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Vita-Lite:
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Vita-Lite
Lighting Brightens Vermont Classrooms
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Vita-Lite Lighting
Brightens Vermont Classrooms
As one of the nation's most picturesque states, Vermont may be a
pleasant sight for sore eyes, but not if you happen to teach in a
basement or light-restricted classroom. Unless, as teachers from several
schools in Brattleboro, Dover, and Putney have discovered, you install
Vita-Lite full-spectrum fluorescent lamps.
Over the past several years, the Dover Elementary School, St.
Michael's School, and Landmark College have experienced dramatic
improvements in classroom light levels, visibility, and reduced
glare under Vita-Lite's crisp, natural, sunlight-simulating
fluorescent light. Before discovering the benefits of full-spectrum
lighting, these schools used standard high-glare fluorescent lamps
that actually made dark, dull basements or light-restricted classrooms
even drearier--especially during long Vermont winters.
Installing Vita-Lite has helped students at all levels
keep their focus on learning because Vita-Lite simulates
the full-color and balanced ultraviolet spectrum of natural outdoor
light. With its high color rendering index (CRI) of 91 (compared
to natural outdoor light's 100). Vita-Lite reveals details
and colors accurately. Reduces eye-strain, helps lessen glare on
VDT screens, and facilitates all visually-demanding tasks.
A Good Report Card
Teachers report positive reactions from pupils, parents, and visitors
who enter a classroom that formerly used harsh, standard fluorescent
tubes. "Vita-Lite has transformed the inside light of our
classrooms and has changed the whole atmosphere throughout our school."
said Dover Elementary's Principal Frank Varra.
A strikingly modern structure with an attractive but light-inhibiting
overhang, Dover Elementary just completed a three-year phase-in
of Vita-Lite tubes. "Before Vita-Lite, there were
shadows on student desks and blackboards, but no more," continued
Varra. "When the children returned from summer vacation, they noticed
the difference right away and students whose classrooms had the
old lighting started asking for Vita-Lite. In my 29 years
of working in education, I never heard a child mention lighting
before."
Plants Love Vita-Lite Too
People aren't the only beneficiaries of full-spectrum
lighting. Noreen Cooper, sixth-grade teacher and
principal of St. Michael's School in Brattleboro
installed Vita-Lite bulbs in her basement
classroom and reported that not only were she and
her students less lethargic at the end of the day,
but her plants bloomed as never before. "I had tried
to grow plants under the old lighting," said Cooper,
"but in spite of careful watering, they died. Under
Vita-Lite, they're not only growing, they're
thriving."
Cooper also found that taking slides was easier under natural
full-spectrum lighting. "Even my camera picks up the difference,"
she continued, "because under the old tubes I had to use a big spotlight
when taking pictures, but now all I need is my flash since Vita-Lite
provides enough light." Serious photographers will appreciate the
fact that. Under Vita-Lite, it's possible to use daylight-type
film without the use of filters.
Vita-Lite's color rendering index promotes visibility and
makes it the ideal fluorescent for all tasks requiring accurate
color and detail perception. This is especially important at the
Landmark College in Putney, Vermont, a school for both degree and
non-degree dyslexic students who are particularly light sensitive.
Since installing full-spectrum lighting in their basement classrooms,
teachers in these rooms report that complaints about glare and eyestrain
have been eliminated. "There is no question that my students and
I can see better under full-spectrum lighting," remarked teacher
Meredith Morgan. "The print is clearer and I can read for longer
periods of time without eye fatigue. I even put Vita-Lite
in at home near my computer and I've found it's easier to focus
on the screen."
When these Vermont teachers were asked if they would consider
returning to their former lighting, the answer was a resounding,
unanimous "No!" Morgan was emphatic in stating she would never work
in a basement classroom again unless the lighting was natural full-spectrum.
"I think this type of light should be everywhere," she said. "For
our particular student needs, full-spectrum lighting creates a more
advantageous learning environment."
Varra pointed out the cost effectiveness of natural lighting,
explaining that "Vita-Lite is not expensive in view of its
long life and quality performance. We come out ahead in the long
run and get all the benefits of this nice lighting, too."
Installing Vita-Lite has helped students at all levels
keep their focus on learning.
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