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To reassure, new school will look much like the old

MONROE, Conn. - When the children who survived a shooting that killed 20 of their classmates return to school in a different building, they will find things just as they left them Friday, down to the water bottles and boxes of crayons on their desks.

MONROE, Conn. - When the children who survived a shooting that killed 20 of their classmates return to school in a different building, they will find things just as they left them Friday, down to the water bottles and boxes of crayons on their desks.

They will have their same chairs and desks, when possible. Their classroom walls will be painted the same colors and be hung with the same pictures.

The new Sandy Hook Elementary will be in a vacant middle school in Monroe, about six miles from the old school. It's expected to open in January, and students will remain there at least through the academic year with Donna Page, a retired Sandy Hook principal, leading the new school.

"Once they get into the classroom, it's going to look as close to the old classroom as possible," Monroe First Selectman Stephen Vavrek said.

The idea is to create as much normalcy as possible, he said. Officials consulted psychologists for the planned new school.

To re-create the school, photos are being taken of classrooms and desks. One boy left behind his school football helmet, a little water bottle, and his writing assignment. A girl left a crayon next to a box of them on her meticulous desk. Chairs are being carefully wrapped and taken to the new school.

More than 500 people are involved in the effort.

Carolyn Mears, author of Reclaiming School in the Aftermath of Trauma, said familiar objects can be comforting when one's world is shattered.

"Routine really does help," Mears said. "The water bottle - that's really touching. I would think that would be helpful."

But Mears, whose son survived the 1999 Columbine High School massacre in Colorado, said children respond differently in such situations and officials need to be alert to any negative reactions.

Parents and students began touring the school Wednesday. Vavrek said the boy with the football helmet was excited to see it.

Their reactions were positive, with some students excited to be going to a larger middle-school building, Vavrek said.

The school will have cameras, police, and other security, he said.

He declined to go into detail. "It's definitely going to be more secure than any school I've ever seen," he said. "Once that child enters that school, they're going to be safe."