And they pulled it off.
In May 2013,
![0913_hopscotch_blog](/images/ptoblog/2013/10/0913_hopscotch_blog1.jpg)
The school may have closed its doors, but its former students can remember that they helped beat a world record, says Wendy Potope, who was vice president of the PTO at Round Hills. “We wanted to put the school on the map,’’ she adds.
To make sure they were successful, Potope says she followed the Guinness rules precisely. The organization emailed the PTO its lists of rules and regulations, which included getting two witnesses who had no association with the school to observe the event.
The group waited four months to find out its fate. Potope says she starting getting a little nervous, wondering “what is taking so long?” But now she and other volunteers are having fun spreading the news to all the hopscotch participants, who are attending various schools in Williamsport, and letting them know they are now record-holders.
Photo credit: Mark Nance/Williamsport Sun-Gazette