The Homewood Star | January 2012 |
www.TheHomewoodStar.com
neighborly news & entertainment for Homewood
Volume 1 | Issue 10 | January 2012 Red Nose Run- pg 9
Sam’s Super Samwiches
Piggly Wiggly - pg 17
- pg 16
National tournament returns to Lakeshore By KATIE STEWART
Hands spin wheels at incredible speeds and shoot basketballs across the court. At the Pioneer Classic at The Lakeshore Foundation, players race up and down the court and the crowd cheers like at any other basketball tournament, but for this one the athletes play in wheelchairs. “Walking into Lakeshore Foundation’s field house can put anyone in sensory overload,” said Mary Allison Milford, recreation specialist and one of the coaches for the Lakeshore Sharks. “The smell of metal grinding against metal and burning rubber as tire treads screech to a halt upon the hardwood greet fans at the door.” The Foundation will host its 25th Annual Pioneer Classic wheelchair basketball tournament the weekend of Jan. 13-15. The National Wheelchair Basketball Association Division III, Women’s Division and youth wheelchair basketball teams travel from across the country to participate in the annual tournament. “The Pioneer Classic is arguably one of the longest-running sporting events in Birmingham and has showcased the nation’s best talent in wheelchair basketball
See BASKETBALL | page 10
January Features Best of Homewood Ballot
6
City Council
7
Tips for resolutions
8
Shining Star
9
Herb Trotman
11
Lauren Denton
14
Julie Williams
15
Restaurant Showcase
16
Business Spotlight
17
Sports
19
School House
20
Calendar of Events
22
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Come out to the Lakeshore Foundation to watch teams from all over the country compete in wheelchair basketball Jan. 13-15. Photo courtesy of the Lakeshore Foundation.
Bettering schools, bettering the community By RICK WATSON First graders at Shades Cahaba Elementary have a new way to tell where they are having reading problems: by recording and playing back themselves reading on iPads. “The iPads offer an opportunity to reach children who have various learning styles – kinesthetic, visual and auditory all at once,” said Betsy Crimi, a HHS graduate and current Homewood first grade teacher and resident. “It’s added a whole new aspect to teaching children.” Elizabeth Stewart’s special education class at Homewood Middle School also uses the iPads. They had used iPods on a trial basis, but the smaller screens were a challenge for the students. Integrating iPads into lesson plans is part of the new campaign “Build a foundation, be the difference” for the Homewood City Schools Foundation. “We are so grateful to the Homewood Foundation for making such a difference in the lives of students with special needs in Homewood,” said Stewart. The foundation’s grants have helped extend the middle school’s award-winning Engineering Through Robotics program to the high school and all three elementary schools. The results are impressive. In the 2010 BEST competition, Homewood
Reed Johnson and Josh Galloway use an iPad provided by the Homewood City Schools Foundation. Photo courtesy of Mac Logue.
Middle School finished second in the state against mostly high school teams. They went on to compete in the regional finals at Auburn University. Seventh grade math teacher Sherry Putt used a foundation grant to buy tools such as hands-on equations and angle viewers. Angle viewers, iPads and other learning tools that the foundation supplies are all integrally tied to the larger community. “The quality of schools is an indicator of the community’s health,” said Jane Marie
Fabric of Homewood
Marlin, president of the Homewood City Schools Foundation. Research has shown that homes in communities with quality schools sell for a premium. The people of Homewood understood this connection and decided to start a foundation in 1996 to provide resources to help teachers teach better and children learn better. In the beginning, the foundation funded mostly big programs and technology projects for classrooms, but the
See SCHOOLS | page 14
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