The BluePrint - Volume 7, Issue 6

Page 1

HAGERTY HIGH SCHOOL

3225 LOCKWOOD BLVD. OVIEDO, FL 32765

INDEX

the

blueprint

FCAT Scores................2 Benedict to Germany.....4 Funding cuts...........6-7 Too much homework....8 Districts....................10

volume 7, issue 6

may 29, 2012

Upperclass unstressed about AP exams

I remember in freshman year, AP exams were so nervewracking. I felt like I had to study so much,” senior Katie Yoches said. “After my third exam, they started to feel like no big deal. There is no stressing over them because I’m so used to them.” The end of the year means the beginning of Advanced Placement exams. It means last minute studying and yearlong classes coming to an end. For many students, the second and third weeks of May mean exam after exam for the college-level classes that these students endured throughout the year. For underclassmen, these exams are a big deal. Students want nothing more than to pass, which often times means studying nonstop leading up to test day. They have to wake up early on their weekends to take mock exams and complete review projects that are meant to help them to better prepare. However, upperclassmen have a different feeling about it. “By my senior year, I have taken so many exams that it feels like nothing,” Yoches said. “I feel confident that my hard work paid off. I have taken so many tests that I know my teachers prepared me to the best of their ability.” The work that many students are assigned throughout the year seems to be given to prepare them for the worst. Teachers know what their students should know. “The exam always seems much simpler than the tests and homework that my teachers give me,” senior Jamie Gnan said. “When I

Taking it easy. Junior Eric Anschuetz plays on his Bameboy instead of studying for his AP exam. Anschuetz felt that as he got older his exams became less of a stress.

finally get to the exam, I feel like I know a lot of the information and am very prepared. There is not only a difference for students; teachers believe that after a point, there is not much left to do. “These students endure tons of prep work leading up to exam dates. After a year of work, they either know it or they don’t,” AP Language and Composition teacher Lauren Hamilton said. “If they aren’t stressed out, then they are well prepared for the exam. The stress level may decrease with age, but students feel like their scores increase the more tests that they take. “I took seven AP classes this year and have taken AP classes since freshman year, so after the first few exams I took, it didn’t seem like such a big deal anymore,” junior Eric Anschuetz said. Many students find that although the actual exams were not stressful, that does not mean that the classes are not. Many AP classes mean numerous teachers giving large amounts of work at the same time. “All year I have been stressing out over the large sums of work,” junior Taylor Scimeca said. “When you have numerous AP classes, it becomes very difficult to balance all of the work.” All of the nonstop work that students have put in all year and all of the stress that they have endured give the students a prepared feeling, enabling them to head into their AP exams without being nervous or stressed. -Darbi Filliben, News Editor

photo by Isabelle Sarnek

5

things to do this summer  Star Wars Weekends

[May 18-June 10] Meet Queen Amidala, Darth Vader, Chewbacca and other Star Wars characters at Disney’s Hollywood Studios.

 Night Hike at the Zoo

[June 9] Explore the Central Florida Zoo & Botanical Gardens after dark. Starts at 7 p.m. and admission is $20.

 Summer Nights at Seaworld  Fringe Festival [June 23-August 12] Experience special nightly events such as Shamu Rocks, Summer Nights Central and a live fireworks show. The park will be open until 10 p.m. all summer long.

[May 26-27] Celebrate theater, art and music at various venues near the Orlando Repertory Theater and Loch Haven Park. Admission is $5 to $10 per show.

 Orlando Carnival

[May 27] Day of music, parades and live entertainment celebrating Caribbean culture, located at Festival Field across from the Citrus Bowl.


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The BluePrint - Volume 7, Issue 6 by Hagerty Journalism - Issuu