Los Altos High School, Los Altos, CA ■ September 30, 2014 ■ Volume XXX, Issue 1
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FACILITIES
CURRICULUM
School launches pilot reading class AP U.S.
History curriculum changes
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
SITARA SRIRAM Senior Writer
FIELD HOCKEY STARTS SEASON WITH BIG TEAM
With more people trying out for the team than in past years, field hockey has high hopes for the fall season. Take a look at their record so far, and their expectations going forward. Sports, 18
MVLA Board elections bring more candidates to the mix Seven candidates are running for three contested seats on the MVLA Board in the Board’s first contested election in six years. News, 3
Intro to Engineering class kicks off its first year Math teacher Teresa Dunlap began teaching a new engineering class this fall. Students in the class learn design skills, engineering software basics and more. News, 2
NFL’s new domestic violence policy step in right direction, but needs clarity The NFL’s new domestic violence policy has come under scrutiny. Read one writer’s opinion on the policy. Opinions, 6
Fall series premiers Learn more about some of this season’s series premiers and how they’re doing so far. Entertainment, 15
Rockabilly inspiration English teacher Arantxa Arriada’s fashion is inspired by the rockabilly culture of the 1950s. Features, 9
UPCOMING EVENTS September 30 @ 6 p.m.
Private college/UC Application Night
October 1 @ 6:30 p.m.
CSU Application Night October 8 @ 6 p.m.
College Fair @ MVHS October 9 & 10 @ 7 p.m.
Band and Orchestra Concerts October 15
Post Secondary Awareness/PSAT Day October 20-25
Homecoming Week, Game and Dance
News Editorial Opinions
2 5 6
Features 9, 12 In-Depth 10 Entertainment 14 Sports 18
CARL FAUST
From left to right: sophomores Natalie Moreno, Katherine Figueroa, Angelica Salvidar Otero and Julia Figueroa participate in the new reading class in the Reading Zone. In addition to serving as the classroom for the pilot class, the Reading Zone is a quiet recreational reading space for all students.
JESSICA KING Staff Writer
Last year in May, principal Wynne Satterwhite approved a pilot reading class led by librarian Gordon Jack and teacher aid Ann Battle. The pilot reading class began this year and takes place during first period in a room next to the College and Career Center called the Reading Zone. Using money from an anonymous educational grant and a private donation, Jack and Battle painted
and furnished the former conference room over the summer, converting it into the Reading Zone. “We just thought this is the best room,” Jack said. “It’s one of the nicest rooms on campus because it looks out onto the quad, it’s got a lot of natural light, and so we just thought kids should be able to be in this room more.” The room was created with the idea that it would become the location of the new reading class, in which students who are struggling in their English classes read books of their own choice for credit and a grade in addition to assigned reading from regular English classes.
Jack and Battle believe the class will encourage students to read for pleasure more frequently as well as make reading required material easier. “It allows them to become better readers, to be more f luent in their reading, [to] sustain focus longer. Their vocabulary will increase, their interest in subjects will increase [and] they’ll learn about a broad range of whatever they’re interested in,” Battle said. “I think it helps raise the foundational knowledge when they come into a class.”
“Read” continues on page 2
This May, juniors at Los Altos High School will take a re-designed version of the AP United States history (USHAP) exam, one that serves to emphasize analytical and critical reasoning skills. The change to the test is part of a growing national effort to align schools to the Common Core standards. “The Common Core asks students to think more on an analytical level rather than a rote memorization level,” USHAP teacher Gabriel Stewart said. Additionally, feedback from USHAP teachers played a significant role in having the College Board make these changes. “The College Board was hearing from all sorts of USHAP teachers that the course was a mile long and an inch deep,” USHAP teacher Michael Messner said. “We had all sorts of material to cover, and we didn’t go into depth about hardly anything at all. I think the redesign was really with the idea of allowing people to move deeper into the curriculum because we went wicked fast through all the curriculum.” The new exam has been revised based on this feedback and to meet these changes in the way students are now learning. It now includes less emphasis on the multiple choice and a series of short answer questions replace one of the free response questions. The free response questions are now called “long answer questions.”
“USHAP” continues on page 2
STUDENT BODY
Foreign exchange student comes to the school OLIVIA JERRAM Staff Writer
Editor’s note: Interviews done with Chloe were translated from French into English. The Talon apologizes for any errors or loss of meaning that occurred during translation. Sitting cross-legged on the floor of the Los Altos High School library, squished into the aisle between the fiction novels and the encyclopedias, sophomore Chloe Bocek is bent over a piece of white printer paper lying on the ground, carefully shading one of her new works of art. She has her Chromebook open and her earbuds in. At first glance, she could be just another Los Al-
tos High School art student. It’s only when you discover her back story behind that you realize she’s not. Chloe is from the south of France in a town called Brignoles and has been enrolled at LAHS for the year in order to improve her English through immersion. However, her first few weeks of classes haven’t exactly been a piece of cake. “Google Translate is my friend,” Chloe said. “I have my computer in all my classes, but it’s very hard. [I miss] the people [back in France and] my friends because here, there’s no one that I know and I’m a little afraid of all the [new] people. Here, nobody understands me, but in France everyone can talk to me. And yes, it’s that that I miss.”
“Exchange” continues on page 13
Bridging the Gender Gap
Analyzing the importance of role models
BRANDON HONG
Sophomore Chloe Bocek is spending the year at the school to improve her English. She is from Brignoles, France.
Investigating the workforce gender imbalances
IN-DEPTH | PAGES 10 AND 11
The Talon checks out the new iPhone 6 ENTERTAINMENT | PAGE 14