Issue 5 - 11.16.12

Page 1

NORTH GROSSE POINTE NORTH HIGH SCHOOL

SINCE 1968

POINTE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2012

Science teachers revolutionize the classroom By Particia Bajis Staff reporter

IN-DEPTH

The levels of scrubbing are put into a student perspective, and the never ending challenge on whether or not to scrub is debated. Page 8 maria liddane

Eighth grader Brionna Adams and mother Nakeeka Richardson talk to social studies teacher Terri Steimer at the open house.

Open house Grosse Pointe Public Schools offered tours for the public on Sunday, Nov. 11. By Maria Liddane Editor-in-chief

SPORTS

Fall sports season is over. Season stories and highlights are included in a season wrap-up. Page 5

PRINCETON REVIEW Juniors test in the cafeteria on Nov. 21 at 8 a.m.

THANKSGIVING BREAK

10:55 a.m. dismissal on Wednesday, Nov. 21. School resumes Monday, Nov. 26

WINTER SPORTS

Winter meet the coaches in the cafeteria, Monday, Nov. 26 at 6:30 p.m.

CHALLENGE DAY

Monday Dec. 3 and Tuesday Dec. 4 at First English Lutheran Church 8 a.m. to 3:05 p.m.

She’s researched her options, and she wants North. Eighth grader Brionna Adams attends South Lake Middle School, but has sights set on Grosse Pointe schools. “I went to different websites and compared it to the high school I would have to go to,” she said. Adams said she is interested in the language programs, Chinese specifically. “The school is beautiful. We love it,” her mother, Nakeeka Richardson, said. “And like I was telling the tour guide, most schools, they don’t really go in depth. They just brush over certain things.” The two did their research and said the high test scores impressed them. “There is so much more here to offer than the average high school, and especially South Lake High School,” Richardson said. Would moving into Grosse Pointe be worth it? “Most definitely,” she said. “Hands down – yes.” The district-wide open house was advertised in the Grosse Pointe News, on gpschools.org website and in a pre-recorded phone blast to all households with students in the district. “Our goal is to reach out to the community, especially people who live within Grosse Pointe that don’t currently attend our schools,” Assistant Principal Kate Murray said. But the open house also targeted students already in the school system. “It told the middle school students, ‘Come on over and see North,’” activities director Pat Gast said. “Parents are coming, they want to learn

about our school and we’re an open book here. We have a tremendous amount of things to offer here at North. We go all the way from our lowest-achieving students to our highest-achieving students and everything in the middle.” Parent’s Club member Christie Scoggin, along with almost a dozen other parents, were prepared to answer questions after the tours. “That’s who they’re shooting for demographic-wise,” Scoggin said. “They’re trying to get those kids that are transferring from eighth into ninth or from fifth into sixth – that transition year. They’re trying to get parents to come and see what we have to offer.” Other schools in the area market themselves and Grosse Pointe Public Schools (GPPS) are following suit. “They all do this way earlier than we do,” Scoggin said. “They target kids way down in sixth grade for their high schools. They market way beyond what we do as a public school – we’re way behind in the marketing aspect.” Scoggin said GPPS visited private and Catholic schools to advertise. School Board President Judy Gafa said the district recognized the opportunity. “We noticed that Liggett and the Academy and some of the private schools were starting to advertise now for their schools next year, and we thought, ‘We have a great school system and we don’t advertise it enough,’” she said. “And we felt this would be a great way to market what we do in the community with our students.” Sunday marked the first district-wide open house Grosse Pointe has had. But will it continue in future years? Murray said it hasn’t been discussed, but is “certainly a possibility.” “It depends on how successful this has been, but we certainly do have a roadmap now for it,” Gast said. “I mean, now that you’ve been through it the first time you can see what you’ve done – if you’ve achieved your goal, or what we’d do better next time.” continued on page 2

NATIONAL HONORS SOCIETY

Induction night in the PAC Thursday, Dec. 6 at 7 p.m.

IDEAS

emily huguenin

Most synchro

girls would just

say

meekly... ‘oh,

it’s sort of like

dancing in the water...’ ... i have

resorted to this answer for a lack of better explanation

for this unheard

phenomenom. Page 7

© 2012 North Pointe Volume 45, Issue 5

Students losing sleep lose focus By Rachel Cullen & Dayle Maas Staff Reporter & Editor

As senior Courtney Carroll sits in her fifthhour Sociology class, her eyelids become heavy and her resolve to stay awake grows weak. Her teacher’s voice fades and she dozes off. Carroll isn’t the only one powerless to the allure of snoozing during class. According to the National Sleep Foundation, just 8% of all teenagers get the required nine hours of sleep every night – which means 92% of Carroll’s generation is spending the waking hours of their days resembling, in the words of Cornell sleep expert James Maas, “walking zombies.” “It’s strange, but I can never tell when I’m falling asleep; it just happens. Everything feels very real in my mind and then I realize that my daydream became an actual in-sleep dream,” Carroll said. “I don’t mean to, and I feel guilty that I do, but it does sometimes help to keep me up in my other classes.” She and many students agree that homework, sports and extracurriculars keep them up

at night, but “avoidable” activities – like texting, Twitter or Tumblr – play a part as well. A 2011 study conducted by Sleep in America found that 95% of people who spent an hour or more before bed with their eyes fixated on an illuminated screen had a harder time falling and staying asleep. “Stimulation from evening-time activities and light exposure from TV or computer screens can cause insomnia, which delay bedtime and result in insufficient sleep,” Dr. Timothy Hoban, the Director of Pediatric Sleep Medicine and Clinical Neurophysiology at the University of Michigan, said. Junior Kaylin Causley admitted she often tweets and texts the night away – as late as 2:30 a.m. This means she is getting many hours less sleep than is medically recommended. She said she has become so accustomed to not getting enough sleep that she can’t differentiate between being sleep deprived and well rested. This sparks a question for sleep specialists: Is nine hours of sleep really the right, or reasonable, amount to ask of everyone? With hectic lifestyles and full schedules, many teenagers realize that nine hours of sleep is a dream, not a reality.

It took a year for science teachers Don Pata and Gary Abud to become unsatisfied with traditional teaching methods. Seeing students slip between the cracks wasn’t what they had in mind when they became teachers. Both sought change. Pata and Abud separate their method into two categories: Constructivist teaching, which lets the students find and relate content to the class; and standards-based grading, a system to replace the common letter grade. “In a traditional classroom, the teacher is the giver of knowledge. It’s their job to disseminate knowledge to the students, whose job is to accept this information. But that’s not actually the most effective way people learn. People learn through their own experiences,” Pata said. “Instead of me saying, ‘these are the pieces of information that I want you to know,’ I set you up so that you’re ready to ask a question. You’re exploring and you build your own knowledge through the structure that we provide. It’s much more in line with how we learn as humans.” Students are given a scientific question to explore for a period of time and are responsible for conducting a lab and recording all of their findings on whiteboards “to explain it to somebody else,” Pata said. “That’s where the real learning is.” However, for chemistry, the modeling method, a subdivision of Constructivism is used. “If you look at what we’re doing in chemistry, starting at day one through the end of the year, the sequence of topics we learn and the way in which we learn them mirrors the way in which things were discovered in chemistry historically. As we build ideas that we know are true, based on experiments, we can come to arrive at different laws about chemical principles. That over the course of the year will help us develop a model of the atom that is the model that many chemistry textbooks would start out with by just telling everybody to expect that those are true,”Abud said. Neither method uses a textbook. “Textbooks are for people that already know the end of the story. And unless you’ve already studied chemistry, the words on the page will mean much less to you then they would to someone who has already studied it. I have a far greater appreciation for the content of the textbook than any of my students ever will because they don’t know anything in the same experience realm that I do,” Abud said. Along with Constructivism came a change in the way students are evaluated. “I’ve been very disenfranchised in the way we give grades,” Pata said. “I feel that a grade should convey some information about what you know and are able to do. But when you assign arbitrary points or percentages, we lose all meaning. Let’s say you scored a 75% on a quiz. I don’t know what that 75% means. Does it mean that you knew 75% of the material, or you were able to do 75% of the skills? Maybe it does. But does that tell me any information about what 75% it is? What you actually know and are able to do is lost in the number. Plus, if I just say, ‘this is the unit we’re learning and I’m going to test you at the end,’ how are you supposed to know what my expectations are in terms of what you know and be able to do? It’s a big mystery.” Both Pata and Abud use standards-based grading. “The form I use works like this: I have indicated for the students all of the skills I want them to know and be able to do for a particular unit. I make them very explicit by writing them on the board. Every time you come into my room you can see all of the standards for a particular unit,” Pata said. “When we get to an assessment, I write the actual standard number itself next to the quiz question so that nobody is confused about what you should know and be able to do and how it manifests itself on the assessment.” Students are assessed on their understanding. “The highest level is expert understanding. The next highest level is general understanding. The level below that is approaching understanding. The lowest level is called well below understanding,” Abud said. After papers are graded and passed back, students are allowed to study and reassess their mistakes.

continued on page 5 continued on page 2


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