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S P E C TAT O R 1500 WEST KENNEDY ROAD, LAKE FOREST, IL 60045
VOLUME 91 NUMBER 6
Featured Stories NEWS
Preventing dating abuse at LFA
page 3
NEWS
Students attend the 8th Annual Networking Event Technology: Innovation & Entrepreneurship
page 2
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Check out J & J’s restaurant review: The Happ Inn and Brazilian food
page 7
OP-ED
Caxy Rave: Weekday van runs
page 11
More high school students taking creatine athletic supplement
page 15
SPORTS
Spectator staff plans Powder Puff event
page 12
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APRIL 12, 2013
New Perkins award honors former Ferry Hall teacher Francis Perkins
By Amelia Moses Editor-In-Chief Lake Forest Academy has always been proud of the outstanding contributions that Ferry Hall made in creating an uncommon educational opportunity for women in math and science. Frances Perkins was one of those early educators who helped build this solid academic foundation in the early 1900s. Eventually this steadfast and able leader left her mark both on the LFA community and on the nation. In recognition of this prominent American trailblazer and Ferry Hall educator, Lake Forest Academy has created a new student award in her memory. Besides being an innovative educator, Perkins was also famous for serving as the first female Secretary of Labor from 193345 in the cabinet of President Franklin D. Roosevelt where she helped create the important New Deal program, which contributed to the formation of modern America. The new Perkins Award will be cosponsored by the Mount Holyoke College alumnae network. Naomi Goldberg, head of the Mount Holyoke Chicago Club, first proposed the idea of an award in an effort to reach out to qualified LFA candidates for admission to the college. She contacted Miss Lauren Kelly, English instructor and Mount Holyoke College alumna, who worked on the proposal, approval, and design of the award with Mr. Chris Tennyson, Dean of Students and Academics. “She asked if any alums in the area worked with high schools and would
Photo by Bailey Ayers
Junior Oliva Stevenson reads the description on the Francis Perkins plaque in the Hall of Fame. The new award will honor Francis Perkins and will be awarded to a junior girl.
be willing to pursue proposing a Mount Holyoke College Book Award,” said Kelly. “We thought it would be best to use the title of the award to make the connection between LFA/Ferry Hall and Mount Holyoke College.” Freshly graduated from Mount Holyoke with a degree in chemistry and physics, Perkins arrived in Chicago to teach science at Ferry Hall from 1904 to 1906 and to spend her weekends working at Hull House with Jane Addams. To her, science and service went hand-in-hand. “The award will go to a junior girl who has excelled in the study of science or math and whose personal commitment to service learning has attempted to create a positive change in local and global communities.
Because Frances Perkins taught science at Ferry Hall and was frequently involved in community service and civil justice policies, we felt it was best that her interests were reflected in the strengths of the award recipient,” said Kelly. Perkins is an icon of “uncommon women,” a phrase coined by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Wendy Wasserstein (MHC ’71) as the title of her 1977 Broadway play. That is exactly how Perkins used her skills. In her later distinguished career as a public servant, she confronted some of the nation’s most difficult problems as a social worker with immigrants, labor advocate, women’s rights activist, and legislative reformer.
AP English classes now requiring applications By Amy Krivoshik News Editor
SPORTS
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A change in this year’s class registration process is that rising juniors and seniors who would like to take AP English Language and Composition or AP English Literature next year have to apply to get into an AP class, the English department has announced. To apply for an AP class, students must submit a portfolio including an example of in-class writing, an analytical English essay, and a third example of original writing such as a poem, short story, editorial, argument, memoir, multi-media project or History essay. Also, students have to provide an answer to an additional question. To apply for AP English Literature, rising seniors need to choose the favorite sentence they have ever read and explain why. To apply for AP English Language and Composition, students must answer the question: “Why write?”
“Your ability to get into an English class should depend on your English abilities, not your standardized test scores or how well you do in History,” senior Emma Haupt commented. As LFA generally boasts of small class sizes, concerns that AP English class sizes are currently too big brought about, in part, this change in policy, AP Language and Composition teacher Kathleen Schlosser confirmed. Junior Clara (Sunjae) Lee, who decided not to take AP English Literature next year, expressed different views. “It might seem negative to the students that they’re adding the whole process but I actually think it’s a necessary process,” she said, “With Math and Science and History it’s easier to see what class you belong in, but with English it’s not so easy to see what level you belong in.” She said the fact that she would have
needed to submit an application did not influence her decision to opt out of AP English Literature next year. “My decision was mostly based on my experience,” she added, “[The class] was harder than I thought it would be.” Sophomore Isabella (Jingyi) Hu said the new application process could motivate some students to try harder in their English classes. While some saw the new application process as a motivator, others viewed it as ‘unfair’ to those students who would want to re-challenge themselves next year. “They’re grading them by what they’ve already accomplished, and not focusing on what their potential is,” Senior Lauren Pugliese pointed out, “I don’t think there should be portfolio requirements because students who are willing to put in the work should be able to have the opportunity to.”