Issue 3

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Raven Report Sequoia High School

Volume IX, Issue 3

1201 Brewster Ave. Redwood City, CA 94062

November 13, 2015

Housing situations challenge but don’t define students By CARMEN VESCIA Executive Editor

Photo by Benjy Jude

Junior Nova Mitchell spends afternoons in AVID, one of Sequoia’s efforts to close the achievement gap. In AVID, students learn skills to help them succeed in college.

Academic programs support school in stepping over achievement gap By BENJY JUDE Staff Reporter Why does one student go to a community college when another goes to UCLA? The achievement gap is one reason. For the first time this year, Sequoia is working with Equal Opportunity Schools (EOS), an organization that advocates for better representation of non-white students of low socio-economic status in Inter-

national Baccalaureate (IB) and Advance Placement (AP) classes and detects the students that can be in more rigorous courses. EOS works to minimize the achievement gap by encouraging diversity in upper-level classes and preparing students for college. The achievement gap is a term to describe the imbalance in successful lower-income students and high-income students of different races; it’s usually measured using high school

graduates and dropouts, GPAs, and standardized-test results. “It’s so important that everybody be able to reach their potential,” Theory of Knowledge and English teacher Lisa Gleaton said. “Every student that walks in has amazing potential, but there are barriers that come up in the way and we have to get rid of them.” The IB Program’s mission for all schools, including Sequoia,

See GAP, page 2

Some nights she finishes her homework in the bathroom—the only room with a door to separate it from the studio where she lives with her family of six. Some mornings she wakes up at 6 a.m. to study before the long bus ride to school. She works anywhere from 16 to 30 hours a week and gives all but around $30 to her parents for rent and other necessities. For junior Karolina Soto, it’s a balancing act. “It’s not always all easy,” Soto said. “It’s not that I don’t want to have 100 percent focus on school, it’s not that I don’t want to hang out with my friends, it’s not that I want to be tired in class all the time, it’s not that I don’t want to bring my friends over to my house, but it’s just situations prevent me from doing stuff like that.” Soto has lived in studio apartments for the last 14 years. Bedrooms, kitchen and living room all blend into one and make finding private time and space a challenge, but an

even more daunting issue is that of rising rent. Soto began working at Safeway this fall to contribute. History teacher, AVID teacher and Key Club adviser Teresa Yeager, a close friend of the Soto family, helped her balance academics, clubs— Soto is president of Key Club and an active member of the DREAM Club—and work hours when it became overwhelming. “She looked frazzled every time I saw her,” Yeager said. “When we finally talked, it was about: why are you working so much? Not: why are you working? Because I would never want to question a student wanting to help their family.” As housing prices skyrocket in the Bay Area, many Sequoia families, like the Sotos, feel the effects. Mayela Ramirez and the Parent Center strive to offer what support they can. “Rent is expensive, [but] unfortunately we don’t have money to support every single family, but we [offer]

See LIVING, page 7

Modern grading method abolishes check-box mentality By PHILIP TYSON Staff Reporter This year, for juniors enrolled in IB History of the Americas, only seven assessments—four pass/fail Essential Knowledge (EK) quizzes and three essays—determine a student’s first semester grade. “We’ve lowered the amount we expect you to know well, and we’re finetuning what we want you to be proficient at,” history teacher Teresa Yeager said. “We want you to really go in-depth and understand something at a totally different level, so we’re not just focused on check[ing] off [a] box.” EK quizzes test students on Identifications (IDs), which include the who, what, when, where and significance for a

person, idea or event in history. In order they needed to improve,” history teacher to pass, students have to get 100 percent Lydia Cuffman said. “[This grading sysof each ID correct. However, the quizzes tem] is fairer because if at the end of the can be retaken outside of class within a semester you can do it, you should get month of the first atcredit for that. If you tempt. didn’t know how to Essays, on the other “At some point we have stopped do it [at first], that’s hand, are graded on holding your hand a little bit, okay because it’s my a 15-point scale and [but] that doesn’t mean we’re not job to teach you how cannot be retaken. To here to help ... Use your teachers as to do it.” receive an ‘A’ for the resources. Ask questions.” The overarching semester, a student has idea of this system —Teresa Yeager, to eventually pass all 4 is improvement. If History teacher EK quizzes and get a someone gets a 7 out score of 12 on two out of 15 points on the of the three essays. first essay, but by the “The normal, standard grading sys- end of the semester receives a 13, the tem was broken, and it wasn’t giving student shows that he or she has learned students very good information about the skills needed to answer the essay what skills they already had and where prompt effectively. Vice versa, if some-

Feature:

Special Feature:

IB students who smoke pot

It’s not all in our heads: examining mental health

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one gets 12s on the first 2 essays, but does relatively worse on the last one, the student might not be eligible for an ‘A’ because he or she does not grow. Some juniors and their parents are worried about whether the new grading policy is going to be effective in helping students learn and succeed. “There are some students who are really upset. Part of it’s coming from fear of the unknown, fear of something totally different than what they’re used to. I think it also comes from [the fact that they]’re pretty used to being told what to do and how to do it at every moment,” Yeager said. “I’ve noticed that there are a few brave students who are asking questions for clarification, and I

See GRADING, page 2

By the numbers

18

percent of Sequoia students reported having suicidal thoughts according to the Needs Assessment Survey.


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