Volume 105, Issue 8

Page 1

The Spectator The Stuyvesant High School Newspaper

Volume CV  No. 8

February 3, 2015

Cellphone Ban to be Lifted at Stuyvesant

Newsbeat

Two Stuyvesant seniors, Daniel Charnis and Kai Pacheco, were among those chosen as semifinalists in the Intel Science Talent Search (STS) on Wednesday, January 7. Charnis was chosen for his project “A Novel Methodologybased on Hydrodynamic and Molecular Surface Dynamics for Predicting the Quaternary Structure of alpha-Kinases: eEF2K Structure Prediction.” It focuses on the discovery of the complete structure of a protein overexpressed in cancer cells. “This is pretty important [in cancer research] because if you know the structure of the protein, you can design drugs that help inhibit it, if it’s overexpressed,”

Features

City Council Discusses Changing the SHSAT

On March 2, the decade-old ban on cell phones in New York City schools will be lifted by Mayor Bill de Blasio and New York City Schools Chancellor Carmen Fariña. This ban was originally put into effect because phones were thought to be a distraction in the educational setting. While not finalized, the new legislation will remove the obsolete total ban and, in its place, instate a much more lenient and modern set of standards. The main reason for lifting the ban is that allowing phones will increase safety in schools. “Lifting the cell phone ban is about common sense, while ensuring student safety as well as high-level learning in our classrooms,” Fariña said. “As a parent and a grandmother, I know that families and children feel safer when our students have access to cell phones […] With today’s changes, we are demonstrating our commitment to student safety and community concerns, as well as our respect for principals, as we allow them to develop a cell phone policy that best addresses their individual school’s unique challenges and circumstances.” On February 25, the Panel for

Charnis said. Charnis developed the project as he worked at the City College of New York (CCNY) biophysics lab, with help from Nathan Will, a graduate student at CCNY. His project was based on computational biology, using professional software to help analyze the results given from his physical experimentation with proteins in the lab. “When proteins fold, they have certain domains. My project tried to find the total structure of a certain group of proteins called alpha-kinases,” Charnis said. Using the software, Charnis was able to generate about a hundred random models of proteins, eventually narrowing them down to a dozen that fit the criteria he continued on page 2

Article on page 7.

Slam Poetry: A Catharsis of Emotions Read page 7 for an inside look into the life of senior and slam poet Frankie Li. Find out how what began as a fleeting idea has turned into a long-term passion for Li, who is currently looking forward to taking a gap year to pursue his dream of making it onto one of NYC’s top slam poetry teams.

Educational Policy (P.E.P) will vote on the reformed cellphone policy. The panel consists of 13 appointed officials, 5 selected by the borough presidents and 8 selected by the mayor. If the vote passes, the new cell phone policy will go into effect March 2. “The change will better enable parents to stay in touch with their children, especially before and after school,” Zhang said. The newly formed policy would remove cell phones and other electronic devices from the list of prohibited items in schools. Under A-413, a newly created regulation, school principals will meet with their School Leadership Team (SLT) and decide among a range of options related to cell phone policy for their specific schools, depending on what they feel is best for their students, families and educators. Stuyvesant’s SLT organized a meeting on Tuesday, January 13, in which members discussed a new cell phone policy that would be best for our school. A consensus was reached in this meeting concerning when and where phones would be allowed on school premises. If the P.E.P vote passes, designated areas for cell phone usage, open from 7:25 a.m. to 3:45 p.m, will be assigned starting March continued on page 3

A rally and press conference were held on the steps of City Hall at 10 a.m. on Thursday, December 11, immediately followed by a City Council hearing to debate the merits of the Specialized High School Admissions Test (SHSAT) and to discuss the lack of diversity within the New York City Specialized High Schools. The events were set forth in opposition to a bill that would replace the SHSAT with a multicriteria admissions standard similar to college applications, endorsed by Mayor Bill de Blasio. Historically, the SHSAT has garnered its share of controversy. In 2012, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Legal Defense and Education Fund filed a complaint to the United States Department of Education, Office of Civil Rights, challenging the SHSAT as the sole criterion for acceptance into the Specialized High Schools. African-American and Hispanic students currently hold only 11 percent of seats in Specialized High Schools, despite the fact that they comprise about 70 percent of the public school system. With a decline in the number of African-American and Hispanic students enrolled in Specialized High Schools, De Blasio and NYC Chancellor of Education Carmen Fariña suggested that a multiple-criteria admissions system would increase diversity. Policymakers, the Coalition of Specialized High School Alumni Association, and parents of students spoke out against changing the SHSAT at the December 11 rally. Others came to register to testify at the hearing, which was open to the public. Representatives from Stuyvesant, like the Alumni Association Diversity Committee Chair Christina Alfonso, also attended the event. Aside from advocating within the Alumni Association, Alfonso is also working along-

side director Curtis Chan and his team on “Tested,” an upcoming documentary following students from various backgrounds preparing to take the SHSAT. She, along with many other members of the Alumni Association, believes that the exam is not inherently wrong, but that there are a number of external factors limiting the chances of a student being accepted into one of the Specialized High Schools. These include middle school performance, opportunities throughout grade school, and prior exam preparation. “I am passionate about keeping the test as the sole criterion for admission into the specialized high schools,” Alfonso said. Several prominent politicians also gave short speeches at the rally against changing the SHSAT. “I feel very strongly that the exam is unbiased,” New York State Senator and Bronx High School of Science alumna Toby Ann Stavisky said. Stavisky acknowledged her support in preparing students starting from younger ages, as opposed to changing the criteria for admission. Several factors that inhibit students from doing well on tests like the SHSAT were discussed at the rally. Some agreed that access to advanced coursework in schools located in at-risk neighborhoods in the city is limited, contributing to the divide in the demographics of students who gain entrance to top-caliber high schools and those who do not. Many of the magnet lower schools for high-achieving students no longer exist at the middle school level, leaving students who had previously been challenged in grade school without the proper support they need to pursue higher studies. In addition, pre-school programs are incredibly selective, and cater towards upper middle class families with the means to continued on page 3

Delay in Theater Renovations Pushes Back STC Winter Drama and SING! By Joanne Ha and Julia Ingram

On a normal January day, the Stuyvesant Theater Community (STC) can be found in the theater putting the finishing touches on the Winter Drama for its performance right before finals week. Recent renovations to the theater, however, have resulted in a change of setting for rehearsals of this year’s Winter Drama, “12 Angry Men,” and have pushed the performance to mid-February. The renovations were enabled by the recent approval of a $300,000 grant by New York City Councilwoman Margaret Chin and Manhattan Borough President Gale Brewer, geared specifically towards replacement of the upholstery and flooring. “The theater renovations include replacing the seats to look better, and [fixing] the carpet; kids were trip-

Justin Strauss / The Spectator

By Jonathan Buhler and Dhiraj Patel

Two Stuyvesant Students Named Intel Semi-Finalists

By Sharon Lin and Lindsay Ma

stuyspec.com

By sharon lin

Justin Strauss / The Spectator

• Fern Levitt and Arnon Mantver recently spoke to social studies teacher Robert Sandler’s Jewish History class about Operation Solomon, in which the Israeli military airlifted more than 14,000 Ethiopian Jews from their war-torn country to Israel. Levitt and Mantver were instrumental in making this operation possible. • The Stuyvesant chess team won first place as a team at the Greater New York Scholastic Chess Championships, held on January 10 and January 11. Junior Alex Spinnell took the first place individual award. • The school library will remain open until 5:00 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday until the end of the term. • Social studies teacher Linda Weissman recently invited several speakers to her Criminal Law class, including two Manhattan Assistant District Attorneys from the Crime Victims’ Advocates’ Office and NYC Assistant Corporation Counsel Karen Seeman. • The Stuyvesant Novice and Junior Varsity Policy debate teams won first place as a team at an Urban Debate League Tournament held at Brooklyn Technical High School on January 10. • At the Columbia Invitational Tournament for Speech and Debate held from Friday, January 23 to Sunday, January 25, Stuyvesant had finalists in every single speech category, and won first place in team sweepstakes.

“The Pulse of the Student Body”

ping around it because its edges were very bad. Also, the partition is being cleaned, because it’s very dirty,” Principal Jie Zhang said. The theater renovations started shortly before the December Article on page 20-21.

holiday break. While the theater’s renovations were originally intended to be finished by the time continued on page 4

A&E

Get Your Popcorn Ready: 2015 Movie Preview! Looking forward to “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” the new Pixar movie, or the long anticipated “Mockingjay Part 2”? Check out editor-in-chief Lev Akabas’s preview of the can’t-miss movies set to come out in 2015.


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Volume 105, Issue 8 by The Stuyvesant Spectator - Issuu