Volume 104, issue 5

Page 1

The Spectator

“The Pulse of the Student Body”

The Stuyvesant High School Newspaper

Volume CIV  No. 5

November 21, 2013

When junior Lucien Siegal entered Stuyvesant on Halloween, Thursday, October 31, he expected his makeup, styled after the famously extravagant band Kiss, to elicit a few stares. The reaction he actually received, however, was stronger than he had anticipated. “When I got to school, the security guards basically [said] ‘Here’s another one for you, Señor Simon’ [Spanish teacher and dean Manuel Simon],” Siegal said. “[Simon] led me to the men’s bathroom on the first floor, and he made me wash off the face paint.” Simon declined to comment. Principal Jie Zhang and Assistant Principal of Security, Safety, and Student Affairs Brian Moran alerted students via e-mail on Wednesday, October 30 that they were not permitted to wear masks or face paint. Next year, the administration plans to alert students of the regulations earlier. “The students were sent out an e-mail, so if they were wearing a mask or anything covering their face, they were asked to remove it,” Moran said. In previous years, the administration has taken a hands-off attitude towards costumes on Halloween. Former Principal Stanley Teitel often dressed up himself. The New York City Department of Education (DOE) has no spe-

cific policy regarding Halloween costumes, but administrators were concerned that allowing students to wear face paint or masks that obscured their faces could result in a safety issue. “There is a safety concern if a student comes in and they are not recognizable as themselves,” math teacher and dean Gary Rubinstein said. “What if some intruder put on a costume, came into the building, and hurt somebody?” Zhang also listed several reasons for the regulations regarding costumes that obscured students’ faces. “When students wear a mask, it’s an identity issue and interruption to instruction,” Zhang said. “If the painting is too scary, it can be a distraction in class.” “[It’s] the same reason we ask kids to take their hats and hoods off, so we can recognize them when they walk in the building,” said Moran. “We have to maintain the security of the building; we have to know who’s coming in.” Moran also claimed that masks and face paint could obstruct students’ vision and cause them to hurt themselves throughout the school day. The administration, as per DOE protocol, did not allow students to bring props imitating weaponry into the building. Props were taken as students came into the building and held in room 207, where students could pick them up at the end

DOE Launches Controversial Teacher Evaluation System By Jennifer Lee and In Hae Yap Freshman Emily Ma was one of many students and proctors to arrive late for the English Language Arts (ELA) assessment that was administered on Wednesday, October 30, from 8:00 to 9:30 a.m. Ma had not only forgotten all about the exam, but also claimed that she was simply too tired to take it seriously. “I didn’t want to write an essay… and everyone said [the exam] wasn’t going to count for anything anyway, so I made up my own essay question and wrote a paragraph on ‘Do you think the [Department of Education] is doing a good job educating its students’ and a haiku,” Ma said. The exam’s actual essay question prompted students to write about technological innovations and discern what made a “good invention.” The ELA assessment that Ma and all students except juniors were required to take is part of a new teacher evaluation system called “Advance.” Being implemented in New York City this school year, Advance will be utilized to grade teachers of all subjects based on two factors: Measures of Student

Features

Learning (MOSL) and Measures of Teacher Practice (MOTP). MOSL, which comprises 40 percent of teacher evaluations, is determined by the progress made by students from the beginning to the end of the school year. This progress is measured by scores on a “baseline” assessment exam, which will be compared to those from a later examination held at the end of the school year. Though the baseline assessment is uniform for the entire city, later examinations will vary as each school is required to choose its own test according to its students’ needs and abilities. Each school’s exam was chosen from a select list of tests that includes the Advanced Placement exams by a “School Local Measures Committees” of administrators and teachers who volunteered to join. The Stuyvesant committee, comprised of Chemistry teacher Samantha Daves, History teacher Lisa Greenwald, Math teacher Gary Rubinstein, and History teacher Daniel Tillman, chose the New York State English Regents Exams, which all juniors will take in June, as the metric to which the baseline results are compared in the spring. MOTP, which comprises the Spread on page 8.

Five, Six, Seven, Eight! Discover the hidden dance skills of Stuyvesant students.

other 60 percent of the teacher’s grade, is based on in-class observation, student surveys, and evaluation of teaching materials. These observations will be judged and graded according to a checklist written by education expert Charlotte Danielson in her evaluation manual, “Framework for Teaching.” “Framework for Teaching” involves not only in-class teacher-student interaction, but student-student interactions as well. Some examples utilizing Danielson’s teaching methods include students selecting another student to continue the discussion or students answering other students’ questions. At the end of the school year, each teacher will receive their ratings: Ineffective, Developing, Effective, or Highly Effective. As a result of the new ELA examinations, approximately 2,400 student essays needed to be graded. Members of the faculty reached a consensus that the English department would grade the essays on Election Day, which was Tuesday, November 5—a date usually reserved for professional develcontinued on page 2

Students wore face paint and masks to school on Halloween.

of the day. According to Moran, most students agreed to take off face paint and leave their props behind, and he did not need to confiscate students’ ID cards. Siegal agreed to remove his face paint, but felt that the policy was unevenly enforced. “It was arbitrary. Basically, some

kids had face paint on, but they went straight under the radar,” he said. “Either say everyone can wear face paint, or expressly say nobody can wear face paint.” Administrators feel that the policy is fairly lenient for continued on page 2

Fingers Snapping, the Jets and Sharks Take Stuyvesant

Justin Strauss/The Spectator

By Elena Milin and Ariel Levy

The Photo Department/ The Spectator

Administration Bans Concealing Masks and Face Paint

Newsbeat • Stuyvesant’s Model UN team attended the Brown Model United Nations Conference on Saturday, November 9. Eight of the thirty attendees won Best Delegate Awards. • Stuyvesant junior Kirit Limperis had her play “The Best Black Holes are Yellow” performed at the Angels Ajar theater gala, sponsored by the Naked Angels Theater Company, on Monday, November 4. Her play was performed alongside works of professional playwrights. • Stuyvesant received an A on its annual progress report from the Department of Education. Business Insider has also returned Stuyvesant to first place in its rankings of the New York City public schools. • Inventor Howard Wexler, creator of the Connect 4 board game, visited Social Studies teacher George Kennedy’s Wall Street Class He will be working with them on a new business venture, in coordination with Teen Entrepreneur Boot Camp.

stuyspec.com

The Stuyvesant Theater Community recently put on their Fall production of West Side Story on October 30, November 1, and November 2.

continued on page 18 Spread on page 21.

Sports Favorite Sports Movies

The Sports Department shares its favorite movies about athletics.


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Volume 104, issue 5 by The Stuyvesant Spectator - Issuu