Issue 6

Page 1

9

Arts gives you a glimpse of one of AHS’s newest student bands

10-11

InDepth investigates the pressure put on students by helicopter parents

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Weekend looks into the crystal ball of local psychics

International brings you its take on gender roles around the world

ANNANDALE HIGH SCHOOL

the VOLUME #56 ISSUE 6

20

12

4700 Medford Dr. Annandale, VA 22003

Informiing the Atoms siince 1954 4

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 19, 2011

(703) 642-4229

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Proposed law stops electronic communication Student/teacher e-mails, text messages, raise concern BY REBECCA MALZAHN News Editor

AJ MCCAFFERTY

Boys Varsity Basketball Record: 8-4

According to the Virginia Board of Education, being Facebook friends with students may soon become illegal for teachers and faculty. The board is in the midst of deciding whether electronic communications between students and teachers should be considered acceptable or not. Policies are currently in the process of being drafted, and will soon be voted on, to determine how school staff should interact with consideration to a professional code of conduct. The policy at stake would prohibit oneon-one electronic communications between school staff and students through personal online social-networking sites, such as Skype, Facebook, Twitter and by email. “I’m an English teacher, so a lot of times “Communications” continues on page 4

IB Night for parents and students approaching IB Night will be held on Feb. 8 in Clausen Hall. IB Coordinator Shirley Campbell will address parents about the requirements for the diploma and other opportunities in the program.

Spring musical auditions to be held Students have the opportunity to audition for the spring play, which continue today and tomorrow. Auditions will be held in the Black Box and will last from 2:15 until around 4:00. Students will perform a one minute reading and a song of their choice. Call backs will be announced after the initial auditions. The actual play is yet to be determined.

Leadership Changes

Principal John Ponton prepares to pie teachers at Battle of the Classes on Jan. 14. He, along with several other adminstrative officials, recently announced his retirement.

Principal and director of student services both set to retire in June BY ANNIE CURRAN News Editor Principal John Ponton and Director of Student Services Steven Sengstack both announced their retirement after students and faculty returned from winter break. Though it is not yet half way through the year, early announcements such as these are commonplace so that the school can have adequate time to hire and train replacements. Ponton has been at AHS for six years and Sengstack has been here for 17 years. “[Ponton] has given a sense of purpose and organization to this school, without which AHS would not be the excellent place it has become,” social studies teacher John Hawes said. “Mr. Sengstack has enormous wisdom, sensitivity and the ability to solve even the most complex problems.”

Since both announcements are fairly recent, the process of interviewing and hiring the replacements is still in its earliest stage. The next principal will most likely be hired by May 1 after the long process involving input from faculty, parents and selected students. Dan Parris, Superintendent of Cluster 3, will be in charge of hiring Ponton’s replacement. “He wants the new principal to be announced by May 1 because he wants me to work with whomever is selected,” Ponton said. The process is still being hammered out by Parris and will hit the ground running sometime in the beginning of the second semester. Generally, the process involves meetings with the faculty, students and community and interviews with an official selection committee.

AJ MCAFFERTY

Counselors will begin to talk to juniors, sophomores and freshmen about their class opportunities for next school year. Orientations for juniors will be on Jan. 24 and 25, Jan. 26 and 27 for sophomores and Feb. 2 and 3 for freshmen.

AJ MCCAFFERTY

Course orientations to begin for underclassmen

Juniors Abigail Fleming and Kayla Meadows rehearse before Broadway Desserts.

Chorus presents quite a dessert Annual event showcases various Broadway tunes BY CAROLA ROJAS Staff Writer Immediately after Winter Break, the AHS Choral Department began to prepare in earnest for their biggest event of the year: Broadway Desserts. The event, held on Jan. 16 and 17, provided more than just cheesecake and brownies to the audience; it gave everyone involved a glimpse into various Broadway shows and raised funds for several upcoming chorus trips. Tickets for Broadway Desserts, which took place in the Fine Arts building of George Mason University, cost $10 for the matinee and $20 for the evening performance. While this year’s sales numbers

“Retiring” continues on page 5

“Desserts” continues on page 5

Panel proposes solutions to overcrowding Regional planning study explores various boundary and non-boundary options

Visit www.thea-blast.org for a look at the highs and lows experienced by AHS students during the year 2010.

Change has been a long time coming for AHS – its hallways have been crowded for years, new trailers appear each fall and lunch lines seem longer than ever. There is no question that the school is overcrowded, but what to do about it is an entirely different matter. The middle and high school subcommittee of the Annandale Regional Planning Study (ARPS), a group charged by the School Board in April 2010 with exploring potential overcrowding relief AHS PTSA President and Annandale Regional Planning Study commitmeasures, believes it has come up with a solution. tee member Emily Slough addresses the community at a recent meeting regarding the ARPS’s report.

EMILY FRUCHTERMAN

BY EMILY FRUCHTERMAN Co-Editor in Chief

In its final report, presented to the School Board on Jan. 10, the committee examined 12 different scenarios, which range from changing boundaries to changing grade configurations. “What we really have are two choices,” AHS PTSA President and Chair of the Enrollment and Capacity subcommittee of the ARPS Emily Slough said. “We could do a boundary change or we could find a more creative way to keep the Annandale community together.” The non-boundary options focus primarily on using all of the space available in the AHS pyramid. In one scenario, Holmes Middle School, which currently holds grades 6, 7 and 8, would be converted into a grades 6 and 7 middle school, while Poe Middle School would “Overcrowding” continues on page 5


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