Sherwood High School 300 Olney-Sandy Spring Road, Sandy Spring, MD 20860 www.thewarrioronline.com
Warrior 38th Year, Issue No.1
October 15, 2015
the
Inside: News: 1-5, Football: 6-7, Features: 8-9 Humor: 10-11, Spotlight: 12-13, Opinions: 14-17, Wondering Warrior: 18 Entertainment: 19-21, Sports: 22-24
American Sign Language:
Added as a Foreign Language Class pg. 3
Football:
Causing Serious Injuries at All Levels of the Game pg. 6
imgarcade.com
Social Media:
Its Effects on Our Generation pg. 12-13
Jump on the Bandwagon:
How Sherwood Students Feel About Trends pg. 18
Scream Queens: A Review of the New, Star-Filled Show
pg. 19
imdb.com
Soccer: The Ups and Downs of the Fall Season so Far pg. 23
Solar Panels Ready To Go on Roof of School by Tyler Ruth ‘16 As a part of MCPS’s ongoing efforts to become a more environmentally friendly and sustainable organization, the departments of Facilities Management and Materials Management, in partnership with SunEdison LLC, have begun installation of solar panels on Sherwood and three other schools. Installation of 2,041 solar panels onto the entirety of the roof (excluding the auxiliary gym) of Sherwood was supposed to begin on August 24 but permits have not yet been attained, delaying the project indefinitely. The project is expected to be done by mid-December. MCPS made an agreement with SunEdison LLC for the latter to be responsible for the possession, installation, operation, maintenance and financing of the photovoltaic cells that are rated for a capacity of approximately 564 kilowatts at Sherwood (total energy for all of the solar panels being installed at the four schools is 2.2 megawatts). Last year Sherwood used 2,060,074 kilowatt-hours in energy. Depending on the time of year, the solar panels at Sherwood will be able to account for 20-40 percent of those power needs. In exchange for this, MCPS has agreed to a 20-year term agreement for the solar panels to be hosted on MCPS property.
The school is expected to install 2,041 solar panels on the roof by mid-December. The project was delayed due to difficulty acquiring permits. Sherwood is one of four schools in the county implementing solar energy. SunEdison LLC was chosen for the project because of its successful installation and operation of solar panels on eight schools in 2008 and 2009. SunEdison LLC also provides MCPS with the most competitive prices as the prices have essentially been subsidized so SunEdison LLC can offer fixed prices that are lower than the competition. With this new deal in place, MCPS has an estimated annual utility cost avoidance of about $206,000.
MCPS Votes To Eliminate Countywide Final Exams by Morgan Hill ‘16 The Board of Education voted unanimously on September 8 to remove county exams for all high school students. The decision will become effective for the 2016-2017 school year, making the final exams at the end of this school year the last exams that the county will administer. Externally assessed courses, which are classes that require students to take the PARCC or HSA tests, will not be subjected to county exams for the second semester of this school year. The decision comes just weeks after the board eliminated all exams for middle school students in MCPS. In doing so, the Board hopes to shift education to a more project-based system of learning. Before making their final decision, the Board reached out to students and parents across the county for input on the proposal. “This is a decision which directly benefits the students,” said Eric Guerci, Student Mem-
ber of the Board (SMOB). “In reaching out to students, this was the option they felt was the best by an overwhelming majority.” Leadership came to agreement about the removal of exams less than two months after the idea was first proposed. It has been pointed out that the Board took little time to debate the consequences of its decision and how it would affect students in the long run. “I fear that MCPS is moving too fast on something that is going to have a deep impact on the high schools. They have in many ways ‘put the cart before the horse,’” said science teacher Glenn Miller, who is a Sherwood representative to the Montgomery County Education Association (MCEA). “The Board of Education and the MCPS leadership should have spent more time vetting this idea and talking it over with stakeholders. They should be able to show what the other assessments
see NO EXAMS, pg. 3
All the energy produced by the SunEdison panels will be bought up by MCPS and used only in accordance with MCPS buildings and services. This means that no energy will be distributed to the surrounding communities like some residential owners of solar panels choose to do in order to be paid for the outputted energy to the county. Since 2003, MCPS has reduced greenhouse gas emissions by over 70,000 MtC02e (million
metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent) from the 178,000 MtCO2e that used to be produced every year before sustainability management plans were put into place. With the new solar panels and better power management, such as using LED instead of fluorescent lights, timed lighting and virtualization of servers, MCPS hopes to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by another 15 percent by 2024. MCPS plans to install solar panels at more schools.
Late School Times Students across the school were asked how their schedules were altered by the twenty-minute change. Have the delayed start and end times affected you?
42% no 58% yes Do you get more sleep due to the later start time?
55% no 45% yes If you could select the school hours, which choice would you pick? 6% said 9:00-3:45 8% said 8:30-3:15 22% said 8:00-2:45
25% said 7:45-2:30 39% said 7:25-2:10 *109 students surveyed compiled by Samantha Schwartz ‘16