The Black and White Vol. 56 Issue 1

Page 1

FEATURE

FEATURE

SPORTS

Confederate controversy hits close to home PAGE 15

Juuling in school: dangerous trend? PAGE 12

Alum Michael Dunn’s path to the NFL PAGE 19

Walt Whitman High School

7100 Whittier Boulevard Bethesda, MD 20817

Monday, October 9, 2017

Volume 56, Issue 1

More risks, smaller teams: MCPS football in 2017

Senior outside linebacker Cal Cibel leads the football team onto the field before their 24-14 loss to the Churchill Bulldogs Sept. 22. While the Vikes and other football programs have seen their roster size increase, many schools have seen dramatic decreases. Some schools have even been forced to drop their JV team due to concussion concerns and changing cultures within Montgomery County. For more, see pages 10-11. Photo courtesy WHITMAN FOOTBALL.

MyMCPS transition creates confusion for students, teachers by MIRA DWYER MyMCPS Classroom, an interactive online program introduced at the beginning of the school year, will serve as the primary parent, teacher and student communication platform. Staff and students have reported widespread confusion as a result of the switch. The system combines Google Classroom’s features with Edline’s gradebook to cut county costs by replacing Edline this year and, eventually, Google Classroom. One advantage over Edline and Google Classroom is that parents can view their child’s school work through their own separate portal account through myMCPS. Although myMCPS was originally conceived in 2009, it wasn’t implemented until this year. Both students and teachers complain about problems with technological glitches, grade access, log-ins and more. The delayed upload of class lists caused some confusion because teachers had limited time to explore the program while populated with actual students. “I was disappointed they didn’t upload our classes sooner,” math teacher James Kuhn said. “If I had had those eight extra days to mess with it, I may have figured it out already, but now I’m using time that I should be working with students trying to figure it out.” The county ran previews and information sessions for staff last spring and held optional training sessions over the summer. Four select staff members went to an intensive eight-hour

“boot-camp” in June to master the program. Many staff members say the in-school training hasn’t been enough. “When we had this training, the system wasn’t up and going at that point, so we couldn’t do anything real—we had to learn it all with these practice classes,” said science resource teacher Donald DeMember, who attended the eight-hour training. “There’s a big learning curve on this software—a bigger learning curve than Google Classroom.” Although the program is supposed to be connected to Google Drive, all documents— Google or Word—are posted through a link, requiring students to download the documents and then share their work with the teacher for grading. Teachers complain that they can’t share documents with their students and then edit them in real time. “It’s missing what I would call—and what many teachers are calling—the critical functionality that Google Classroom has had for years,” English teacher Ryan Derenberger said. “Google has the ability to disseminate docs in ways that are immediately accessible for the students and the teachers alike.” Some teachers said they’ll continue using Google Classroom exclusively, or until all the complications with myMCPS are sorted out. The entire English department is still using Google Classroom, but other departments vary by teacher.

“MyMCPS” continued on Page 2

Narcan is an opiate antidote Blocks actions of Opioids: - Heroin - Morphine - Oxycodon - Vicodin Photo courtesy CINCINNATI.COM

MCPS introduces Narcan by MATT PROESTEL A drug for reversing opioid overdoses is now available in the health room of every Maryland public school under a mandate passed by the state General Assembly July 1. The Heroin and Opioid Education and Community Action Act of 2017, or Start Talking Maryland Act, requires the State Board of Education to provide training to teachers and health technicians on how to administer the drug, Naloxone, commonly known as Narcan. It’s administered with a nasal spray. “I think that [the introduction of] Narcan was a wise decision,” said MCPS Board President Michael Durso, an advocate of making Narcan available in schools. “I wish we didn’t have to worry about that, but the abuse of drugs isn’t a

new phenomenon.” In the past few years, the opioid epidemic has skyrocketed to national prominence: in 1980, there were fewer than 10,000 drug overdose deaths in the United States. By the end of 2016, drug overdoses caused more than 64,000 deaths in the United States, the New York Times reported. The Act also requires governor Larry Hogan to appropriate at least $3 million to implement the bill and to provide training to medical professionals and teachers. Senior Matt Simon says having Narcan in the school as a preventative measure for a overdose is reassuring. “Just like how Whitman has AEDs around in case someone has a heart attack, Narcan is a good thing to have in case of a drug overdose,” said Simon.


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