October 2013 - Regina Catholic Schools
Transcription
October 2013 - Regina Catholic Schools
Regina Catholic School Division Director’s Communiqué Issue 30, October 2013 A message from Director of Education Rob Currie “We need to keep telling the story, because if we don’t, it dies.” -Sr. Maureen Sullivan I recently attended a national conference called Catholic Education: A National Conversation. This conference focused on the vision, mission, value and sustainability of Catholic education in Canada. The repeated theme at the conference was the importance of our staff, clergy and parents working together to share the story of Jesus Christ. Without Christ at the centre of our education system, the mandate of Catholic school divisions, and the need for Catholic schools, diminishes and disappears. Saskatchewan is one of only three provinces with publicly funded Catholic education. Thus, we, as a Division, need to continue to share the story of Jesus Christ. Fr. John Weckend, the Archbishop’s Representative to Catholic Education and Pastor at St. Cecilia Parish, wrote an excellent article in his parish newsletter about the positive value of, and the need to be vigilant to protect, Catholic education. His article reminds us of the gift and privilege our Catholic education system really is. As with any gift and privilege, we need to be faith-filled witnesses and lead by example. I invite you to visit the St. Cecilia Parish website to read Fr. John’s inspiring article. This edition of the Communiqué includes more examples of “difference makers” within our Division. These great people – students, staff members, parents, clergy and community supporters – have truly made a difference by actualizing the mission of our Division. A few examples include: • Patrice Krueger, a Miller Comprehensive Catholic High School teacher, successfully lead the Terry Fox Run at her school. Students and staff focused on the “never give up” message of Terry Fox and have, similar to many of our other schools, raised funds to continue research in the fight against cancer. • St. Marguerite Bourgeoys School, St. Matthew School and St. Josaphat School all successfully hosted Oil Recycling Days that illustrated the environmental leadership and stewardship of students and staff. • Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School students and staff were selected to host the launch of the Ministry of Education’s Youth Safety Day. This dynamic school was selected because of its significant level of engagement in the provincial program. • Both the St. Francis Community School and Sacred Heart Community School staff members were commissioned at St. Cecilia Parish in September. This commissioning was an important recognition by the St. Cecilia Parish of the quality work done by the staff of these two schools. • Mr. Wendelin Herle, who recently passed away, served as Director of Education and Board Trustee for our Division in the 1970’s and early 1980’s. Mr. Herle was committed to Catholic education and today we appreciate the legacy of his faith-filled servant leadership at the local, provincial and national levels. We are encouraged that our student enrolment continues to grow. We now have approximately 10,500 students, a fact that demonstrates the need for a Prekindergarten to Grade 12 Catholic education system in Regina and an appreciation for the good work that we do. Once again, we accept the responsibility and trust from our parents to prepare their children for tomorrow’s world. I know our staff members respect this incredible trust from our parents and look to make a difference in the lives of their students. I am proud of our over 1,100 employees who daily dedicate themselves to give for the benefit of our students. As we prepare for Thanksgiving, I invite you to consider your many blessings and to offer a prayer of thanks. Personally, I am thankful for our school division personnel and faith community for the tireless work to ensure Catholic education remains a reality in the City of Regina. God bless, Employee 15 & 25 year awards Demonstrating Christ-Like Behaviour 15 Years Congratulations to our 15 year award recipients: Marian Bachman, St. Luke School Terri Bernard, St. Gabriel School Stephanie Casper, Catholic Education Centre Michael Chase, Catholic Education Centre Dwayne Ell, Miller Catholic High School Marilyn Fisher, St. Michael Community School Wendy Gervais, St. Angela Merici School Susan Kirton, St. Catherine Community School Maxine Klein, Holy Rosary Community School Garrett Kot, LeBoldus Catholic High School Michaela Kraft, St. Mary School Yvonne Kyba, St. Angela Merici School Lydell Lang, Miller Catholic High School Jo-Anne Lewis, Riffel Catholic High School Janet Merk, St. Dominic Savio School Rene Montenegro, Sacred Heart Community School Joseph Parisone, Maintenance Shop Cindy Patenaude, Miller Catholic High School Markus Rubrecht, St. Catherine Community School Alex Sarvari, Deshaye Catholic School Shelley Scheibel, Sacred Heart Community School Yvonne Sirdar, St. Joan School Kenneth Stephen, St. Luke School Brigette Steranko, Deshaye Catholic School Annette Vogelsang, Sacred Heart Community School 25 Years Congratulations to our 25 year award recipients: Del Augustine, on leave Jean Dufresne, on secondment Robert Faris, Miller Catholic High School Shauna Hanus, O’Neill Catholic High School David Ripplinger, Riffel Catholic High School Patricia Schiissler, St. Theresa School Diane Seiferling, O’Neill Catholic High School Congratulations and thank you to all the 15 and 25 year staff. We appreciate all you bring to the Regina Catholic School Division! The awards were presented to the employees at the Opening Mass at the Resurrection Parish. Employees who have worked with the Division for fifteen years were given a small Wilf Perreault print and those who have been with us for twenty-five years were given a large Perreault print. LeBoldus students giving back Demonstrating Christ-Like Behaviour A group of students from Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School helped raise money for Ovarian Cancer Research by participating in the Ovarian Cancer Walk held on Sunday, September 8, 2013 - another great example of our students getting involved in the community! Opening Mass Demonstrating Christ-Like Behaviour The Opening Mass for all the staff of the Regina Catholic School Division was held at the new Resurrection Parish on August 29. The celebration of staff coming together in their faith to begin a new school year focused on the value of Catholic education and the privilege of being able to have a publicly-funded Catholic education system. The mass, which has traditionally been held at the Holy Rosary Cathedral, was held for the first time at a different parish due to the renovations being done at the Cathedral to honour their 100th year anniversary. Everyone who attended the mass received a blessed Rosary from the greeters to honour our Holy Mother, patron saint of the Cathedral. It was a beautiful gathering for all. Vicky Bonnell, the School Board Chair, bringing greetings to the staff at the Opening Mass. The Catholic School Division staff choir singing at the Opening Mass. O’Neill football players honoured Improving Student Outcomes This summer, Yol Piok and David Singer, two students of Archbishop M. C. O’Neill Catholic High School, made the Team Saskatchewan Provincial Under 18 Football Team. With that team, they competed for a National Championship at the Football Canada Cup Tournament in Moncton, New Brunswick in July. The Saskatchewan team came in fourth at this competition, and Yol Piok was named a tournament allstar player. Yol Piok A proud student moment Demonstrating Christ-Like Behaviour Hakim Ocaya, a student at Archbishop M. C. O’Neill Catholic High School, surprised a stranger with a good deed. She was working at a Rider football game with the O’Neill Travel Group to earn money for a European trip in April when a lady came to the counter and asked to talk to the supervisor. The lady pointed to Hakim and mentioned that she had dropped a $20 bill and Hakim had chased her down to the bleachers to return it to her. She was grateful and very impressed with the honour and the character of all the student volunteers. Well done, Hakim. Out of the players at this tournament, a roster was selected to represent Canada, as part of the Under 18 national team, at a week-long event in Texas in February. Impressively, both Yol Piok and David Singer were chosen for the Team Canada roster. Only six players from Saskatchewan were selected to this roster, two of which are from O’Neill! As part of Team Canada, these players have an opportunity to be selected for the Football World Junior Championship team. David Singer Saskatchewan Science Centre corporate membership Opportunities through Partnerships The Regina Catholic School Division has once again partnered with the Saskatchewan Science Centre, a non-profit, non-governmental organization with a mission to ignite scientific curiosity and innovation in Saskatchewan communities through interactive, dynamic and engaging opportunities. We have established a Corporate membership that allows our employees to purchase family memberships at 15% discount for the year. LeBoldus students go global Improving Student Outcomes A group of twelve students from Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School joined students from schools in Ontario, Alberta, and New Brunswick in a journey to Edinburgh, Scotland this summer. There, the students participated in an eight day working drama exertion. They were an elite group of students who were chosen to perform two one-act plays at Edinburgh’s Fringe Festival. Joan Lichtenwald, an English teacher at LeBoldus, Bernadette Gavin, and Dan McDonald worked with the students all year to prepare. The two plays that were chosen were “A Play with Words,” a satirical play, and “Blind Love,” a play about a boy meeting a girl and the lifelong experience of relationships. The students also stopped in London at Globe Theatre for a workshop and to see a play. In Edinburgh, they stayed at the Edinburgh University residence and performed their plays four times. They also attended workshops and enjoyed the opportunity to see other plays at the festival. The Edinburgh Fringe Festival is the oldest and largest festival of its kind in the world. The trip was a unique and incredible opportunity for the students as only about 50 students in North America are invited to participate in the festival. Youth Safety Education Day Opportunities through Partnerships Representatives from the Regina Catholic School Division met with leaders of the Service and Hospitality Safety Association of Saskatchewan at Dr. Martin LeBoldus Catholic High School to hand out toques and promote Youth Safety Education Day on Tuesday, September 10. LeBoldus has enjoyed a long-time partnership with the SHSA. Pictured here on “Youth Safety Awareness Day” are Michele Braun, Rob Currie, Jim Bence (SHSA Director), Richard Donnelly and Lawrence Biegler. LeBoldus students received toques (as modelled in the photo) and t-shirts. A new course introduced this year deals with safety training in the services and mining sectors. This offers students valuable work experience and safety training certificates that they can use as graduates in the workplace. Shout Out for Innovations Opportunities through Partnerships Improving Student Outcomes Erin Gee, a graduate of Archbishop M. C. O’Neill Catholic High School and former student at École St. Mary, is now living and working in Montreal, Quebec. Erin is renowned for her unique adaption of mechanical devices in creating music based on raw emotions. Erin earned a bachelor’s degree in Music Education and then in Fine Arts at the University of Regina. The following text is an excerpt of an article written about Erin by Liz Crompton from the MARCS Institute at the University of Western Sydney. What does anger sound like? What Music does sorrow imply? Human emotions is being given a new sound track thanks to an exciting new collaboration between art and neuroscience. Erin Gee, a Concordia University researcher, is taking feelings to a new level by tapping directly into the human brain, delivering music powered purely by the human body and its emotions. Using data collected from physiological displays of emotion, Gee created a software and, hardware system that incorporates a set of experimental musical instruments that performs a symphony of sentiments. For example, Gee has orange images on her black laptop screen that look something like a pair of grinning Halloween Jack-o’-lanterns. They are, in fact, computer-generated images of larynxes. Gee has rigged a microphone so that when a person speaks or sings or shouts - the larynxes respond in sync. You can literally watch what you say. She is intrigued by the contrasts: the sleek high-tech devices that look ever more futuristic versus the fleshiness of the larynx. Her research could have significant therapeutic benefits for those who have difficulty expressing emotion. Individuals with autism disorders, for example, often struggle to understand the emotions of others. Gee’s robotic technology could be used to teach them how to identify feelings by externalizing and exaggerating them into such forms as music. Having developed strong research connections in Australia around the topic of human bodies and electronic voices, Gee is pursuing a Master’s of Fine Arts in Studio Arts under the guidance of neurophysiologist Vaughan Macefield at the University of Sydney. She will give her robots, which she builds herself, their debut during a world premiere in Montreal this fall through chamber music organization Innovations en Concert. This research was funded in part by Concordia International, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, and the MARCS Institute of the University of Western Sydney, with support of the Conseil des arts de Montréal. The Thinking Head project is funded by the Australian Research and National Health and Medical Research Council. She will defend her thesis in February. The city of Montreal has given her $16,000 to show this work first in Montreal. She has invested a lot of this into her costs while working on the research and robots. Each of the robots cost approximately $500.00 for her to make everything herself. Gee is a founding member of Holophon, an audio curatorial collective based out of Saskatchewan established in 2008 and she has also received several awards from the Saskatchewan Arts Board, and the Canada Council for the Arts. Her interactive audio installation Lucide (2010), was shown at Regina’s Neutral Ground Contemporary Art Forum, featuring a line of five oversized eyeballs. Triggered by a light sensor in its iris, each eyeball activated a different voice in a choir. By opening and closing the handcrafted eyeballs, gallery-goers, could control the number of voices singing a composition. Canoeing program Improving Student Outcomes This year, fifteen of our Division schools took advantage of the fine weather by participating in the canoeing program in September. Staff and students from St. Augustine Community School can be seen in the photo on the left, and those from St. Michael Community School can be seen in the photo to the right. A proud Catholic moment Demonstrating Christ-Like Behaviour St. Cecilia Parish invited the staff of both Sacred Heart Community School and St. Francis Community School the parish’s 10:00 am Mass on Sunday, September 22. During Mass, Father John Weckend called the school staff to the front during mass and commissioned them, complete with a special blessing given by the whole congregation. After the blessing the congregation clapped for the staff, demonstrating their confidence in the good work that they do. The staff was then invited downstairs for a free Pancake breakfast hosted by the Knights of Columbus and Parish. Starla Grebinksi, the Principal of Sacred Heart Community School, was deeply touched by St. Cecilia Parish. You can read all about the commissioning in the St. Cecilia September newsletter at http://www.stcecregina. com/Bulletin/2013/SeptemberNewsletter.pdf. An excerpt of the blessing given at St. Cecilia Parish: Lord Jesus, light of the world and saviour of all, You have been sent by our heavenly Father to be our teacher, our Lord and our brother. Give your special blessings to those who dedicate their lives as teachers. Guide them in their studies and in their classes, and help them to teach young and old by their word and their example. Lord Jesus, hear our prayer, for you are our Lord for ever and ever. Amen. PAA and partnerships Opportunities through Partnerships Students from Miller and LeBoldus toured Partner Technologies Inc. (PTI) on October 1. PTI is a local company that builds transformers and ships them all over the world. In the photo, students are shown with Richard Donnelly, PAA/Partnerships Consultant, and George Partyka Jr., a LeBoldus graduate who is now a manager of sales for this very successful high-technological company. If you know of a business that might benefit from connecting with Regina Catholic students, please contact Richard Donnelly at 306-791-7319. High School Cross-Country Improving Student Outcomes Riffel’s Sarah Slusar (in front in the picture) placed first at the Regina High Schools Athletic Association cross-country meet. She won all 16 of her races during four years of competing in RHSAA meets. LeBoldus runners also won two events. Kaden Nilson won the Midget Boys, and Matt Johnson won the Senior Boys. Brynn Latimer, also from LeBoldus, finished second in the Senior Girls event. Rachel Evans of O’Neill won the Midget Girls and Emanwil Ginawi of Miller won the Junior Boys. Well done, athletes! A note from Chinook School Division Opportunities through Partnerships Representatives from the Chinook School Division toured the PAA classrooms at Miller Comprehensive Catholic High School. They were so impressed with the facilities and the staff, they sent the following letter: On behalf of the Chinook School Division, we want to thank you and your staff for their hospitality, collegiality and their willingness to showcase their facility and equipment at Miller Comprehensive Catholic High School. It was very clear that Jamie Bresciani, Blair Bachelu and Richard Donnelly all have a tremendous amount of pride for the school’s programs and the opportunities they offer students. Thank you - we had a great visit! Kyle McIntyre, Deputy Director, Chinook SD 211. The Game’s Afoot The Regina Little Theatre 2013-14 season opened with The Game’s Afoot - a comedy that draws from Sherlock Holmes mysteries. The play, written by Ken Ludwig, won the award for best play at 2012 Mystery writers of America Edgar Allen Poe Awards. Irene Paul, the Executive Assistant for Student Services, played Darla Chase in the play, a character who is stabbed during a Christmas celebration at Sherlock’s Connecticut Mansion.