January 2011 Newsletter
Transcription
January 2011 Newsletter
SOUTH EAST CORNERSTONE SCHOOL DIVISION NO. 209 r e n r o c s i h t And from Volume 2, issue 5 January 2011 S t u d e n t s a r r e s t e d at S p ru c e R i d g e f o r o u t s ta n d i n g , p o s i t i v e b e h av i o u r Mary Parker and a few of her friends were working on decorations for a dance at Spruce Ridge School in Estevan when a squad of COPS walked into the room and arrested her—for outstanding behaviour. “Our school is kind of weird anyway, so I didn't think much of it,” the Grade 8 student said, “but it was kind of cool.” Parker was one of five students who was recognized recently by the COPS program. COPS, or Catching Outstanding Positive Students, is made up of a group of staff members who dress up as police officers and about once a month, recognize students who have been caught doing something very nice for others or who demonstrate some act of kindness or positive behaviour that goes well beyond the regular expectations. Parker was recognized for helping her peers in many areas, including teaching a dance for an assembly. “It’s cool they’re doing that because there are so many things people are doing in our school that are really good, and it is good that people are getting recognize for it,” said Parker. “I feel really good about (being recognized). Sometimes people don’t see that I try to help people and it’s good to get recognized. It feels good.” COPS is based on a similar initiative at the Estevan Comprehensive School called DORKS, or Dynamic Organization Recognizing Kids’ Success, explained Leslie Chapman, Students Dana Wilbraham and Mary Parker a Learning Support teacher involved in the COPS program. Some Spruce Ridge teachers heard about DORKS during a session at last year’s teacher’s convention and wanted to try something similar starting this year. With many students doing positive things at the elementary school, COPS was just one of the ways teachers could recognize that behaviour. Teachers nominate students when they see them doing something positive. When a large enough group has been nominated, the officers, accompanied by music, go and give the students their awards. Students are given a certificate, get their picture taken with the officers, receive a treat and have a letter sent home thanking the student for their contributions to Spruce Ridge. “It’s a quick thing we do that students see, that we’re recognizing student behaviour. It doesn’t take too long to do so we’re not taking away from their academic time,” Chapman said. “It’s to help with our school community and our school spirit. I think it is a very good thing.” With a student population of 420, it won’t be hard to find a student to recognize, Chapman added. Instead, it will fall upon the teachers to find the appropriate student to nominate for the initiative. “I think people will try and do better things so they can get arrested,” Parker said. “People will try to be better students. (COPS will make the school better) because then there won’t be as much bullying or harassment.” D O R K S c e l e b r at e s t u d e n t ac h i e v e m e n t DORKS, or Dynamic Organization Recognizing Kids’ Success, is a group that was formed at the Estevan Comprehensive School (ECS) to celebrate the achievements of ECS students. These achievements range from academic to extracurricular, to good deeds in the school in community. DORKS is a group of positive-minded teachers who felt the need to spread positive energy throughout their school. Periodically throughout the school year, the group generates a list of students based on recommendations from other staff members. These students are then recognized in an event known around the school as a “DORKing.” The DORKS don capes and masks and burst into each student’s classroom to their theme song, “Mission Impossible.” Once the student is located in the room, the DORKS introduce themselves, the student accomplishment is explained to the class and the student is presented with a chocolate bar or candy that represents their achievement, such as a Mars bar for being “out of this world.” The DORKS take a picture with the student, which is then used to generate a certificate that details his or her accomplishment. The certificate is mailed home to the student’s parents. The DORKS program is in its sixth year at ECS. Jan. 1— Happy New Year! Jan. 6— Welcome back to school Jan. 20— Assessment Day Jan. 27— Family Literacy Day Feb. 7-11— French Second Language Education Week PAGE 2 AND FROM THIS CORNER E s t e va n s t u d e n t s c o n t r i bu t e m u s i c a l ly at G r e y c u p Band students in Estevan had the opportunity to provide some entertainment at the Grey Cup in Edmonton. On Nov. 26, the Estevan Junior Marching Band, under the direction of Shauna Meek, left on their trip to Edmonton to participate in the 2010 Grey Cup parade. Band members consisted of students from all schools in Estevan. Stacy Grunert also joined the Estevan group with her band students from Lampman, Macoun and Bienfait. Seventy students in total made up the marching band, which consisted of band students and flag carriers. Doug Stallard worked with students on their marching and Brenda Blackburn taught the flaggers their routine. Other staff members and parent chap- erones also carried various flags from Saskatchewan. Ten other bands from across Canada were also in the parade, but only two were from Saskatchewan. they started. They were so focused and knew what they had to do and did it. “They played amazingly well and kept good steps.” To ensure they performed flawlessly, the band practiced once a week for 10 weeks. The one song the group played was “Louie Louie,” which Meek said with a laugh they played probably 15 times as they walked the streets of downtown Edmonton. “It was pretty cool,” Meek said. Almost the entire crowd was made up of Rider fans, and as the students walked by, they were cheered on by the crowd. “The kids were very excited and nervous,” she added. “They weren’t sure what to expect. You could see it when As for the overall trip, “it was quick,” Meek added. They got to Edmonton Friday night, performed Saturday afternoon, left and made it to Warman Saturday night and got back home Sunday, in time to watch the game. To see the group perform, visit the division website for a video. G o “ G r e e n ” b y t u r n i n g o f f yo u r e n g i n e w h i l e wa i t i n g The Ministry of Environment invites everyone to reduce vehicle idling by going green and supporting antiidling initiatives in the province. The Government of Saskatchewan is working hard to ensure environmental education, conservation and sustainability are taught in schools as part of the curriculum. Further, it is important that Saskatchewan’s environmental and natural resources are protected to maintain a high level of environmental quality, ensure sustainable development and provide economic and social benefits for all. Saskatchewan has the highest per capita greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions rate in Canada. GHGs are released when we use energy derived from fossil fuels. We release GHGs into the atmosphere when we use coal to produce electricity, oil and natural gas to heat homes and gasoline and diesel to run vehicles. One study found more than onethird of parents idle their vehicles while waiting to pick up their children from school. A vehicle idling for 10 minutes per day uses more than 100 litres of gasoline per year, releasing GHGs and other harmful emissions. By turning engines off at schools, parents can be part of the solution and experience substantial financial savings as well. For free resources and more info, visit www.environment.gov.sk.ca/ school_idle_free. Fa m i ly L i t e r ac y day e n c o u r ag e s p l ay i n g g a m e s Family Literacy Day takes place annually on January 27 to celebrate adults and children reading and learning together. It also encourages Canadians to spend at least 15 minutes enjoying a learning activity as a family every day. In Thursday, Jan. 27, 2011, Canadians will Play for Literacy! Playing games that encourage literacy and numeracy—such as board games, card games and word games—is a great way for parents and children to practice their literacy skills and have fun. On Jan. 27, grab your family and play at home, attend a local event or host an event in your community. Playing is a great literacy activity for families because it creates a strong family bond, promotes language comprehension and improves reading skills. Literacy-enriched play settings can result in at least short-team gains in young children’s knowledge about the functions of writing, ability to recognize play-related print and use of comprehension strate- gies such as self-checking and selfcorrection. Research suggests that story reading, providing materials for scribbling and ‘writing” in pretend play, and participating in extended conversations, are among the activities that promote emergent literacy skills. For more information about Family Literacy Day, visit http://abclifeliteracy.ca/en/ family-literacy-day, where you can also find helpful resources. VOLUME 2, ISSUE 5 PAGE 3 January Greetings from the Board Chair Happy New Year from the Board of Education! We are looking forward to working with all of you in 2011. At the close of 2010, we celebrate the “almost” completion of the new Oxbow Prairie Horizons K-12 school, the introduction of a new assessment and reporting system to better align with the Ministry’s outcome-based curriculum, the many successes of our students and staff who have won numerous awards and competitions, and all the day-today achievements of students and staff which often go unnoticed. The Board will continue to work in 2011 with its partners to enhance communications and understanding of the new assessment and reporting system, and will continue to build relationships to ease the implementation of everchanging demands. The Board also sends our sympathies to those of you who have lost students, colleagues and friends of your schools this past year. January is an appropriate time for the Board to reflect on the past year’s successes and challenges and a time to move strategically forward. The Board will be reviewing its policies in January and making any changes necessary to better reflect the current governance reality. We will also be conducting our annual Board/Director evaluation. On Monday, Jan. 17 at 7 p.m. in Wapella, the Board will host its final meeting on responses to Conversations with the Board. We appreciate staff from that area attending this meeting to dialogue with us. Please note that our annual meeting date has been changed to Thursday, Feb. 17 at 1:30 p.m. at the division office. We would welcome your attendance at that meeting as we will be unveiling our three-year education plan. I have spoken to a number of staff from many areas in our school division who have wonderful stories to tell about activities happening in your schools. Please share those with everyone by sending your stories to Jason Antonio to include in the upcoming newsletters. Thank you! Carol Flynn, Board Chair S p o rt s s p o rt s s p o rt s s p o rt s s p o rt s s p o rt s s p o rt s We are always looking for information on how teams or individuals did during season-end championships. If your team or athlete won a medal during a district, regional or provincial tournament, we want to hear about it! If we missed your team, let us know and we’ll include the info in the next newsletter. Volleyball Redvers Senior Boys won bronze at 3A Provincials in Maidstone. Oxbow Senior Boys won silver at 4A Provincials in La Ronge. Manor Junior Boys won first at Districts in Fillmore. Gladmar Junior Boys placed second at Districts in Fillmore. Redvers Senior Boys Manor Junior Boys Gladmar Junior Boys Pa rt i c i pat e i n 1 5 t h y e a r o f S a s k . Yo u t h h e r i tag e fa i r The Saskatchewan Youth Heritage Fair Association is celebrating its 15th year of honouring Canadian heritage, and the time to register your school for this year’s Heritage Fair is fast approaching. The Association’s website, www.saskyouthheritagefair.com, provides resources and related documents to help educators integrate Heritage Fair projects into the Grades 4-9 Saskatchewan Curriculum. The website also provides information on how to participate in the next Fair. the commitment to promote the Historica Fairs Program in the province. Wednesday, Jan. 15 is when all Intent to Participate Forms are due. Registration forms for the Class/School/Division Fair are due Tuesday, March 15. The Program is an education initiative designed to increase awareness and interest in Canadian history. Students in Grades 4-9 are encouraged to investigate a heritage project, person or seek out the living history surrounding them. Students can display their projects threedimensionally, in creative writing and performance or through multi-media. “Giving our Past a Future” is the theme of the Historica Fairs Program, which was initiated in 1993. In the spring of 2000, the Saskatchewan Youth Heritage Fair Association was established, with PAGE 4 AND FROM THIS CORNER F ro m Va n c o u v e r to L a m p m a n, d r a m a t e ac h e r g i v e s t h e g i f t o f m a j o r l i v e t h e at r e to ru r a l s t u d e n t s From Vancouver to Banff to Regina, Christine Branyik-Thornton has been involved in numerous live theatre productions over the years and worked with many wellknown theatre players. For 12 of the past 15 years, BranyikThornton has been using those theatre skills to direct major live theatre productions at Lampman School. The quality and professionalism of her productions attract students from Stoughton, Carlyle, Arcola, Oxbow and Alameda. Over the years, the school has won 28 trophy awards and many certificate awards. In 2009 the school won a silver medal at the provincial level of high school theatre. This year’s drama producSeussical, tion, takes place on Friday, Jan. 21 and Saturday, Jan. 22. The production combines eight Dr. Seuss stories into a musical and weaves them together around the Dr. Seuss story Horton Hears A Who. Forty students from all six schools will be participating in the play. “I love to work with students because they’re fearless. They’ll try anything. They’re willing to go out on a limb and learn new things. And it’s that energy that I love,” she explained. “I have worked with adults. I worked in professional theatre. That was great too, but I always come back to teenagers because I just really enjoy working with them. I like their energy ... (and) their commitment.” Although no one else in her family worked on stage, Branyik-Thornton was drawn to the theatre because she liked to sing. Her first involvement in live productions was in elementary school, where two science teachers wrote musicals specifically for the students’ voices and interests. Those teachers were the impetus for her involvement in theatre, she said. From elementary school to high school to university, Branyik-Thornton stayed involved in live productions. Her passion for theatre led her to pursue a Bachelor of Fine Arts in theatre production and design from the University of Victoria, a Masters Certification (not the same as a Masters degree) from the Banff Centre of Fine Arts and a Bachelor of Education in arts education from the University of Regina. Branyik-Thornton worked at a number of famous theatre locations, including the Vancouver Playhouse, Vancouver Firehall Arts Centre, Vancouver Opera, Salisbury Playhouse in Victoria, The Banff Centre in Alberta and the Regina Globe Theatre. Putting on live theatre productions for six schools is a great feeling, BranyikThornton said, but it’s even better for her drama students. They are able to gather with other students who share the same interests, which can provide more motivation and allow them to draw energy from other students while on stage. “Theatre is a team and collaborative artwork,” she added. “You need to have new people to keep it fresh.” This will be the first year Lampman is doing a full-fledged kids’ show, compared to previous years. Last year the drama production was Little Shop of Horrors, which featured four versions of a man-eating plant. Branyik -Thornton said with a laugh their motivation now is how they can top last year’s production. But when they have a walking and talking 80-pound plant on stage, “it’s kind of hard to top that.” Branyik-Thornton receives plenty of help for her productions, from teachers and students in school to community members. Even with the help, though, it can still be tiring as the director. “It’s a full-time job. You (would) have a fulltime job directing the show if you were to do this as a career. And when we do our shows we try to do them as professionally as we can. Except I have another full-time job teaching,” said Branyik-Thornton. “So it’s tiring, but yes, it’s a good tiring. But I feel that way about teaching anyway, so it’s not really a job as far as I have to make myself go to work.” Branyik-Thornton’s work extends onto the Internet as well. She is the creator and owner of the largest drama teacher egroup currently on the ‘Net. There are over 700 drama teachers from all over the world who represent the largest cross-section of theatre educators online. The e-group has been recognized as one of the top sources for drama educators by PBS online, Education at the Getty Center and American Alliance of Theatre Educators. T i p s to s u b m i t i n t e r e s t i n g s to r i e s , g r e at p i c t u r e s Think you have a story you want to submit but aren’t sure how to put it together? Have a picture to share but don’t know how to make it look good? Here are a few tips to get the best results when submitting one or both. Story Writing 101 Answer the five Ws: Who, What, Where, When and Why. And if it explains your story more, also answer How. Those are the basic building blocks of a story. Keep your paragraphs short. Large masses of text are hard to read. Picture Taking 101 If necessary, use the flash! Get up close to your subject. Faces are good. Don’t shoot facing into the sun. Your subject will be in shadows. When e-mailing your pictures, send them as large as you can. If your computer asks you to shrink the picture, don’t. Bigger is better. Get to know your camera. Changing some of the settings can make your pictures look better. Less posed, more natural shots. And there you have it. If you follow some of these suggestions, you too can write and take pictures like a pro. SOUTH EAST CORNERSTONE SCHOOL DIVISION NO. 209 South East Cornerstone School Division No. 209 serves over 8,000 students in 38 schools across southeast Saskatchewan. 80A-18th Street Northeast Weyburn, Sask. S4H 2W4 Stretching from Ogema in the west, to Maryfield in the east, Phone: (306) 848-4795 Fax: (306) 848-4747 E-mail: jason.antonio@cornerstonesd.ca covers nearly 31,000 square kilometres. With a mission of pro- to Estevan in the south, to Rocanville in the north, SECSD viding passionate and committed leadership and a vision to ensure success for all students, South East Cornerstone School Division is a leader in instructing students and showcasing We’re on the web! cornerstonesd.ca and utilizing technology to enhance education in all schools. C a r ly l e E l e m e n ta ry f u n d r a i s e r s e n d s c i t i z e n s to ja i l SMART Boards will soon be a permanent fixture in every classroom at Carlyle Elementary School (CES), after a recent community fundraiser raised more than $16,000. CES’s School Community Council held a Jail ‘n’ Bail fundraiser on Oct. 29 for the very first time, with the goal of raising at least $5,000 to purchase a SMART Board for all 12 classrooms in the building. Previously, there school had only one portable Board and projector for the whole school. Whenever it is needed, it is moved from place to place. The community responded “very well” to the initiative, said principal Shelley Sargent. The school’s SCC would have been happy raising the original goal, but to receive over $16,000 “exceeded their expectations and hopes.” “And because the whole community got behind it, that’s what made it a huge success,” she added. “When you see everybody pull together to make it a huge success,” it’s very encouraging. Without the community’s support, the fundraiser might not have gone as well. Twenty-eight people were “arrested” by the local RCMP during the course of the event, with 27 serving time in the prison. The bail, set by the person who took out the warrant against the accused, ranged from $200 to $400. Of the 28 “criminals” in jail, two managed to raise $2,500 each for a quick $5,000. Having a SMART Board provides different opportunities for students to learn in the classroom, Sargent explained. It reaches all types of learners, such as those who learn visually or by touch. The biggest thing about the equipment is it is hands-on and allows students to interact with their work, as opposed to having a teacher stand up at the front of the classroom all the time, she continued. Carlyle Elementary is also looking at putting up dual touch screens so two students can be up at the front working. During the previous school year, the school purchased five projectors and the mounting hardware for the SMART Boards, in expectation of eventually having the classroom equipment. In the new year, the goal is to purchase five more projectors for the coming SMART Boards. “To me, (the fundraiser) was a huge success,” Sargent added. “To be able to raise that much money in one day, it was a huge benefit for our students and that’s what the fundraiser was for.”