Area Students Recognized at FA Science Fair

The 28th annual Falmouth Academy Science Fair, featuring 165 student projects and a judging panel of nearly 100 scientists, engineers, physicians, researchers and other experts – several of them Falmouth Academy alumni – was held at the school on February 18.

The fair was the culmination of five months of independent research on the part of every Falmouth Academy student in grades 7-11, who were supported and guided in their work by teachers and mentors from the local scientific community.

Organizations represented on the judging panel included Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole Research Center, NOAA, Sea Education Association, the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Geological Survey, Cape Cod Healthcare, Visiting Nurses Association, and Mass. Audubon. The judging panel also included faculty from major research universities such as Harvard, MIT, Rochester Institute of Technology, Tufts, the University of Chicago, the University of Pennsylvania, and Yale. Other judges represented area schools and colleges, municipal government and businesses.

Upper School Awards

Second Place: Alissya Silva, grade 10, of Marion, “Endotoxin Content of Tap Water, Filtered Water and Different Bottled Water Brands.”

Third Place: Eliza Van Voorhis, grade 11, of Mattapoisett, “A Study on Potential Bacteria Found in Fast Food Restaurant Ice.”

Middle School Awards

Second Place: Charles Tomlinson, grade 8, of Marion “The Most Effective Ski Wax on Ice.”

Fourth Place: Eleanor Beams, grade 7, of Mattapoisett, “The Effect of Fertilizer on the Chlorophyll Content of Pond Water.”

Fifth Place: Emma Keeler, grade 9, of Rochester, “The Effects of Different Ocean Hypoxia and Acidification Scenarios on the Size Distribution of Calcifying and Non-Calcifying Species of Foraminifera.”

UCT College Fair

Upper Cape Tech welcomes area high school students and their parents/guardians to attend the annual UCT College Fair on Thursday, March 24 from 6:30 to 8:00 pm.

Approximately 70 colleges, technical schools, and military representatives will be available to meet with interested students about post-secondary opportunities and admissions requirements. Counselors will be present to assist students with identifying appropriate institutions and navigating the fair. The event is most appropriate for 10th and 11th grade students, as well as seniors who may still be exploring their options for next year.

Additionally, several institutions will offer “on the spot” admissions interviews for current seniors between 4:00 and 6:00 pm. This opportunity is open to all area high school seniors who have not yet decided on a college for next fall. Students may make appointments or walk-in.

Detailed information, including a list of participating institutions for both the fair and the “on the spot” program, is available on the Upper Cape Tech website. Please visit www.uppercapetech.com/guidance and select the link for the UCT College Fair.

There is no cost to attend the fair. Questions may be directed to Jennifer McGuire at jmcguire@uppercapetech.org or 508-759-7711 ext. 247.

The History of “Firsts”

On February 29, the Marion Council on Aging hosted an entertaining and informative presentation given by James Healy, history officer for the Boston-based Duck Boat Tours. Healy has developed a historical perspective titled “Firsts in Boston and Massachusetts.” Marion’s beautiful Music Hall was the perfect venue for listening to a bit of historical trivia.

Speaking to a gathering of about 20 people, Healy transported the audience on a “firsts” journey that began in 1630 with the development of the first building code and ended in 1972 when WGBH was the first television station to provide closed captioning for hearing impaired persons.

During the 342 year period that Healy covers in his material, an amazing and diverse number of “firsts” color our history.

When the first building code was written in 1630, it was done so to prevent future chimney fires. Prior to the regulation, chimneys were commonly made from wood versus bricks or stone.

As we wandered along through the 1600s, Healy shared that Boston Latin School was the very first building used as a schoolhouse and their roster of students contained such dignitaries as Benjamin Franklin, Samuel Adams, and John Hancock. Before school buildings were built, students went to the teachers’ homes for lessons. When Healy asked if there were any retired teachers in the crowd, several responded affirmatively and laughed at the notion of having a house full of students.

Healy went on to mention the first disbarred lawyer, no smoking community, divorce, witch hanging, minted coins, and fire department. Regarding the divorce case, a woman filed for dissolution of her marriage after finding out that her husband had another wife in that far-flung town of Plymouth.

In 1690, the first newspaper, Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and Domestick, was published, but the local officials didn’t like the content so it was shut down. Remember the Constitution had not yet been written and adopted.

Moving into the 1700s, Healy pointed out that the first lighthouse, Boston Light on Little Brewster Island in Boston Harbor, was built and is still in operation today. Boston Light is also the only lighthouse where Coast Guard personnel are still on duty.

Other firsts from this century that Boston or the state can claim are the development of smallpox inoculations in 1721, Saint Patrick’s Day parade in 1737, and the first chocolate factory in 1765 owned by Dr. John Baker. Yes, the famous Baker’s chocolate is still available in the baking aisle of grocery stores today.

Of significant note was the story Healy told of Phyllis Wheatley. Wheatley was captured and transported to New England as a slave in 1761, a small and by then sickly child. Suzanne Wheatley purchased the child. Wheatley subsequently provided care and education to the child now named “Phyllis” after the ship in which she had been transported. Phyllis, who demonstrated superior intellect, went on to become a well respected writer and poet.

By 1783, Massachusetts was the first state to abolish slavery.

The 1800s saw such local firsts as a teachers’ college in 1839, use of ether, sewing machines, and the famous candy NECCO Wafers that are still in production today. The year 1848 saw the first women’s college open its doors, first public lending library, Valentine cards, and automobile.

The first African American all-volunteer infantry regiments, numbers 54 and 55, were formed and they went on to be forever emblazed in our history for their heroic service during the Civil War. William Carney received the first Medal of Honor ever awarded to a person of color, 37 years after retiring from the Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry.

Rounding out the 1800s, Healy said toothpicks, importing of bananas, Christmas cards, light bulbs and telephones all started right here in the Bay State.

Rushing towards modern times, Healy said that the first license plates came into being in 1903, baby formula in 1919, chocolate chip cookies, and microwave ovens by Raytheon which, by the way, were the size of refrigerators and weighed over 700 pounds.

Organ transplants and pace makers were both developed here, and last but not least on Healy’s long list of firsts, was WGBH with closed captioning for hearing impaired television viewers of the French Chef.

Healy, not quite ironically, is himself a first in that he developed the “firsts” presentation for use by the Duck Boat operators giving tours in and around the greater Boston area. “Sometimes there is a lot of traffic that slows the tours down … this gives the drivers something to tell the visitors about the area.”

For information on upcoming discussions hosted by the Marion Council on Aging, go to www.marionma.gov/pages/marionma_coa or call 508-748-3570.

By Marilou Newell

 

FinCom Faces-off with School Reps on FY17

It was the Marion Finance Committee versus the Marion School District in round one of budget negotiations, which got off to a tough start on February 24 when the Finance Committee expressed impatience just after 6:30 pm at the tardiness of the school representatives.

In the large recreation room at 13 Atlantic Drive, two long tables – one reserved for FinCom and the other for the school budget subcommittee and administration – were placed on opposite sides, arranged in a classic “face-off” position. At precisely 6:30 pm, one table was full of players and the other was completely empty.

Marion Finance Committee Chairman Alan Minard expressed his disappointment that no one representing the school arrived on time for the 6:30 pm meeting. Minard thought school budget discussions would begin at that time; however, as school administrators and School Committee members filed in one by one, they told Minard their meeting was posted for 7:00 pm.

Once the majority had arrived, School Business Administrator Patrick Spencer passed out a draft budget totaling almost $6,079,000 to each FinCom member and acting Town Administrator Judy Mooney.

Minard flipped though the pages and shook his head.

“We’re being handed this document now with no other chance to review it,” said Minard. “It’s not acceptable, folks. It’s impossible for us to do our job with us looking at it five [minutes before].”

Minard addressed Spencer and again commented on the meeting starting 20 minutes late, according to Minard’s schedule.

“You’re looking at me like I have six heads,” Minard said to Spencer.

The room was silent.

“I’m sorry I didn’t get it to you in advance, that’s all,” Spencer replied.

The tension between the two sides was palpable, and the discussion appeared to take a nosedive before it even got off the ground.

“How can we dig through all this … there’s no time,” said Finance Committee member Hamish Gravem.

Superintendent Doug White said the School Department had always responded promptly to any request for information and said he appreciates the cooperation of the town.

“This is a collaboration not only on how to service the needs of the students in this town but also the needs of the town,” said White. “I’m not looking to start and be in a place that is causing issues. We will work with the town if there are any questions….”

“And we would’ve had much better questions if we had looked at this yesterday,” Minard said.

Mooney pointed out a few changes to the Finance Committee to facilitate the committee’s understanding of where amounts went down since the last draft, which Mooney said was not as much as one would think them to go down.

“But every little bit helps,” said Mooney. “It’s good. We’re getting there.”

Minard pointed out the $486,564 maximum new tax revenue the town will collect and compared it to the collective budget increase requests from Sippican, ORR, and Upper Cape totaling $875,431, plus “all other expense and income net” totaling $167,510, showing a $556,377 shortfall.

“There’s almost a million dollar’s worth of stuff competing for $486,000,” said Minard. In a household, he said, if you don’t have the money “you don’t go on vacation or you don’t buy the car or you don’t get the new dryer….”

Minard continued, “We (FinCom) are required to get that [$556,000] down to zero.”

Finance Committee member Jeffrey Dickerson intervened in the conversation and addressed the discomfort between both sides of the room and the way the tables were arranged with one side facing the other side.

“Just this set-up is adversarial,” said Dickerson. “Why don’t we take this down a notch or so, introduce ourselves … and our roles to each other.”

Everyone gets emotional when it comes to the schools, Dickerson stated. He suggested the group “simmer down a bit” and try to work though it.

Both sides introduced themselves and the mood in the room appeared to lighten a bit.

“I’m the CEO of a hundred-million dollar software company,” said Dickerson, “and if I held a meeting like this, I’d get fired.”

Dickerson asked for clarity and more specific details on the numbers, but he added, “This isn’t meant to be an inquisition.”

Minard suggested they start with special education and go on from there.

The main topic was use of “circuit breaker” money, which is money reimbursed from the state to cover the cost of unexpected substantial increases in special education services during the year that weren’t budgeted. Spencer explained that it was best practice to cease relying on circuit breaker money as a way to offset the budget because that is not the intent of the funding to begin with.

Last year, the School Department used circuit breaker money to offset the budget, but Spencer said it was not a viable solution.

Also discussed was the request to fund a new special education teacher to form an age 18 to 22 program at ORR, which would save potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars by keeping the students in the school district instead of sending them outside the district.

Other special educations costs, as White described them, “are out of your control. Those are things that are in our budget that we have very little leeway.”

FinCom members acknowledged this fact and also voiced support for the request to fund a new SpEd teacher for the new program.

The group discussed retirement, a new part-time health teacher, and the cost to hire teachers before wrapping things up.

Minard said the district should look at using circuit breaker funds one more time, despite Spender’s recommendation.

“We’re going to turn over cushions on all the other sides (town department budgets),” said Dickerson. “I just ask you to do the same.”

The next meeting of the Marion Finance Committee is scheduled for March 3 at 6:30 pm at the Recreation Center at 13 Atlantis Drive.

By Jean Perry

 

Marion Recreation Drawing

You could win a free week of Challenger Soccer Camp, July 25-29, or a one-week Silvershell Summer Program.

The newly-formed Friends of Marion Recreation Soccer announces a plan to fund the purchase of new soccer nets for our growing soccer program! With a need for new soccer nets at a cost of over $2,800 for all the nets needed, it was decided to host a drawing to help fund the cost. Cost of the drawing is $5 per ticket or a book of five for $20. The winner of the drawing will be announced at the end of the Health Fair sponsored by the Recreation Department on April 9. Prior to that, tickets may be purchased at the Recreation Department, 13 Atlantis Drive, at the Town Hall Conservation Office, or by mailing your check to Jill Pitman at the Atlantis Drive office. If you choose to mail your check, Jill will fill out your tickets and send you a receipt for your donation.

The winning ticket holder will have the choice of a free week of Challenger Soccer Camp at Dexter Field in Rochester, July 25-29 (a value of $188), or a week of camp at the Silvershell Summer Program (a value of $175)!

Thank you in advance for your help with our NET GAIN Drawing.

Academic Achievements

Chloe Seroussi, Marion resident and a student at the prestigious Pratt Institute, was among more than 1,000 students who made the President’s List in the fall 2015 semester.

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute students Edward Costa of Mattapoisett and Austin Salkind of Rochester were named to the Dean’s Honor List for the fall 2015 semester. The Dean’s Honor List recognizes full-time students who maintain grade-point averages of a minimum of 3.5 out of a possible 4.0 and have no grades below “C.”

Carson Coelho of Mattapoisett has been named to the Dean’s List at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute for the fall 2015 semester. The Dean’s List recognizes full-time students who maintain grade-point averages of a minimum of 3.0 out of a possible 4.0 and have no grades below “C.” Coelho studies Mechanical Engineering.

In honor of their outstanding academic achievement, Emmanuel College has named more than 600 students to the Dean’s List for the fall 2015 semester. To earn a spot on the Dean’s List, Emmanuel students must achieve a grade point average of 3.5 or higher for a 16-credit semester. Local students named to the Dean’s List include:

– Meghan Pachico of Marion

– Madelyn Pellegrino of Mattapoisett

Select students have been named to the fall 2015 Dean’s List at Roger Williams University in Bristol, RI. Full-time students who complete 12 or more credits per semester and earn a GPA of 3.4 or higher are placed on the Dean’s List that semester. Students from the Tri-Town include:

– Kristen Knight, an Elementary Education major from Marion

– Ryan McArdle, a Finance major from Marion

– Scott McDavid, an International Relations major from Marion

Seaside Health and Wellness Fair

Marion Recreation is currently seeking exhibitors and sponsors for its first annual Seaside Health and Wellness Fair to be held April 9 from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm at Sippican School. The mission of the Seaside Health and Wellness Fair is to promote overall health awareness and provide an event to showcase the many opportunities available for participants in the area and encourage them to lead healthy, active lifestyles. Join many businesses and community organizations that will promote overall health and well being with information tables, free classes, and presentations. There is no cost to be an exhibitor or presenter at this event. This event will be open to the public and free of charge. Exhibitors are asked to contact Marion Recreation for details. Sponsorship opportunities are also available.

SATs: Redesigned for the Better?

For juniors and seniors across America, the SAT is quite possibly one of the most important tests they will take as a first step into their college career. Colleges are looking for increasingly higher scores, and the pressure is on to receive the highest score possible.

There is one twist this year, though. Upperclassmen are encountering a switch from the traditional test to a new, redesigned version of the SAT.

The College Board, which is the organization that administers the test, revamped the SAT after years of maintaining the same format. The new format will be distributed on the next testing date.

The SAT that was administered in this area at New Bedford Voc Tech last Saturday, February 27, was the rescheduled test from the original January 23 date, which was cancelled due to inclement weather. That SAT was considered the “old” test; the “new” SAT is set to take place this Saturday, March 5.

The old SAT was comprised of ten sections, all based in reading/writing or math, including a mandatory essay question. The test’s essay question was written at the beginning of the exam, and it asked test-takers to pull from personal experiences, literature, observations, and studies to answer an opinion-based question in 25 minutes.

The total testing time was three hours and 45 minutes, with five-minute breaks scattered in between. For every correct answer, students were given one point. For every omitted answer, no points were gained or lost, and for every incorrect answer, one-quarter of a point was lost. The test was scored on a scale from 600 to 2400.

For the new SAT, there will be a total of 154 questions – much less than the old test’s 171. The essay question will be taken at the end of the testing period and is optional. There will be a 50-minute time period given, and the question will focus on analyzing a given “source text.”

The total testing time (including essay) is set to be three hours and 50 minutes. As for scoring, one point will be rewarded for every correct answer, and no points will be added or subtracted for both incorrect and omitted answers.

The test will be scored on a scale from 400 to 1600. The English section will no longer contain the infamously difficult vocabulary words that students work diligently to memorize before the test, as the College Board website explains:

“The words are ones that you will probably encounter in college or in the workplace long after test day.  No longer will students use flashcards to memorize obscure words, only to forget them the minute they put their test pencils down. The redesigned exams will engage students in close reading and honor the best work of the classroom.”

The newly-designed SAT hopes to connect with the skills students will use after high school by selecting a wider range of math problems that broaden the focus to a more usable level of mathematics, as well as including important documents, such as “U.S. Founding Documents.”

This newly-designed exam will have the biggest impact on juniors, as most seniors have already applied to colleges and sent in their scores. Juniors hoping to take the test multiple times, even before senior year, which is recommended, are forced to adjust to a completely new form of the test – a form about which not much is known until it is taken this week.

Students in general are a little apprehensive about having to learn how to take a whole new test, especially one of this magnitude.

“It feels kind of rude, I’ve got to say, like, ‘why us?’ Why couldn’t it have been the next year?” said junior Celeste Hartley. “We didn’t really have a lot of warning that the test was changing, so it could affect our prospects; we could’ve had three chances on the old one and done well, but we have it switching halfway through our junior year…. It might hurt our college chances.”

On top of feeling slightly cheated, many students feel unprepared to walk into a test without having an idea about what the test will look like. Hartley said she feels completely unprepared.

“It’s a whole new setup and the PSAT isn’t like it and the MCAS was setup for the PSAT,” said Hartley. “This is something else entirely. If it’s anything like the Galileo or the PARCC … those were awful and made no sense because we’ve done [standardized] tests the same way for so long.”

Besides that, Hartley said, teachers are just now instructing students on how to prepare for the new one, because the teachers themselves have only just recently discovered how the test has been changed.

“There should’ve been some early information to help them and us,” stated Hartley.

Although the test is set to incorporate more relevant information, many students are anxious about the new material and the longer essay at the end, especially after three straight hours of testing.

“I don’t like it,” said junior Erin Costa, “especially because, when I took an SAT course over the summer … they only made us take one of the old kind of test and they made us take three of the new ones. The new one is so much longer, and you need a lot more endurance for the new one than you do for the old one.”

And although most students are understanding of the attempt to make the test fair for all and more relevant, it is still difficult for students not to feel like the switch occurring mid-year is a little unfair to the test takers.

“People test differently for the SAT and all tests really,” said Costa, “but they’re just trying to make a test that everybody in the nation … so that’s okay. But it is kind of hard because the test does cost money, and they tell you to take it more than once.”

With the new test quickly approaching, there is only one way to truly find out how the test will look and if it has changed for the better – we can only wait and hope for the best.

By Sienna Wurl

 

Ann M. (Scanlon) McGrath

Ann M. (Scanlon) McGrath, 93, of Mattapoisett died March 4, 2016 peacefully at home.

She was the widow of the late Louis Amoruso and William McGrath.

Born in Boston, the daughter of the late John L. and Elizabeth (Ferry) Scanlon, she was raised in Dedham, she lived in Westwood and Quincy before moving to Mattapoisett.

She was a graduate of Boston University. Mrs. McGrath was the former head of the lower school at Brimmer and May School in Chestnut Hill.

Survivors include her son, Louis Amoruso and his wife Shirley (Jewell); her daughter, Susan Fine and her husband Alan; her daughter-in-law, Alice (Dimascio) McGrath; and her grandchildren, Elizabeth (Amoruso) Lacasse, Michael Amoruso, Alison McGrath, Joshua Fine and Rebecca (Fine) Bocchino; and her great-grandchildren, Abigail and Ethan Lacasse.

She was also the mother of the late John McGrath.

Mrs. McGrath was a communicant of St. Anthony’s Church in Mattapoisett.

Her Funeral will be held on Saturday, March 12th at 9 AM from the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6) Mattapoisett, followed by her Funeral Mass at St. Anthony’s Church, 22 Barstow St. Mattapoisett at 10 AM. Visiting hours will be on Thursday, March 10th from 4-8 PM. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Rochester to Forego Special Town Meeting

The Rochester Board of Selectmen on February 29 officially decided to not hold a special town meeting, given that an annual town meeting isn’t too far off.

Town Administrator Michael McCue advised the board that since a special town meeting wouldn’t be possible until some time in late April, it would be prudent and more economical to simply wait until the annual town meeting and hold a special then.

Selectmen had been waiting to schedule a special town meeting until the state legislature passed special legislation to uphold the votes of the June 8 Annual Town Meeting that was discovered to have been held without a quorum. That legislation, although making progress, still has the town waiting.

“Given the unpredictability of determining the date in which the [legislation] we’re waiting on … will come to fruition,” McCue said, advising selectmen to support his recommendation.

McCue said an annual town meeting at the end of May would suffice, and any financial requests that various departments had prepared for articles on a special town meeting warrant have been addressed with the Finance Committee through other means of funding.

A special town meeting warrant would have featured an article to return the town meeting quorum back to 75 from 100 but, as McCue pointed out, holding a special town meeting now would still not be enough time for it to pass through the attorney general’s office for final approval before the annual town meeting.

“As much as we want to make that change, the timing is such that it won’t work out,” said McCue. “It’s my recommendation that we forego it.”

No motion was required, just the unanimous support of the selectmen.

Also during the meeting, McCue said the Town has applied for $37,000 of a $2 million state technology grant to allow for a major upgrade of the town’s email system, which McCue said was “sorely in need of an update.”

McCue is also hoping to secure some funding from the A.D. Makepeace Neighborhood Fund grant for a new thermal imaging system for the Fire Department, funding to offset the rising cost of running the Rochester Country Fair, and for funding requested by the Conservation Commission for the improvement of walking trails in town, specifically near Mary’s Pond.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for March 7 at 6:30 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry