UCT Eighth Grade Open House

Upper Cape Tech welcomes area eighth grade students and their parents/guardians to attend an Open House on Thursday, December 5, 2013 from 6:00 to 8:00 pm.

Prior to the open house, a complimentary dinner prepared by the Culinary Arts students and staff will be available from 5:00 to 6:00 pm. Starting at 5:15 pm, Admissions and Exploratory Program presentations, along with Post-Secondary Planning presentations, will be offered. Academic and Technical program presentations will begin promptly at 6:00 pm.

Upper Cape Tech offers a solid academic experience, opportunity for extensive career exploration, and effective skill development for many technically demanding jobs. In addition to the enriching academic and technical programs, Upper Cape Tech also offers interscholastic teams that foster competitiveness, build leadership, and encourage teamwork. Information regarding specific athletic opportunities will be available at the open house.

Please take this opportunity to discover what Upper Cape Tech offers. For planning purposes, please RSVP at www.uppercapetech.com or call the Guidance Office at 508-759-7711, ext. 253.

Christmas Care Packages for the Troops

The Veterans Service Office for the Towns of Mattapoisett and Rochester, in conjunction with Cape Cod Cares for Our Troops, will be organizing “Christmas Care Packages” for the Troops serving in Afghanistan and Iraq. Donating an item is an excellent way to let our men and women in uniform know that we care about them and that we haven’t forgotten about the sacrifices that they’re making on our nation’s behalf. If you would like to donate, please drop off your items in the box located downstairs at Mattapoisett Town Hall by Friday, December 6. Any questions, contact the Veterans Office at 508-758-4100 ext. 212.

Personal items (travel sizes): bug lotion, deodorant, eye drops/wash, foot powder, hand sanitizer, hand wipes, tissues, hand and body lotions, mouthwash, cotton swabs, shampoo/conditioner, shaving items, shower gel/soap, sun screen, toothbrushes, toothpaste.

Food: candy, coffee singles, cookies (packaged), gum/mints, hot chocolate, snack cakes, microwave popcorn, microwave soups, powdered drink mixes, sports drinks, iced tea, sunflower seeds/nuts, energy bars, jerky sticks, snack foods, trail mix.

Other Useful Items: batteries, current magazines, deck of cards, first aid kits, flash lights, generic card, hats/gloves, paper and pens, socks, and T-shirts, towels and wash cloths, toys for children, travel games, boot laces, sandwich bags.

Special Presentation of Journey to Myanmar

Approximately 8,000 miles from Marion, in Southeast Asia, lay the enigmatic country of Myanmar (formerly Burma). Until the British invaded the country in 1885, little was known about the classical civilization located there. As a British colony, the country gained recognition in literary works by George Orwell (Burmese Days) and Rudyard Kipling (“Mandalay”). In World War II, it was overrun by the Japanese who in turn were driven out by combined American, British, and Chinese forces. The famed U.S. “Merrill’s Marauders” spearheaded the effort. After WWII, the British granted total independence to Burma. The country was thereafter ruled by a military government and isolated from the world for more than 60 years. In 2011, in order to secure a relaxation of economic sanctions and to encourage foreign investment, Myanmar finally started down a path toward democracy and was formally opened to tourists.

The poorest state in Southeast Asia, Myanmar still has a long way to go to become a modern country. Despite its economic difficulties, though, the country offers a wealth of cultural opportunities, and visitors can now enjoy this exotic land of golden stupas, red-robed monks, and elaborately carved teak palaces. Earlier this year, Bob and Judy Rosbe traveled to Myanmar, returning with a host of memories and images of their fascinating journey. On Wednesday, December 11, at 7:00 pm at the Marion Music Hall, the Rosbes will talk about their travels to Myanmar and share images from their trip. Co-sponsored by the Elizabeth Taber Library and the Sippican Historical Society, the presentation is offered free of charge and is open to the public. No registration is required. For more information, contact the Elizabeth Taber Library at 508-748-1252 or the Sippican Historical Society at 508-748-1116.

ORR Gets Into the Holiday Spirit

Last Thursday, Old Rochester Regional High School held their annual Senior Superlatives Gala. Hosted by School Principal Michael Devoll and Drama Club Director Paul Sardinha, the event was a fun-filled night for all who attended. Profits from ticket sales went towards yearbook club to defer the cost of the 2013-2014 yearbooks.

After being nominated and elected by their peers, seniors won entertaining awards such as Most Likely to Succeed (Leah Thomas and John Hewitt) and Cutest Best Friends (Robby Magee and Ryan Simcoe). Best Personality went to Kelly Merlo and Alden Truesdale, while Best All-Around went to Callie Gomes and Chris Carando. Friendliest was awarded to Doug Blais and Emily Hyde. Anne Roseman and Jeremy Bare won Most Changed and Hannah Vieira won Least Changed. Jeremy Bare also won Tallest, while Bridget Costa won Shortest and Most Accident-Prone. Kiernan Besse won Best Dressed. He and his girlfriend, Rachel Brown, were awarded Cutest Couple. Drama King and Queen went to Troy Rood and Nicole Enos – both active members of the school’s drama club. Most Athletic went to Colin Knapton and Morgan DaSilva. Other awards, such as Most Musically Inclined (Keren Satkin), Class Clown (Rachael Chandler and Ian Hibbert), Highway Menace (Seth Richards), Teacher’s Pet (Lizzie Machado), and more were awarded throughout the night.

In other news, the National Honor Society is wrapping up their Thanksgiving food drive while starting up a book drive. The Thanksgiving drive – while not as successful as in previous years – had a decent turnout. All food donations will be given to families in the Tri-Town. The book drive, which started November 18, is a collection for fiction and nonfiction books for students in kindergarten through third grade. At the end of the collection, the books will be donated to the Renaissance School in New Bedford.

AFS club has also been busy these past few weeks. The club ran their third annual pie sale for the Thanksgiving season. Faculty and staff of the high school and junior high placed orders for a total of 67 pies. All the pies were homemade by students involved with the AFS club. They were delivered Wednesday morning, just in time for Thanksgiving. Proceeds from this fundraising are going toward AFS club’s trip to Arcola, Ill., in April.

By Renae Reints

ORRPic

MHS Open for the Holidays

The Mattapoisett Historical Society’s Museum will open for the Holiday Season on Saturday, December 7, from 9:00 am to noon. Light refreshments will be served. Have fun viewing a Toy Train Exhibit while shopping for unique Mattapoisett gifts including notecards featuring Mattapoisett snow scenes -great for Christmas cards – posters, books, and many other unique gifts. The museum will continue to be open on Saturday mornings before Christmas. On December 14, there will be a drop-in craft for children where they can craft their own rope wreath ornament, and on December 21, you can view classic Christmas cartoons from the 1930s, 40s, and 50s while enjoying some hot chocolate. Exhibit and programs are free; donations are always welcome. For more information, please contact the Mattapoisett Historical Society, 5 Church St., at (508) 758-2844 or mattapoisett.museum@verizon.net, or online at mattapoisetthistoricalsociety.org.

2014 Marion Fireworks Committee Meeting

The 2014 Marion Fireworks Committee will hold their first meeting of the new fundraising season on Thursday, December 5, at 7:00 pm at the Marion Recreation Department on 13 Atlantis Dr., Marion. Anyone interested in joining the committee or helping out is encouraged to attend the meeting. If you are able to make it on December 5, or if you have any questions, please contact Marion Recreation at (774) 217-8355 or info@marionrecreation.com

Annual Thanksgiving Banquet

 The Annual Thanksgiving Banquet at ORRJH served up seniors a traditional turkey dinner with all the trimmings. During this holiday season many people depend on the kindness of those willing to give. If you belong to an organization helping others this season contact The Wanderer so we can help you get the word out. Have a Happy Thanksgiving! Photos by Felix Perez

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How a Cranberry Bog is Formed

On Wednesday, Nov. 20th, he Marion Natural History Museum after-school group investigated how a cranberry bog formed in New England.  Museum Director, Elizabeth Leidhold, helped the kids to explore the physical structure of a bog, and how to tell a healthy berry from a rotten one.  The students then made “mini-bogs” to take home. Photos courtesy Elizabeth Leidhold

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Issues in Education

To the Editor:

“What matters most in the decades ahead is the extent to which we cultivate creativity, ingenuity, curiosity, innovation, and thinking differently. These qualities have been the genius of American culture. These traits are not measured by standardized tests.” – Diane Ravitch, Research Professor of Education at New York University and a historian of education.

I have not written in a while. Parents and teachers and community members, however, continue to stop me in my walking or my running or grocery shopping to tell me how much they have valued my letters, agreed with my views, and hoped that I would write more.

My purpose in writing this and the previous letters is to inform and educate the citizens of the towns in the Old Rochester Regional school district on the current issues in education and to connect that information to our own school district. I write again hoping that with informed views parents, teachers, students, and community members will contact the school committees and administrators and ask questions and air concerns.

With no end to the articles to read, editorials to consider, research analyses to digest – the available material detailing the damage being done to education by the data-driven decision-making – I need to encourage everyone concerned to seek information and question our school committee members and administrators before they do further damage to a once stellar and much admired school district in favor of standardized tests and data, computerized instruction and assessment, and school rankings. The data reported is about schools, not our children. The PARCC tests are coming.

Books, articles, editorials, blogs, professional journals, transcripts of lectures, research reports from university studies: Each day we can all read about changes in teaching practice and curriculum development, stress over test taking among even our youngest students, creativity and individuality overlooked and deemphasized and replaced by teaching-to-the-test instruction and the highlighting of isolated test questions – these factors are all doing damage to our children’s educational experience. We all need to remember, as I have said in previous letters, that children go through school only once, and we have the responsibility to offer them the best and most inspiring experience possible. In my view, the notable people not reading and acting on all the current material available on the detriments of standardized testing and the narrowing of curriculum are the administrators and school committees of the Old Rochester District; in particular, the Assistant Superintendent for Curriculum, Instruction, and Assessment, who seems to focus on data, assessment, and numbers and to neglect instruction and creativity. Rather than recognizing and celebrating the well-respected, high-performing district we have formerly celebrated, the current environment is becoming more and more of a teaching-to-the-test driven one.

Another reason for another letter is my recent experience as a member of the Strategic Plan Forum. I was happy to join the Strategic Plan Committee, because I care about the students and the schools of the Old Rochester Regional District, and I thought I could contribute a credible voice and work with others toward formulating the five-year plan. The whole experience could not have been more of a letdown for me and for others. Many of those with whom I interacted were parents; some were parents new to the district, eager to contribute. Although I had nothing to do with the planning of it, I was embarrassed for my school district as we sat through the most uninspired, unenthusiastic, talk-to-you-from-a PowerPoint presentation. The first forum was the assembly of the entire group in the evening in the high school cafeteria; all constituencies present – parents, teachers, administrators, and community members. Everyone in the room had received a packet with the research done on the district in terms of demographics, enrollment projections, housing markets in the towns, school test scores, etc. My tablemates and I spoke about how we had read the information prior to attending and some of us had highlighted important points. I had read the complete packet twice. The information had been sent to us by Diana Russo, the Superintendent’s administrative secretary, who is always organized and prepared – clearly and consistently showing competency way beyond her position and beyond those of our two highest administrators.

Superintendent White with no enthusiasm in his voice introduced the consultants who were hired to facilitate and thanked those present for being there. No time was given for those present to identify themselves and to state which constituency they represented. The Strategic Plan Steering Committee was never introduced, although the existence of such a body was mentioned several times. Because I had recently retired as a teacher in the district, those at my table turned to me to fill them in. I did not know who was who in the room, except for a couple of administrators and teachers. Very poor planning on the part of the facilitators. When I got home, I timed how many seconds it would take to state my name, my town, and my place as a community member. It takes seven seconds. So how long would it have taken for everyone in the room to do the same? Not very long. Also, why not tell everyone who was on the Steering Committee. My tablemates began to feel that it was a real secret.

On to NESDEC, the presenters: The presentation was a projected slide show of all the information sent ahead of time. The NESDEC leader read to us what we had already read. Why were we there? No discussion followed. We had had a “light supper” and left with no new information, dismissed in less time than the two hours allotted.

On the following Saturday, small groups met in the superintendent’s conference room for our focus group discussions, again facilitated by NESDEC. We listed strengths and weaknesses for the district that were paraphrased and projected on a screen. Very little time was given for discussion. Our Assistant Superintendent was not even present at my group’s assigned time, and our Superintendent seldom looked up. Again, as someone who loves our district and cares about education, I was embarrassed and disappointed. Why our administrators could not have come up with an innovative plan for developing a community form, I don’t understand. Why they turned to NESDEC, an antiquated group with no new ideas, I don’t know. I will add more on the Strategic Plan experience in another letter, since I need to move on to another topic today.

I have read so much recently about how more and more young students are being diagnosed with ADD, ADHD, anxiety, and autism. That is a fact. We ask, “Why?” A plausible emerging answer is that very young students are being required to sit and do tasks for which they are not ready academically, physically, emotionally, and developmentally. The young students are frustrated, act out, withdraw, recognize failure, lose recess privileges, and further lose self-esteem. Parents and teachers want a reason. They do not often enough see the readiness element; hence testing and a diagnosis and perhaps medication – ah, they see there is a solution. Given a more hands-on, creative, and inspiring learning environment – focused on their abilities and readiness and knowing the connection to successful reading, math, and writing success – most students will thrive and become excited about learning, rather than anxious. Children want to learn. If some students struggle even after appropriate and engaging learning experiences, then some monitoring and testing is, of course, warranted.

As Mrs. Demers, whom many readers may remember as the most enthusiastic, creative, and masterful kindergarten teacher at Rochester Memorial School for many years, often said, “Readiness is everything.” Mrs. Demers was a gentle genius, who knew that constructive play and carefully crafted education experiences, not drill and standardized testing preparation, is what young students need to be learners. Mrs. Demers once told me that the throwing and catching a ball that we do with young children is more effective in getting children’s brains ready to read than all the practice in letters and sounds that we often do.

In keeping with the same beautiful educational philosophy as that of Mrs. Demers, 121 authors and illustrators of children’s books recently published a letter sent to President Obama and Arne Duncan, the Secretary of Education, expressing their concerns over the current overuse of testing and narrowed curriculum.

The letter reads, in part, “Our public school students spend far too much time preparing for reading tests and too little time curling up with books that fire their imaginations.” and “This year has seen a growing national wave of protest against testing overuse and abuse. As the authors and illustrators of books for children, we feel a special responsibility to advocate for change. We offer our full support for a national campaign to change the way we assess learning so that schools nurture creativity, exploration, and a love of literature from the first day of school through high school graduation.”

You can check out the entire inspiring letter and the list of authors and illustrators who signed by searching for: Public Letter on Standardized Testing from Authors and Illustrators of Books for Children and Youth. The letter is clearly a call for concern and a call to action.

Another source to consider is Hal Salzman, a professor of public policy at Rutgers University, who writes on education and economic policy. I will include only a brief quote from an article. Please check him out, too.

“’What’s really peculiar about the whole test-score hysteria is that they use it as a proxy for the U.S. “competitiveness and innovation,” as though we don’t have actual measurements,’ said Salzman, an expert in science and engineering labor markets and the globalization of innovation. ‘The country continues to lead on innovation, economic performance, and all the results that these things are supposed to indicate … It doesn’t mean we don’t want to improve education,’ Salzman said. ‘But the fear that’s driving it is unfounded. The problem we have is not at the top or at the middle. It’s at the bottom. That’s what gets lost in averages and rankings.’”

I am going to end here. I have more information to share on Pearson (particularly on their new profit-seeking involvement in teacher certification through standardized testing in New York State); on our district’s use of Galileo, a computerized assessment program on which our students are spending way too much time; and the coming PARCC tests, the nationwide testing attached to the Common Core that has already been piloted in New York State. In New York, four year-olds in public pre-school have been given standardized multiple-choice tests. Please seek out information on Pearson and also on the New York State districts that are already opting out of Race to the Top and PARCC assessments, because of the many problems with the test. The ORR District is currently headed in the direction of implementing measures that have already shown themselves to be flawed.

More letters to come.

Thank you for reading. Please take advantage of the information available, and please remember that the school committee members are representatives and should hear from their constituents. As always, if you would like to contact me, email me with comments or questions at tpdall9@yahoo.com.

Teresa R. Dall

Mattapoisett

 

The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wanderer will gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wanderer reserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderer may choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wanderer has the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wanderer also reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence. 

Mattapoisett Special Town Meeting

To the Editor:

Mattapoisett Special Town meeting illustrated that conducting government business is about values as much as it is about taking care of business. Over the years, including Monday, November 18, Town Meeting, voters have consistently approved measures aimed at protecting the water quality in our harbor and Buzzards Bay. At Special Town meeting, though, they voted against a small $20,000 investment to buy a pump-out boat. Apparently there were concerns that the process for arriving at the proposal may have been flawed: too little communication about the proposal with town committees, businesses, and others affected by what seems to many a “no brainer.” It is regrettable that none of us there (including myself) had the presence of mind to propose an amendment to fund the proposal pending approval by a) Marine Advisory Board or b) a second vote at next year’s Annual Town Meeting after production of a suitable report. Had we done so, and if warranted, the boat could be in service at the earliest opportunity. We could have supported two fundamental values: healthy harbor and healthy governmental process.

Bonnie DeSousa

Mattapoisett 

 

The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wanderer will gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wanderer reserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderer may choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wanderer has the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wanderer also reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence.