Ready, Set, Dodgeball!

A tournament that had been dormant for three years finally awoke last week.

On Friday, November 30, the Roller Courts at Tabor Academy played host to a dodgeball tournament that pitted dormitories and day students against each other.

This was the first time Tabor has had a dorm vs. dorm dodgeball tournament since the Fall of 2009, when there were six different teams made out of allying dorms in a competition called Dorm Wars.

The tournament received lots of popularity as there were sixteen teams in total, as well as impressive attendance to this event.

Student Activities Director Chris Millette was very optimistic with the tournament’s future.

“I thought the tournament went very well,” he said. “Making it a dorm event was very productive, and I really liked the energy and excitement each dorm brought to the gym.”

The bracket was set up so that the boys would compete against boys and girls would go up against girls. In the end, the remaining boys and girls team would play in the championship.

In the preliminary round, Williams Dorm defeated Foscle to enter the first round, but Makepeace shut them down. However, sophomore Charlie Clipstone made a valiant effort on his own and came close to pulling off a stunning comeback.

Makepeace once again found themselves in a hole in their second matchup against Lillard North 2/3, who defeated the day student boys in the first round. Lillard had Makepeace down to their last guy, but Makepeace dug deep and eventually outlasted Lillard to reach the semifinals.

“I think that we performed well under a lot of pressure, and we made a statement with our wins,” said Makepeace resident, senior and dodgeball player Brian Goldaber.

Other results included Lillard North 1 defeating New House and West House, with both wins requiring lengthy struggles to defeat the last player.

On the girls’ side, Bushnell moved into the quarterfinals by default and took on the winner of Baxter and Lillard East. This matchup was highlighted by Lydia Caputi’s marvelous catches as she showed her skills as the starting varsity soccer goalie, to give Baxter the win.

However, Bushnell still overcame these catches in the quarterfinals and moved on to the semifinals.

Finally, Heath and Lillard South wound up in a nail-biting finish. Kelsey Shakin from Heath and Izzy Nappa from Lillard South were the only two players left on the court, and Shakin came through by making a clutch catch. Heath moved on to the semifinals by default.

The semifinals and championship game will be played on Friday, December 7 with Makepeace taking on Lillard North 1 and Heath taking on Bushnell. The winners will then duel for the championship.

By Nicholas Veronesi

Marion Thanks Board Members for Service

Instead of looking at an agenda, those who serve on town boards socialized with one another at the annual Town House potluck holiday gathering held at the Marion Music Hall on Tuesday evening.

“We have this event, in the spirit of the season, to thank everyone who volunteers to come out, often in the evening, away from their families at the dinner hour to serve on committees in our town,” said Paul Dawson, Town Administrator. “We appreciate their service.”

The venue was decorated in festive holiday decor by Steve Gonsalves, a member of the Marion Planning Board and the owner of a local landscape and garden business.

Truman Terrell, a member of the Marion Music Hall Committee, played the piano to provide an upbeat holiday feeling to the event.

“We want to say thank you, from the Town of Marion, to all of you for your commitment and service to the town,” said Chairman Steve Cushing. “We’ve had a successful year this year and hopefully next year as well.”

Selectman John Henry spoke and said it was his 8th year as Selectman. “It is a great time to be with friends and associates in town government, to come together regardless of their political differences to enjoy the evening.”

Selectman Jody Dickerson told the crowd that he was pleased at the turnout for the event and that he has enjoyed his time as a newly elected Selectman.

Karen Kevelson, a member of the Finance Committee, commented that it was a time for all to gather together regardless of their differences of opinion on issues. “This is my first time at this event and I’m pleased to see so many gathered together enjoying the evening, regardless of the differences we may have.”

Over 60 people attended the event, including board members from the Council on Aging, Conservation Commission, Cultural Council, Planning Board, Zoning Board of Appeals, Board of Selectmen, Board of Health, Marion School Committee, Alternative Energy, Recreation Board, Pathways Committee, Cemetery Commission, Elizabeth Taber Library Board members and many others.

Each year, an invitation is sent to the committee chair of each town committee, who then invites the board members who served on the committee during the prior year. Former members of committees are also invited, along with spouses.

“It’s fun to gather in a non-working environment to socialize,” said Susan Schwager, Director of the Council on Aging. “Usually, we only see each other at board meetings where we work together to tackle the business issues of the COA.”

According to Deb Paiva, organizer of the annual event, planning starts in November with the date selected for the potluck supper.

“It’s been a great evening for us all,” said Paiva.

By Joan Hartnett-Barry

Curfew in Question

To the Editor:

The Tri-Town consists of three small towns: Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester. With a few thousand populating these towns, you can imagine how small it really is. Where everyone knows everyone, they are towns where many people don’t like to leave as they start their own lives and so generations all come together. Being small towns, we therefore have strict regulations, one being my most hated: town curfews of 10:00 pm.

As for me and every other young adult in the Tri-Town, this regulation and strictly enforced rule puts a huge damper on social hangouts. Especially in summer, which our towns are made to be enjoyed for, nothing for children or adults is allowed to be accessed after curfew. This rule couldn’t be any more of a burden, especially when we want to enjoy our friends in our lovely suburban, safe towns in the summer.

You look at the alarm clock next to your bed, as you half-dazed pick up your head, while it takes you a minute to realize what time it really is. Half of your day is gone, and it’s about 1:00 or 2:00 in the afternoon. It’s become a natural summer routine to waste most of your day asleep, and most of the night and the early morning awake.

No matter how long the school year was, and the alternate routines we held up to work with their schedule, it’s like it all never happened. Summer is there and so is everything that comes with it. The warm feeling you get knowing that as soon as you wake up, you slip your bathing suit on and quickly put a beach bag together to go off to the beach with your friends to the town beach.

As your day goes on, the time flies by. Throughout the day, you’re busy making plans with many friends for the night and whom you’ll see. I can’t speak for everyone, but for my friends and me, the nighttime hangouts and what we did at night was what we looked forward to. With very few places to go, just walking around town with your friends has always been a main event in the summer. You see every age group, as well as our seasonal tourists walking around. Summers are the time to enjoy and soak up as much time as you can with your friends, especially if they are seasonal visitors. With our welcoming streets, and safety knowing there’s a cop around every corner, I’ve never seen a need for a 10:00 pm curfew.

As 10:00 pm approaches, the only places to go, like the town beach, Center School, the private beach, and even just the streets, are expected to be bare. As the police officers of the town drive slowly amongst the dead streets, little did they know sometimes there were us, and many others hiding behind anything that would shield our presence.

To our defense, we are doing nothing destructive or illegal, none of us ever are. They keep this rule intact, only for no one to be able to enjoy our great scenery at the nightly hours most of us are up for. Mostly teenagers, but very much as well adults, do stay up late. When in summer, my night is my day. The weather is beautiful and warm, and our towns are such a beautiful thing to be out and see, even at nighttime. I’ve had many summers where my friends and I love to just go sit on the beach at night and talk and listen to the water, or lay and watch the stars. I’ve done this with my mother as well, and have been told to leave. I feel like this is my town as much as it is anyone else’s, I feel like I should be able to enjoy the places that my mother works so hard to keep us in. Whatever the Town Counsel may have to say, it’s just not fair.

Not being too sure, I know the towns would come up with some sort of reasons for the curfew being upheld. After reading articles of other towns having curfews like Charleston, their reasons were very understandable. They had placed a curfew for teens to place some order back into their town after violence with guns. Even other towns, not having the extremities with guns, but rather cases with spray paint and tire slashing, instituted curfews. Either way, every town had incidents to lead them to a 11:00 pm curfew. With towns and cities adopting curfews, it is safe to say that in the places where big crimes were the main focus, the curfew helped for the most part. I don’t think places that have had no issues should be able to set a law on mistakes that haven’t been made.

“The police already have the right to arrest juveniles who are committing crimes,” said Terri Baur, staff attorney with the state group. ”The curfew puts innocent juveniles essentially under house arrest for a portion of the day/night.”

Whatever Mattapoisett, Marion and Rochester’s reasons for putting this early nighttime curfew for teens, as well as older people, I would like to point out especially in our towns, there’s a large majority who are just out there to purely enjoy our town at night, and the social aspect. I, as many do, see nighttime as a time to enjoy being with friends. We don’t see it as a time of destruction. There will always be people who break the rules, but the rest shouldn’t be punished and restricted on “what could happen.” I love to enjoy my town and what it has to offer if not more at nighttime than I do in the day. I live in a beautiful area with many things to offer. This restriction, in my eyes, is a waste.

Samantha Clements

Tri-Town Resident

Physical Activity is Essential

To the Editor:

Recently, I read an article that has left me in a quandary. The news mentioned that the 18-month Rochester Memorial School project’s final cost came in nearly one million dollars under budget. While this is terrific news in itself, I remain curious how a public school is considered complete without the inclusion of a quality playground designed to meet the physical activity needs of all students.

Surely, a thoughtfully designed playground would help to meet the educational objectives of a public school. However, it seems such a quality learning space was excluded from the Rochester Memorial School project’s budget.

As a public school educator, I am constantly hearing about the use of data as the driving force behind today’s instructional decision-making. Maybe it’s time we consider the following facts with regard to our collective investment in public schools:

• Childhood obesity has more than tripled in the past 30 years.

• The percentage of children aged 6 – 11 years in the United States who were obese increased from seven percent in 1980 to nearly 20 percent in 2008.

• The percentage of adolescents aged 12 – 19 years who were obese increased from five percent to 18 percent over the same period.

• Today, more than one third of U.S. children and adolescents are overweight or obese. These youngsters are more likely to suffer immediate and long-term health issues, including: poor self-esteem, bone and joint problems, sleep apnea, heart disease, type 2 diabetes, stroke and several types of cancer.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consider this information reason for public health concern. Therefore, it’s time our public school leaders seriously consider this data as part of their instructional decision-making. Physical activity, in combination with other healthy habits, can lower the risk of becoming obese and developing related diseases. Physical activity behaviors of children are influenced by societal components that include our schools. Our Commonwealth’s public schools play a critical role in establishing a safe and supportive environment for our children with policies and practices that support healthy behaviors. Schools should include myriad opportunities for students to learn about and practice physical activity behaviors, as the pursuit of MCAS scores must not precede the importance of student health. Ultimately, our most valuable educational resources support long-term community achievement of health in both mind and body.

Physical activity is an essential ingredient in the education of our children. Its importance can no longer be overlooked. I am hopeful that the addition of a quality playground, one that meets the physical activity needs of all students, will become an important priority to each of our town’s residents and leaders. I can’t think of a better way to complete such a wonderful investment in our community.

Sincerely,

Kevin Woodward

Rochester Memorial School Physical Educator

Let us think of education

To the Editor:

Today, I’ll begin with words from John F. Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States — words that have even greater meaning in 2012.

“Let us think of education as the means of developing our greatest abilities, because in each of us there is a private hope and dream which, fulfilled, can be translated into benefit for everyone and greater strength for our nation.

“All of us do not have equal talent, but all of us should have an equal opportunity to develop those talents.”

“A child miseducated is a child lost.”

In previous letters, I have emphasized the need to see each child as an individual learner and to understand that the current emphasis on standardized testing, data-driven decision-making and data-driven curriculum revision diminishes the importance of inspiring students to pursue true learning, as well as the development of individual investment in creativity and talents.

I repeat the fact from one of my previous letters that children go through school only once. Our schools do not exist for themselves, or for administrators, or ratings fawned over by School Committee members and community members. Parents are also, unfortunately often, persuaded by the emphasis placed on ratings, rankings and data. Schools exist for the inspiration, education and personal development of each individual child. Education is not a one-size-fits-all endeavor. Education is not a business, nor should it be. To teach to a test so that a school or school district can collect data and boast of higher scores is neglecting the public school’s mission to educate each child in the one short time he or she is in school. To do less is irresponsible.       Currently, central office administrators and school committees focus on scores and curriculum and require school administrators and teachers to do the same. Parents and community members should be concerned and seek to become informed and not be taken in by the continuous talk of data and raising scores and thus being led to believe that education is improving.

The key to a true quality education for each child is having an outstanding teacher in every classroom.

Students actually crave a challenge. They will rise to meet expectations. To deprive them of the sense of accomplishment and the satisfaction that working at something difficult provide is denying them the boost to self-esteem that encourages further learning and brings the joy that authentic personal investment in education offers students. Students crave inspiration and opportunities for them to awaken their creativity and individual talents.

Creativity and innovation are what will provide the future with educated individuals who will have vision, who will have the ability to solve problems, who will be inspired to believe that individuals are important and that the world can be a better place.

Students will rise to meet challenges when they are encouraged to do so. I will offer two examples today and more in my next letter. An opportunity for challenge and the resulting rewards that stands out for me is the teaching of Shakespeare’s Othello to 12th grade Tech Prep and B level students. The idea of reading Othello in the original Shakespearean language and not a modernized version was daunting to these less-than-confident students. Year after year, however, I promised them that they could do it. We read every word of the play, discussed the complexity of the characters, watched a film version, wrote about the themes and created projects. When we were finished, I applauded them, and they applauded themselves —“We did it!” At the end of the year, when I asked them to name the book that we studied that they liked the best, invariably they said Othello. It was the work they didn’t think they could read but the one that spoke most to their understanding of life and humanity and which gave them the greatest sense of accomplishment. How is that for data that can’t be measured in numbers or percentages?

Another yearly example of students meeting a challenge was my teaching of The Canterbury Tales in Chaucer’s Middle English to my Honors and AP juniors and requiring that they learn to pronounce and recite from memory the first 18 lines of the Prologue. Again, this initially presented itself as an impossible task. I even experienced parents questioning whether students could do it. Once, standing in line for tickets at a movie theatre with my husband, a mom and dad approached and commented that learning Middle English was asking too much of high school students. I assured them that I had been doing it for years and that the students did rise to the challenge. Each year the students met the challenge, and each year they celebrated themselves on the accomplishment. Many came back from college to visit and were proud to tell me that they impressed their college professors by being able to recite the opening lines in Middle English — a true sense of accomplishment.

In a previous letter, I wrote of Student A – encouraged to complete NovaNet courses, not required to adjust to the classroom, not challenged to complete assignments, and receiving a diploma without acquiring the skills, both personal and academic, needed to be prepared for further schooling or the workplace, but making administrators happy that AYP, graduation rates, and public perception would all appear positive.

Today I will share the story of Student B, a young woman not too fond of coming to school, seldom making it on time in the morning and falling behind in her courses. Student B was a very capable student. She was in my English class as a senior. She only came to school every other day, because she was supposedly participating in School-to-Career. When she had begun to fall behind in my class, because she was absent and late so often, I would assemble assignments for her, encourage her to do them, and she would do enough to get by. What she was missing, however, were the class discussions, the interaction of class activities, the instruction in writing, the peer editing, the inspiration of watching and listening to fellow students present their creative projects — in other words, everything that makes for skill building in a good English class.

She missed my class 23 times. When we remember that our every-other-day schedule means each class only meets 90 times in a year (actually fewer for seniors), we realize how much she missed. This was a student who could have benefited personally and academically from a fifth year or an incomplete — to grow, to discover her talents and to build skills. With the current philosophy, however, of paring down requirements and excusing work, and excusing excessive absences, that does not happen. The student is part of the data, and the data is what matters to administrators. Had Student B been worried about the excessive absences (she knew they would be excused), and had she been required to come to school everyday, rather than some weeks only two days, and had she had directed studies rather than the days off, I could have worked with her to develop the skills. I never give up on my students. Instead, she left with a diploma but did not leave with the skills, the sense of accomplishment or the enhancing of her talents that could have been.

By contrast, some years ago, before the data-driven decisions and AYP obsession, I had a student who decided three quarters of the way through senior year to stop coming to school and take up exotic dancing at a club for a new career. Sometime close to the end of the year, she came back realizing that what she really wanted was to finish school. Happy to work with her again, I made lists of the work to be made up, encouraged her to stay after school to work with me, and told her that she could still get it all done, and I would hold out an incomplete for third and fourth quarter grades. By the end of the year, she had accomplished a lot, but was still not finished, so she did not graduate — English being a subject needed for graduation. We kept in touch, and she continued to tell me she was working on the assignments. Two years later, she contacted me that the work was done, she brought it in, we talked about it, and I graded it. We arranged for a day for her to come in, and with her guidance counselor and I present, the principal presented her with her long-awaited diploma. What did she learn in addition to furthering her reading, analytical and writing skills? She learned accountability, responsibility and what it feels like to accomplish something important. She was celebrated. With current shortcut practices, this story could not happen.

The answer to what creates a productive and motivating learning environment for students is an easy one, actually — the investment of good teachers and a belief that challenge and individual accountability are good for students. Rather than spending time finding and implementing more jargon-based initiatives, the administrators’ job should be the consistent evaluating of teachers — recognizing and supporting the excellent ones and helping those who are less effective to improve. More on this aspect of education next time.

Again, if you would like further information or would like to comment, my email address is tpdall9@yahoo.com.

Thank you for reading.

Teresa Dall

Mattapoisett

Cupcake Creativity at the Library

There was a Christmas cupcake carousal at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library on Wednesday, December 5.  Old Rochester Regional senior Mattie Boyle was invited by the youth group, S.K.W.A.R. (Strange Kids Who Actually Read), to teach local children how to decorate cupcakes for the holidays.  Boyle, who was recently accepted to the Johnson & Wales College of Culinary Arts in Charlotte, N.C., brought with her vanilla, chocolate, and red velvet cupcakes.  She made the frostings from scratch, allowing the younger kids to help sift together ingredients.  She then led a step-by-step lesson on how to use fondant and the different shaped tips for the piping bag.  Check out our gallery of photos from the event.  Photos by Eric Tripoli.

Sippican Continues with Curriculum Alignment

Teachers and staff members of Sippican Elementary School are continuing to align the English and math curriculum with the Common Core standards and other Tri-Town elementary school curriculums, said Director of Curriculum and Instruction Elise Frangos at the meeting of the Marion School Committee on Wednesday, December 5.

“We’ve been aligning the past curriculum with the lens of the future,” Frangos said. “This is all coming to conclusion as we near January.”

New curriculum and lesson plans are currently being stored on a password-protected website which only teachers, staff members and administrators may access. This setup is for until the new curriculum goes public.

Particularly for Sippican Elementary, Frangos said that the teachers are preparing for two science hands-on learning units. One is the King Arthur Flour grant project, which will provide the school with the supplies for each student to make bread at home after learning about the history of bread and the science of yeast in the classroom.

“Our King Arthur Flour project will rise after the new year,” Frangos said. “The goal is to get some but also to give.”

To that end, there will be over 900 loaves of bread coming from the elementary schools and the junior high school which Frangos said she would help distribute to local food pantries.

The other hands-on learning unit is for a laboratory dissection.

“Our sixth grade teachers will be learning to teach the dissection of lamprey,” Frangos said.

The lamprey, an invasive species of fish, has already arrived at Frangos’s office and she has distributed them to the science classrooms in each of the Tri-Town’s elementary schools.

“They are odorless, vapor-less, clean and wonderful,” Frangos said about the lamprey, which she explained modern technology has allowed to be preserved in chemicals other than formaldehyde.

In her Principal’s report, Evelyn Rivet informed the School Committee about the feedback she has received from parents regarding this year’s open house.

“Overall, parents felt positively about the open house format being before the first day of school,” Rivet said. She also said that, next year, the school might experiment with a different time slot.

“Many parents felt a little bit different time would work better,” Rivet justified.

Committee Vice Chairman Christine Winters suggested that the school host two open houses, one for kindergarten through second grade and one for third through sixth grade. Winters thought the arrangement might be easier on parents with multiple children in the school.

“A lot of parents feel like they’re giving their kids short shrift,” Winters said.

The Committee also discussed the unfortunate post-Thanksgiving heating troubles that Sippican Elementary experienced. Facilities Director Gene Jones updated the Committee on the state of the repairs.

“Saturday after Thanksgiving one of the main circulation pumps on the heating system literally ripped itself apart,” Jones said.

After a serious water leak, one of the motors was heavily damaged. After securing the area, Jones said his team was able to put in a spare motor from the junior and senior high schools so that the school could return to operation. The repair holds.

The Committee was able to meet Teah Mazzoni, the district’s new English Language Learner teacher. Mazzoni told the Committee about her work, which takes her from school to school in the district teaching and monitoring students who have been identified as English Language Learners. Mazzoni currently has a roster of 28 district students whom she is either teaching or monitoring.

Mazzoni has also spent time revamping the district’s English as a Second Language program.

“During my first weeks here, I drafted a handbook which details an ELL referral and testing,” Mazzoni said.

Frangos praised Mazzoni’s work, saying that she has an elaborate schedule.

“It’s quite a tapestry of going from school to school,” Frangos said.

In its other business, the Committee voted to ratify the Memorandum of Agreement for the custodial and cafeteria staff.

The next meeting of the Marion School Committee will be on Wednesday, January 2 at 6:30 pm at the Town House.

By Anne Smith

Water Abatement Investigation Continues

The Marion Board of Selectmen will further investigate a water abatement request for a residence located at 131 Allens Point Rd.  The decision to continue the investigation was made at the board’s regular meeting on Tuesday, December 4 in the Marion Music Hall.

According to Town Administrator Paul Dawson, Nicholas Grace, the owner of the property, is asking for money for his water bill, which was an astonishing $72,227.65 after one billing period.

The bill, which only includes water and excludes sewer, was so high due to a leak in a pipe and a faulty meter.  Dawson said the water meter was located in a pit about 150 yards from the house.  When the pipe suffered a leak, no radio signal was sent to the meter because the meter was underwater and not functioning properly.

“This is an unusual circumstance,” said Selectman Jonathan Henry. “Whatever we decide to do will be precedent setting.”

Dawson presented the board with a chart that stated rates for normal water bills in the area.  The chart also included figures that were double, triple and quadruple the amount of the normal bill.

Selectman Stephen Cushing suggested offering the quadrupled figure, which would be in the amount of $4,439.57.  Still, the quadrupled figure is far off the bill amount.

“I would feel comfortable doubling the quadrupled amount, personally,” said Selectman Jody Dickerson.

Henry asked to table the discussion until the board can see more water rates in the area in order to make an appropriate abatement suggestion.  Dawson urged the timeliness of the issue as the bill is due on Saturday, December 15.  Dawson said he would try to get some comparable numbers before the deadline.

The Marion Board of Selectmen will meet again on Tuesday, December 18, at 7:00 pm in the Marion Town House.

By Katy Fitzpatrick

 

Commission Votes Against Land Purchase

The Rochester Conservation Commission held a public meeting on Tuesday, December 4, to discuss the possible purchase of land on Alley Road owned by Thomas Gayoski.  Since the land qualifies for Chapter 61A tax relief, Gaysoski is required to file a notice of intent to sell the property, giving the town the right of first refusal to purchase the land.

“It’s the lot with the red house,” said Commissioner Rosemary Smith.  There are three total lots in the area but only the one with the house is for sale.

The issue has been heard at public hearings across multiple committees so each board can offer its recommendation for the property.

“There’s an existing dwelling here and Mr. Gayoski is dividing off this lot.  He’s gone through the Planning Board process to create this lot.  The option is to purchase the land for $265,000,” said conservation agent Laurell Farinon.

She suggested that the Commission recommend to the Board of Selectmen not to purchase the property because the amount of land that could be considered for conservation is negligible.

“There is an area of wetland toward the back of the property but not enough to really make the case for it,” said Farinon.

The Conservation Commission voted unanimously to in favor of refusing the option to purchase the property.

In other business, the Commission discussed the conservation restriction that has been drafted for the Doggett’s Brook property.  The area is located next to Dexter Field.

The Commission made only minor changes to the draft, which will be complete next year.

“We’ll be finalizing this in the new year.  It went before the Land Trust board of directors, it was tweaked, and now you’ve had your peak at it,” Farinon said.

Farinon also updated the Commission the progress with the Doggett’s Brook land preservation project, which would make the land more conducive to hiking and other outdoor recreation.

“We had a meeting to discuss the project [in November.]  We discussed the Wild Lands Trust’s role in the project.  They’re going to help with trails.  We discussed them helping with the kiosk that would be located there, bringing volunteers to do the trail work,” she said.

 Farinon will be speaking with town legal counsel Blair Bailey to explore options for securing other grants that may be available to fund the project.

“It’s really nice area to walk.  You can walk your dogs there,” said Smith.

The next meeting of the Rochester Conservation Commission will be on Tuesday, December 18 at 7:00 pm at the Town Hall.

By Eric Tripoli

Christmas in the Air

The Sippican Choral Society held its annual Christmas concert on Sunday, December 2 at Wickenden Chapel of Tabor Academy.  “The Many Moods Of Christmas” featured sacred and secular Christmas music performed by the Sippican Chamber Choir and South Coast Children’s Chorus.

Brian Roderick has been the musical director for the chamber choir since 2003, but the Choral Society dates back to 1965.  Since its first Christmas concert in 1966, the show has been one of the premier holiday events of the area.

Roderick has continued the tradition of offering a diverse program ranging from the obscure to the conventional.

“We try to pock pieces of contrasting text and mood,” said Roderick.  The chamber choir performed a version of the well-known carol “It Came Upon The Midnight Clear” as well as an upbeat Latin-language “Psallite” by Michael Praetorius.

“They’re a wonderful group.  They willingly tackle new repertoire. They actually prefer it,” said Roderick.  “And it’s always fun to do things with the South Coast Children’s Chorus.  It gets people to come to a concert that they ordinarily may not attend.”

The children’s group has been around since 2009, when musical director Leslie Piper first gathered young singers from six area churches to form the initial group.

The children sang a processional song as they lined up on stage.  They followed that up with “Child of Light,” a partner song that mixes an original melody with a familiar tune.

“I’d done that song with a church choir a few years ago.  I love it because after a while, you start to hear ‘What Child Is This?’ coming through,” said Piper.  “Then it brings it back to a song people know.”

They closed their set with the comical song, “No Time To Diet,” a song Piper found at random while listening to CDs from music publishers.

“I had heard an adult group singing it, and it was silly, but I thought how much fun it would be for the kids,” she said.

The song celebrates all the delicious delicacies of the holiday season and reminds those who may be counting calories that they can always make a weight-loss resolution at New Year’s.

“You need a song like that to lighten the tone a bit.  You have all these serious pieces and even though the audience knows a few, it’s nice to bring it up a bit with the kids,” said Piper.

The concert at Wickenden Chapel was the second and final of the series, following the premier concert at Grace Episcopal Church in New Bedford on November 30.

By Eric Tripoli