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lpahomov

Students, Teachers Conduct 8th Grade Interviews

December 22, 2011 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Staff Writers Marina Stuart and Sam Lovett-Perkins
Staff Writers

During the first and third week of December, SLA conducted admissions interviews with eighth graders around the city to select the next incoming class.
SLA has completed this process for the last seven years, starting with the first ever class, who interviewed in the winter of 2004.
The reason for this process is so that the students and factually of SLA can really get to know the student and see whether they would be a good fit for the school’s educational environment.

“Since SLA is a very unique place to learn, doing interviews allows us to ensure that it is the best place to learn for our students,” said Math Teacher Mark Miles. “While I believe that anyone can be successful at SLA, there are many people whose preferred learning style might be more traditional.”

Organizing the interviews involves scheduling over 1000 eighth graders spread  over 4 days, with 2 sessions a day. Students and families call for months and are scheduled by Ms. Diane and the office interns.

The actual interviewing process involves many student and teacher volunteers. The student manager of the scheduling is Junior Max Marton, and the event was managed by Marton and English Teacher Larissa Pahomov

Marton was “chosen by Mr. Chase and Mr. Lehmann” last year to organize the schedule.

“I wanted to help my school, I felt that interviews are a staple of our schools foundation,” he explained. “I was honored to be asked to organize them.”

Figuring out who will do the actual interview is a process almost as complicated as getting the 8th graders organized. Students covet the chance to interview prospective students, and on the sign-up form they had to fill out a form and write a paragraph about why they wanted to interview.

“We choose interviewers based on previous experiences and what they wrote for their paragraph to get in,” said Marton. “Then we choose the writing rooms they need at least one experienced students and one or more new students.”

The process can be stressful for Marton and the staff, with some students not following directions, and others not showing for the days they were assigned.

Marton is the only one who feels stressed on these days. As current students may remember, the process of interviews is a nerve-wracking experience for all eighth graders.

“I was really nervous and waiting in the writing room was worse then the actually interview,” said 8th grader Jayne Cohen, who interviewed this year. “But I liked it a lot. It was good experience and it really made me realized how much I wanted to to this school.”

Her mother, Debbie Cohen was in agreement.

“We were excited going into it, but got a little nervous once we were there. But as soon as Mr. Lehmann got up on the counter it was better, he made everyone was laugh and we felt better. It interesting looking around looking at all the family units, and I made new friends hanging out there. It was good to see when the kids came down — they all looked pretty happy.”

Eighth Grader Anne Nordlof , who was one of the first students to interview out of her writing room, felt the same way. “I was a little nervous, but it was fine. I’m glad I didn’t have to sat the whole time I was really nervous about my interview.”

Not everybody has as smooth an experience. Freak outs or crying are not unusual in a day’s worth of interviews.

“Some kids broke down because they were nervous,” Said Freshman Nikki Adelei  “I would tell them, ‘I know how it feels. I was in your position last year. Take a breather and just relax.’ ”

Senior Gil Gonzales had worked interviews every year..

“It’s important for me to give back to my school,” he said. “You’re choosing the SLA class, and that’s a big responsibility, but I can handle it.”

With just under 1000 interviews completed this year, now comes the hard part — Principal Lehmann has to decide which students to accept.

Filed Under: News

Locker Talk: What are SLA students doing over break?

December 20, 2011 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Caption
Zach Castro (Junior) "I'm going to celebrate, party, and spend time with my friends"
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Klarissa Hudsen (Freshman) "I will be attending BuildOn events and playing with my cat over winter break"
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Karly Bornstein (Sophmore) "I'm going to a modeling competition called IMTA in LA"
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Anthony Torrance (Senior) "I'm going to be focusing on college applications and enjoy family and friends"
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Jamie Christmas (Freshman): "My last name is Christmas so it will be my duty to bring joy to the children"
PreviousNext

We asked students around school what their winter break plans were. Click on the caption to see what they said!

Interviews and Photos by Isabela Aznar.

Filed Under: Features, Uncategorized

Seniors Celebrate College Acceptances

December 20, 2011 by lpahomov 1 Comment


Physical Education teacher and senior advisor Pia Martin keeps a list of college acceptances of her advisees updated on the wall outside her classroom.

By Bach Tong
Staff Writer

As of the second week of December, at least 44% of seniors at Science Leadership Academy have applied to one or more colleges — and many of them have won early acceptances those schools.

Senior Tariq Smith, who got in early to the University of Pittsburgh, said that “being accepted is giving me the safe feeling that no matter what happens from here out, [he] will be going to a college”.

Senior Julia Boyer, who also got into Pitt, echoed similar feeling of safety.

“And now as I finish my other applications, I can say to myself “Well, at least I’m going to Pitt” and it makes me feel better.”

Since then, many more students have been accepted to other institutions, including Stanford, University of Pennsylvania, University of the Science of Philadelphia, Arcadia, Eugene Lang College of the New Schools, and many more.

The joyfulness is a result of hard work — for these students, the admission process began very early in their senior year.

“It wasn’t that bad, because Pitt’s application is fairly simple,” said Boyer about applying to University of Pittsburgh. “It just asks the basic ‘What are you SATs?”, “What’s your GPA?”, “What classes are you taking next year?””

Spanish Teacher and Senior Advisor Melanie Manuel says that the advisers and college office have worked “their buns off to make sure we scaffold the college admission process.”

“We start well before [September] and arm our kiddos with as much information as possible so that Seniors are informed and not overwhelmed.”

To help with this process, there are tracking sheets between college counselor Karina Hirschfield, principal Chris Lehman and the advisers to communicate about college admissions.

Ms. Manuel, who keeps a tracking sheet of college acceptances of her advisory, is thrilled every time she hears about a new student who was accepted. “It’s like finding out you won $500 at bingo.”

The challenge for these students now is to stay on track with their academics. These acceptances are dependent on the students graduating with good report cards. If they drop off, their college offers could be revoked.

In a senior meeting last month, Lehmann warned students that he has seen colleges take back their offers of acceptance when their grades dropped for the second part of the year.

Even with her acceptance, Boyer is not taking a break–and she has a specific reason for staying on track.

“I’m going to keep working as hard as I always have,” she said, “because I’m looking to get a scholarship for good grades.”

Filed Under: News

Stress At SLA: Support Systems

December 20, 2011 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Kristi Bezhani and Mike Dea

Staff Writers

Most adults assume that because students don’t have to live in the “real world,”  with responsibilities like holding a full-time job or paying taxes, that their stress levels are minimal, if not non-existent.

For many students, this may be true. But as with many things at SLA, students attending SLA often defy this stereotype.

SLA is a place that invites the unique individual in and celebrates the differences the individual has. It is also a competitive environment — not because of class rank or grades, but simply because it’s a selective admissions school.

“We’re dealing with population who made an effort to not be in a neighborhood high school, have a system in place to enable them to go to SLA, and SLA is an environment that they aren’t used to,” said Health and Physical Education Teacher Pia Martin.

She acknowledged that, “overachievers tend to deal with a lot more stress than average.”

The independent spirit of the school is also uncommon for the School District of Philadelphia, which has a more standardized way of teaching students.

Ms. Martin conceded that SLA is “not representative of the majority of high schools in the city….When you allow students ‘flex space’ to be an individual, that increases stress levels,” she explained.

Stress is pervasive amongst both the staff and student population. In a school where presentation is a core value, students are constantly expected to perform, and have to learn to deal with that.

It’s a common practice among SLA students to help their classmates out when someone falls into crisis. Many of the students have either been helped by a fellow student, or have helped a friend through a tough time.

In addition to this, different teachers have different strategies in how to deal with students who are in crisis during class. Art and Technology Teacher Marcie Hull is one of the best teachers for this needed support from having experience in needing support.

“There is a reason I have a sofa in my room. I create a comfortable place for kids to take a time out. I can sometimes read a person’s face and body language and be able to tell they are in crisis but I do not usually approach them if I feel it is not life threatening or unbearably painful,” said Hull.

“I believe in giving kids space,” she explained. “They need to know they can come to you and then they need to come to you on their time and in their comfort zone.”

Even with all of the help from friends and teachers, sometimes their counsel is not enough to deal with the problem. Nikhail James, a senior at SLA, has given his share of help to his friends, but sometimes he’s not sure how to respond.

“Some problems are too advanced for a child to balance on top of school work,” James explained.

Most teachers would agree with James. When a situation goes beyond what a little tending loving care can provide, Ms. Hull and other teachers don’t hesitate to take the necessary next steps.

“I am what you call a mandatory reporter, every teacher is,” explained Hull. “when a situation is particularly bad and in need of professional intervention I have to go to the authorities and in SLA that starts with Mr. Lehmann and Ms. Siswick.”

Though we have a system in place for dealing with stress and mental health issues, it has room for improvement, just as anything does.

Counselor Zoe Siswick said that she felt the school could improve the education for the children.

“The school could do a better job of educating students as to how to effectively they deal with their peers’ mental health concerns,” she said.

Students need to learn how to “differentiate between the issues that a friend can help with — as opposed to the issues that require adult intervention.”


Filed Under: Features

Stress At SLA: A User’s Guide

December 20, 2011 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By DeShawn McLeod

Staff Writer

Although every high school student deals with stress, as with everything else at SLA, the situation here is unique. Here is an overview of the causes, symptoms, and solutions for stress at Science Leadership Academy.

The Causes

When asked what SLA stresses about, Senior Donna Survillo said, “Drama, then benchmarks, then home life.”

Unlike normal high school drama, SLA is a small community where news can travel fast. Having access to AIM at all times during the school day doesn’t help.

“It’s extremely odd and goes against the norm of high school drama,” Junior Manna-Symone Middlebrooks commented.

On the other hand, Senior Basheer Lewis explained, “I don’t know too much about the drama, but I’d have to say it’s kind of childish.”

No matter how one looks at it, drama takes time, effort, and emotions out of everyone.

When benchmark season comes around, SLA’s stress levels can fluctuate. Having a project based community, students are more pressured to devote time to large scale projects and papers.

“It depends on the project,” Junior Isabella Tognini said, ” and how much time I have to do it.”

Having a project due in five major classes isn’t easy, but SLA students do a well job of getting papers done and producing projects.

When asked about his stress levels during benchmark season, Senior Joshua Martin-Corrales commented, “[It’s] low, the way I see it, I’ve been taking benchmarks for four years, so it’s not any worse than when it started. I’ve taken more than 100 benchmarks.”

With everyone having a laptop in the school, there are a plethora of distractions that a student can encounter. From social networking to video games, all can create procrastination habits that can reflect on a student’s grades. This can amplify stress.

In contrast, MiddleBrooks said, “My stress level is through the roof and yet manageable.”

As for one’s home life, it sometimes can’t be manageable.

“The are other stressors that you can’t avoid, say if you lose your parents as a teen, it’s a life long tragedy,” School Nurse Onnie Kelly explained.

“There’s also the loss of parents through divorce or separation, that’s a life long pain. Now, the stressors of society and crime, those are all things that students have no control over.”

The Symptoms

Having stressors from different aspects, may it be drama, school work, or one’s domestic life, people have different ways of reacting to it.

The effects of stress can be immediate and physical. MiddleBrooks said that, when she gets stressed, ” I get headaches, I’m hyperactive, and I can’t think clearly.”

Depending on the situation and it’s circumstances, everyone’s different in how they try to control their stress.

Kelly thinks that different genders have different ways of dealing with stress.

“Some of it is an example of their family, so if you’re from a erratic family, you can adapt that type of behavior,” she explained. “Some families bottle up their feelings and those families suffer from high blood pressure.”

“People deal with stress differently and often it’s a social example of their family and friends that teach them how to deal with stress.”

The Solutions

As students go on with the stress in their lives, here’s some ways to cope or relieve it. Just as there are many ways for distractions that can cause stress, there are also various ways to deal with it.

“SLA is a great place to experience and learn, but if students perceive school work as stress, then they need to revaluate what stress is,” School Nurse Onnie Kelly explained, “School is an everyday occurrence, you’re always going to have deadlines and demands made of you, the only way to relieve that stress, is to rise and get it done.”

Work wise, Math Teacher Erin Garvey suggests, “If they’re stressing out about procrastination, they need to get their work down when it’s assigned.”

Personal wise, Math Teacher Caitlin Thompson suggests, “Yoga, physical activity, productive and purposeful use of free time. For example students could allow themselves an hour to hang out with friends, watch TV, or do good for others.”

Martin-Corrales has a similar approach to coping with stress. “Whenever I do get stressed I breathe, do yoga, and then I relax.”

Senior Rashaun Williams suggests that students can relax “by finding their hobbies that make them independently happy.”

Sports, extra curricular activities, friend and family time, and self improvement are all healthy ways of coping with stress.

Stress tied to people can also be difficult. If the circumstances are possible, step away from those who can cause dramatic stress in life. It’s good to associate with people who are up lifting to one’s self image and others.

Having close friend circles can also help with stress. If one continues spread their business across a wide range of people, that’s how it can be spread to the whole community without the originator even knowing.

It’s good to concentrate on productive things instead of problems that can hinder one’s output in their academic, social, and home life.

It’s important to remember that stress can also have a good side.

“To a certain extent it’s a good motivator, it keeps a fire under people,” said Math Teacher Brad Latimer.

“It there was no stress, people wouldn’t be productive.”

Filed Under: Features

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