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SLAMedia is a publication of the news for the Science Leadership Academy community. Writers come from the student body in 10th, 11th, and 12th grades. We work in unison to create a functioning paper with biweekly postings on a variety of events.

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lpahomov

March Madness

March 26, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By: Alhaji Koita

 

March Madness is back again and better than ever! Students around SLA, are getting their couches ready & setting their brackets up to perfection. The reason behind this massive overload, he love for basketball, obviously. And also  the chance to win major prizes and luxuries. The country is glued to their screens for 3 weeks, anxiously waiting for that national championship game.

 

Here are a few of my predictions…

 

Who I want to win

I have been a Wildcats fan since 06’, they are the best team in the country right now sitting at a perfect 31-0 demolishing teams left and right. Having the one of the country’s tallest teams. Kentucky is high flying- electrifying team. Every team needs to play their best basketball while attempting to take down that mammoth of a backcourt. They are chasing history right now attempting to become one of the few teams to have a perfect record.

 

Who WILL win the NCAA Championship

The experts say that its a 3-way race between Wisconsin, Kentucky & Arizona.

All three teams have depth, experience and a well oiled coaching staff. Even though its a race, Kentucky is voted highest among all 64 teams to reach the Final Four. While records and highlights do say a lot, this is March Madness after all; anything goes.

 

 

Possible Sleeper Team?

 

The Wichita State Shockers have a well balanced offense and defence, their record is undeniable 30-4. Teams in the midwest should look out for the Shockers backcourt as they have one best shooting teams in the country.

 

 

The Upsetter match for the National Match

 

The match would consist of Notre Dame and Michigan State. While both of these are both popular by name and sports in a whole. They are very two high proficient teams that are under the radar.The number 23 michigan state has been on roll these past couple of weeks, beating their opponents by a margin of over 10+ points. While the Notre Dame Irish are finally finding their stride, as the front court and back court have reached a perfect harmony.

 

 

Filed Under: Op/Ed, Sports, Uncategorized

Model U.N.

March 23, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Chiara Nemati

Staff Writer

You’ve heard of Debate. But what’s Model UN?

model un

Model United Nations is just what it sounds like — a simulation that gives students  the opportunity to debate and discuss issues of the past and problems of the future with others from around the globe. This is a great way for students to learn about diplomacy, international relations, and the United Nations. Students receive topics that will be discussed at conferences and must do extensive research, as well as learn and understand the position their country would take.

 

Model U.N. is a like a role-playing game. Students are assigned a country and a focus. Playing this role gives them a sense  of what it would be like to discuss these topics with other nations and come up with resolutions.

 

This year, four SLA students were chosen to participate in the model U.N. conference in Vancouver, Canada. It was a 3 day long international conference. Only ten students total were selected to join from Philadelphia. These 10 were chosen out of 50 applicants! This conference only contained two cities from the U.S. (San Francisco and Philadelphia) the rest were from Vancouver and other surrounding cities in Canada.

 

Sophomore Gabrielle Kreidie was one of the youngest participants at the conference. “I have always been very interested in the United Nations, last year my good friend, Nikki, told me about this opportunity and I was very excited to join.”

 

Out of 50 applicants, Gabrielle Kreidie, Nikki Adeli, Julian Makarechi and Anna Surgue were selected to go to Vancouver and debate.

 

Kreidie represented the National French Revolution Comity as Joey Santos. Kreidie did extensive research and made sure her position paper was very powerful and confident. Many people who are apart of the conferences go to win an award so it was very important for her to be extremely prepared.

 

Nikki Adeli, a senior, represented Iran on the Commision on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, otherwise known as the CCPCJ.

 

To register for the Model U.N. conferences, you must have a group. You then select what country and comity you would be interested in representing. Once you have been selected you write a position paper and come prepared with research and ready to speak with others to come up with a resolution.

 

“It was a great opportunity to learn about world events and crises in a really fun and informative way.” said Adeli.

 

This was the first year SLA was able to travel with others from 4 different schools in the Philadelphia area. Model U.N. brings people from around the world together to talk about current and past events, teaching students history, economics, and politics in a different way.

 

“Groups of people who never imagine talking to each other come together and are able to rewrite the past and work toward possible deliberation in the future.” reported Kreidie.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Locker Talk: Sophomore Edition! (Are you prepared for Keystones?)

March 23, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

by Staff Writer Calamity Rose Jung-Allen  

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Mark Gucciardi-Kreigh
Kind of. I don’t know what I’m doing, but my guessing capabilities are pretty strong.
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Kai Burton
I mean, yeah. StudyIsland’s been going pretty well, so that boosted my confidence. I feel like SLA has provided an environment that has prepared me for this test.
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Gabrielle Cromley
I feel somewhat prepared for Biology, but with English, I don’t get it. I don’t understand. It’s a mess.
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Adam Cavalier
I don’t think I’m prepared for Biochem, because I don’t feel like I know everything yet. A lot of the questions are Googling answers, so … not so much.
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Casey Thomas
Not really! For starters, I failed the pretest, and I feel like there’s so much information on the test that we haven’t learned. It was pretty much skimmed over in class.
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Xavier Carroll
I’m way too confident, so I know I’m gonna fail.
Eva Karlen
Kind of excited, actually. But only ’cause it’s science.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

App Review: Scholly

March 23, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

By Leah Kelly

Staff Writer

scholly-thumb

In February on ABC’s hit TV show Shark Tank, Drexel student Christopher Gray successfully presented the sharks with a new app that he made entitled Scholly. He then provided every senior at SLA with a copy of the app.

Scholly is a scholarship database application where students seeking financial help for college or graduate school  input different pieces information about themselves such as gender, grade level, GPA, race and major, and then the database matches them with hundreds of scholarships that they are eligible for. The app is currently $0.99.

While this sounds like a wonderful idea, there have been many criticisms of the app online. Even though it has decent reviews and 4 stars on the iTunes store, customers on Google Play have been less than satisfied with Scholly. There are a few major complaints including a particular major not being listed, outdated scholarships being listed and little to no options for undergraduate or graduate students.

Screen Shot 2015-03-23 at 12.31.10 PM

Since the entire SLA class of 2015 has access to the app, we’ve had a unique opportunity to check out its strengths and weaknesses. In my opinion, this app and idea is nothing special or original. There are a bunch of other free websites and apps that do exactly what Scholly does and they do not match you with faulty scholarships, as Scholly also does.

For example, yesterday I checked my new scholarship matches online with Scholly and I saw that I was matched with a scholarship entitled “Oh, the Places You’ll go! College Scholarship” and it was a full ride. I excitedly clicked on the link to bring me to the website, and it turns out that the scholarship has not been offered for the past two years.

Screen Shot 2015-03-23 at 12.30.35 PM

Scholly matched me with another scholarship that they claimed was still open for entry: the Dr. Pepper Tuition Giveaway. When I saw that it was for $100,000, I was really excited to get started on my application. I clicked on the website to view more information and on the homepage, it said “Dr. Pepper is awarding over $1,000,000 in tuition. Entries are closed.”

I am not the only who has been having trouble with this app. Senior Lisa Kang also remarked, “I don’t like Scholly at all, it doesn’t work. It makes you put in information about yourself and then give you scholarships that you’re not eligible for.”

“I looked at it once and gave up. I still use Fastweb,” said Senior Alaina Silverman. Fastweb is one of the most common scholarship search engines used by SLA students and students nationwide. It is almost identical to Scholly in the way that students input information and are in turn provided with lists of scholarships that they eligible for.

When asked how often she uses Scholly, Kang responded, “I was on it the first day that they [the founders of Scholly] gave it to us and then I was on it one more time, but that’s it. I don’t plan on revisiting it because I can just use Fastweb.”

Kang also shared her ideas for improvement: “They need to do a better job with matching students to scholarships- don’t list scholarships they’re not eligible for. It’s not helpful and makes this whole process more frustrating!”

“And make it more visually appealing,” Silverman added with a smirk.

Filed Under: A&E, Uncategorized

The Ins and Outs of Opting Out

March 23, 2015 by lpahomov Leave a Comment

Ella Donesky
Staff Writer

Chances are, if you are a Pennsylvania high school student and older than a freshman, you have taken the Keystone Exams in at least one subject. If you are in tenth grade, you’ll be expected to take them again in Spring 2015 for Literature and Biology. And if you are a high school student in the Philadelphia School District, only about 45% of you would score proficient or above on the biology section.

How do you like those odds?

Any student who has received a public education has been subject to at standardized testing from as early as the first grade. Whether online or on paper, the results are documented and the number follows the student from elementary school and through high school. This number often determines which classes students are placed in. But this score is certainly not representative of an entire year of teaching or learning.

Often the material on the test is not the material covered in class. So, as many of you know, students scheduled to take the tests are forced to spend the few weeks leading up to the test cramming to quickly memorize vocabulary and formulas, most of which we just as quickly forget.

SLA is an unusual case because of our different approach to teaching and learning. Instead of the usual mid-terms, finals and unit-end tests distributed in between, we create projects which require a more in depth analysis of what we have learned. Instead of simply memorizing the information, we internalize it. We demonstrate what we have learned through presentations, posters, children’s books, videos, speeches, monologues, and plays. The list goes on.

But come May 16, like every student in Philadelphia, we will take the Keystone Exams. This year, however, we have become aware of another option – and that is opting out.

The controversy surrounding opting out of Keystones is that many parents and students fear that it will give students a disadvantage, by harming their chances of graduating. Schools share a similar concern, since if five percent or more of students do not take the tests, then the scores are invalidated as a measure of that school’s progress. With the already sensitive state of our education and funding, a bad score could lessen our chances of prospective support and funding, though we are not currently sure if, in place of actual scores, the district will put in a “no data” or a “0.” No input may or may not hurt the school’s overall School Performance Profile number, which is determined by the district.

While opting out is not new the process of opting out presents difficulties. The main point of concern is convincing parents to allow their children to opt out of taking the test. From there, parents have to submit a letter, citing their reasoning as “religious” or “health related.” Then the principal may require them to review the exam in person.

However, we not entirely exempt from all forms of assessment. If we choose to opt out, we are required to complete a project for which we receive a grade of either “pass” or “fail.” The “project” is essentially designed to discourage you from choosing that option, because it is a difficult and very long online assessment–not anything like the projects

So, what can students do in the face of all this?

I’m a member of SLA’s chapter of the Philly Student Union and we’re preparing a campaign called “More Than a Test” to encourage high school students to opt out of the Keystone Exams. The campaign will include Vines, where students briefly summarize a project they have done, followed by the phrase “This wasn’t on the Keystones.” We’ll also be challenging local politicians to take the test, to further emphasize our message that we forget a major portion of the information on the test and further, that it will not be of use to us when we are adults. Our website will launch in a few weeks.

Gentrification is also something we hope to avoid by opting out. Economically disadvantaged students who attend schools in poor neighborhoods do poorly on Keystone exams. Poor test scores may sometimes be used as an argument for closing schools. The school district sells the buildings to Temple, Drexel, Penn or turns them into condominiums. Because these buildings cost more to live in, the real estate value of that area increases forcing lower income families to move out and gentrification takes hold.

Tests cannot truly measure our full capacity to learn, but the repercussions of an Opt-Out Campaign may cause harm to the very ideology we are trying to maintain at SLA. We encourage you to examine the risks and benefits of choosing to opt out so that come May 16, you have made your decision, one that you believe is truly in your best interests.

Image courtesy of lehighvalleylive.com

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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