
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
GE Mock Trial Team

Associate Superintendent Mr. Gary Comley goes to China

First Annual Native American Night
Child Guidance
Through the Safe Schools Healthy Students grant, SHS partnered with Child Guidance to receive counseling services for students in school. SHS has a clinician from Child Guidance, Laura Lokenburg, located in the building to work with students identified as needing counseling services for a variety of reasons that may include: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Anxiety Disorders, Depression, Trauma, Mood Disorders, Adjustment Disorders, and Oppositional Defiant Disorders.
Child Guidance offers individual and family counseling; home based services, as well as psychiatric services. Child Guidance also provides emotional well-being screenings and assessments to determine what kind of services may be needed for a student and their family. This year Child Guidance offered a TEEN SCREEN to incoming freshman to screen for concerns of depression and/or suicidal ideation.
If you feel your child may need services or would like them to be screened please contact Child Guidance at 381-8911 or stop in at 530 Franklin St. 2nd floor Schenectady NY 12305.
A child’s emotional health and well-being plays a key role in determining his or her success in school, ability to get along with others, and ability to deal with the challenges of growing up.
Annual Variety Show
College of St. Rose Trip
GE Career Fair
Black History Night
AFJROTC

JROTC contributed to Native American Heritage Night with 22 students assisting in making the evening a success. 28 students spent the weekend prior to Thanksgiving packing and delivering Thanksgiving baskets in the Feed the Hungry drive – putting food on the table for over 10,000 people. It was rewarding and humbling with the recognition that there are so many within our community needing assistance.
Upcoming: Staff Training/Retreat in Binghamton, NY – setting up corps events for Semester II; Leadership Challenge Weekend at Norwich University, VT.
National Green Week
Green Education Foundation (GEF) is mobilizing two million children to participate in environmental educational programs during National Green Week 2010 (Feb. 1-5, 2010). The objective is to empower students to become environmental stewards within the context of their own lives.
Students are encouraged to volunteer in a number of environmentally friendly activities. This spring, at SHS students will learn about the gardening and composting if they participate in Nature’s Classroom Club. Students are encouraged to adopt a plant– did you know that using one house plant for every 100 square feet help remove toxins and pollutants indoors. If you don’t already– RECYCLE! Students in some Science classes will learn about auditing classrooms and homes to find energy leaks and correct them in an effort to reduce energy consumption. NY Residents– look for rebates when purchasing energy efficient appliances coming in February.
GE Teachers Win Grant
Colette McCarthy, a GE Science teacher and advisor of Nature's Classroom Club and Kris Foote, GE Family and Consumer Science teacher and advisor of Family, Career, and Community Leaders of America (FCCLA) at Schenectady High School received a $500 Kids Growing Food Garden grant from Cornell University and a $500 Climate Change Energy Education Award from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA).
The Kids Growing Food Garden program is designed to connect kids to agriculture by actually growing food at school. The grant provides educators with financial start-up funds and educational tools that help integrate knowledge of the food and fiber system into the classroom.
The teachers were awarded $500 as "seed" money to help them purchase what is necessary to start a garden classroom. Garden-based lessons will be integrated into regular classroom studies such as math, science, language arts, and history.
Ms. McCarthy and Mrs. Foote said they wanted to find an opportunity for students to increase their understanding and appreciation of agriculture, nutrition, and the food system. They agree that growing food at school will help the students gain an understanding of how the local food system works and serves as a link to local farmers, businesses, and others involved in agriculture. As recipients of the grant, the teachers will receive educational resources, workshop opportunities, and access to a growing network of school food gardeners through the Kids Growing Food Network.
The cross-curricular plan includes an array of teachers of different grades and subjects, as well as administrative and custodial staff from both SHS and Central Park International Magnet School. The grant not only requires that students from elementary to high school be involved but also calls for community involvement. Representatives from the Central Park Greenhouse and Roots and Wisdom both Schenectady County Extension programs are partners in the program.
Since 1998, Kids Growing Food, a New York Agriculture in the Classroom program, has helped create and support over 325 school food gardens, providing K-12 students throughout New York with hands-on food growing experiences. For more information about the program, visit the NY Ag in the Classroom website at www.nyaged.org/aitc/ New York.
Ms. McCarthy and Mrs. Foote were also awarded a Climate Change Energy Education Award from NYSERDA. The teachers received $500 to support their proposal, A Blooming Idea: Implanting Climate Change in Indoor/Outdoor Gardens.
Within the proposal they presented an opportunity for students to increase their understanding and appreciation of using energy wisely and moving from fossil fuels to renewable energy. The teachers said their goal is to promote sustainable pro-green behaviors in Schenectady High School students, their families, and the community. The program will support efforts to involve students in community-based energy projects. This grant program will also include an array of teachers of different grades and subjects as well other staff members from SHS. For more information about the Climate Change Energy Education Award, visit the NYSERDA website at http://www.nyserda.org/
