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Dulaney High School Timonium, Maryland
Volume 56, Issue 6 HIDDEN BURDEN
the griffin
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TO KNOW
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April 28, 2017
Reacting to Dance’s departure S
see page 3
Visit us at http://dulaneygriffin.org
emma walz, managing editor tudents yelled out in the middle of class as the unexpected news broke around 10:15 a.m. April 18. Staff received an email from Dallas Dance, and the news trickled down to students from social media announcing that the superintendent will resign from his position June 30, according to a Baltimore Sun article. “I’m shocked. I mean, nobody knows what to say,” Latin teacher Dawn Mitchell said. French teacher Bella Nabutovsky said she was happy about the news. “The grading system is a complete mess, and I don’t think he understands what he has done,” Nabutovsky said. “Maybe that’s why he resigned. He wasn’t sure that he’d be able to solve these problems himself.” Freshman Anne Wang also critiqued Dance for
implementing the grading policy. “Because homework isn’t graded so now, kids aren’t going to do it,” Wang said. Still, Wang applauded Dance’s motivating videos for students at the beginning of each school year. An educational advocate shared such praise for Dance. Although she has appeared before the school board to criticize some of the superintendent’s decisions, Jean Suda, whose children attended county schools, praised Dance for team building and for the steady increase in minority achievement. “He has pushed people to reevaluate how they teach students of different races and ethnic backgrounds,” she said. In fact, black graduation rates have topped those of whites in the county schools for the first
photo by sophie bates SUPERINTENDENT DALLAS DANCE, seen here during a 2015 school visit, is to leave his post by June 30.
time, according to the Sun. Suda also praised Dance for making so much information available to stakeholders on the Baltimore County Public Schools website. see DANCE, page 2
students are registered to take AP exams this year RIDER EXCELS
see page 7 # TO KNOW
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number of FALS/ CALS students performing at BCPS State of the Schools see page 2 GROWING SKILL
see page 12
INDEX 2-3 news 4-5 opinion 6-7 sports 8-12 features
graphic by tirzah khan This information was gathered in an anonymous pen-and-paper survey March 2-3 in select English classes. Surveyors urged students to be candid and honest in their responses to 26 multiple choice questions.
Sex survey finds students tend to be more cautious than liberal
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sophie bates, editor-in-chief hile rates of sexual activity in some categories are increasing locally, an anonymous pen and paper survey of students in all grades and academic levels finds that when it comes to sexual intercourse, sexting and oral sex, students here are less active than their peers nationwide. Among the salient findings of a survey of 217 students in February: nearly a third of females and 43 percent of males reported that they’ve had intercourse. The National Center for Health Statistics website reports that between 2011 and 2013, 44 percent of American females 15 to 19 and 47 percent of males in that age group had sexual intercourse. Still, this year’s stats are higher than those found with a similar Griffin survey given here three years ago. For girls, the 2017 rate inched up about a percentage point. For boys, the rate jumped 12 percent. In 2014, 31 percent of females
and 28 percent of males reported having sex. On a related note, the Griffin’s 2017 survey found that most students here – 76 percent – report that they have never had unprotected sex. That’s good news, according to science and
“I think nude pictures are not really safe, especially in high school.” health teacher Laura Braly. “With so many people testing positive for sexually transmitted infections, and sexually transmitted infections, most of them have no symptoms,” she said. “It’s really important for kids to
use protection.” While national figures on the rate of sexting are notoriously difficult to verify, the results of the Griffin survey suggest students here are either on par with peers or may be exercising more caution than peers elsewhere. Fewer than a third of students here (29 percent) indicated that they had ever sent nude photos of themselves. A 2014 Drexel University study detailed in TIME Magazine found that 54 percent of teenagers nationally admit to sexting. But in a New York Times op-ed a year ago, Amy Adele Hasinoff, author of “Sexting Panic: Rethinking Criminalizaton, Privacy, and Consent,” cited a series of surveys suggesting that only 20 percent to 30 percent of American teens have ever sexted. As TIME noted, the Drexel survey polled college students about their past behavior, which may make that survey’s results more accurate. Of course, any sexting raises concerns. “I think nude pictures are not really safe, especially in high school,” senior Taelon Um said. “Nowadays if you send one, then they are probably never going to go away.”
see SURVEY, page 2
FYI: Spring dance Junior Prom History Honors Society Relay For Life AP Exams Kendall Burrows April 29 May 1-12 April 22 hosts U.S. Rep. Dutch Blood Drive concert 5 p.m. - 10 p.m. Loyola Graduate 7 p.m. 10 p.m. April 30 April 21 Ruppersberger gym Center classic cafeteria 7:30 p.m. auditorium
and gym
April 24 2:30 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. satellite cafeteria
Find us at http://dulaneygriffin.org.
see page 2
10 a.m. - 4 p.m. classic cafeteria