Eye of the Tiger (Issue 8, Volume 18)

Page 1

TOP NEWS Features

Opinion

A&E

Married district AP Stats teachers work together to improve class Page 5

Sports

EOT’s editorial board champions campus progression toward 1:1 Page 7

Sophomore Jackson Young previews Marvel’s newest installment of The Avengers Page 9

New CIF rule change set to affect RHS football, basketball, soccer Page 12

EYE OF THE TIGER Roseville High School’s student-produced publication

eyeofthetigernews.com

Eye of the Tiger

@EOTNews

1 Tiger Way, Roseville, CA

APRIL 23, 2018 ISSUE 8, VOLUME 17

Security reassessment sheds light on campus hazards This article is the second of a two-part series on Roseville High School’s Way and Berry Street rather campus safety. See eyeofthetigernews.com for the first article, published March than crossing the street directly 19 (‘Recent threats prompt district security reassessment,’ C. Medrano). onto the dirt lot. BY CAM MEDRANO

c.medrano@eyeofthetigernews.com

As the oldest school in RJUHSD, RHS grapples with everyday campus safety concerns, including matters pertaining to road safety and uneven terrain for pedestrians and runners. According to RHS principal David Byrd, the school’s 106-year-old landscape does not accommodate for the abundance of drivers around campus.

“This is an older facility. It was built in this place a hundred plus years ago and the way they built things today accounts more for more people driving,” Byrd said. “We don’t always benefit from that.” Many heavily trafficked areas, like the dirt lot across the front entrance of the school, lack crosswalks. Youth resource officer Marc Kelley believes it would be beneficial for students to utilize the crosswalk on Tiger

“I realize that students don’t always want to walk further than they have to, but it would be the best option safety wise,” Kelley said. According to Byrd, the Union Pacific Railroad Co. owns the property of the dirt lot. As a result, a crosswalk may not be built. “Crosswalks are great, but at the end of the day you still got to get across the street and you still got to look both ways,”  SAFETY | Page 3

CAM MEDRANO EYE OF THE TIGER

Students cross Tiger Way to get to their cars in the dirt lot, despite the street’s lack of a crosswalk. The lot is one of a few popular places for students to park.

THE ROAD TO 1:1

Students’ walk fundraises for

national charity

THE FUTURE: A Chromebook for every student by 2019 BY DANIELLE BENNETT d.bennett@eyeofthetigernews.com

Next year, RJUHSD will provide sophomores and freshmen with new Chromebooks as a part of an initiative called Digital Equity in Learning, formerly known as One-to-One. The initiative aims to provide one Chromebook for every student for both home and in-class use, which they will keep throughout their high school career. Current sophomores and juniors will continue using Chromebook carts next year. However, in two years, current sophomores will be able to take home some of the Chromebooks that are currently in carts. By the 2019-2020 school year, every student in the district, excluding those at Adelante High School, will have their own Chromebook.

RJUHSD administrators, such as assistant superintendent of business services Joe Landon, worked to determine how to implement Chromebooks in the classroom. “We didn’t quite feel comfortable with the funding to do it with all four years and when we looked at just freshmen we came across a number of issues where you have a lot of classes that are freshmen and sophomores combined,” Landon said. “We really want the curriculum to be centered around the devices.” The initiative passed at the April 10 board meeting, and the district purchased 5,500 Chromebooks at a total cost of $1,518,000, with another $750,000 entered in their budget in anticipation of Chromebooks for the next incoming class. Students will receive their Chromebooks during picture day

BY ALEXANDRIA SUBA a.suba@eyeofthetigernews.com

BRIAN NUEVO EYE OF THE TIGER

A student works on a Chromebook in class. All RJUHSD students will be issued their own personal Chromebook at the start of the 2019-2020 school year.

at the start of next school year. Similar to computers currently on campus, students will be expected to follow RJUHSD’s Acceptable Use Policy and the school firewall will apply to the Chromebooks. In the event that students

should damage their computers, the school will provide them with a temporary replacement while the Technology Department repairs it. Students may be subject to fines for the cost of repair. The district will work  FUTURE | Page 2

THE PAST: Gradual tech progression leads to digital equity BY DANIELLE BENNETT d.bennett@eyeofthetigernews.com

The Digital Equity in Learning initiative projected to roll out next year comes as the culmination of a gradual evolution of technology in RJUHSD classrooms.

The progression of one-to-one Chromebooks began five years ago, when RJUHSD procured Chromebooks for all staff members, from teachers to administrators to counselors. According to RJUHSD superintendent Ron Severson, by having a Chromebook for

CAM MEDRANO EYE OF THE TIGER

English teacher Jamie Handling works with a student on a Chromebook in her third period Creative Writing Class.

each staff member, the district aimed to give adults the chance to familiarize themselves with technology to increase its use and effectiveness in a classroom setting. “The goal is that they needed to get comfortable,” Severson said. “They needed to learn how to use them, they need to have them become part of the fabric of their lives so they can become more comfortable using them in the classroom.” The next year, RJUHSD became the pilot district for a new type of state testing for juniors, called the Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium. SBAC served as the first instance where students would need to take their exam electronically, calling in the need for purchasing enough Chromebooks for all juniors. The state allotted RJUHSD a one-time grant to implement new Common Core standards

and testing. With approximately $900,000 of the funding, the district purchased around 4,000 Chromebooks. The RHS campus, which had already hosted several Chromebook carts, could now increase the use of them in the classroom. As the number of Chromebooks increased, teachers had opportunities to attend trainings such as Computer-Using Educators conferences and an Ed Tech Summit hosted at RHS each year. Within departments, professional development days provide teachers the chance to learn new strategies and online tools from each other. English teacher Jamie Handling, from her experience attending the Ed Tech Summit and district development days, feels the trainings’ potential for facilitating growth in the classroom makes attending them worthwhile.  PAST | Page 2

INSIDE: UPCOMING EVENTS NEWS 2 - 3 ESPAÑOL 4 FEATURES 5 - 6 OPINION 7 - 8 A&E 9 - 10 SPORTS 11 - 12

Last Friday, three Roseville High School English 10 classes participated in a water walk to raise money for children in Liberia. Instead of spending the morning in their classrooms, students and teachers opted to walk around the RHS track for a mile, each carrying a bucket of water to represent the miles children in Africa must walk every day for clean water. English teacher KC Worden partnered students with the organization Children of Compassion and created a lesson plan for the classes to promote the idea of global citizenship. Senior Haley Zarour is pleased with this year’s student turnout and anticipates more people will participate in upcoming school years. “I think it is already really cool with a small portion of students but if it was a bigger thing like if our whole school was involved then it would really make an impact, and because Ms. Worden is so passionate about it I feel like one day it will be the whole school,” Zarour said. Senior Yvan Uwobahorana appreciates the chance to be a part of the event. “I’m very glad to be able to have this opportunity because I normally would never have done this,” Uwobahorana said. “It’s like a whole new experience that I wouldn’t get in any typical class, it’s just been very awesome.” Uwobahorana hopes to see the water walk become an annual event at RHS and believes participating helps students expand their perspectives. “I do think Roseville High School should continue doing this and having this experience because it makes more kids open to be agents of change,” Uwobahorana said. “It helps kids get out of their own personal world and personal struggles and see what it’s like for someone else who has less opportunity and is less advantaged.” Although the water walk was the culminating event of this project, the students will continue to fundraise through their personal web pages for Children of Compassion.

Read more at eyeofthetigernews.com


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