Eye of the Tiger (Issue 5, Volume 13)

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TOP NEWS Features

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Opinion

Entertainment

Sports

Senior Lena Lewis defies stereotypes as one third of punk girl band

Be grateful you get to stress about college, says senior Seiénna Papini

Senior Madison Telles warns that new space epic Interstellar will rip your heart apart

Eye of the Tiger sports staff ranks RHS’ top 10 fall athletes

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

www.eyeofthetigernews.com

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1 Tiger Way, Roseville, CA

NOVEMBER 19, 2014 | ISSUE 5, VOLUME 13

CVC switch leaves game spirit flat Football suffers drops in attendance, revenue BY MADIE WHALEN

m.whalen@eyeofthetigernews.com

ROBBIE SHORT EYE OF THE TIGER

Attendance at RHS’ five home football games was down nine percent compared to last season. Some believe the school’s switch to the CVC is to blame for the drop.

For the past 17 years, Roseville High School’s athletics teams competed in the Sierra Foothill League, opposing teams from local schools like Woodcreek, Granite Bay, Rocklin and Del Oro. With this year’s realignment into the Capital Valley Conference, RHS lost historical rivalries – most notably its one with Woodcreek. Consequently, athletic events – particularly home football games – are now drawing smaller, less engaged audiences, and the school is losing money from a

drop in ticket sales. According to some students, RHS lost more than just a rivalry when it moved out of the SFL. Because high school attendance boundaries often coincide with social proximity, RHS students lost the chance to compete against their childhood friends – the people who they grew up with, played Little League and rec soccer with, studied in middle school with and parted ways with when they transitioned into high school. Tiger Cage leader Eric Tyukayev noticed both a lack of attendance and spirit during this

fall’s home football games and attributes both to the league switch. Tyukayev believes that because CVC schools are generally further away, RHS students don’t have relationships with students who attend them and are therefore less likely to care about, be spirited during, or even want to go to games against them. “We used to play local schools – schools that [students] from this school have friends with and really want to go and see the outcome of [games against them],” Tyukayev said. Tiger Cage co-leader Paige Spencer agrees. “For Woodcreek games we’d get pumped,” Spencer said. “Even for other games [with]  CVC | Page 3

UC seeks major hike in tuition RHS grads may struggle with five-year increases BY MIKAYLA STEARNS

m.stearns@eyeofthetigernews.com

ROBBIE SHORT EYE OF THE TIGER

Senior Nathan Cimino (above) is one of 13 boys in his fourth-period AP Literature and Composition class of 37. Male students at RHS, in RJUHSD and across the country currently lag behind their female classmates in many measures of academic achievement, including AP and SAT participation and UC a-g completion. RJUHSD leaders recently committed to trying to figure out why.

District targets gender gap BY GEORGE HUGHES

g.hughes@eyeofthetigernews.com

B

ased on current course requests, female Roseville High School students will take 715 Advanced Placement courses this school year. Their male classmates will take only 470. If this year is any like 2011-12 and 2012-13, boys in the Class of 2015 will graduate having completed the University of California’s a-g requirements at a rate more than 10 percent lower

than that of the girls who will walk the stage beside them. Since 2010, nearly 60 percent of the SAT exams administered to RHS test-takers have been completed by female students. Though a gender gap in upper-level academic participation is nothing new, the Roseville Joint Union High School District recently committed to examining the impact and severity of the inequities within its own academic programs. RJUHSD superintendent Ron Severson said that the district knows about the issue and is still

Textbook utility now in question Common Core forces demand as district tries to embrace tech BY JILLIAN FANG

j.fang@eyeofthetigernews.com

Though the Roseville Joint Union High School District pushed for a technological approach toward teaching, mandated integration of Common Core is leading them to purchase more textbooks. High schools across California are stocking their classes with updated versions of textbooks due to the integration of Common Core Standards in Californian schools – these standards focus on critical thinking and problem solving. RJUHSD believes

analyzing data in order to better understand the issue at hand. He and other RJUHSD administrators recently committed to adding gender as a divisor in future breakdowns of district data. “We don’t know what the problem is right now,” Severson said. “We just have a few data points. High school kids are complex, and we are going to have to do some real analysis and dig deeper into the data to figure out what exactly is going on.” RJUHSD leaders feel that this gender gap is  GENDER | Page 2

that incorporating Common Core Standards will help produce a well trained workforce, because it will well equip students with critical thinking skills, problem solving and adaptive strategies and the ability to read and communicate complex information. However, due to the encouragement from RJUHSD for a technological approach to teaching, in addition to most students having access to the Internet during school, some question the efficiency AVERY BRALEY EYE OF THE TIGER of these textbooks. Since 2013, RJUHSD funded over $900,000 To comply with the ongoing Common Core adoption, RJUHSD continues on mobile devices, carts, training and licensing. to purchase textbooks for its student, but some doubt their effectiveness  TEXTBOOKS | Page 2 in the wake of the district’s recent embrace of technology.

Roseville High School students looking to attend a University of California school may be in for a bigger hit to their pocketbooks than they were expecting. Two weeks ago, the UC Board of Regents announced THE PLAN that it will consid 5 percent jumps er adopting a new each year for “long-term stability” five years plan that would raise  Eventual tuition tuition at its nine of $15,563 (up undergraduate camfrom $12,192) puses by 5 percent a year for the next five years, potentially starting in 2015-16. The proposal could add an extra $612 to tuition fees in the first year and, by the end of the five-year period, increase the current $12,192 annual tuition to $15,563. “The California economy is growing  UC | Page 3

Community shocked by Smith arrest Class of 2011 graduate in custody on murder charge

BY RACHEL BARBER

r.barber@eyeofthetigernews.com

A recent graduate of Roseville High School who excelled in the classroom and on the athletic fields is currently facing murder charges in Oregon. Last Wednesday, Salem police arrested Beau Smith, 22, in connection with the beating and murder of 66-year-old Michael Beau Smith Hampshire. Hampshire’s autopsy revealed his death was caused by blunt-force head injuries. His body was found near an inner-city intersection at 3:42 a.m. Smith was found a few blocks from the scene, where he was then interviewed by police and arrested. He was charged with murder the following day. According to a report by the Sacramento Bee, Smith’s lawyer, Walter Todd, was granted a 30-day period to collect character references for  SMITH | Page 2

INSIDE: Upcoming Events......2 | News......2-3 | Español......4 | Features......5-6 | Opinion......7-8 | Entertainment......9-10 | Sports......11-12 | Read more at eyeofthetigernews.com.


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