February 5, 2010

Page 1

Page 6: Students face the pressure to partitcipate in a sport.

High Tide

Redondo Union High School

XC Number 7

631 Vincent Park, Redondo Beach, CA 90277

focus

There will be a boys’ basketball game tonight at Mira Costa. Go out and support your fellow Sea Hawks.

go green

general

Information

by Emily Sutton

The ASB Finance Office is open for student business at the following times only: before school, after school, snack, and lunch.

the Detention

The College and Career Center student visit times are before and after school, at snack and at lunch. The center is closed during class hours except by appointment.

Dilemma

Club

Information

by Josh Hillsburg and Anthony Leong

Auto Club-10 California Scholarship Federation- 301 Chess Club- 64 Fellowship of Christian Athletes- 823 French Club- 808

info for

Did you make a New Year’s resolution to be more organized? If so, Planners are now only $2.00 each while supplies last! Get one now and be organized for your new semester assignments. Purchase in room 202. Sign-up for Grad Night 2010! Forms are in the Administration hallway or at redondounion.org under links. Cost $80 until April 30th, $100 after. Turn in completed forms and payment to Michaelle Obear in the Administration building. This event is separate from the senior class Disneyland allnighter. A wedding band has been found and turned in to the attendance office. Singing valentines are here! Show that special someone how much you care by sending them a Singing Valentine in their third period class. Send a card and a song for $3, and add a flower for just $1 more. Singing Valentines will be on sale all this week and next week during lunch in the Freshman Circle, and will be delivered on February 12th. Students : The profile sheets from Mexico are in room 404! If you are interested in hosting a student from Mexico April 19-May 2 stop by and pick up this week. The High Tide is now available online. See: www.hightideonline.org

weekend

weather

Saturday: Rain 58˚/46˚ Sunday: Sunny 61˚/45˚ Source: www.weather.com

High Tide What’s Inside... Pages 2......................News Page 3...................Opinion Page 4,5,6..............Features Pages 7,8..................Sports

February 5, 2010

LEED enables campus to

Friday

Students

Page 5: What is love? Students experience love, hooking up, and long-distance relationships.

ILLUSTRATION BY MOLLY SIMON

Administration seeks to change detention policy due to lack of effective punishment Due to budget constraints, detentions are now only held at lunch and snack on Fridays. “We used to have a full-time detention supervisor,” Assistant Principal Megan Cassette said. “However, we lost funding for that position, so we had to reduce [detentions] to only once a week.” In past years, detentions were held daily and students were able to choose between serving at lunch and snack or after school by a certain date. As a result of California’s budget crisis, the administration can no longer afford supervised detentions everyday. “Because of [the budget cuts], we’ve lost a counseling position, a secretarial position, and an assistant principal position,” Cassette said. “We’ve even lost a couple teaching positions. When we have to make big cuts, it’s usually the staff members that get caught.” The previous full-time detention supervisor had her position cut halfway through the last school year and was temporarily replaced by former secretary, Julie Bassine. “Mrs. Bassine filled in during snack and lunch everyday out of the goodness of her heart,” Newman said. Bassine left at the end of the year, however, to pursue a promotion as secretary at Adams Middle School. Limited detention supervision has had its

share of shortcomings, according to biology teacher Ann Bhare. “Detentions used to be served after school,” Bhare said. “It put the student out more.” Even students feel the old method was

“It doesn’t appear to be working.Not everyone is showing up to their detentions. Students are forgetting.” –– John Newman more effective. “It’s not that bad to just have time taken out of my school day,” sophomore Eric Emdee said. Now, the administration is facing problems with unserved detentions. “It doesn’t appear to be working,“ Newman said. “Not everyone is showing up to their detentions. Students are forgetting.” Math teacher Daniel Prinkey feels that the detention system is ineffective in disciplining students. “It’s supposed to hinder future rule breaking. But in reality, I don’t think it does,” Prin-

key said. Despite this view, Prinkey continues to utilize the detention system. “But there’s nothing else I can do; teachers are sort of limited with what they can do,” Prinkey said. “I’m just following protocol.” In an attempt to reform, the administration is considering methods that would allow detentions to be held more frequently. “We’d like to have it more often. We’re looking at different options, possibly holding it daily after school,” Cassette said. Newman is certain that the switch to daily after school detentions will occur soon, if not in the next year. “Part of the reason we’re switching to the daily detentions is to deal with the issue of student attendance,” he said. “We’ve been pulling kids in and telling them that they need to go [serve their detentions].” Cassette believes that a more effective method of punishing students would be having the students serve the detentions the same day they committed the violation. “If we ever got the positions back that we had lost, I think it would be better for students to serve the detention the same day they broke the rule,” she said. “The whole purpose of consequences is to change behavior. The consequences have to be uncomfortable enough to change student behavior.”

With construction underway, the school is aiming for a more environmentally friendly campus by participating in Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), a program that rewards the school for making environmentally friendly changes. “Every time we do something that is ecofriendly, whether it is involved with our construction or our school’s everyday lifestyle, we get a certain amount of points,” John Newman, Assistant Principal, said. The LEED program has influenced the construction plans greatly, providing ideas and rewards for a more environmentally conscious campus. The construction is giving Redondo the opportunity to maximize its use of the resources already available through recycling. “We’re recycling just about everything as we demolish it,” Newman said. “We’re recycling parts of the gym building, the pool, the field house, and other buildings around campus.” The LEED program has encouraged the school to use old materials that would have normally been thrown out. “We broke the benches off one by one on the away side [of Sea Hawk Bowl] and are going to be able to reuse and sell all of the metal used to make them,” Newman said. The concrete and re-bar of buildings that are being torn down is being recycled for various purposes such as filling drainage basins in and around the school. “We are trying to either reuse everything being demolished for our campus directly or to sell it to companies who can reuse it,” Newman said. The program was created by the U.S. Green Building Council in 1998, which provides a set of standards for construction that is environmentally sustainable. LEED certified buildings use their resources more efficiently and are also more environmentally friendly. In addition, the school will be saving money by conserving energy. “We’re installing solar panels in both the small gym and the big gym as well as powering 70 to 80 percent of the pool’s heating system by solar energy. The solar panels will save the school a lot of money in the long run,” Newman said. While many of the construction innovations aim to save money, some are simply to create a healthier and more Eco-friendly environment at school. “We are attempting to go green with the new construction, and the LEED program is helping us achieve that goal,” Newman said.

School aims to raise thousands for Haiti by Emily Vavrek

The history department and ASB have teamed up to donate money and supplies to help Haiti after the 7.0 earthquake. Donations of blankets, clothes, food, medical supplies, baby supplies, and money are being collected to aid the people. The teachers will send the money donations through Red Cross and the other donations through the Help the Children Organization. “I think that it’s really good that high school students are stepping up to help those in need,” sophomore Brooke Rocha said. While collecting donations, history teachers Amber Keller and Lani Sarachild ran into some obstacles. At first, Red Cross, Salvation Army, and Goodwill said they would take supplies, but then changed to only cash. “Luckily I was able to find a few organizations that would take supplies not just cash, which helped out a lot.” Keller said So far, the teachers and ASB have

collected a little under $500 and many provisions for the Haitians. They are accepting donations of either money or supplies until Feb. 10, when the Help the Children organization will pick them up. The two organizations were thinking of how they could help more, when the Rotary club presented the idea of sending Shelter Boxes to Principal Mary Little, who passed the idea along to ASB Adviser Sheri Gross. Each Shelter Box is 110 pounds, waterproof, and is used for food storage or as a cot. Items put into the shelter box are selected for durability, practicality, and sustainability. What goes into the box depends on the type of situation that the people are experiencing. The Shelter Box contains two tents that can hold 10 people with multipurpose blankets and sleeping mats, a children’s kit with school supplies, a coloring book, a multi-fueled cooking stove, and eating utensiles (www.shelterbox. org.)

A school wide fundraiser will take place on Tuesday Feb. 9 in fourth period. A representative from ASB will be in every classroom to collect the money, and run it back to ASB. “Depending on how much money we provide on Feb. 9, we will be able to provide shelter for the people of Haiti,” Gross said One Shelter Box costs $1,000. Little’s goal is to raise $3,00 and send three shelter boxes to Haiti. “I’m going to risk saying that we’ll exceed that goal,” Little said, “Let’s make this event a proud moment for the Sea Hawks.” Little is confident that the students will come together to help with the relief efforts and is proud of the school’s generosity. “I am proud of the compassion of our teachers and students, and their efforts to reach out to the people of Haiti,” Little said. “The collection of supplies and money to help in the relief efforts will make a difference in the lives of the people in Haiti.”

PHOTO COURTESY OF LAUREN BECK

Students learn in a Haitian classroom. Before the earthquake, Haiti was the most impoverished country in the Western Hemisphere. The school’s contribution will shelter displaced citizens.


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