The Razor - October 2019

Page 1

Hopkins School 986 Forest Road New Haven, CT

Vol LXVI, no. 2

October 18, 2019

www.therazoronline.com

Hopkins Students Balance Google Classroom and New LMS However, some students, think Classroom procides the most unifying experience. Prairie Resch ’21 said, “As a school, we're already using Google Suite for our email and [D]rive, and everything is already connected to Google Classroom. With Classroom, students can make class posts, ask questions privately or publicly, and unsubmit work.” Faculty and students alike complain the new LMS's lack of efficiency. According to Melchinger, “the website require[s] more time for me to program,

get to assignment sheets, especially on [her] phone.” While the new website does have a notificaAnushree Vashist '21 tions option, some suggest that Classroom better perNews Editor formed that function. Cameron Murray ’22 is disappointed “that the website doesn’t tell students which Hopkins adopted a new learning manageteacher made an announcement when an email notificament system (LMS) that, while universally adopted, tion is sent out.” Resch agrees, saying the website “is less is controversial in the Hopkins community. Some efficient at communication than Classroom notifications.” features of the new website include the integration The LMS demands signing in multiple times of the schedule, attendance, class pages, an assignbefore accessing materials. Resch explained the inconvement center, and grade book under a single program. nience: “If I close my computer for a time, The Technology Committee, a I don't need to click at all for Classroom to group of students and faculty that recSarah Roberts '20 get back to the page whereas I have to sign ommends technology policy on campus, back into the website and navigate back to decided the new LMS aligned with the the page I was on.” Sonnenfeld explained overall interests of the Hopkins Coma similar tedious process when logging munity. Director of Academic Technolin on a smartphone, saying she, “ha[s] to ogy Ben Taylor explained the goals inmess around with the Hopkins website on clude a “motion towards consistency Google, then sign in, then scroll through in communication of assignments.” To everything to look for a class, and then this end, teachers now must include click on links to find assignment sheets that dates on assignment sheets, announce take you through a million different Google major deadlines, and online work in the apps.” She hopes, though, that “a way to calendar, and decide whether they will download a Hopkins app” could help. use the grading option. Taylor emphaAdditionally, Classroom offers a specifsized that teachers can continue to use ic grading feature the new website does not Google Classroom, Hopkins’ previous possess, as Taylor acknowledged: “There is LMS: “We’re not saying you can’t use one advantage to Google Classroom which Google Classroom. We want...to be flexis very important to teachers. That's the ible and allow people to try new things.” ability to comment and look at your work, Math teacher Kathryn Chavez and for that not to be seen by students unagrees, emphasizing that she can “take til they are ready to hand them all back at attendance, look up grades and assignall at once.” Melchinger, who writes “a lot ments, and pull [the LMS] up on the of coaching comments on papers, like[s] Juan Lopez '22 visits Mr. McCord's Math 48 Bulletin Board on the new website board and teach kids how to use it. It’s Classroom's functions for dealing with comall in one location and I don’t have to switch screens.” and the results aren't 100% clear. I think the Assign- ments on Google-Docs.” He continued, “I want writing to The experience is similar for some students, like Soment Center is keeping some of my students on task be a conversation about improvement, not just a grade-judgphie Sonnenfeld ’21. She thinks the website is “an efwith more confidence. But we don't know if it's re- ment dropping into a spreadsheet. That's a benefit I don't ficient way to keep all [her] information for classes, ally teaching students to organize their time better.” want to lose, so I chose to stick with Classroom for papers." athletics, and school updates together in one place.” Jenny Gidicsin ’21 “dislike[s] how inefficient it is to Continued on Page 2

College Board Changes AP Policy Juan Lopez '22 Assistant News Editor The College Board decides not only the content of Advanced Placement (AP) exams, but also the fees and registration deadlines. The changes to the AP exam registration process for the 2019-2020 school year is shifting the way Hopkins students and teachers prepare for the exams. The new deadline for registration is November 15. Previously, the deadline was February 19. Any change between the new November date and March 13, 2020 adds a $40 fee per exam on top of the original $94 per exam. The change in the deadline to November forces students to make their decisions with less information. Jeremy Cheng ’22 says “Last year I had much more time to think about taking the AP exam; with that extra time, I was able to decide to take the exam based on how well I understood the material. This year I registered to take an AP exam for Physics. However, based on how I comprehend the material of the class I am then going to decide to either pay the fee and cancel it or take the exam.” The College Board claims the new changes to the registration deadlines and costs create a more organized Inside: News........1-2 Arts..........2-3 Features....4-5 Op/ED.......6 Sports........7-8

process. Administrative Assistant to the Dean of Academics Elaine Plante disagrees, “Right now it does not seem that way. I am basically doing everything I have done in the spring, now in the fall and adding in the online piece.” AP Mathematics teacher David McCord says “Many students feel like taking it in September but, for seniors, in April, with college acceptances in hand and maybe the AP not even acknowledged by their future school, some begin to feel less inclined to take it. They can still back out, but now it costs them $40.” The registration and fee changes also create challenges for students new to AP exams. Sam Mason ’22 explains, “Being this is my first year taking an AP class, it is difficult for me to decide whether or not to take the exam this early in the year. I am not sure what to expect and making the deadline earlier does not help at all.” Plante echoes Mason’s concerns, “I have gotten a few [AP exam registrations] but I think it is hard for the students to make these decisions now.” Nick Wilkinson ’21 says “The earlier deadline doesn’t play a role in my decision at all. I 100% know I want to take Continued on Page 2

Arts Page 2: Hopkins Drama Association Performs Hamlet

Political Primary Primer for Fall 2019 Sophie Sonnenfeld ’21 Op-Ed Editor On Tuesday, November 3, 2020, current Hopkins juniors and seniors will have the opportunity to vote for the first time in the presidential election. As of October 1, 2019, our Hopkins student voters have 19 Democratic and 4 Republican candidates from which to choose. Although the election is more than a year away, the heads of Young Democrats and Young Republicans are already planning a joint Political Discussion Series. For the Democrats, Former Vice President Joe Biden, Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders emerged as the three main front runners in recent polls. The September 22 Politico poll placed Biden at 32%, Warren at 20%, and Sanders at 19%. Other Democratic candidates that made it in the top ten include: California Senator Kamala Harris; Mayor of South Bend, Indiana Pete Buttigieg; former Texas Representative Beto O’Rourke; Entrepreneur Andrew Yang; New Jersey Senator Cory Booker; Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar; and Hawaii Representative Tulsi Gabbard. Of these candidates, there are a record number

Features Page 4: Students March for Climate Action

Features Page 5: New Faculty Profiles!

of women and people of color running. In 2018, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) slated 12 DNC debates to take place, six during 2019 and the remaining six for the first four months of 2020. At the time this article was written, some logistics including an offical candidate list and timing of the next debate on October 15 were still being determined. The debate was moderated by CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Erin Burnett as well as New York Times National Editor Marc Lacey. CNN, The New York Times, BBC, and other news analysts disagreed over who won and lost in the debates, but candidates differentiated themselves in terms of strategic attack and defense, public speaking and debating ability, and policy. For this election, there will be 50 primaries and seven caucuses in Iowa, Nevada, Wyoming, and four territories. The primaries and caucuses lead up to the 2020 Democratic National Convention which is scheduled to take place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin from July 13 to 16, 2020. Aaron Gruen ’21, said he feels the Democratic primaries are important in order to determine the direction of the Democratic Party. “There are so many monumental issues, Continued on Page 2

Sports Page 8: Faculty Spotlight: Former Soccer Stars


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