Sister Teachers Reminisce Student Section Relocates Memorable Moments G10-11 B1 C1
Siblings at school discuss their teaching careers
Tribe moves out of endzone and into bleachers
Students discuss experiences over summer
The Granite Bay Gazette GRANITE BAY HIGH SCHOOL w 1 GRIZZLY WAY w GRANITE BAY, CA w 95746 w VOLUME 22 w ISSUE 1 w FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2018
COMMENTARY
CAR CLASHES Students cope with changes to parking situation
andrew yung ayung.gazette@gmail.com
College essays prompt healthy self-reflection
I
am an avid fan of haikus. Perhaps it is the way that the 17 syllables roll off the tongue in such a short, savory way. Perhaps it is the Asian origin of the haiku, a heritage I share. Or perhaps it is the limitation that the haiku entails. Because who doesn’t like a challenge? Hemingway sure refused to back down from one, as did Dr. Seuss. As a result, we are gifted with “For Sale: Baby Shoes Never Worn” and “Green Eggs and Ham.” And in the vein of willingness to take on a challenge, I must say this: I enjoy the challenge of the Common Application general statement essay. I enjoy the challenge of writing it. I enjoy the challenge of thinking about it. I enjoy the challenge of having to depict the entirety of my 17-year life, the entirety of my being, with 650 words. Because, though the task initially is daunting and stressful – as this will perhaps be the most important piece of writing I will ever do – I feel confident in my ability to portray my being in a way that is true to myself. Not true to what colleges want in an applicant. True to myself. That is why I have sat on this essay for several months now. To brainstorm, to ponder and to edit. However, my parents have attributed the long wait to my supposed procrastination. They think that because I am usually quick with homework and other assignments, my essay remains incomplete only because I do not feel the urgency of finishing the essay. How wrong they are. When I said earlier that for the last several months now I have been working on this essay, I lied. It was in the eighth grade that I started thinking about this essay. Because it was in the eighth grade that I started to question my true identity. Although such intense self reflection was prompted by a family death and ongoing problems at school, I am truly glad I went through that rough time. I learned a lot about myself that year. I learned that enduring persecution doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong, but vice versa, and it only makes you a stronger person. I learned that dealing with loss doesn’t mean you’re overly sensitive or vulnerable, but it only makes you more empathetic and caring. And above all else, I learned that my purpose in life was not to better myself, but to be a light to others. That is why, when the admissions officers read my essay, I want them to look my essay in the face. I want them to stare into its eyes and not only get a feel for who I truly am, but also what I stand for. I want it to encompass every aspect of me: the creative side, the athletic side, the religious side, the giving side. Above all else, I hope they will get to know me better. And if they choose not to accept me, so be it. If they do not accept me for who I am, then it is their loss. It is only my loss if I pretend to be something I am not. *** Andrew Yung, a senior, is a Gazette co-editor-in-chief.
RESERVED BY ABBIE GOULD
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he parking situation at GBHS has always been an issue, but this year it has become a larger challenge. For more than a year now, the Roseville Joint Union School District has been planning to install solar panels in the Granite Bay High School parking lot.
“The parking lot (project) was supposed to have started (a year ago, but) the school district said ‘Time out... we don’t want to run into next fall while were doing construction,’” assistant principal Brian McNulty said. “So we planned it out.” The goal was to have the solar panels built by the end of summer to avoid any problems with parking protocol during the school year.
Gazette illustration | Andrew Yung and Sidney Zabell
However, because of a few construction complications, the project had to be extended into the start of the 2018-2019 school year. “There was an issue with the steel girders that hold (the solar panels) up,” McNulty said. “It became a time-out, time-in kinda deal.” Along with the steel dilemma, there were also strict guidelines that the school had
School introduces six new faculty members following a larger-than-normal turnover BY SPENCER COVA
scova.gazette@gmail.com
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Gazette photo | Sydney Sewell
Video cameras added across GBHS campus Security upgrades come after troubling year
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t’s not that school campuses are no longer safe – it’s that they are no longer as safe as students, parents and teachers want them to be. As a result, Granite Bay High School, along with many other schools across the nation, has increased its security system and protocols in the past year, adding door-locking mechanisms and security cameras on campus. This national trend – to increase campus security – largely stems from the national reaction to several school shootings that occurred last year. GBHS students and faculty members fully realized the possibility of such an event last May after a note, threatening to shoot up the school, was found in a school bathroom. No person ever acted on the threat, but the hours-long lockdown that ensued because of the note left many people more concerned about the school’s safety. “The lockdown last year was surreal,” senior Josh Yeargin said. “Because of the school shootings around the country, es-
pecially the Parkland (Florida) shooting, I was just thinking about what could have happened here.” For others, the event added fuel to their fire to fight for change. Bethany Brooding, a GBHS senior who co-coordinated the March For Our Lives walkout at the school last spring, said the event played a large part in adding to her zeal. “I became more passionate about (reform) when we had the lockdown at our own school,” Brooding said. “It just made everything feel a lot more real.” The lockdown, as well as the shootings around the nation, caused GBHS to make some changes on its campus. “Our culture had a couple of major incidents (across) the United States last year,” assistant principal Brian McNulty said. “These (security upgrades) were definite reactions in an effort to keep our constituents safe.” One of the first problems the school addressed was making sure the safety of the entire campus was being considered. “Granite Bay is a 40-acre parcel that
See SECURITY, page A7
ith the turn of the new year, new faces have emerged at Granite Bay High School. The Roseville Joint Union High School District and site administration have hired six new teachers to inspire, influence and teach students. “I am looking for really smart, innovative team players,” principal Jennifer Leighton said. “They believe that every kid can learn. That’s a big deal for me. Phoenix Johnson, hired to teach English 10 and International Baccalaureate English High Level, had exactly what Leighton was searching for. “With Mrs. Johnson, literature is (her) life,” Leighton
said. “There is a deep understanding of literature, and love of people and kids. Her interview made us feel like we just got a big warm hug, and we felt like the IB program could really use that too.” Johnson previously taught at Monterey Trail High School in Elk Grove, a long commute from her home in Roseville. However, it wasn’t just the easier commute to GBHS that caused her to switch schools. “As much as (the interview panel) felt me, I felt them,” Johnson said. Not only did she coincide naturally with the staff, but with the student body as well. ”Everyone was so warm in the assembly, but afterwards is what made an impression on me,” Johnson said. “Three or
Phoenix
Johnson New English teacher takes on IB English HL four young ladies came up and told me, ‘Welcome to Granite Bay.’” Johnson is passionate about literature, but she has also made it clear that she is in it for her students. “Teaching students the value of words and helping them find their voice,” Johnson said, “they really (can) get away from expectations. I feel that See FACULTY, page A7
Several staff members depart Spanish teacher Jennifer Hill now an AP at San Juan High BY SIDNEY ZABELL
szabell.gazette@gmail.com
The summer of 2018 came with several staff resignations and retirements, a few of which came as a surprise to the Granite Bay High community. Math teacher Denise Kraft resigned on Wed., Aug. 9, less than 24 hours before the first day of the 2018-19 school year. Health teacher Kathy Sinor retired and English teacher Jody Van Dusen resigned at the end of the 2017-18 school year, and performing arts teacher Angelika Dyadchenko resigned
inside this section news Theater to be renamed in teacher’s honor
Intervention changes in its second year
School and community honors former staff member the late Jim Prichard.
After its first installment last year Grizz Time is changing.
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See PARKING, page A5
New teachers hired
Security cameras are now installed on the GBHS campus and keep an eye on students every day.
BY ANDREW YUNG
to follow. “Planning and building stuff on schools… in the state of California is very challenging,” McNulty said. Even with all the mishaps, the administration has developed a parking lot protocol that allows both students and staff to still park at the high school.
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over summer break. English teacher Adam McLearan resigned to take an assistant principal position at Woodland High School. One of the most surprising staff changes came in mid-summer when Spanish teacher Jennifer Hill resigned to accept a position as an assistant principal at San Juan High School in Citrus Heights. In addition to teaching, Hill served as the Advanced Placement coordinator last year. “I taught Spanish for 13 years at Granite Bay High School, and if you had asked me three years ago, ‘Do you ever want to stop teaching,’ I would have said no,” Hill said. “I feel like I’ve reached a point in my teaching where I feel like I can offer so much more to a school when I’m in a position where I can support other teachers See DEPARTURES, page A7
voices Overscheduling is a problem at GBHS Students should not take on too much and inundate themselves with homework.
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