THE
PROSPECTOR
801 WEST KENSINGTON ROAD, MOUNT PROSPECT, ILLINOIS 60056
Dolan retiring English teacher Megan Dolan, known for her unique teaching style with props and costumes, is retiring at the end of this year. To read more, turn to ...
different experiences
S
enior Veronica Boratyn was just hoping to get deferred. She didn’t want to get her hopes up, but when she refreshed her screen at 4 p.m. on Dec. 15 and opened the status update, a dancing bulldog and a big “Congratulations” popped up. She has been accepted as a part of the 6.27 percent of applicants who were accepted to the Yale University Class of 2020. She immediately told her parents and her sister, a junior at the University of Michigan. Her sister then told her roommate and everyone in her dorm hall, making Boratyn “a little bit of a celebrity for five minutes.” “Still sometimes I think my application got stuck to the back of somebody else’s, and I slipped through the cracks,” Boratyn said. Particularly with Ivy League universities, there is an upward acceptance trend among this year’s senior class; at least four seniors were admitted to Ivy League schools this year, more than Prospect has ever had, in addition to numerous others at selective schools like Northwestern, University of Chicago and Notre Dame. While elite college admission rates have been plummeting recently, with Stanford hitting a record-low 4.69 percent acceptance rate this year, students, teachers and parents alike are left viewing
VOLUME 55, ISSUE 8
the admissions process as a lottery. Unfortunately, many, like 2014 graduate Matt McPartlin, end up on the losing side. Growing up, McPartlin aimed to become part of the next generation of McPartlins to attend the University of Notre Dame. His great-grandfather was an All-American pole vaulter there, his grandfather was football player there and his mother went to St. Mary’s College, an all-girls school across the street. However, that dream crumbled with one rejection letter from Notre Dame during the spring of his senior year. “I was just completely devastated,” McPartlin said. “I was pissed off. I just did not really want to go to anywhere else but Notre Dame. I had kind of turned it into this almost paradise, [this] ultimate goal.” McPartlin is now a sophomore at Indiana University, and he thoroughly enjoys being a Hoosier. In retrospect, he believes the main reason he was rejected from Notre Dame, which had an 18.3 percent acceptance rate this year, is because his grades took a hit as a result of a six-month absence from school due to an illness and his heavy involvement in The U, basketball and volleyball. “I think colleges should put a lot more weight on the kids who are heavily involved,” McPartlin said. “I think you get more value out of a kid who is willing to take a 10th of a point off of his or her GPA and then be involved in three different groups. I think that gives you a much more well-rounded student, socially and academically.”
FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 2016
'School of Rock' While “School of Rock” is playing on Broadway, it also coming to Prospect’s stage — an unheard of feat. For the full story, go to ...
Students who game in class make choices that affect their education and teachers. To read more about students like these, turn to ...
Page10
Page 8-9
Going all in BY SHREYA THAKKAR Editor-in-Chief
@PROSPECTORNOW
ipads increase gaming
Not all high school experiences are the same. To read about offerings at other schools in the district and around the world, flip to ...
Page 7
Gambling on selective college admissions
THE VOICE OF PROSPECT HIGH SCHOOL SINCE 1959
FOLLOW US ON:
Page 12
“Prospect is doing a lot of things right, and if you do a lot of things right for many years, eventually luck meets preparation and good things [happen].” Veronica Boraytn, senior
THE PERFECT HAND: With selective college admission rates dropping each year, there is no guaranteed method of getting into schools such as Stanford University, the University of Notre Dame and those in the Ivy League. However, many students aim for a perfect GPA, outstanding standardized test scores and many extracurriculars. (photo by Cassidy Selep) For Boratyn, she believes achieving a healthy balance between academics and extracurriculars is key. Following what she is passionate about is what led her to an acceptance to Yale. However, she didn’t always have this balance, particularly her freshman year when she joined activities just to pad her résumé. “I realized [that] … you can’t really live your life trying to impress an imaginary committee,” Boratyn said. “I think if you pursue prestige and pursue accolades, you’re going to end up with an empty life.” Boratyn believes narrowing down her activities to focus on
those she cared about actually gave her a leg up in the admissions process. “Once I started focusing all of my time on the two things I really enjoyed and was passionate about, [speech team and robotics], I think that’s where I had an advantage in the college admissions game,” Boratyn said. “I think I was really passionate about [them] and could write about [them]. And I was totally OK with spending hundreds of hours over the summer working on robotics projects because it was something I enjoyed.” Being able to write captivating essays about activities, experienc-
es and personal stories is also a crucial part of the application process, according to College Counselor Diane Bourn. Beyond that, she believes it’s a “numbers game” because there are numerous applicants for few spots. “I don’t know that you can say, ‘If I’m going to do this, then I can definitely get in,’ because I think year to year those schools are looking for a different kind of student that’s going to fill their class [each year],” Bourn said. “So you might have had exactly what they were looking for last year, and this year See ADMISSIONS, page 2
Administration plans 2016-17 pool usage for PE classes BY GRACE BERRY Associate Editor-in-Chief Next year every physical education (PE) class will have to swim, including dance and weight lifting, according to Jovan Lazarevic, Assistant Principal of Career and Technical Education. Everyone has to take swimming because the state requires swimming to be taught in PE for every school that has swimming facilities. Prospect’s new pool will open Aug. 8. The construction is progressing on schedule and will be finished sometime in mid-July. At this point, the walls are partially constructed and the concrete has been poured in the foundation of the building. As soon as construction is finished, the pool will need to be aired for a couple weeks. The chemicals used in sealing the pool are very strong because they have to make sure the bottom of the pool will not wear away from the water. The Prospect swim and water polo teams will benefit from the pool because they will not have to travel to Wheeling anymore for practice. The pool will be shared with the Hersey teams as well. As of now, Lazarevic says each PE class will be scheduled in the pool for three to four weeks per school year, but he’s not sure if
CONSTRUCTION: The pool’s construction is underway. The walls have been constructed and the concrete has been poured in the bottom of the building. The pool will classes will be in the pool only on certain days or every day during this period. Lazarevic just wants to make sure that pool is utilized every period to maximize use. Students will first be tested on their swimming skills. This test will most likely
be based on the Red Cross Swim to Safety curriculum. If students pass the test, they will move on to learning more advanced strokes and participating in water activities and games. The students that fail the test will have to work with their teacher on the
basics of swimming. Eventually, the goal is for freshmen PE classes to teach strokes and basic skills while the other PE classes do more fitness-based activities in the pool. But ultimately Lazarevic says the curriculum for each class will depend on the skill level of each class. If everyone in a class can pass the basic swim test, the class will move on, but if the class is split on skill level, then it will be up to the teacher to decide what to do with the class. “Our goal is to make sure you’re safe in the water,” Lazarevic said “If [students] happen to get into a situation where they have to swim, we want to make sure they can.” Lazarevic and PE teachers will be visiting Elk Grove and Buffalo Grove’s pools within the next month to talk to their PE teachers and learn from their expertise on the swimming curriculum and how best to run these classes. There will be an aid in the pool next year, helping the teachers when needed and making sure everyone is safe. The aid might help teach basic skills of swimming to part of the class while the teacher is working with another group of kids or is supervising another a group playing a game like water polo. See CONSTRUCTION, page 3