Issue 6 (2015-16)

Page 1

THE

PROSPECTOR

801 WEST KENSINGTON ROAD, MOUNT PROSPECT, ILLINOIS 60056

THE VOICE OF PROSPECT HIGH SCHOOL SINCE 1959

FOLLOW US ON: @PROSPECTORNOW prospectornow.com VOLUME 55, ISSUE 6

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2016

MONEY ON MY MIND

THE ROAD LESS TRAVELED

PEAK-A-BOO

Leo's year?

Challenging economic situations can put pressure on students socially and academically. To learn more, flip to ...

Class of ‘10 graduate Jimmy Gavin went from not playing high school varsity basketball to playing in Division I. To hear more about his story, go to ...

Biology teacher Jennifer Welter has climbed 12 mountains in the last seven years. To read about Welter’s high altitude exploits, turn to ...

Entertainment editor Garrett Strother and staff writer Kit Fitzgerald make their Academy Award predictions for Leonardo DiCaprio and more on ...

Pages 8-9

Page 15

focus

Page 10

integrity

productivity

Page 13

control

Playing the game Increased iPad integration provides challenges for students, staff members BY MIKE STANFORD Copy Editor *Name changed for confidentiality

iPads by the numbers

33%

of students believe there would be less cheating without iPads.

66%

of students have used their iPads to send homework to friends.

39%

of students are distracted by their iPad in class more than four times a week.

Just under

half

of students are distracted by their iPad while doing homework more than four times a week.

information from a Prospector survey of 196 students

sky’s frustration. He also stresses tracted during class. Dean of Students Lisa Soukup that cheating on homework does believes using school technology to not lead to positive results for stucheat on tests is not a widespread dents. “Their grades problem. How“Cheating is cheating no reflect those beever, technology can be used to matter how you’ve done haviors,” Hodges said. “I saw that receive answers it. People who have put happening when on homework as I was in high well, an activity in the work to do the before 66 percent of stuhomework shouldn’t just school any kind of iOS dents admitted to give that to someone device existed, doing in a Prospector survey of else and let them get off so kids always cheat. Maybe 196 students. the easy way.” the iPads make According to it a little bit easEnglish teachNikki Matters, senior ier for them, but er and Division they’re cheating themselves ultiTechnology Coordinator Teri mately.” Buczinsky, while copying homeSenior Nikki Matters agrees work has always been a problem, students can now get homework and often finds herself saying no from their friends electronically 24 to classmates who ask to copy her homework. hours a day. “Cheating is cheating no matter Social studies teacher and fellow Division Technology Coordi- how you’ve done it,” Matters said. nator Erik Hodges shares BuczinSee IPADS. page 2

Making their ‘state’ment Prospect activities have started strong second semester. Cheer, speech, chess and dance teams have qualified for state. To read more about their postseason runs, be sure to ...

photos by Cassidy Selep, Riley Langefeld and Nick Olson

J

unior Tyler Young* wasn’t worried. He didn’t see any reason to be. Until five days later when he was locked out of his school accounts and told he had to see the dean to have them reactivated. “A lot of people were doing it, so it didn’t seem very risky, but upon further examination, it was a horrible idea,” Young said. The dean met with Young in regards to an email chain he had received and forwarded to some of his friends. The email held answers to the Industrial Revolution test in AP U.S. History (APUSH) on Jan. 15. A student took the test first

hour and hoped to help his friends in later periods by typing the answers in an email on his school account. According to Young, the email soon found its way into the inboxes of 40-50 students. While discussing tests with

students in later periods is as old as school itself, Young believes the iPad’s ability to instantly send information facilitated this scandal. The APUSH cheating incident is part of a growing challenge for teachers and administration. As the school continues to increase technology use in the classroom, iPads provide ways for students to take shortcuts and become dis-

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Sophomore Kayomi Hirano, cheerleading

Senior Andrew Pittman, speech team

Sophomore David Fang, chess team

Junior Dana Iverson, dance team


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