Montgomery Blair High School SILVER SPRING, MARYLAND
A public forum for student expression since 1937
silverchips
CHAMINDA HANGILIPOLA
Lunch bunch D1 March 10, 2016
Winner of the 2015 National Scholastic Press Association Pacemaker
VOL 78 NO 5
Bus and student’s car collide in parking lot
Spring tryouts
By Sarah Hutter
GRIFFIN REILLY
HEADS UP Junior Nolan Bay snags a fly ball on the first day of baseball tryouts.
Board chooses new superintendent By Julian Brown The Montgomery County Board of Education selected current state interim superintendent Jack R. Smith as the next county superintendent on Feb. 4. Smith will have to go through contract negotiations and be approved by the State Board of Education (BOE) before he can take office on July 1. The selection concluded a yearlong search for MCPS’s next superintendent, which began last January with the early termination
of Joshua Starr’s contract. The BOE then appointed Larry Bowers as the interim superintendent and enlisted the help of Hazard, Young, Attea and Associates (HYA), a private contracting firm, to conduct a search for the next superintendent. Over the course of the year, the BOE and HYA considered multiple candidates before landing on Smith. Smith is currently the interim state superintendent for Maryland, standing in for Lillian Lowery who became the CEO and president of
A student driver’s vehicle and a school bus collided in the Blair parking lot on Friday, March 4, at approximately 7:35 a.m., resulting in minor injuries to students and damage to the vehicles. Three students went to the emergency room as an added precaution. According to security team leader Kathy Greene, the student driver’s front bumper scraped the driver’s side of the bus. Although the damage was minimal, the student’s car was towed. “It needed to be towed because the passenger front tire was damaged, and the bumper was damaged so it was unsafe to drive,” Greene said. The damage to the bus was even less, but county procedure dictated that the incident had to be reported to the police. “We called the Montgomery County police, they took a report,” Greene said. “No one was charged.” Because a county bus was involved, the county bus su-
pervisor was required to come to the scene, and the bus driver was required to take a drug test. According to school nurse Debbie Bitonti, the health room assessed every student who was on the bus for injuries and then notified each student’s parents. “We probably saw 25 or 30 kids that had slight injuries and just a few that went to the [emergency room],” Bitonti said. According to Bitonti, the students’ injuries were minor. “It was mostly just slight headaches and slight neck pain,” she said. Three students were taken to the emergency room as a precautionary measure. “I think they were just complaining of more symptoms,” she said. Katie Sims, a senior who was riding the bus at the time of the accident, said that while she did not experience any major symptoms, she did have some shoulder pain. “I had a slight pain in my right
see CRASH page A4
FutureReady Columbus last September. Smith’s current position includes working with the State Board of Education to manage education policy, funding, and operation issues for all 24 school systems. He also worked as a teacher, vice principal, and principal in Washington state and as a middle and high school principal in Japan. Throughout his life and his working experiences, Smith said
see SUPERINTENDENT page A2
After snow days, quarter dates changed By Camille Estrin and Luisa McGarvey Due to the snow days at the beginning of the marking period, the end of the third marking period will be pushed back from March 24 to April 8. The fourth marking period will begin on April 11. Because of the new schedule, report cards from the third marking period will now be distributed on April 22, according to a memo provided to secondary school prin-
cipals by Chief Technology Officer Sherwin A. Collette. According to Assistant Principal Suzanne Harvey, this change would have been more helpful had it come earlier. “It would’ve had more of a positive impact if teachers had known at the beginning of the quarter that this was going to happen. At this point teachers have already adjusted their plans and have geared up for the quarter being over before break,” she said.
MARIS MEDINA
Dating culture Teenagers should embrace traditional dating.
CHAMINDA HANGILIPOLA
NEWS A2
B3
OP/ED B1
GRIFFIN REILLY
FEATURES C1
Math teacher Tung Pham is grateful for the extended quarter. “I think it’s great. It gives me more time so I don’t need to cram things in,” Pham said. “It is allowing me to give one more test this quarter and giving students more time to prepare for it.” Since the quarter will now end after spring break, students will likely have more homework over the break. “I’m a bit annoyed because I’d prefer having a stress free and homework free spring break,” junior Emma Jin said. Senior Hunter Jones said she feels that pushing the quarter back will add to students’ stress. “It’s just like winter break when our exams are after the break so then... you don’t get to enjoy your break, you’re just stressing about doing well and getting good grades, and finishing your homework,” Jones said. Since this change will not affect the end of the fourth marking period, school will still end June 17.
insidechips
CADENCE PEARSON
CAR CRASH Three students were taken to the emergency room after a student driver collided with a school bus.
Interpreting new responsibilities By Dawson Do When she was 11, freshman Doucelvie Mizingou immigrated to the U.S. with her father. As a middle school student, she had to take on responsibilities that many students would not have to shoulder until long after high school. Every month, Mizingou endured hours of paperwork. She paid phone and house bills. And she did taxes—all because her father did not speak English. It was not until her mother came to the U.S. that Mizingou was relieved of her adult responsibilities. Mizingou’s mother is
able to speak English well enough to take care of bills. Still, Mizingou’s struggles were not over, as she could not go to her parents for any academic support. She, like many other Blair students, has had to deal with the complications of having one or two parents who do not speak English.
A verbal barrier
The very first hurdle for students who lack English-speaking parents is learning English. Many of these students take English
see PARENTS page C1
Teacher mentors
La autosegregación
Basketball playoffs
Teachers counsel students outside the classroom.
Los estudiantes de Blair se separan en grupos étnicos.
Boys’ basketball fell to Whitman in the third round of the playoffs.
C6
ENTERTAINMENT D1
CALEB BAUMAN
E3
CHIPS CLIPS D6
GRIFFIN REILLY
LA ESQUINA LATINA E1
F3 SPORTS F1