MISSION SAN JOSE HIGH SCHOOL
VOL. 51, NO. 5
41717 PALM AVENUE, FREMONT, CA 94539
January 29, 2016
Students contribute to boxART! program
courtesy sherry zhou & staff writer chloe velasquez
(Left photo) Painters pose with the completed painted box. (Top row) Freshman Pamela Casipe, Junior Irene Yin, Freshman Alisa Luu, Junior Tanushri Sundar, and Sophomore Joyce Wang. (Bottom row) Junior YC Xing, Sophomore Allison Xu, Sophomore Negeen Amerian, and Junior Jocelyn Wang. (Unpictured) Freshmen Enya Xing and Anuja Konda, and Sophomore Sindhu Goli. (Right photo) The completed box.
By Lucille Njoo & Chloe Velasquez Staff Writers The MSJ National Art Honor Society (NAHS) and MSJ Visual Arts and Music for Society (VAMS), jointly collaborated to design and paint a traffic signal control box for Fremont’s boxART! program. The boxART! program encourages members of the Fremont community to paint designs onto large metal traffic control boxes in Fremont. The program aims to beautify Fremont and encourage civic engagement within the community. The boxART! program was started in October 2014 as part of Fremont’s Make A Difference Day, which gives the community the opportunity to help with ongoing projects in Fremont and celebrate the acts of helping one another. Since then, the boxART! program has grown and produced more than 30 painted traffic control boxes throughout Fremont.
The Smoke Signal earns journalism honors By Ella Chen & Michelle Dalarossa Staff Writers The Smoke Signal was recently named a Columbia Scholastic Press Association (CSPA) Gold Medalist for its publications in the 201415 school year. This will be the fourth Gold Medalist award in the newspaper’s history; it won one for the 2001-02 school year, one for the 2005-06 school year, one for the 200607 school year, and now one for the 2014-15 school year. The CSPA is an international student press association founded in 1925 and owned and operated by Columbia University. Each year, the CSPA reviews newspapers, magazines, yearbooks, and online media sources from student publications around the world. The asso-
The boxART! program was first introduced to MSJ earlier this school year when Program Manager Susan Longini came to Art Teacher Edie Christensen’s art classes to give presentations about the program and its benefits, such as receiving service hours. In November 2014, Junior YC Xing, MSJ VAMS’ public relations officer, initiated the collaboration with MSJ NAHS and designed the boxART! using templates distributed by the City of Fremont. The design itself is a colorful jukebox, inspired by the popular children’s television show Arthur. It covers all five faces of the traffic control box and is about four feet tall and three feet wide. The design proposal was submitted to the City of Fremont’s Art Review Board one week before Thanksgiving break and was approved two weeks later. Once it was approved, MSJ NAHS and MSJ VAMS both advertised through social media for volunteers to help paint the traffic control box, in which 12 MSJ students signed up. The 12 students ciation selects adviser-judges to assess individual entries using an in-depth and standardized rubric called the Medalist Critique. Once the judge completes the Critique, a CSPA staff member reviews it for completion and accuracy. Since the implementation of Common Core Standards in California schools, the CSPA has created a new Common Core Curriculum Alignment guide in order to observe and adhere to the standards. After reviewing four of the Smoke Signal’s issues from the 2014-15 school year as well as its website, the CSPA awarded the newspaper 885 points out of 1000, praising its coverage of “unique” and “diverse” topics as well as its “quality research” and qualifying it as a Gold Medalist. Each publication that the CSPA evaluates earns a score out of 1000 and either a Gold, Silver, or Bronze Medalist placing based on that score. The Smoke Signal advisor Sandra Cohen said, “Whenever I hear about an award like the CSPA . . . I’m just happy that they recognize exactly what we’re doing here . . . I’m so very proud whenever I see that we
DEBATE SPOTLIGHT
MSJ students recently competed, and placed, in two debate tournaments---the MLK Tournament at James Logan High School and the Stanford Invitational.
were Freshman Pamela Casipe, Freshman Anuja Konda, Freshman Alisa Luu, Freshman Enya Xing, Sophomore Negeen Amerian, Sophomore Sindhu Goli, Sophomore Joyce Wang, Sophomore Allison Xu, Junior Tanushri Sundar, Junior Jocelyn Wang, Junior YC Xing, and Junior Irene Yin. The traffic control box for MSJ NAHS and MSJ VAMS is located at the intersection of Driscoll Road and Paseo Padre Parkway, near CVS/Pharmacy, and was sponsored by the Fremont Education Foundation. Painting officially began on December 20, over Winter Break, and took place over the course of a week, lasting around three hours per day. “It was definitely really cold on some days—it was raining at some point, where we were holding umbrellas and painting at the same time, so it really helped us learn to keep going because we were on deadline,” said Freshman Anuja Konda. Several students’
“It’s no surprise to me that the Smoke Signal is again being recognized for its journalistic excellence . . .” - Principal Zack Larsen
get this kind of recognition because it’s well deserved.” The Smoke Signal is one of the few studentrun businesses on campus. Although it works closely with school administration and staff, it is not sponsored directly by MSJ. Funds to print the newspaper each month are raised primarily through advertisements. The Smoke Signal team consists of 50 staff members divided into editors who edit drafts and make page layouts, managers who oversee the day-to-day activities of the paper, and staff writers who collect data and write the articles. Laura Chen, former Editor-in-Chief during the 2014-15 school year, said, “We saw a lot of changes in my three years on the staff–from braver coverage like a multi-installment exploration of cheating, to highlighting diverse voices in
A-WING FLEX ROOM
A portion of the school is to be converted into a multi-purpose room for learning and socialization by early second semester.
parents supervised the painting and were joined by Math Teacher Tyler Robinson, who helped the students construct a grid over the design layout to make the painting process more accurate. In total, the students worked around 30 hours to complete the box. MSJ VAMS and MSJ NAHS’ boxART! is the first of three approved design submissions from MSJ to be completed. The other two approved submissions are currently undergoing review in terms of location and design, but will eventually be painted throughout Fremont this school year. Several of the 11 student painters agree that the boxART! program has given them a valuable experience. As Sophomore Negeen Amerian said, “The most special part was that it [the boxART!] is going to be there for a really long time. It’s like leaving your mark on the city and that was really exciting for me because I’d never really done anything like that.” ▪ Humans of MSJ, to revamping our iOS app and website.” An average cycle lasts one month, beginning with the formation of story ideas. Once editors choose which articles should be written, staff writers pitch to write the stories. Although writers typically have a week to submit a final draft of their articles, periodic rough drafts must be given to the editors for review and edits. On average, the newspaper is about 20 pages, with at least four pages printed in color. This year, the website was revamped and updated, something the CSPA also took into consideration. Every cycle is a new process for the staff, which looks to stay in touch with the MSJ community. Principal Zack Larsen said, “It is no surprise to me that the Smoke Signal is again being recognized for its journalistic excellence. For years the publication has been instrumental in informing MSJ students and staff as well as the larger community about events which happen on campus and beyond. I look forward to reading every word of every edition.” ▪
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