MISSION SAN JOSE HIGH SCHOOL
VOL. 51, NO. 6
41717 PALM AVENUE, FREMONT, CA 94539
February 26, 2016
Stronger Than You Think campaign fights teen dating violence High school students work to promote healthy relationships By Kevin Li & Didi Wu Staff Writers
courtesy of team stronger than you think
Back Row: MSJ Junior Gia Pham, IHS Senior Simran Sen, IHS Senior Gibson Chu, IHS Senior Darren Huang, IHS Senior Amarinder Chahal, Middle Row: IHS Junior Catalina Geronimo, IHS Junior Catherine Li, MSJ Senior Neha Shah, MSJ Senior Anastasia Ecin, IHS Sophomore Miles Chu, IHS Senior Daniel Ho, Front Row: MSJ Senior Tiffany Wong, Team STYT Director Yasi Safinya-Davies, MSJ Junior Vivika Fernes, IHS Senior Hsiu Lin, IHS Senior Eunice Chan. MSJ Junior Christie Chiang is not pictured.
To learn more, consider using resources such as www.loveisrespect.org or the National Domestic Violence Hotline (1-800-799-7233). Nearly out out of three adolescents are affected by teen dating violence.
CodeDay Bay Area attracts MSJ coders By Andrew Choi & Victor Zhou Staff Writers CodeDay Bay Area, a high-school focused programming competition, took place February 13 to 14 at Make School in San Francisco. The event, which over 260 students attended, including multiple MSJ students, was a competition organized by the nonprofit StudentRND to encourage students to start programming and web design.
“CodeDay isn’t focused on winning awards, or landing a new job. The focus is learning and creating.” - Sophomore Sanil Chawla
CodeDay began in 2011, in Seattle, when a gathering of local friends who wanted a challenge created the event. Since then, it has grown to cover 22 cities in 18 states. CodeDay is a nationwide event where student programmers, artists, musicians, actors, and everyone else can get together and build apps and games for 24 hours. High school students of all skill levels are welcome, with workshops and mentors available for those with limited coding and programming ex-
perience. At the beginning of CodeDay, all attendees with an idea come up and pitch it to the group. If students are on their own, or just without an idea, this is the time for them to join a group and build whatever they want. Though there are prizes for those who create the most impressive games and apps, CodeDay emphasizes that it is not a “hackathon,” and that the most important aspect of the event is to get new students interested in programming through engaging and positive experiences. “CodeDay isn’t focused on winning awards, or landing a new job. The focus is learning and creating,” said Sophomore Sanil Chawla, who is a StudentRND Regional Manager. This season, 263 attendees came to CodeDay Bay Area, making it the largest CodeDay in the country once again. Make School, which provided the venue for this event, offers an alternate college replacement for developers, and hopes to continue to work with StudentRND in promoting coding towards the young population in the Bay Area. “This is really revolutionary because it’s going to change the amount of innovation that’s going to happen in the world, it’s going to change the amount of problems we can go out and solve,” said Make School Founder Ashu Desai. Along with workshops provided by Splunk, Make School, and Hack+, StudentRND Founder and CEO Edward Jiang also visited the event, and said he was impressed at the massive attendance.
GIRLS’ WRESTLING NCS
Five MSJ students recently qualified for, and competed in, Girls’ Wrestling at NCS. Read about their results and accomplishments!
CONCERT EXPERIENCES
Missed a concert, but still want to find out what happened? Check out recollections of MSJ students’ favorite concert experiences.
In honor of February, Teen Dating Violence Awareness and Prevention Month, Team Stronger Than You Think, a youth group comprised of MSJ and Irvington High School students, launched two projects to raise awareness of teen dating violence. The two projects, a public service announcement and billboard, aim to increase the public’s awareness of teen dating violence. The public service announcement, a minutelong video showing various abusive situations and calling for heightened awareness of teen dating violence, debuted in theaters on Friday, February 6. It played in Pacific Commons, Newark, and Union City theaters right before the movies began. The team wrote the script for the video themselves, an effort that began August 2015. The group directed filming in coordination with Bay Area film company Your Media 2. The second project was an electronic billboard on display along Highways I-880 and I-680, Dixon Landing Road, and Mowry Avenue. In the process of designing the billboard, team members pitched their takes on the definition of love. Irvington High School Senior Hsiu Lin then created illustrated images, while MSJ Senior Anastasia Ecin photoshopped text images. These projects are a continuation of the team’s overarching goal to combat the lack of awareness surrounding teen dating violence. Team Stronger Than You Think Director Yasi Safinya-Davies said, “Honestly even people who do this work,
who work in the field of domestic violence, they still won’t get it for a long time . . . [because] understanding it, really being able to get it, knowing what is this beast called domestic violence takes a long time—because it’s so multilayered. It’s not so simple as ‘today I don’t know about it, tomorrow I do.’ So the learning of it, the getting it, it’s really an evolution.” Safinya-Davies, also executive director of Safe Alternatives to Violent Environments, a Fremont organization which provides shelter, support, and educational opportunities for individuals and families affected by domestic violence, mentors team members, provides connections to local businesses or officials, and makes them aware of opportunities they could pursue. The team, however, is largely self-directed, with members coming up with ideas and responsible for executing their plans. MSJ Junior Vivika Fernes said, “Because we are more educated, because we are here, we want to spread our education, educate our peers on this [teen dating violence]. Just like us, we didn’t know that much until [we got to] where we are now. We want the same [understanding] for our peers.” Ecin said, “I think that obviously [dating violence] doesn’t happen overnight. Nothing happens overnight. But if we just sit around and don’t do anything, nothing will ever be achieved. So the fact that we’re just beginning to turn the wheels—it will speed up, the wheels will go faster and faster and eventually it’ll make power and do things that make change. We’re the start, we’re the beginning, and the results are endless.” ▪
Juniors Aayushi Gupta, Vineeth Yeevani, Hetav Gore, and Ajay Dulai won the Best Application Award.
There was a large MSJ representation at CodeDay. MSJ students. For example, Junior Sayan Bhattacharjee, created Lifeline, an automated calendar for college applications. Senior Shivam Parikh taught a beginner’s workshop on Android Development, and Freshmen Abhi Upadhyay, Yash Gupta, and Rayyaan Mustafa gave a talk on building efficient products for consumers. Freshmen Ritvik Ramdas and Rithvik Ravikumar, and Sophomore Zakaria Ridouh, won the Beginner Special Award for their game, Jumpman, and Ju-
staff writer victor zhou
niors Ajay Dulai, Hetav Gore, Aayushi Gupta, and Vineeth Yeevani won the Best Application Award for their Libra app, which lets students read open-source books online. StudentRND and the CodeDay staff look forward to their next event, which will take place May 21 to 22, once again at Make School. Addressing the crowd at closing ceremony, Chawla said, “Keep coding, keep making . . . never stop hacking.” ▪
SPECIAL OLYMPICS
Students from our Special Education department recently competed in the Special Olympics held at Newark Memorial High School.
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