VOL. 49, NO. 2
PAGE 1: SPECIAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT EXPANDS TWO MSJ TEACHERS INTEGRATE TECHNOLOGY IN THEIR CLASSROOMS COMMON CORE’S EFFECTS ON MSJ PAGE 2: MSJ’S TRAFFIC PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS PAGE 3: FUSD’S BAN ON PEANUT FOODS NEW CREDITED FARSI CLASS
MISSION SAN JOSE HIGH SCHOOL
October 25, 2013
41717 PALM AVENUE, FREMONT, CA 94539
Homecoming 2013
WHOLE FOODS TOUR: CHECK OUT THE SMOKE SIGNAL’S REVIEW AND PHOTO SLIDESHOW OF THE NEW WHOLE FOODS IN TOWN THE IMPORTANCE OF MOVIES: WHY ITS IMPORTANT TO WATCH MOVIES DESPITE A BUSY SCHEDULE SCIENCE TEACHER SAI KUMAR RECOGNIZED BY STANFORD UNIVERSITY: FIND OUT WHY AN MSJ TEACHER WAS HONORED AS AN OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR.
FOR MORE COVERAGE GO TO
THESMOKESIGNAL.ORG
Special ed department expands
staff writer katrina cherk
From left to right: nominees Alton Lin, Jin Peng, Ryan Walleman (not pictured), Nathan Lee (not pictured), Homecoming King Brian Wu, Homecoming Queen Tammy Tseng, nominees Tiffany Chou, Tara Ruff, Kelsey Lam, and Monica Gamez (not pictured).
Teachers integrate technology
Common Core brings changes
By Madeline Zheng Staff Writer
By Tanvi Raja Staff Writer
With additional funds from the school district, MSJ’s Special Education Department has implemented two new programs: the moderate to severe special day class and the intensive instruction class for students with moderate to severe autism. The two programs, although somewhat similar, are taught completely separately and accommodate different types of students. Previously, the department did not have such specialized classes—all students were in the same general program. The two new programs were not available in the past for a variety of reasons including lack of student population. Now, however, both programs are very much occupied and the moderate to severe special day class has in fact been filled to maximum capacity. Special Education teacher Sujata Singh heads the special day class, where she teaches students with low cognizant awareness. She explained that these students have a different way of perceiving the world around them: they have more deliberate reaction times and less developed comprehension skills. The class places an emphasis on academics through functional life, incorporating lessons into activities such as cooking and gardening. For instance, students grow potted plants, placing one plant near a window and another away from sunlight. Naturally, the plant near the window thrives, and students learn to appreciate the necessities for plant life and expand their knowledge of biology. Singh also places emphasis on teaching with repetition, giving students multiple chances to digest fresh infor-
know how to work with this technology. It may be new in a classroom, but it is not new in the business world. For students to become familiar with this technology, to feel comfortable with it, and know how to use it in an effective manner, it is going to serve them well in their college and career paths,” said Geers. In the upcoming years, they plan to use the devices almost on a daily basis to make lessons more engaging, and to provide students with increased opportunities for projects and ideas involving multimedia. This year, they are starting a new humanities collaboration project between juniors and seniors known as the “History of Us.” The year-long project strives to create a unique opportunity for students to choose a topic of interest, tell a story from their history, and develop a project that has value to them. This project will utilize the TVs by allowing students to use multimedia in their presentations. “We wanted to try to come up with a program that was broad enough and vague enough which would allow individuals or a group of individuals to focus on a topic of their choosing and present information in a way that was meaning-
Common Core standards will replace the old California State Standards for EnglishLanguage Arts (ELA) and math in the 2013-14 school year. The goal of Common Core is to align students across the nation with the same standards to graduate high school. The standards will align with college and career expectations and let students show knowledge through high-order skills. In 2009, education professionals from 48 states met and committed to developing these standards. Last year, FUSD approved the plan to transition into Common Core. This year, they are being implemented through field tests in all FUSD schools. Common Core standards will be bringing many changes to normal class time procedures. Smarter Balanced Assessments Consortium (SBAC) will replace the current California Standards Test (CST) STAR Assessments. The STAR Test is suspended for the 2013-14 school year, except the Science category for grades 5, 8, and 10, while SBAC field tests take its place. SBAC will be delivered via computer and are also computer adaptive, where questions will change per individual depending on how they are doing throughout the assessment. While CST tests were administered for grades 2-11, SBAC assessments will be administered to grades 3-8 and 11. Currently in ELA classes, the ratio of literature to informational text taught is about 1-to-1. The new Common Core standards aim to shift that ratio to 3-to-7 by the 12th grade. The standards will prompt students to read increasingly complex texts in order to be ready
See TECH NEWS Page 3
See CORE NEWS Page 3
See PROGRAMS NEWS Page 3
staff writer katrina cherk
English teacher Katherine Geers uses a new LG Smart TV, funded by a grant from the Fremont Education Foundation.
By Katrina Cherk Staff Writer English teacher Katherine Geers and U.S. History/Human Geography teacher Bill Jeffers recently received two LG 60-inch flat-screen Smart TVs after being awarded the Fremont Education Foundation grant. Getting the grant was a year-long process; they began writing grant proposals in January 2013 and continued to write them until June, finally receiving the TVs in late September. They have already installed the TVs in their classrooms, and they plan to use them to integrate more technology into their curriculum to make class more interactive for students. Though they encountered many obstacles along the way and still have a long way to go, both teachers have taken important first steps towards the application of technology in the learning environment. Both teachers strongly agree that incorporating technology into the curriculum is vital. They hope that the devices will prepare students for the real world, provide greater accessibility to online resources, allow students to showcase their work and receive feedback, and increase student engagement and accountability for their education. “In order for students to be college and career-ready, they need to