The Lion's Tale - Volume 49, Issue 6

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Teen father shares the difficulities and joys of raising his newborn son.

The Commons has been standing its ground since 1969. Check out its renovations and history.

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pages 10 and 11

LION’S TALE M a r c h 13 , 2 0 0 9

Volume 49

Issue 6

601 K ing Street

Risky business Cheaters run afoul of honor code Carson Bailey

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staff reporter

enior Amanda Hampton watches as a girl in her class artfully lifts the seam of her skirt to reveal her thigh. Scribbled in black ink across the girl’s thigh are the answers to the daily quiz. “The extremes that students go to cheat is sometimes very bizarre and definitely risky,” said Hampton. Cheating has expanded from just looking onto your

friend’s paper. iPods,cellphones, graphing calculators, and even body parts are now being used to help students pass tests, illegally of course. “I’ve seen a student take a picture with their phone of the test answer key while the teacher had her back turned to us,” said sophomore Claire Cook. Sophomore Morgan Cassel has also witnessed off the wall cheating methods take place. “As I was taking a test one time these two kids in front of me kept holding up their hands with either one, two, three, or four fingers showing,” said Cassel. “After the test I realized that they had come up with a signal system to help each other on the test.” Now that iPods can connect to the internet, they are more commonly being used to cheat as sophomore Hannah French explains. “The students place the iPods in their laps during a test,” said French. “They are then able to access the internet and look up whatever they need such as definitions or diagrams.” Students aren’t the only ones to experience methods of cheating. “I’ve seen students with formulas written on a scrap paper,” said Algebra 2 teacher Maryann Montione. “Storing information in a graphic calculator is another method I have seen on rare occasions.” Even objects such as writing utensils are being used as a method for cheating. “Once I caught a student who put the answers to a multiple choice test on his pencil,” said Chemistry and AP Environmental teacher Susan Carpenter. These are examples of an emerging trend. A Duke University study showed that 75 percent of students see CHEATING, page 9

photo/MIRANDA GHALI photo illustrations/TIFFANY RAY

CATCH ME IF YOU CAN. Junior Anna Rehnstrom demonstrates

an exaggerated form of cheating. Cheating is a violation of the honor code.

Oviedo, Florida

Buy a pie, save a life

Julia Thorncroft

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staff reporter

now white selling apple pies for charity, how ironic. “Each year Relay for Life has a theme,” said sophomore Ashley Tooke. “This year’s theme is ‘Fairy Tales’ and the team I’m on decided to be Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” The American Cancer Society’s Relay for Life kicks off on Friday, March 20, at UCF Memory Mall. Schools like Lawton Chiles Middle School, Winter Springs High School, and Trinity Prep will also hold the 24-hour event over the next two months. Tooke has volunteered for Relay for Life for the past three years. She’ll be working as a team member for Relay for Life with the families from her neighborhood. “Our team raises anywhere from $1200-$2000 every year,” Ashley Tooke ‘11 said Tooke. “We raise money by holding events before Relay for Life takes place, then during the race we sell things at our tent site.” This year, Tooke’s team will not only sell apple pies, but they’ll hold a raffle drawing for several baskets. One basket includes a Nintendo Wii. There’s a history of cancer in Tooke’s family. Tooke’s grandfather died of colon cancer, her aunt was diagnosed with breast cancer, and her grandmother was diagnosed with colon cancer this year. “It [Relay for Life] is very important to me,” said Tooke. “I want people to be educated on the subject, and I like how Relay for Life brings so many people together to raise money for research.” While Tooke’s hands are full of apple pies and raffle tickets, sophomore Robyn Strobl will be one of the dancers performing at the event. Although Strobl has never attended a Relay for Life event, her dance team (Upac) looks forward to supporting this cause. “A girl on our team passed away from cancer at a young age, which was emotional for many at the studio,” said Strobl. The girl Strobl refers to was Lexi Matthies. Matthies would’ve graduated from Oviedo High School this year if she survived leukemia four years ago. see RELAY FOR LIFE, page 3

County offers transfers to boost enrollment Victoria Persampiere

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“The capacity transfer should help us to offset the

other student. They will be true Lions, able to participate in all the school has to offer. Robert Lundquist. “It won’t eliminate As a member of the band, Tri-M Society, How to apply the problem, but it will certainly help,” the spring musical, Thespians, Beta Club, and Lake Brantley, Lake Howell, said Lundquist. Encore Winter Guard, junior Paige Lenssen Lyman, Seminole, and Winter In an effort to combat the low knows the value of OHS’s huge variety of Springs High Schools are all enrollment numbers and hang on to as extracurricular activities. at or above capacity, and their many teachers as possible, Lundquist “Oviedo definitely has a leg up on other surplus students have the option and school board officials initiated the schools when it comes to the attention it puts to attend OHS. Information Choices Program for students not zoned on academics,” said Lenssen. “The variety and applications can be found OHS. of classes, especially AP classes, enables in the front office or at www. Capacity transfers are open to any students to really push forward into whatever seminolecountyschools.com, student from Lake Brantley, Lake subject they consider their forté. I’ve had some and are due in to the front Howell, Lyman, Seminole, and Winter amazing teachers who have really helped to office April 1. Springs. (Note that this does not mean show me what I can accomplish, and it’s that that Oviedo students are applicable for sort of teacher who makes you want to come capacity transfers.) Capacity transfer students will have to to school every day. The more you look forward to attending provide their own transportation to and from school daily, see CAPACITY, page 3 but otherwise they will receive the same treatment as any

news editor [budget] cuts we’re facing,” said principal

ttention Seminole County Students: OHS is opening its doors to students who are zoned to attend Lake Brantley, Lake Howell, Lyman, Seminole and Winter Springs High Schools. In addition to diversity transfers, OHS has obtained clearance from the school board to offer 200 capacity transfers to students who would like to become Lions. OHS’s newly constructed and renovated campus is equipped to hold up to 2,700 students. With only 2,000 students enrolled, the jobs of school staff and teachers may be in jeopardy. And that’s pretty much what it boils down to – with approximately 700 empty desks every day, the school will receive much less funding from the district. The highest expense in any business is labor; the lack of students may make some teachers just too expensive to keep on.


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