The View - December 2011

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Desert Vista High School

December, 2011

Volume 16, Issue 3

MRS. MOM

BEHIND THE BEAUTY By Amitty Tam Staff Writer

From the looks to the poise, sophomore Sarah Engels has got it all. Born and raised in Ahwatukee, she has been selected to represent Ahwatukee in Miss Arizona Teen USA. Engels has been doing pageants since she was 10, having receiving a package in the mail asking her to participate in a pageant. Even though she has only been doing pageants for a couple of years, she has already won a major pageant, The NAM National American Miss, a couple of months ago and one of the key parts to her success was her parents. “My parents are really supportive of me! Especially with money, because pageants are expensive. They are always there for me and are like my best friends, they’re like they get me what I need,” said my sisters! They become your life Engels long friends, because they share the On the outside pageants look same hobbies and you make a lot of glamorous and easy but they are friends through your hobbies,” said actually a lot of hard work to go Engel. through and to prepare for. Not only has Engels made a lot of “It depends on the pageant you’re friends during pageants, they have doing, but usually they take a few also bought out her self-confidence. months to get ready for. You need “I use to be really shy but after I to walk in your dress, or go to the started doing pageants, they really gym because you may need to get in brought out my confidence,” said shape to wear your swimsuit,“ said Engels. Engel A lot of people aspire to do Pageants may take up a lot of time pageants, but they may not be and it certainly takes a lot of effort confident or bold enough to step on but Engels still manages it all. In a stage and present themselves. addition to preparing for pageants, “Signing up for it and just going on she also dances and cheers. Most like whether you win the crown or recently she was featured at the not, and just getting on that stage is winter dance show, where she had to a step because not many girls can do prepare and learn the dances weeks that. So definitely do it.” in advance. She is certainly a busy If she wins Miss Arizona Teen, she bee, but she manages to make time goes on to Miss American Teen in for her friends, some of them she January where she will compete on has made from pageants. a national level with the other 50 “ Some of the friends I have made state’s winners in the US.

ONE STUDENT DEALS WITH THE REALITIES OF A PARENT-TEACHER By Ankur Razdan Staff Writer

Most teenagers detest their parents, and the ones who do not still usually act as if they do, when in the company of peers. Some students try to ensure that only their closest friends ever even meet their parents. Unmonitored interaction with the student body by a parent is unimaginable to most, like a sick horror fantasy. Micah Musheno would read all of this and laugh. Every day, her mother spends time with almost two hundred of her friends and peers, and it worries her not a wit. Her mother is a science teacher at Desert Vista, Mrs. Musheno. This is not to say that this situation is not without its fair share of problems. “It’s kind of weird when everyone does badly on a test. I get random people getting angry at me over the next few days, it’s very strange. If they’re very annoyed about the amount of homework they have to do this week, I kind of get my toes stepped on a lot,” said Musheno. “But I’ve never had anyone try to seriously get revenge on me ever.” The fact that most of her friends have her mother as a teacher, however, does not bother her. “That’s one thing I never think about at all, that most of my friends are AP kind of kids and most have had my mom at some point. For example, most of my friends this year have her for Biotech. But hardly anyone mentions it in class at all.” Musheno only calls her mother ‘mom’ in class, not ‘Mrs. Musheno’ because, “everyone would probably

make fun of me if I called her Mrs. Musheno. She’s not that to me!” Her mom and she have a semi-strict rule against discussing school matters at home, which is somewhat mitigated by the fact that she often stays at school with her mother well into the evening, her classroom abuzz with students even hours after seventh period. The only perk some would see in having a parental teacher is nepotism, but Musheno experiences none of that. “People like to joke that I get special treatment, but I don’t get any better grades just because she gives them to me. It’s more because I’m held to a higher standard. I got a C on the first test this year and

she was pretty mad,” she said. Both of Musheno’s parents are educators; her father teaches at UC Berkeley. Despite a family legacy, going back several generations of educating, Musheno would hate to be a teacher. “I simply loathe children. And I’m not studying any sciences or anything any ways, so I teaching kids how to finger-paint or something would be awful.” Musheno’s entire world is a mixup between home life and school that most people would find unfair and sickening. But she prefers it that way. Said she, “I probably wouldn’t have excelled as much as I have without her.”

A UNIQUE POSITION: Micah Musheno relaxes by a tree.

Razdan/The View

FOR AP STUDENTS, BENEFITS OF STUDYING OUTWEIGH THE STRESS By Michelle Borbon Staff Writer

“I spend hours and hours studying just for one quiz,” said Charmaine Mills, a freshman in AP Human Geography, one of the 18 Advanced Placement classes available to students at Desert Vista. Mills is in three other honors classes, involved in Speech, Theater, and Debate, Art Club, and Latin Club. “I took the class because I wanted to take higher level classes” Mills said. “Its not hard,

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but I didn’t expect it to be so much work. Honestly, it gets really stressful.” So how much work do students like Mills really invest? On average, most AP classes are 60 minutes of homework every night, sometimes up to 90 minutes. Mid terms are rapidly approaching and the extra studying is making students wonder how much AP classes actually help. “An Ivy league school is always going to look for the most challenging classes the school offers, which are AP classes at

Feeding children tops groups goals By Sujin Seo Staff Writer

Three-year old Marilyn was born into a poor Haitian family and weighed barely 14 pounds. Her family just couldn’t afford to feed her. Soon the three year old, whose ribs were like toothpicks poking out under her dark skin, was suffering through the last stages of starvation and tuberculosis. Miraculously, Pator Micheal and

Kohi Gill cracks down on his AP work Borbon/The View

DV,” said Mr. Mark Kulik, one of the gifted counselors on campus. Thirty one percent of colleges look Andrea Brewer, the founders of their ReachHaiti orphanage, found her and took her in. They fed her packaged meals from the organization Feed My Starving Children two times a day. Three months later, Marilyn is a healthy 33 pounds and is called “the spunkiest little girl in our family!”. Feed My Starving Children is a nonprofit Christian organization that helps starving children like Marilyn. Their workers have traveled from the dangerous ruins of Haiti to the drought-ravaged lands of Somalia, often risking their lives in countries www.dvthundermedia.com

at the number of AP classes and 60 countries universally recognize them. Harvard takes the top 10-15% of the graduating class with students taking the most rigorous classes available to them. “I would never tell a student they must take ONLY AP classes because I don’t know what else is going on,” said Kulik. “If you have three hours of homework every night and you work 30 hours a week then you are going to be overwhelmed.” In terms of college preparation, students who take AP classes in high school, on average, do oneruled by terrorist groups or dictators. Their journey revealed the staggering needs of these famine-weary people. “Our food gets to the places where there is simply no other help,” said Mark Crea, CEO of FMSC in a press release on their website. “You start to understand what six years without rain really looks like. You realize how critical it is to get the food in.” FMSC has six packing plants in the US, one of them located in Tempe. This branch was a temporary site but, because of how much good it has done and the affect it has on the community,

third of a letter grade better in University level classes. “AP classes can give students excellent preparation for college,” said Philip Sadler, a Harvard Professor and researcher in his book that details AP classes. “An AP course’s work does not magically bestow advantages on under prepared students.” For a student that has ambition, time, and is willing to do the work, AP classes are the best option. “Getting a B in an AP class is better than an A in a regular class,” said Kulik. “ It means you were willing to challenge yourself.”

FMSC: THE TYPICAL VOLUNTEER SETUP OF A FMSC SITE. Barendrick/The View

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