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Latest News

Middle School band awarded top honors

March 20, 2019

The Middle School Band was Awarded the top honor of Superior from the judges, yesterday, at the NC Central District Bandmasters Association Music Performance Adjudication (MPA).  An MPA is a music performance festival and competition in which dozens of schools from across the state compete.

The group did a wonderful job and Band Director Lester Turner is excited to report that all of their energy and efforts paid off in the best way possible.  The last time Cary Academy’s Band received a Superior at MPA was back in 2007. Turner explains, “this is a fantastic success for the group and will help drive us forward…  I hope all the students enjoyed the experience and I know for me, it was awesome to make music with them.”

Please take a moment to congratulate them as you see them around campus.

We hope you will join the CA Middle School band for their spring concert at CA on Thursday, April 4th at 7pm.

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Athletics

Senior Nights: Varsity Boys’ Lacrosse

Magazine of CA

Mission Accomplished

Athletics

Senior Nights: Varsity Softball

Library from quad

Upper School

CA students make it count at Mathcounts

March 18, 2019

Four Middle School students competing as a team at the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics placed in the top 25 percent of the 41 teams attending, this past Friday. Mathcounts is a national math enrichment, coaching & competition program that promotes middle schoolmathematics achievement.

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CA Curious

There’s a Crackle in the Air

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Art is essential

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2020 Spring Athletic Awards

Sticky notes

CA Curious

Subtle, Yet Powerful Acts of Positivity and Kindness

February 7, 2019

The Middle School years are exciting because of all the developmental changes (physical, intellectual, emotional and social) that occur across the course of three short years. While the changes are exciting, sometimes, the social aspects can be rocky. This is particularly true of how students choose to communicate about themselves, about others, and to others. While our students are committed to the CA tenets of “acting with integrity, respect, and compassion,” their actions, at times, can be at odds with these values. Peer groups, social media, advertising, and the latest TV programs and movies are huge influencers and, at many times, promote the opposite messaging.

Three years ago, via our Charger Trails focus on Digital Citizenship, Kim Karr, co-founder of the iCanHelp organization, spoke to our students about negative and positive messaging in social media. This national group is dedicated to educating students about social media and empowering students to be change agents in addressing negative messaging. Following the presentation, several students, inspired by the stories they had heard about how young people could make a positive difference through a small act, approached our counselor, Kelly Wiebe, about starting a Middle School iCanHelp club. While the national organization’s focus is primarily on social media, our students wanted to create opportunities to promote and sustain – in simple small ways – a positive climate within the halls of the Middle School.

Members of the Middle School iCanHelp club in front of the ‘Take One, Give One’ Post-It Note board.

Over the past three years, iCanHelp members have written grade-level specific newsletters with tips on how to be a positive community member. A ‘Take One, Give One Board’ was created on the first floor as a place where all students could contribute encouraging messages. Students are leaving sticky notes with upbeat comments that are available for other students to take for themselves or to share with a friend. There are also ‘Compliment Jars’ where individual students can be recognized by classmates for a kind act. For example: a note to the student who stopped to help another student pick up dirty plates that had tumbled off the cart during lunch. Students also created paper snowflakes following an advisory discussion about how each member of our community is unique and adds to the school’s fiber, emphasizing the message that everyone is beautiful, yet different, like a snowflake.

Right now, the Middle School is in the first week of a three-week positivity challenge. The 8th grade iCanHelp group has challenged students to write an email or a note to teachers or other students thanking them for helping in some way. Teachers are also participating in this challenge by thanking students and/or, colleagues for providing inspiration. Next week, the seventh grade iCanHelp members will challenge students to share messages they have received in the past that helped brighten their day. The illuminating thoughts will be posted on star-shaped notes in every grade level hall. The sixth-grade group will bring the trimester to a close with another positivity challenge.

The actions of the iCanHelp group are subtle, yet powerful. The more we see and hear positive messaging and recognition of small deeds and actions, the more we shape and foster a culture of support and caring. I recently sat down with members of the club to learn about their experiences and observations of the impact of the iCanHelp initiatives. The students felt good that they personally were helping to “spread positivity” and that the club “encourages others to act kindly”. They noted that their classmates had shared the experience of feeling good when doing something positive for another – the sense that the giver as well as the receiver benefits from an act of kindness. While recognizing that getting everyone on-board will take time and that persistence is important, the iCanHelp members feel that they are making a difference and are seeing peers being thoughtful and positive in their communications. This motivated club is modeling and encouraging the principles of its motto: i Can Help, i Will Help, i Did Help.

Written by Marti Jenkins, Head of Middle School

CA Curious

Reflections on AsEA

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Charger Corner-Turning the Lights Back On

Alumni News

Creating Simple, Low-Cost Ventilator Solutions in Sydney

Library from quad

Collaborative US/MS dance and orchestra concert delights audience; video now available

November 29, 2018

The CA community enjoyed a special treat on Wednesday, November 7: a collaborative cross-divisional dance and orchestra concert featuring the works Hey There Delilah (Middle School) and Bitter (Upper School). 

In addition, the Middle School orchestra presented Mark Williams’ Dorian Variations, JC Bach’s Sinfonia in D major and Fiddle Tune arranged by M. Isaac. The Upper School Honors orchestra performed Serenade for String Orchestra by E. Elgar and the Symphony orchestra played Beethoven Symphony no. 7 second movement and Brahms’ Symphony no. 1 fourth movement.

A video of the performance can be found here.

 

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CA Curious

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Green iniatives on campus

Library from quad

7th grade visits International Festival of Raleigh

November 1, 2018

 

On Friday, October 26, 7th-grade students attended the International Festival of Raleigh. They explored various cultural booths, speaking with people from 36 countries about this year's theme: celebrations around the world.

Students enjoyed a world bazaar and a delicious international café featuring 31 different cuisines. They interacted with people from around the world and journaled their experiences by completing a scavenger hunt with their advisory group. Many had the opportunity to enjoy a performance by Ed Stephenson & Flamenco Dance, an international dance performance, while others witnessed parts of a Naturalization Ceremony with 200 candidates from 40 different countries.

On their return, students worked in their advisory groups to create and present a reflection poster of what they had learned. Perhaps Mr. Haas' advisory summed it up best: "The International Festival is The Best-Ival."

What an engaging opportunity to stretch boundaries and experience something new—a world of fun and connections to discover in our very own backyard! 

 

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CA Curious

Uncomfortable Magic

Alumni News

Trey Murphy III (’18) picked by the Pelicans in NBA Draft

Athletics

Sports Round-up: Fall ’22 Season

Library from quad

Students selected to represent CA in North Carolina Honors Chorus

October 25, 2018

Three Cary Academy chorus students earned one of the coveted spots in the North Carolina Honors Choirs this year. The spots are highly competitive among the strongest choral musicians in the state and require performing a difficult piece of choral repertoire and sight singing an excerpt that they have one minute to learn.

Eighth-grade chorus student, Koen Chao, will be representing Cary Academy as a Bass in the NC Middle School Honors Chorus.

Sophomores Vibhav Nandagiri, Tenor 2, and Brandon Yi, Bass 1, will be representing Cary Academy in the NC High School Honors Chorus.

The event is held in Winston Salem over the weekend of November 10 and 11 in conjunction with the North Carolina Music Educators Association and culminates in a concert that is free to the public at the Stevens Center in downtown Winston Salem. The Middle School concert is at 1:30pm and the High School concert is at 3:00pm on Sunday, November 11, 2018.

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CA Curious

Making the climb

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Make an impact on GivingTuesday

Magazine of CA

Future-Ready

CA Curious

Middle School reflections

September 6, 2018

It was truly terrific to see so many parents join us last Thursday at Middle School Meet the Teacher Night. This event for parents is much like the first days of school for the students. There were new parents getting to know other new parents and returning parents catching up with one another. There were those confused by their schedules and went to the wrong classes, those who raced from one class to the next, and those who skipped (no, the kids didn’t try this). And, just like the students, everyone moved between classes in packs. I loved trying to figure out which parents belonged to which students!

Most similar was the energy and enthusiasm that parents brought about learning, as well as affirmation for the talents of our teaching staff.  I constantly heard the comment, “I wish I could have gone to middle school here”.

While appreciated, this comment doesn’t totally surprise me. I don’t know of many people who have amazing memories of their middle school years (people typically remember their high school years in more detail and with nostalgia), and I believe that much of what is remembered about middle school is informed by non-academic experiences.

The transitions, the heightened awareness of self and others, the dramatic physical changes, the social influences and interactions–all the “other stuff” that is happening during these fast and ever-changing adolescent years—can overshadow the academic aspects. If you’ve happen to see the recent movie, Eighth Grade, it hits on these other aspects.

There is so much going on in this three-year period before high school that the best classroom experiences can be somewhat diminished in the memory. So, later as adults, when parents come to visit their own child’s middle school, it is with a much more focused perspective that allows for a better appreciation of the academics.

This actuality doesn’t dissuade our middle school faculty and staff from giving its absolute best effort to engage students in a challenging, interesting, and dynamic program that is cognizant of the unique needs of middle schoolers. Just recently, as I walked the halls, I observed

  • students engaging in a reflective writing exercise that asked them to compare Walt Whitman’s poem about America to their own personal poem about America;
  • in one science class, students travelling via video, viewing the earth from space with astronauts while listening to them speak about the global interconnectedness of humans and our environmental impact on the earth;
  • in another science class, students making observations about atmospheric pressure by watching a balloon expand and contract in a glass container; and
  • in the seventh and eighth-grade world language classes, students reactivating their listening and speaking skills by sharing in the target language what they had done over the summer.

Early on, our wonderful IS staff provided up-close and personal tech training to help our sixth graders develop familiarity and comfort with their new tablets. After such a session, one sixth grade student shared with me that he thought “computers were great” and he was delighted to have had the opportunity to “Lewis and Clark” (explore) on the tablet.

In addition to lots of interesting class activities, there have been events focused on developing friendships and connections between students and faculty. From the seventh-grade advisory tug-of-war, to the eighth-grade day of Elympics, to this week’s sixth-grade trip to Camp Caraway, time is spent on nurturing the social and community growth of our students. It takes a committed faculty and staff, working together, to develop such a holistic and comprehensive program.

We only are in our third full week of school and so much has already taken place within these walls! What an exciting year awaits us!

 

 

Written by Marti Jenkins, Head of Middle School

Middle School

Parents explore the student experience during Community Flex Day

Storytelling at CA

Athletics

Senior Nights: Varsity Baseball

Library from quad

Grade 8 flamenco

May 29, 2018

On May 24the eighth graders learning Spanish at Cary Academy participated in a flamenco workshop. Ed Stephenson brought this Spanish art-form to the students with his classical guitar, a percussionist, and a dancer. This project was made possible due to funding from the PTAA Grant Program.

During the event, first, students enjoyed a recital of traditional and new flamenco guitar pieces accompanied by el cajón (a percussion instrument), las palmas (handclapping), and las castañuelas (castanets). At the same time, a bailaora danced to the different rhythms. Finally, students participated playing el cajón, handclapping, zapateando (footwork showing), and cheering the artists in Spanish. ¡Olé estudiantes de español!

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Middle School

Parents explore the student experience during Community Flex Day

Upper School

Student’s voice earns national recognition

Middle School

Dream Team

Library from quad

MS boys and girls win track and field crowns

May 10, 2018

The MS boys and girls track and field teams won the league CAMSC Championships at the meet held at Cary Academy this past week. Special congratulations to Conference Champions (meet record holders are bolded) in the following events:

Girls

  • Noor Alam – long jump, 100, 200, 4x200m relay
  • Gabby Matejowsky – 400m, 100m hurdles, 4x200m relay
  • Elise Boyse – 600m, 4x200m relay
  • Leah Wiebe – 50m
  • Emma Hughes – high jump
  • Raiya Patel – 4x200m relay

Boys

  • Ryan Newnam – 50m, 600m, 4x100m relay
  • William Coley – 200m, high jump
  • Cole Fekete – 400m, 4x100m relay
  • Anderson Colantuoni – 4x100m relay
  • Arran Swift – 4x100m relay

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6th

Homecoming Heroics

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