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Varsity Robotic Team bagged and tagged

Upper School

Varsity Robotics’ last-ever ‘Bag Day’

February 20, 2019

There’s a little-known CA event that has occurred around the third Tuesday of every February since 2014. For Varsity Robotics it’s officially called ‘Stop Build Day,’ but more commonly known as ‘Bag and Tag Day,’ or simply ‘Bag Day’.

Varsity Robotics competes in the FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC), where students build 120 pound robots designed to conquer the challenges set forth in that particular year’s game. The game is announced on the first Saturday of January, giving teams just six weeks to design, build and test their robot. This six week build time was designed to ensure parity so that all teams had the same amount of time to build, regardless of whether they compete at events in week one or week five of the tournament season.

So, every year since the inaugural FRC season at CA, the varsity team has worked in the CA Makerspace after hours, frantically trying to complete their build. While FIRST rules state that teams have until midnight, CA coaches set an internal deadline of 10pm, for the sake and sanity of all involved. Some years we fell short, being snowed out more than once, other years we didn’t make the deadline, only to have to lights go out, resulting in a slow scrambling around the Makerspace guided by our cell phone lights.

Consistent every year, however, was camaraderie, excitement, stress, pizza, good decisions, not-so-good decisions, the thrilling feeling of ‘breaking rules’ by being in the building so late (on a school night, no less) and the ceremony of bagging and tagging the robot.

To an outsider, Bag Day might seem like a mundane task of finishing up and putting a robot in a big bag, but to those of us involved it is ceremonial. It marks the end of build season and the beginning of competition season. It’s a chance to take a breath, step back and look at the machine that was born from collective efforts in design, engineering, creativity, sweat, compromises, hard decisions, duct tape, zip ties and lots of snacks.

Sadly, this was our last bag day. Cary Academy will still compete in FRC, but FIRST has decided to eliminate Bag Day, as it no longer meets its purpose of parity. Removing this restriction will give smaller, less established teams more time for proper drive practice, and the opportunity to perfect their programming and designs; something that larger, more established teams were managing because they had the means and resources to build two robots, bagging one and practicing with the other.

It is a good rule change and one that makes sense, however, I’m sure I’m not the only one who will miss the ceremony of Bag Day. We’ll still have plenty to celebrate and we’ll still have the magic of being an FRC team, because robots rock our world.

Want to experience the delight of robots?

  • Catch our JV (FIRST Tech Challenge) teams in action on February 23rd at the Trinity School of Durham and Chapel Hill. Matches run from 10am – 5pm.
  • See the Varsity (FRC) team compete on March 9 & 10 at Holly Springs High School Matches run from 10:30 am – 6 pm.

– Guest Post by Besty MacDonald, Upper School Design, Programming and Robotics Teacher

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CA’s girls’ and boys’ varsity swim teams surge to State Champion titles

February 12, 2019

Congratulations to Cary Academy’s State Champion girls’ and boys’ Varsity Swim Teams! An astounding THIRTY TWO different boys and girls made it to the Finals and scored. This marks the girls’ third consecutive State Championship title.

Congratulations to everyone (parent supporters and volunteers included) who contributed to two tremendous State Champion wins. We had our share of first place finishes and oodles of personal best swims – most of which were crazy drops in time. But, most of all, congratulations on being two great teams and One Big Family! You swam and cheered to near exhaustion. Your support for one another all season long in inspiring and led to a special evening.

Special Congrats to:

  • Charlotte Hook with TWO State Meet Record swims in the IM (1:59.84) and 100 Butterfly (:54.63) and a first place, individual State Champion finish in the 100 Butterfly
  • Nisma Said with an individual State Champion swim in the 100 Backstroke while lowering her own school record time to 56.24 seconds
  • The Girls 200 Medley Relay State Champion team of Nisma Said, Amy Chang, Charlotte Hook and Helen Chen with a school record setting time of 1:47.25.
  • Jack Todd for being an individual State Champion in the 200 Freestyle with a time of 1:47.14
  • Will Newman setting a new school record in his 2nd place swim in the 50 Free at 21.70 seconds.
  • The boys 200 Medley Relay team who placed 3rd and smashed the old school record with a time of 1:41.81; Kevin Chen, Alex Lim, Nate Alexander and Will Newman
  • The boys 200 Free Relay State Champion team of Constantin Zodl, Quinn Vaughan, Oliver Wang and Will Newman who set the tone for the 2nd half of the meet

A full breakdown of times and finishes will be available soon.

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CERT students visit Raleigh Police Department’s Special Operations Facility for hands-on learning

December 13, 2018

 

On Tuesday, December 4, nine CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) students visited the Raleigh Police Department's Special Operations Facility. The Special Operations Facility houses all specialty units for the police department, including the bomb squad, SWAT, K-9, and motorcycle unit, as well as performing other administrative functions.

Students were treated to two presentations and Q&A sessions. Captain J.A. Taylor and Detective J.T. Heinrich of the Hazardous Devices Unit (aka "the bomb squad") presented on two robots used to handle and contain potentially-explosive materials, discussed suspicious package handling and x-ray techniques, and demonstrated a variety of personal protective gear used on the job.

Lieutenant S.M. Gunter of the Selective Enforcement Unit (aka SWAT) offered an in-depth look at how SWAT officers train and provided a hands-on demonstration of how specialty equipment–like battering rams–are used in the field.

In both instances, students got a chance to interact with a variety of protective gear and tools of the trade. Altogether, this opportunity offered students a unique behind-the-scenes glimpse into the world of high-stakes crisis and emergency response careers.

The Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) program trains students to prepare for emergencies in their communities. CERT students also help with non-emergency projects that improve the safety of the community.

 

 

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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 cross-country closes out season with strong showing at state meet

November 1, 2018

Last Friday's state cross-country meet was a wet and sloppy "mud run" in the midst of Tropical Depression Willa. But, in CA style, our boys and girls battled through the conditions and posted outstanding runs and results.

The boys finished 3rd overall behind Providence Day who edged Durham Academy by 1 point. The girls, squaring off against TISAC rival Durham Academy, earned runners-up.   

With more than 100 runners competing in both the boys and girls races, four CA boys and girls earned all-state honors in the sloppy conditions in Hendersonville. Congratulations to Kenny Eheman (6th-boys), Luke Johnson (7th-boys), Keely Murphy (6th-girls), and Lia Lathan (10th-girls)

Congratulations to all the CA runners on yet another terrific XC season! Click here for full final results.

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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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Wisdom from the Senior Corner

October 18, 2018

On Monday of this week, I broke an unwritten rule of the Upper School: I traipsed upstairs, and rather than follow the well-trod path toward the teacher lounge and the coffee machine, I turned right, threaded my way between the book bags, and plopped myself onto a couch in the Senior Corner.

The seniors politely tried to ignore me.  An adult—an administrator, no less—had intruded into their sanctum sanctorum, their happy land overseen by cheerful painted mountains and the cardboard cut-out of Bob Ross.

I cleared my throat and said, “I’m writing a blog, and I would like your thoughts.  Would you mind?”

They paused, and after a brief moment of internal debate, they all declared, “Of course not.”  Even if I was an intruder, they would be polite.

“As you think about the classes that you’ve taken at CA,” I asked, pen in hand, “what jumps out at you?”

“10th grade English,” one student stated almost immediately.  “That was the first time that we had to analyze the literature really deeply and write a long essay about it.  That was such an important learning experience.”

Other students added their thoughts.

“Turbo-Calc.  It was flexible.  It was my first blended class, and I chose whether to do the homework—if I didn’t need the practice, I didn’t have to do it.  But it was my choice.”

“Advanced Chemistry.  It was practical.  I started to see how it related to every day.  We talked about the forces that held my water in my water bottle.  And I learned why my car works better in the morning in the summer than in the winter.”

“Advanced Biology.  I learned about myself.  There was no place to hide in the class, so I had to be on top of the material.”

“Advanced Environmental Science.  I loved the homework, just because it was so different.  Sometimes it was a blog post.  Sometimes, a tweet.  But we had so many different activities.”

The next period, after lunch, I ambushed three more unsuspecting seniors in the Collabo-lounge.  I repeated my story—blog, student thoughts, help—and then asked them, “Looking back, what classes or experiences stand out to you, and why?”

They also answered, almost before I had finished asking the question.

“The exchange trips were transformative.  We were immersed in a culture, and we had to speak the language—there was no other choice.”

“When I was on the exchange trip, it was the first time I thought in a different language.  I was starting to write a text to my mom, and then I realized, ‘wait, I should write this in English.’”

“Critical thinking—that’s what I’ve gotten from my CA classes.  We apply it to our learning and the work that we create.”

“I love the change in the schedule—it’s allowed me to pursue an internship in art during my long block!”

Another student added, “I actually don’t like the change in schedule.  But you’re not going to put that in the blog, are you?”

***

Several years ago, members of Cary Academy’s Strategic Planning Committee reinvigorated our mission by crafting a guiding statement: “Cary Academy will create learning opportunities that are flexible, personalized, and relevant.  We will cultivate self-directed and bold life-long learners who make meaningful contributions to the world.”

That statement has guided the changes to the Upper School schedule, which allowed us to provide more flexibility in several departments.  We opened the science curriculum, offering more choice for all students.  We also expanded the times for art classes, allowing students to take multiple arts classes in a day.

That statement has guided the development of the Center for Math and Science, which will allow us to engage our students in deeper collaborative experiences.

Courtesy of the space provided by the CSM, that statement will guide us as we re-envision the Upper School building to match the needs of our students taking their humanities classes.

And that statement, in small and large ways, has filtered into the experiences and language of the students.  I did not share this statement with any of the students, yet—unbidden—they all referenced some aspect of the goal in their responses, much to my joy.

***

On Tuesday of this week, I had the chance to listen to two different student panels: one answered questions of prospective parents, the other spoke to underclassmen.  Both of those groups of students emphasized the idea of curiosity, even if they didn’t use that word.  They spoke of the joy when discovering a passion, of the need to focus on the personal journey, of the gift of flexibility.

In other conversations with students over the past few weeks, I have heard the joy derived from classes across all departments and grade levels.

So as a community, we have revised our schedule and rebuilt our buildings in order to facilitate that curiosity—and the students have embraced all of those opportunities.

And we will do more, nurturing that curiosity by creating additional opportunities for students to develop their paths, delving into the experiences that hold meaning and relevancy for them, and—ultimately–for the world outside of Cary Academy.

Even if not all the students are completely in favor of the schedule changes.

 

P.S.  Thanks again to the seniors who willingly put up with my questions during their free periods.

 

 

Written by Robin Follet, Head of Upper School

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CA’s Speech and Debate team takes top honors at the Pinecrest Open 

October 4, 2018

Congratulations to CA’s Speech and Debate team for taking top prize at the Pinecrest Open at Pinecrest High School in Southern Pines, NC on September 29.  Students participated in Original Oratory, Extemporaneous Speaking, Program Oral Interpretation, Impromptu Speaking, Lincoln Douglas Debate, Public Forum Debate, and Congressional Debate. CA placed in every event in which we participated.

 

Team: First place – Overall Sweepstakes

 

Bayla Sheshadri: First place – Original Oratory

Becca Segal: First place – Impromptu Speaking

Lexi Klein: First place – Varsity Congressional Debate

Sydney Tai:  Best Declamation and all-around Declamation Champion

Grace Wissink: First place – Program Oral Interpretation

Emily Zheng: Sixth place – Declamation

Becca Segal: Fourth place – Extemporaneous Speaking 

Shannon Jenkins: Fourth place – Varsity Lincoln Douglas Debate

Will Aarons: Fifth place – Varsity Lincoln Douglas Debate

Isaac Fan and Matthew Schaefer: Fifth place – Varsity Public Forum Debate

 

An extra congratulations to our debate novices on an impressive showing at their first competitive tournament.

 

Folu Ogundipe: Second place – Novice Lincoln Douglas Debate

Emily Wang: Third place – Novice Lincoln Douglas Debate

Allie Chandler: Fourth place – Novice Lincoln Douglas Debate

Casey Powell: Sixth place – Novice Lincoln Douglas Debate   

Safiya Alvi, Owen Kadis, Maddi Macchi, Allen He: Honorable mentions – Novice Lincoln Douglas Debate

 

Alek Palakuruthi and Aryan Nair: Second place team – Novice Public Forum Debate

Adam Farris and David Howard: Third place team – Novice Public Forum Debate

Miles Ramee and Sanjna Jotwani: Fifth place team — Novice Public Forum Debate

Andrew Holland and Oliver Moore; Annya Sachdeva and JR Cobb: Honorable mentions – Novice Public Forum Debate

 

Meirav Solomon Fourth place – Novice Congressional Debate

Andrew Lake: Fourth place – Novice Congressional Debate

Jane Sihm: Fifth place – Novice Congressional Debate

Kelsey Welch: Sixth place – Novice Congressional Debate

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Students spearhead Hurricane Florence relief efforts

September 20, 2018

CERT students help ready the campus 

As Hurricane Florence bore down on the Carolinas last week, our students sprang into action to help their community, both here at Cary Academy and beyond.

As news of the storm overtook media on Wednesday of last week, our Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) students—led by our Director of Safety and Security Jeff Wacenske—put their training to work, helping to ready the campus for the predicted high winds and torrential rain. Typical of our students, others quickly jumped in with helping hands to move all outdoor furniture safely inside. 

Offering a fantastic example of community spirit and teamwork, the varsity baseball and tennis teams used their practice times to survey all of CA’s athletic facilities, securing equipment and installing protective wind guards.

Members of the varsity baseball team hang
protective wind guards in preparation

And while our local community collectively breathed a sigh of relief when the storm turned, leaving CA with minimal damage, focus quickly shifted to how we could help those to the east who were left in Florence’s debilitating wake.  

In the wee hours of Sunday morning, Junior Parker Perkins, a cadet in the Civil Air Patrol—an auxiliary of the United States Air Force that carries out emergency service missions—deployed to Deep Run, NC to distribute supplies to affected areas.

Junior Parker Perkins deploys with
the Civil Air Patrol 

Closer to home, there have been numerous conversations amongst students, faculty, and staff in how to best serve those impacted. In the Upper School, Seniors Lyndon Wood and Milen Patel are spearheading a supply drive to collect pop-top canned meals, hygiene products, and cleaning supplies. The drive will run Thursday, September 20 to Wednesday, October 3, with collection bins in the Upper School lobby.

In addition, an Upper School bake sale featuring baked goods from Key and Beta Clubs is scheduled for US morning break and community time on Thursday, September 20 and Friday, September 21. Proceeds will be donated to the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina.

In the Middle School, the Middle School Student Leadership Club is planning a supply drive to run Monday, October 1 through Friday, October 5.  In addition, Leadership Club students are working with their faculty advisors to grapple with some of the long-term effects of Hurricane Florence and ways that they can sustain relief efforts over what will be a prolonged rebuilding process. Stay tuned for details.  

We thank all those that have stepped forward to provide help, both here on campus and in the wider community. And while we’re proud of the selfless outpouring of assistance from our community, we’re also happy to note that it isn’t altogether surprising. For a community that encourages students to make a positive impact on the world—both during their time here at Cary Academy and when they venture out into the wider world—meaningful community service and helping others is the norm. Hurricane Florence was no exception.

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