The American Computer Science League All-Star Contest was held on May 26 at Barrington HS near Providence, RI. The CA team of Thomas Hoffman (’18), Matthew Modi (’20) and Vincent Wang (’18) finished in 6th place in this international competition, involving team programming and individual written rounds, and battling against top teams from the U.S., Romania, Canada and Croatia. Competition in our division was extremely tight. The team scored 39/40 on the programming round and 26/36 on the especially challenging written round, and were actually just two points behind 1st place!
For their written round performances, Thomas won an Amazon Echo Dot and Vincent, with a perfect score, brought home a Chromebook computer. Matthew, as the only returning underclassman, will likely be our team’s leader for next year.
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Follow the leaders: Spotlight on Leadership In Crisis Program
Five students signed National Letters of Intent on Friday to play collegiate athletics. The lunch-time ceremony featured cake and celebration with family and friends.
Chandler Cree – Soccer at Northeastern
Chase Coley – Cross Country/Track & Field at Davidson
Coleman Mitchell – Cross Country/Track & Field at Davidson
Sarah Cate Niles – Rowing at UNC-Chapel Hill
Athina Zodl – Cross Country/Track & Field at New York University
They join the two other seniors who signed their letters in the fall:
Trey Murphy — Basketball at Rice
Olivia Frazier — Field Hockey at the University of Richmond
The following students earned the following top honors on the 2018 National German Exam, administered by the American Association of Teachers of German. Prize levels are based upon the national percentile ranking on the exam, and students received certificates and medals from the national AATG office for their performance.
Gold Medals:
Tommy Frank
Ryan Chen
Addie Esposito
Teo Feliu Merce
Constantin Zodl
David Go
Hunter Moore
Koa Kaliebe
Kyle Murphy
Finn Kerns
Max Feliu Merce
Hope Ferris
Christian Sodano
Leo deSouza
Olivia Frazier
Sheridan Page
Obinna Modilim
Silver Medals:
Claire Ferris
Parker Perkins
Matthew Schaeffer
Dorrit Eisenbeis
Athina Zodl
Lindsay Callahan
Luke Wilson
Bronze Medals:
Hannah George
Jono Jenkens
Sara Martin
Eva Hammer
Xavier deSouza
Matthew Crow
Raiden Mason
Meredith Fowler
Olivia Halferty
Dunning Hill
Ceren Iz
Bundesliga total!
The Goethe Institut in San Fransisco sponsors a contest each year on the topic of the German National Soccer League, the Bundesliga. Students must watch a soccer game clip each month and answer listening comprehension questions and also make predictions for the series of Bundesliga games occurring on the following weekend. Last year was our first participating, and we may have landed in last place in the Southeast Region (due to our predictions, not our listening comprehension!). But this year we finished in the top 5 in the Southeast Region, which qualified us for the "Champions League" play. We finished in 4th place overall nationally, and were awarded the lovely Bayern-München tricot that Christian is modeling in the photo below. We are excited to compete again next year!
What would school be like if the traditional transcript—that all-important list of courses taken and grades earned—went the way of the dinosaurs?
That is the express aim of a fast-growing education reform group called the Mastery Transcript Consortium, or MTC.
The MTC is a coalition of more than 130 independent schools united in the belief that the current high school transcript is an outdated tool that has students more focused on going through the motions of school and mastering the grading system than on delving deeply into content in pursuit of a meaningful learning experience. Schools participating in the Consortium are looking to develop a better model for reporting student learning and growth, one that connects core content to meta-skills like collaboration, communication, or creative thinking and that emphasizes applied learning that can be showcased in examples of students’ work. The hope is that by changing the way schools document the learning journey of students, the Consortium will not only foster more innovative and effective teaching practices, but will also change the way that colleges and universities evaluate applicants, all toward radical improvement of the student experience.
In the new transcript envisioned by the MTC, students would no longer receive credits and letter grades in isolated courses like Spanish 2 or Honors Geometry, but would instead earn broader “mastery credits” in interdisciplinary areas like Global Readiness or Visual and Spatial Reasoning, with evidence of mastery captured in a portfolio. The types of mastery credits available and the criteria for earning them would be determined by each individual school in accordance with its particular mission, vision and values, and evidence of mastery would come not only from course work, but also extracurricular accomplishments, work experience, independent study, summer enrichment, community service, etc. Most importantly, the evidence of mastery curated by the students would stand on its own, without being distilled into any kind of letter or numerical grade.
As for the logistics of this new “mastery transcript,” the MTC intends to build a common digital platform that would enable college admission officers to access a one-page summary of credits earned, then click on a specific credit to see the supporting standards, and then click on a standard to see the performance evidence. This multi-dimensional format would provide colleges and universities with a much fuller picture of the specific strengths of a student, giving depth and transparency to the student’s work record while still allowing the top level of the transcript to be read in under two minutes.
A key challenge facing the MTC, of course, is getting colleges and universities to accept the new transcript, which the MTC hopes to accomplish largely through the strength of its membership. According to the organizers of the MTC, the great respect that top colleges have for the graduates of MTC member schools will help to ensure that the prototype designed by the group will be taken seriously. The MTC has also actively enlisted colleges and universities as partners to provide guidance and feedback.
While the MTC certainly has its skeptics and critics and widespread systemic change is still years away, the Consortium has at the very least created a powerful framework for bringing like-minded schools together for much-needed conversation about a system long overdue for a redesign. How might we reimagine curriculum and assessment to more effectively tap into students’ intrinsic motivation, reduce anxiety, nurture intellectual curiosity and promote deeper understanding? It is this larger question, and the opportunity to connect with other forward-thinking schools to consider the possibilities, that prompted Cary Academy to join the MTC in Fall 2017. For our school, the value of the Consortium lies less in the product itself (an alternative transcript) than in the collaborative process surrounding its development. The core principles underlying the work of the MTC align well with our strategic vision to create learning opportunities that are flexible, personalized, and relevant and to cultivate self-directed and bold life-long learners who make meaningful contributions to the world. We look forward to another round of exploration and ideation with MTC member schools when we attend our next Consortium workshop at the Nueva School in Fall 2018.
Big wins for the CA Boys & Girls at the TISAC Track & Field Championship; Boys win by 38 over NRCA, Girls by 80 points over DA, one of the largest margins of victory in TISAC history! Meet results are posted: https://twitter.com/CAXCTF
TISAC Most Outstanding Athlete – Coleman Mitchell
All-TISAC Boys –
Coleman Mitchell – 1600m
Coleman Mitchell – 3200m
Sam Chow – 300m Hurdles
Evan Ehrhardt – Discus
Christian Sodano – Pole Vault
Chase Coley, Coleman Mitchell, Chapman Fitzgerald, Ray Faison – 4x800m Relay – New TISAC Record! – 7:56.64
At the State Algebra 1 Math Contest held at UNC Greensboro on Thursday May 3, Eric Ye (’24),middle of back row in blue/grey hoodie, earned 10th place in NC and a trophy for his performance.
On Friday, April 13 the STEP (Shifting the Educational Paradigm) club hosted a conference at Cary Academy called "STEP Forward: Evaluating Student Success." The main focus of the conference was on the grading system's influence on students.
To address these issues on a deeper level and foster collaboration among schools, STEP decided to host a conference consisting of various workshops led by teachers, parents, and students from various schools in The Triangle. Additionally, the conference included a panel where the students and teachers were able to ask each other questions to learn about each other's perspective on issues related to student assessment.
The conference, supported by a grant from the Cary Academy PTAA, welcomed over 40 participants. The conference proved very successful in prompting deep insights into the problems surrounding evaluation and developing a framework with which to develop solutions. Attendees said they thoroughly enjoyed the experience.
Cary Academy extends a warm “bienvenue” to a visiting exchange group from the Lycée Sainte Ursule, our sister school in Tours, France. Head of School Mike Ehrhardt and Upper School Head Heather Clarkson welcomed the 31 students and their teachers, Isabelle Théry and Christine Becker, during a brief reception on Friday morning in the Administration Building lobby. This year’s exchange, coordinated by Kim Jones and Sam Goeuriot, is the 17th between our two schools. During their time at Cary Academy, the French students will visit regular classes with their CA partners, as well as participate in a series of special classes offered by volunteers from the CA faculty. The program also includes visits to downtown Raleigh and UNC-Chapel Hill, a tour of the Civil Rights Museum in Greensboro, a a day at the beach and a picnic at Jordan Lake. Our friends from Sainte Ursule will be with us until May 8th, and Cary Academy students will return the visit to Tours in late May/early June as part of our annual world language exchange program.
The Cary Academy Boys 4x800m Relay team of Chapman Fitzgerald ('18), Chase Coley ('18), Coleman Mitchell ('18), and Ray Faison ('20) qualified for the prestigious 124th Penn Relays and will compete this week against the best in the nation in Philadelphia at UPenn’s historic Franklin Field: https://pennrelaysonline.com/Results/results.aspx?en=303
High School Boys 4x800m Relay teams compete in four heats on Friday morning, the top 12 teams advance to the High School Championship of America at 4:00pm on Saturday.