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Manju Kakare and Dr. Ryan Ku

Upper School

Visiting speakers explore the Asian-American identity

April 4, 2019

CA’s Asian-American Affinity Group hosted its first speaker panel, on Wednesday, as part of Cary Academy’s Symposium Series. The panel, featuring Dr. Ryan Ku, a fellow at Duke University’s Asian-American Studies Center, specializing in the developing of the Asian-American identity in literature and Ms. Manju Karkare, a Raleigh-based dietician dedicated to providing nutritional counseling and making healthy eating accessible to everyone.

The panelists, from different fields and stages of life, spoke on how the common thread of their Asian-American identity plays a role in shaping their day-to-day life.

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Alumni News

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

Athletics

Winter Sports Recap

Middle School

MS celebrates Earth Day in a big way

Varsity robotics

Upper School

Varsity Robotics season ends with valiant effort

April 3, 2019

The Jenkins family cheers on Varsity Robotics at UNC Pembroke.

Cary Academy’s FRC (varsity) robotics team (#5160) had a fantastic 2nd tournament, but fell short of qualifying for states. FRC tournaments are two-day affairs. Each team plays in 12 qualification matches which determines their tournament ranking. After those matches, the 8 highest seeds choose two other teams to form a playoff alliance.

The Chargers had a fabulous Saturday: solid driving, a lot of scoring and a record of 7-2 was good enough put us in 8th position at the close of day 1. Unfortunately, Sunday played out differently. A technical issue and some alliance mistakes led to three losses, dropping the Chargers to a rank of 18. During alliance selections, the 7th seeded alliance selected the Chargers and our 3 team alliance had the daunting chore of taking on seed #2 with two of the top robots in the tournaments. The Chargers were tasked with playing defense on those high-scoring bots and did CA proud, keep them from scoring well below their average. Unfortunately, it was not enough and our alliance was eliminated in the quarter-finals.

We ended the season just outside of qualifying for States, but with the satisfaction of building a solid, durable robot, capable of scoring and defending with the best of teams.

The Chargers would like to honor and thank our soon-to-be graduates Cameron Fisher, Michael Epperson and Claudia Zimmerman for their hard work and leadership during the years they spent in the CA Robotics Program. A shout out to all the parents for their endless supply of snacks and for the many many ways they helped and supported the team. Finally, the coach’s cup goes to Rachel Atay and Scott Allred who are crucial to the success of the team, as well as in the design and maintenance of the robot. We did CA proud.

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

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CA Curious

The power of purpose

Upper School

CA Senior helps hurricane-devastated community

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Math team

Upper School

CA Mathematics teams compete in State Regional Mathematics Contest

April 2, 2019

At the State Regional Mathematics Contest at Wake Technical Community College, four teams of CA Middle and Upper Schoolers competed against many of the top mathematics students in Wake County, and likely in all of the state. Roughly thirty schools participated in this meet.

Five students earned individual medals for their performances: Bryan Fang (’23), Haitian Huang (’23), Emily Wang (’22), Ruiyang Wu (’24), and Eric Ye (’24).

Bryan and Ruiyang also qualified for the State Mathematics Contest in their respective divisions!

Algebra I team: Maddie Alvarez (’24), Katie Shen (’24), Eric Xie (’24), Jasmine Ye (’24)

Team finish:       8th place

 

Geometry team:  Haitian Huang, Nitya Nalamothu (’23), Ruiyang Wu, Eric Ye

Team finish:       4th place (earned plaque)

Top Individuals:

  • Ruiyang Wu (7th) – State Qualifier
  • Eric Ye (11th) – Medal Winner
  • Haitian Huang (12th) – Medal Winner

 

Algebra II team:            Bryan Fang, Owen Kadis (’22), William Su (’22), Emily Wang

Team finish:        3rd place (earned plaque)

Top Individuals: 

  • Bryan Fang (9th) – State Qualifier
  • Emily Wang (11th) – Medal Winner
  • Owen Kadis (23rd)

 

Comprehensive team:  Tommy Frank (’21), Rishi Goswami (’20), Marvin Koonce (’21), Jay Sagrolikar (’21), Viraj Shah (’19), Victoria Du (’20)

Team finish:        5th place (earned plaque)

Top Individuals:  

  • Tommy Frank (16th)
  • Rishi Goswami (18th)

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CA Curious

Art is essential

Spring art performances schedule

Magazine of CA

Preparing for Impact

Prom dress drive

Upper School

Prom Dress Drive collects 70 dresses for a community in need

March 28, 2019

Thanks to the CA community, the Center for Community Engagement received 70 prom dresses during the Prom Dress Drive, to help students in Robeson County who are still experiencing the effects of Hurricane Florence. Thank you for helping to make someone’s prom night special!

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Athletics

Super Charging Athletics

Alumni Spotlight

Gridiron Insider

Upper School

Soulful Strides Success

Library from quad

Upper School

Eight students selected for 2019 Governor’s School

March 21, 2019

Eight Upper School students were selected to attend this year’s session of the Governor’s School of North Carolina. Founded over fifty years ago, it is the oldest statewide summer residential program for academically or intellectually gifted high school students in the nation. It is a five and one-half week summer residential program for intellectually gifted high school students, integrating academic disciplines, the arts, and unique courses on each of two campuses. The curriculum focuses on the exploration of the most recent ideas and concepts in each discipline, and does not involve credit, tests, or grades.

Cary Academy congratulates the following students on their selection to attend the 2019 session of the Governor’s School:

Brandon Yi – Vocal Music

Elena Huang – Dance

Grace Chow – Instrumental Music

Thuc Uyen Dzu – Instrumental Music

Saajan Patel – Social Science

Addie Esposito – Social Science

Mary Kate Englehardt – Theatre

Elly Kim – Visual Art

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CA Curious

Spring in North Carolina can be wonderful!

Alumni Spotlight

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A Look Ahead

Library from quad

Upper School

CA Future Health Professionals charge ahead in State HOSA competition

March 13, 2019

Exactly a week ago, Jarrica Kirkpatrick and I (Troy Weaver) took 15 members of our CA Chapter of HOSA-Future Health Professionals (formerly Health Occupations Students of America) who qualified to participate at the State Leadership Conference (SLC) in Charlotte.  In fact, this time last week, HOSA was invited to take in an NBA game and we watched the Charlotte Hornets battled the Miami Heat!  The next day we prepared for our own battles as competition was steep…there were a couple hundred schools from around the state and several thousand students (filling 6 hotels in downtown Charlotte!) who aspire to careers in the medical/health sciences!  

Of the 15 students who participated, 3 sat for knowledge tests whose results were not revealed until Saturday morning’s closing awards ceremony. The remaining 12 sat for a Round One exam last Thursday and had to wait to learn whether they’d advance to Friday’s Round Two for practical and skills assessment.  The results, all 12 advanced to Round Two,  with eleven of  them earning “Top Ten” in our state! Here are final placements by competitive event:

  • Biomedical Debate (4th  Place) – Sarah Hallman, Nikki Tehrani, Angelina Chen, Anisha Rustogi
  • Biomedical Debate (7th Place) – Salma Said, RJ Jain, Ian Washabaugh
  • CERT (Critical Emergency Response Team) Skills (8th Place) – Cindy Li and Christianna Swift  
  • Epidemiology (1st Place) – Eric Wang
  • Pharmacology (3rd Place) – Liya Chen

While Eric and Liya’s “Top 3” placements automatically qualify them for the International Leadership Conference (ILC), it is quite possible that those in Biomedical Debate and CERT Skills would have the opportunity to attend ILC in Orlando in June!  HOSA Chapter Advisors have been given until Friday evening, March 15th to code the intent of any students who placed in the “Top Ten.”  Coding your intent means that if a higher finishing individual/team is unable to attend ILC, NC HOSA will open up that event to the next individual(s) on the “Top Ten” spreadsheet. Last year, there were events that went as deep as “9” that ended up representing NC and competing at ILC in Dallas! 

SPECIAL NOTES: 

  • Jillian Rokuskie made it to Round Two in Clinical nursing…a very competitive field in a popular event!
  • Sarah, Nikki, Angelina and Anisha were competing in their first-ever SLC and had to compete against our second CA team, including veterans Salma and RJ (who represented CA and NC at the Dallas ILC last year!)
  • Cindy and Christianna made it to Round Two for the second year in a row, but this time they placed in the “Top Ten!”
  • Liya placed “3rd” in her very first SLC, and was in a very competitive field with perennial powerhouses from across the state!
  • Eric placed “1st” in extemporaneous writing at our District Leadership Conference last fall and automatically qualified for this event at States, but he opted to pursue a greater challenge with his interest in epidemiology and diligently prepared for this event, finishing “1st” again!
  • Our student represented us well! They were competing against students who attend specialized/magnet high schools that have classes and clinicals in medical and health science fields!

Guest Post by
Troy K. Weaver, Biology Teacher, Upper School Science

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CA Curious

Time Well Spent

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Middle School Reflections

Library from quad

Upper School

Triangle Debate League holds inaugural tournament

March 13, 2019

The Triangle Debate League—a non-profit organization comprised of CA student peer-mentors and collegiate debate coaches—hosted their inaugural tournament on March 12th with students from Jordan, Hillside and Southern High Schools. CA Speech and Debate students came out in big numbers to support, judge, and make the event run smoothly. Founded at CA, TDL works to bring speech and debate to Durham and Wake county schools that don’t have the resources to otherwise support the activity. 

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World Language

2024 NC German Day Results

Library from quad

Upper School

Speech and Debate sweeps final Dogwood Tournament

March 13, 2019

CA’s novice speech and debaters finished off the Dogwood Speech and Debate League tournaments with another sweepstakes win on March 9. They swept the top six spots in Lincoln Douglas Debate, five of the six in Public Forum Debate, four of the top six/top three in Declamation, three of the top four in Impromptu, two of top four in Oral Interpretation and a win in Informative Speaking.  They also had novices place in Original Oratory, Extemporaneous, and Duo!

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Events

CSA Kickoff

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Athletics

Super Charging Athletics

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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Middle School

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