Belgrade Central School Celebrates 2nd Annual Young Reader’s Week

Submitted by Keith Morin, Assistant Superintendent of Schools and Chief Academic Officer for  Regional School Unit No. 18.

Founded by Pizza Hut and the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress in 1989, National Young Readers Week has been an annual event held at Belgrade Central School during the second week of November to raise awareness around the importance of reading. This is Belgrade Central’s second year of using this week to spread the love of reading around our school community.

Each teacher scheduled events to take place throughout the week that would highlight reading, and we participated in some school-wide events too. On Thursday, November 14th grades K-2 and grades 3-5 each held a “Read-In” event where they all gathered together in the gym to “get cozy and read” for a period of time. Blankets were spread out everywhere, kids were snuggled up with their friends and favorite books, and we all read together! Mrs. “Bacon” brought along her special friend “Mrs. SunnysideUp” to join in on the fun!!

On Friday, November 15th, the whole school participated in a Book Parade, allowing students to dress up as their favorite book characters, carry their favorite books, and spread the love of books up and down our hallways.

Other events and things you could see around the school were bookmark projects, decorated doors, guest readers in classrooms, math literacy (students finding math concepts in picture books), and whole day “read ins” feeding off our school-wide events.

This was a great way to bring the school together around the love of books!

Windham High School Students Learn the Reality of Journalism

Submitted by Lanet Hane, Director of Community Connections in RSU 14.

Students in Windham High School’s Journalism course have been learning all about the process of writing great stories. In addition to learning the craft, they have a number of opportunities throughout the course to experience the real-life world of careers in journalism.

Students were recently provided the opportunity to tour WGME, experiencing everything from green screens to the feeling of being on-air. They had the chance to interact with people who have made a career out of journalism, and were immersed in the real-life application of the work they have been doing in the class.

Later in the week, Lorraine Glowczak of The Windham Eagle joined the class to talk about her experiences as a writer and editor.  They had the opportunity to ask questions about the process of writing articles, keeping deadlines, working for a newspaper, and much more.

Joe Hennessey, Maine 2019 Teacher of the Year: A Year in Review

An open letter written by Maine’s 2019 Teacher of the Year Joe Hennessey.

To my fellow colleagues, educators of all levels, and community members throughout the state:

What follows is an open letter to you which originates from a place of profound gratitude. It has been my sincere pleasure and honor to represent our profession and its schools as the 2019 Maine Teacher of the Year, and I hope that I have fulfilled that charge acceptably. Eighteen months ago, my principal nominated me for a recognition which many of our colleagues would have been unable to accept for any number of reasons or would have refused upon philosophical grounds. I think we can all agree that there is no single best teacher in our state, and unequivocally, I am only one piece of a larger whole in Guilford; no person works in a vacuum, and I find myself having been named Teacher of the Year precisely because the students, parents, community members, and staff members where I work put me in a position to succeed. Time and again, they have permitted me to broaden my intellectual horizons and to augment my pedagogy by taking risks, iterating, and refining. They have shown me great trust and support throughout my year of recognition, and I am not able to repay their kindness other than to offer my deepest thanks.

Despite my initial inner conflict, and throughout my personal doubts, I have sought to serve as an ambassador of public education in Maine on behalf of my students, their sending communities, my school, and various invested parties. I have endeavored to gather, to highlight, and to learn beyond the opportunities afforded to most of my colleagues, and my immediate task is to share these salient pieces with others. As I transition back into a regular classroom routine, I have thought about how to articulate these truths in a coherent manner to others. For the time being, I have grouped my thoughts into these three tasks from the outset of my year: What I have gathered, what I have highlighted, and I what I have learned.

The resources which I have been able to gather on behalf of myself and others over my year are numerous and profound.  On one front, my professional network has been expanded with 55 cohort colleagues, who are diverse and capable beyond my ability to express. On another front, I have also become aware of new paradigms, teacher/community leadership opportunities, centers for teaching excellence, and partners in education. It appears that we are all working in concert, whether we are aware of one another or not. The crux, to me, is how to harness these different pieces together so that we may all benefit from one another’s strengths, across grade levels and state lines. Perhaps a comprehensive, well-indexed database of resources? A dedicated center for teaching excellence in the geographic center of our state? New fellowships and networking opportunities for teachers? I do not know, but I am optimistic that some assortment of the above could be realized if we decide we want it.

In my written and spoken work, I have striven to highlight the challenges and assets of rural education in our state. I have written honestly about our challenges with chronic absenteeism, low literacy/functional illiteracy, progressive mental health education, and spare mental health infrastructure because I know how hard every school district is working to meet the needs of its students. I have also written and spoken about the wonderful additions to intellectual life Maine’s rural areas are making through interdisciplinary classes, project-based learning, multiple pathways via differentiation, and the essential time and space to think and grow which Maine’s rural students are afforded. Schools in the countryside are adaptable, responsive, and committed to being community centers– a notion that other portions of our country are not fortunate enough to possess at present. I remain convinced that rural schools are good places to be in the state of Maine, and that they themselves will be the determining factor in what the essential public service of the future will look like.

My reading, writing, speaking, and listening has taken me all over the world in the last twelve months. From California, to Washington, D.C., to Virginia, to New York, to Alabama, to Louisiana, and throughout our own state, I have seen what public education has to offer American society. In Germany and Switzerland, I have further observed the capacity and enthusiasm of young people from entirely disparate walks of life. And, what I have found in all of these places is an interconnected, interdependent, curious, compassionate, and ultimately fallible world. It is up to us to think critically, articulate ourselves well, and help students to learn to do the same, regardless of whether we agree with their eventual conclusions. In contemporary life as in the past, we are better as individuals and groups for having been exposed to diverse viewpoints. And, I will, in kind, treasure this travel for the rest of my life and incorporate those experiences back into my classroom through planned lessons, impromptu discussions, and further extrapolation which I cannot anticipate as of now.

More than anything, though, my time as the 2019 Maine Teacher of the Year has been affirming, and my mantra that we are all “thinking people” has been further impressed upon me. In Maine and beyond, we are all capable of great intellect and great thought, and our academic and technical education programs ought to reflect that premise. Education– formal and informal, primary or secondary or post-secondary– remains the path to self-betterment and community-betterment. And, in a time of social and political division, technological acceleration, and possibly increased alienation and distraction, it has been made clearer to me that we need all of Maine’s society to achieve what it is capable of achieving. Our collective progress depends upon the essential public service– public education– and we need to frame our discussions moving forward around that fact.

Learning from colleagues and organizations from coast to coast and continent to continent, it is more evident to me than before that our education system is whatever we make it and are willing to pursue. I am enchanted by learning and in awe of the art which education is able to evince in our society. In a manner of closing, I would equate James Weldon Johnson’s “Before a Painting” as metaphor for education writ large.

I knew not who had wrought with skill so fine
What I beheld; nor by what laws of art
He had created life and love and heart
On canvas, from mere color, curve and line.
Silent I stood and made no move or sign;
Not with the crowd, but reverently apart;
Nor felt the power my rooted limbs to start,
But mutely gazed upon that face divine.

And over me the sense of beauty fell,
As music over a raptured listener to
The deep-voiced organ breathing out a hymn;
Or as on one who kneels, his beads to tell,
There falls the aureate glory filtered through
The windows in some old cathedral dim

Let us all look forward to taking the time and space we need to educate one another, educate ourselves, and remember the value of teaching and learning in Maine.

Sincerely,

Joseph Hennessey
English Teacher– Piscataquis Community High School of Guilford, Maine
2018 Piscataquis County Teacher of the Year
2019 Maine Teacher of the Year

Kennebec Valley Regional Superintendents’ Association Hosts 4th Biennial Showcase Event

In an effort to promote the masterful work our public schools do for the students in the Kennebec valley region, the Kennebec Valley Regional Superintendents’ Association (KVRSA) sponsored it’s 4th biennial Showcase Event on November 15, 2019 at Cony High School in Augusta.

This year 10 school districts participated with their students sharing 20 different and ingenious educational opportunities taking place in their schools. Showcase activities ranged from digital photography, ELL programming, culinary arts, Fast Break Café, Dual Enrollment opportunities, JMG Backpack programs, innovation using upcycled materials, STEM and the latest technology such as 3D, printers and Robots.  We had students share their digital graphics program, multiple pathway opportunities and a 20% Project program.  We were also entertained by two performing groups.

This worthwhile event was attended by DOE representatives, Superintendents, Principals, School Board Members, Parents, and Maine Legislators.

“This was such an awesome event!” said Page Nicols, Chief Innovation Officer for the Maine DOE. “I was especially impressed by a group of high school students from Gardiner working on ‘The 20% Project’ in which they developed a business idea and then actually launched the business.  There were a couple of graduates with them who have further pursued their project/business since they graduated.”

“I was so impressed by the caliber of the student ambassadors as they shared what they were learning and doing in the various programs they were representing,” said Shari Templeton, Maine DOE Science & Technology Specialist and Kennebec County Regional Representative. “From RSU 3 elementary students adeptly discussing Cougar coins and PBIS strategies to RSU 18 high school students proudly describing their Fast Break Café, the young people were poised, confident and strong advocates for the programs they represented. Kudos to the next generation and the teachers who lead them,” she added.

Participating School Districts and what they were showcasing are as follows:

Elementary – Grades Pre-K – 5

  • RSU 3 – PBIS
  • RSU 18 – Robotics

Middle School – Grades 6 – 8

  • RSU 3 – IKnowME
  • RSU 38 – Ratio Math Projects

High School – Grades 9 – 12 & Technical Center

  • Augusta – Digital Photography and ELL Program, CATC Culinary Arts and serving, Cony Madrigals – Welcoming performance
  • RSU 3 – Chamber Singers (Performing during event)
  • RSU 18 – Fast Break Café
  • RSU 38 – Dual Enrollment
  • MSAD 49 – JMG Backpack Program
  • MSAD 13, 59 & 74 – Innovation using upcycled materials and the latest technology such as 3D printers and Robotics
  • MSAD 13, 59 & 74 – Multiple Pathways Academy
  • MSAD 11 – 20% projects completed and in progress
  • MSAD 54 – Digital Graphics Program

Adult Education

  • RSU 38 – Maranacook Adult and Community Education

Information and pictures for this article were provided by administrators from the Kennebec Valley Regional Superintendents’ Association (KVRSA).

Maine FFA Aroostook Chapter Students Collaborate on Leadership

On November 15, 2019, 160 enthusiastic Aroostook County FFA student members (formerly known as “Future Farmers of America”) participated in a one-day workshop at the University of Maine at Presque Isle devoted to leadership skills of positive influence, prioritizing, time management, and teamwork.  The University’s Sustainable Agriculture program sponsored the event.

Student State FFA Officers Graham Berry (President), Camryn Curtis (Vice President) and Ava Cameron (Secretary-Treasurer) developed, organized and conducted the workshop, with assistance from Haillee Cunningham and Alli Kenney of Ashland High School and from Emma Burby, Brandon Dubie, Izzy Higgins, Rheanna Ortman, and Amanda Winslow of Presque Isle Regional Career & Technical Center.  Logistics were assisted by Doug Robertson, State FFA Advisor, Maine Department of Education.

All current FFA chapters of Aroostook County fielded students to the event:  Ashland High School, Ashland Middle School, Caribou Technology Center, Central Aroostook High School, Central Aroostook Junior High School, Easton Junior/Senior High School, Hodgdon High School, Presque Isle Regional Career & Technical Center, Presque Isle Middle School, Washburn High School.

Considering Positive Influence in Leadership (left to right at table in foreground, five students facing camera): Hunter Cunningham, Ashland Middle School - Nick Margeson, Caribou Technology Center – Madelyn Buzza, Presque Isle Regional Career & Technical Center (PIRCTC) - Creed Chasse, Ashland High School – Maggie Currie & Clay Gregg, PIRCTC
Considering Positive Influence in Leadership (left to right at table in foreground, five students facing camera): Hunter Cunningham, Ashland Middle School – Nick Margeson, Caribou Technology Center – Madelyn Buzza, Presque Isle Regional Career & Technical Center (PIRCTC) – Creed Chasse, Ashland High School – Maggie Currie & Clay Gregg, PIRCTC

Maine FFA is a statewide organization whose nearly 500 members come from grades 7-12 classes devoted to areas of agriculture and natural resources (including science curricula infused with agriculture and natural resources topics).  Workshop content included discussion of topics, brainstorming, and hands-on illustrative activities.  In additional to leadership skills, students had the chance to meet and work together with peers from other schools.  Some students at the workshop had also recently returned from the National FFA Convention in Indianapolis, an event attended by nearly 70,000 students from across the country.  In addition to workshops and conventions, students in FFA are often involved in local community service and may benefit from numerous awards and scholarships.

Schools interested in starting new FFA chapters should contact:  Doug Robertson, Maine FFA Advisor, Maine Department of Education, doug.robertson@maine.gov  (207) 624-6744.

MSSM Student Elected as Youth Governor of YMCA Youth and Government Program

Submitted by Ryan McDonald, Public Relations Coordinator, Maine School of Science and Mathematics. 

Maine School of Science and Mathematics (MSSM) student Martin Brozman, a junior from Bangor, will serve as the 78th YMCA Youth Governor of the Great State of Maine. He was elected to the office by his peers at the 2019 Maine YMCA Youth and Government program on Sunday, November 11th. Martin is the first MSSM student ever to hold the position. With his election, Martin will attend the YMCA Youth Governor’s Conference in Washington, D.C., representing the Maine YMCA, and he will serve as Governor of the 2020 Youth and Government program in Augusta.

The MSSM delegation returned to Limestone Sunday evening where they were welcomed by a Limestone Police and Fire Department escort at the town line and a celebratory student body ready to welcome Governor Brozman and the rest of the group home. Additional recognition to this year’s senior participants: Will Whitman (Swan’s Island), Michael Delorge (Biddeford), Toben Streevy (Bar Harbor), Taesu Joo (Republic of Korea), Jordan Theriault (Fort Fairfield), James Lau (Buxton), Jay Philbrick (North Yarmouth), Christian Chagnon (Eliot), Annie Giroux (Wales), Shea Sewall (Hope), and Madelyn Battcock-Emerson (Kittery).

Brozman’s platform was based on a need for affordable healthcare here in Maine. He believes that this would “attract young people and families to live here and thrive. Without having to worry about healthcare costs, young families will be more likely to stay and be active members of their communities.” Brozman comes from a family of doctors and plans to be either an orthopedic surgeon or a neurologist. Brozman went on to say, “This program has helped me realize the role of government, and now I have a better understanding of the politics behind medicine.”

YMCA Youth and Government program allows any High School student in Maine to participate in a hands-on experience of how Maine’s Legislative process works. Delegates have a variety of duties such as drafting all the bills to be debated and discussed, and electing their peers to serve in leadership positions to lead at the State House weekend. They also receive training in how to complete all leadership roles for the weekend. YMCA Youth and Government Program Delegates serve as Youth Governor, Cabinet, Representatives, Senators, Lobbyists, and Media Staff, and have a unique opportunity to have access to the State House during the program. The program takes place in the actual chamber and committee rooms.

For more information contact Lonney Steeves, Maine YMCA Youth and Government Director, at lonneysteeves@gmail.com.

 

Lewiston Adult Ed Class Sparks New Life In Clown Car

Submitted by Mike Reagan, Education and Marketing Coordinator, Lewiston Adult Education.

Small Engine & Power Equipment Repair students at Lewiston Adult Education bring in chainsaws and snowblowers with seasonal regularity.

When the weather gets warm again, instructor Richard Hussey will see the return of lawnmowers. But this fall, he had a student bring in a repair job that would not fit in with the others, though it did have a small engine.

Patrick Penley is a member of the Kora Temple Shrine, a Kora clown and the owner of a multicolored jalopy that had several owners before him.

“My goal was to get that running,” he said.

The clown car had a three-horsepower engine and during the semester, it was removed and replaced by a power washer engine.

“We had to modify the engine. We had to modify the framework. We had to modify the drive system. And this was done primarily by the student. I just gave the guidance,” Hussey said.

He said that students can bring in gasoline engines at the start of the semester but are responsible for bringing them in and taking them home at the end of class. Penley brought the clown car in the back of his pickup truck.

“It has to come and go. That’s your size reference,” Hussey said.

The Small Engine class is finishing up for the fall semester but is scheduled to return for Winter-Spring 2020. The class listing will appear in the combined Lewiston Adult Education-Auburn Adult & Community Education brochure, which is set to come out in early January.

In addition to the clown car, Penley worked on a leaf blower and chainsaw in the class.

He hopes to have the car off and running in a 2020 parade. For those interested in seeing it run a little sooner, here is a link to a video of a test run on Tuesday night at Lewiston High School’s main entrance.

Maine School of Science and Mathematics Graduate Selected as a Schwarzman Scholar

Submitted by Ryan McDonald, Public Relations Coordinator, Maine School of Science and Mathematics.

Maine School of Science and Mathematics (MSSM) graduate Gordon McCulloh, Class of 2016, has been selected as a Schwarzman Scholar and will undertake a one-years master’s program at Tsinghua University in Beijing upon graduation from the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA) in 2020.

A highly selective international program, Gordon is the first student from Maine, and only the third from the USAFA, to become a Schwarzman Scholar whose programmatic focus is designed to prepare the next generation of global leaders for the challenges of the future.

Gordon studies astronautical engineering, applied mathematics, and Arabic at USAFA. He earned the 2019 USAFA cadet of the year award and held various leadership positions that focused on building others, such as managing the academic performance of over 1,400 cadets. A proponent of commercial and international collaboration in the space environment, Gordon interned at Ad Astra Rocket and SpaceX. His intent to study in China is to inspire peaceful space policies and technological solutions as an engineer and acquisitions officer in the United States Air Force.

Full details of the Schwarzman Scholarship Program can be viewed at: https://www.schwarzmanscholars.org

Five Town CSD to Host Innovation Conference July 2020

Submitted by Trina Schroeder, Executive Assistant to the Superintendent & Communications Director at Five Town CSD / MSAD #28.

The Hatchery at the Five Town CSD invites you to SAVE THE DATE for our Innovation Conference: The Intersection of Education and Industry, July 1-2, 2020 at Camden Hills Regional High School in Rockport, Maine.

This exciting two-day conference will bring educators and students interested in innovation together with entrepreneurs, business owners and industry leaders who are interested in education. Featuring a wide variety of presenters covering 15 sessions, Design Sprint, Open Minis, and countless networking opportunities.

Registration will open January 2, 2020.

Visit our website regularly for up-to-date information and the announcement of our keynote speaker. https://csd.fivetowns.net/innovationconference

Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/SchoolsCamden and

LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/20141475/admin/

The Five Town CSD, serving students in grades 9-12 from Appleton, Camden, Hope, Lincolnville and Rockport is widely known as a top-notch secondary school district. This well deserved reputation is made possible by the considerable support of all of the member communities, and strengthened by the strong effort and talent of the students, staff, and administration.

Maine Music Educators Help Root Modern Band Curriculum into Maine Schools

IMG_3260
Spencer Hale

Educators from across the state gathered at Orono High School recently for their Modern Band 102 lesson, a second professional learning opportunity available through the Maine Kids Rock Program. Delivered by Little Kids Rock Educator Spencer Hale, the class gave educators the opportunity to fine tune their technique, and to build upon what they had learned in the previous modern band lessons they’ve been participating. Through the Maine Kids Rock program, each of these educators accepted $5,000 worth of modern band instruments, along with resources and hands-on learning opportunities to help them run modern band programs in their schools, an opportunity they would otherwise not be able to give to their students.

There are currently 35 Maine schools offering modern band programs through the Maine Kids Rock program. To be eligible for participation, districts agreed to offer modern band – taught by a certified music teacher, with priority given to schools who serve 50% or more free or reduced meals to eligible students.

During introductions at Modern Band 102, educators in attendance shared their name, school, the age group they are teaching, and the music the kids are working on. Their students were learning a wide-range of modern music selections, of their choosing, like Lost Boy by Ruth B., Count on Me by Bruno Mars, Best Day of My Life by American Authors, Ho Hey by The Lumineers, and Happy People by Little Big Town, on a variety of modern band instruments provided through the Maine Kids Rock Program.

Orono High School Music Teacher and Band Director Jen Acosta, who has been hosting the modern band professional learning in her music room for the past 3 years as a central location in Maine, only recently joined the program and currently offers modern band programming and instruments to her students.

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Jen Acosta and Jason Anderson

“This is revitalizing [music] programs,” said Acosta. “It gives people the opportunity to use whatever resources they have to get kids playing music,” she added. Acosta went on to explain that it also serves as a gateway to music education in general. Being able to play and sing the songs they are listening to on the radio and on TV gets so many more students interested in music education than otherwise would be. Once they learn how to play one instrument, they most likely will pick up another she explained.

“The approach is so open it gives teachers a lot of autonomy,” added Maine DOE Visual and Performing Arts Specialist Jason Anderson. New to the Department, Anderson recently came from his long-time position as Vocal Music Director at Houlton High School, one of the original 10 pilot schools awarded instruments and modern band resources when Maine Kids Rock was created.

Developed between the Maine Department of Education and national nonprofit Little Kids Rock in 2017, the Maine Kids Rock program is funded through a combination of Little Kids Rock donors and a portion of the State of Maine’s education budget, which is approved each year by the Maine State Legislature.

“I think the biggest standout – from top down – is that it represents the ‘do’ approach. Getting them [the kids] to do something,” said Acosta. “I’ve never seen anything like it.” She went on to explain that music education like this is going to change music culture. While students are still in the midst of learning modern band right now, they will eventually graduate and move on to post-secondary options and careers, having learned modern music at a much earlier age than students have been able to previously. This will more than likely result in new and innovative music creations and performances to come from our next generation of musicians.