Highest Rated School in the Area
The high school received great news that validated the hard work we have been putting toward improving/updating curriculum, instruction, and assessment practices. We have earned a rating of 90.4 on the Pennsylvania Department of Education's School Performance Profile. This is the highest scores among all other high schools in the area. Several based on several factors:
- Performance on Keystone Exams
- Performance on SAT and ACT
- Graduation Rates
- Performance on NOCTI Exam (Career Center)
- Ability to close the achievement gap with all students
- Ability to close the achievement gap for economically disadvantaged students, students with special needs, and minority students.
- Classes will be presenting their creative projects for the Anglo-Saxon epic poem, Beowulf, beginning on Monday, November 14th. Individual and group options for a wide variety of possibilities were offered: video of a major scene, a comic book version of the poem, a model of one of the important buildings including contents, a "talk show" where major characters are interviewed, a "review" game show, or a retelling of a major scene from another character's point of view.
- The project is in place of the typical final test on the poem, and the emphasis is on students demonstrating their mastery of the story.
- Students were given time in class to ask questions and work on the project, and all projects are due on 11/14.
Literature and Composition II
- Honors Class- They are doing the Pittsburgh City Theatre Playwrights Program. They also entered essays and CD recordings for the VFW "Voice of Democracy" Contest.
- All sophomores read Animal Farm and did a dramatization of the theme song, "Beasts of England." We are beginning Of Mice and Men. All sophomores did research and completed group timelines on The Great Depression which is the setting of the novel. At the completion of Of Mice and Men, students will be researching, dressing, and presenting a fictional or non-fictional character from The Great Depression.
Literature and Composition III Juniors read selections from Edgar Allan Poe and wrote monologues of emotion. Recently, they completed "The Crucible."
AP BIO - In the trenches
The AP Biology class took a trip to the Pymatuning Laboratory of Ecology (PLE) in Linesville PA on the 8th and 12th. PLE is the largest ecological research facility of its kind in PA. It is a part of the University of Pittsburgh and provides hands on courses to college students, research facilities for University staff, and conducts outreach programs for middle and high school classes. The goal of the field trip was to give our students the opportunity to conduct field research on location and gain experience using science tools not readily available in the classroom. The of the two days was on limnology, the study of inland waters.
On Thursday, the students took the University flat-bottom boat on Conneaut Lake. The goal was to collect samples and data from the deepest part of the lake to determine the trophic classification of the lake. In order to do this samples of the water and benthos (bottom soil) were collected. Students used the Secchi disc to determine clarity, a YSI multiprobe to determine a vertical profile of dissolved oxygen and temperature, a Van Dorn bottle to collect water for chemical analysis (pH, alkalinity, turbidity, total phosphorous, and chlorophyll a), plankton nets to collect phtyo- and zooplankton, and the Ekman dredge to collect the benthic sample. Some of the data was taken and recorded on the boat while others were taken back to the lab for analysis and examination.
Once back at the lab with the samples the students used identification guides to determine the different species at each location under magnification. The data was then used to determine the species diversity at different points in the stream using the Simpson's Diversity Index. In addition the students completed total phosphorous, alkalinity and dissolved oxygen comparisons.
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