School news
Senior Cassandra Naife Shares Stories From Mozambique
Senior Cassandra Naife delivered a fascinating presentation about her native country of Mozambique to about 18 students in Government & Politics class on November 15. Naife is an exchange student at Woodstock through the U.S. Department of State’s Kennedy-Lugar Youth Exchange and Study (YES) program.
In 13-slides, and through a student question period, Naife shared information about Mozambique’s history, government, economy, language, culture, and cuisine. Naife emphasized that her country is ethnically diverse, and heavily influenced by Portugal, which first colonized Mozambique in the early 1500s. Link to the presentation.
Naife also shared her first impressions of the United States, including her amazement at the size of food portions at restaurants. -Steve Smith
CRAFT Students visit Sterling College
Sophomores and Juniors in CRAFT spent Friday, November 17, 2023 at Sterling College learning about this small, unique school in Craftsbury, Vt. They took a campus tour, ate in the dining hall and got to sit in on college level forest ecology and animal husbandry classes.
Students also learned about the fiber arts classes by naturally dyeing yarn that was made from their sheep and colored with locally grown and harvested plants. Students explored the outdoor education component by scaling great heights on the campus climbing wall even after the sun went down.
They then traveled to the Northwoods Stewardship Center in Island Pond for an overnight. In the morning they shared breakfast together, reviewed their newly created CRAFT portfolio and hiked an interpretative forest trail.
Safe School Ambassadors
The Safe School Ambassador Program is in its 9th year at WUHSMS. With 45 members in grades 8-12, this nationally recognized program uses socially influential leaders of the school’s diverse friend groups to shape positive social norms and behavior. The students in SSA had the opportunity to participate in a 2 day retreat, where they did some powerful self reflection, and learned and practiced the skills needed to resolve conflict, defuse negative incidents, and support their peers .
Thank you to the returning students, most of whom have been participating since 8th grade, for their many years of commitment to our school, and thank you for the warm welcome you gave to the ten new 8th grade members; Oliver Bennett, Elisabetta Cirovic, Lexi Gebardi, Lucas Geller, Alaythia Lockhart, Sam Molalley, Joey Palazzo, Declan Roylance, and Lindsey St. Cyr.
These students were selected based on an anonymous survey that their peers filled out, and have been identified as people their friends turn to, listen to, and trust. With that respect comes responsibility. We look forward to watching you grow and develop as leaders.
French students serve as interpreters
In an annual tradition that began more than twelve years ago, students taking Advanced French at Woodstock High School served as French interpreters at the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park this past Wednesday, October 25.
The students, seniors Leah Kuhnert, Chloe Masillo, Amelie Fabre, Phoebe Anderson, Clara Shortle, Griffin Picconi, Delia Morgan, Andrea Journet, Tess Belisle and junior Levi Halley, gave the tour to four French speakers, two of whom are Quebecoise.
The tour lasted for over an hour, with each student leading their part of the tour in tandem with the others. The presentations were knitted together by clearly thought out transitions designed to make the audience feel that the tour was a whole, and not separate presentations. The students moved seamlessly from outside of the mansion where the first three students talked about the park as a starting point in the land and conservation movement to a history of the trails and how these trails are enjoyed today by locals and tourists alike. From there, the group entered the mansion and learned about how the entryway changed over time, to how the Rockefellers, who enjoyed entertaining, were hosts to many luminaries, including Lady Bird Johnson.
Moving from the living room to the library, the audience was introduced to the importance of books to each of the proprietors of the mansion, including Frederick Billings. The student presenter talked about the books her grandfather had in common with Billings, revealing the many links local inhabitants have to the park. From the library, the group entered the kitchen to learn about the employment of servants, what their lives were like and from where they originated (many were young Irish immigrants). The tour ended where it began, outside of the house where three students shared the passion of the Billings family for the natural world in general and this property in particular. Once again, for the twelfth year, the students excelled at a task that at first seemed indomitable to them, receiving rave reviews from their audience.
Learning in C.R.A.F.T.
CRAFT classes have been busy! MS students in Gardens and Greenhouses chose a local fruit or veggie to learn about for their final project and then they made a dish with that ingredient to share with the class. In a picture above, Nolan Alberty is proudly displaying his homemade apple pie.
Students in Stewardship Action Project recently worked with Sustainable Woodstock to make window inserts for homeowners. Our SAP students were essential in stretching the plastic over the wooden frame to create the insulating layer that will help the community stay warm this winter and reduce their heating costs.
Students in Foundations of Agriculture are finishing up our fall garden preparation by planting garlic. They have been learning about the value of seeds as an investment in our future. We purchased $100.00 worth of garlic and if each clove turns into 10 cloves, we now have $1000.00 worth of garlic to eat, share and replant!
Students in Food and Forest Systems went to Marsh Billings Rockefeller NHP to learn about the more sustainable tradition of horse logging and the forest management practices employed by the natural resources team at the park. Students got to watch at a safe distance while an ash tree was felled as a precaution to the emerald ash borer which has begun to show its presence in our forests. This foreign pest will have a devastating effect on our ash trees in the coming years and the park wants to be proactive by removing the ones that could pose a danger along the hiking trails.