Become a Pen Pal for Life
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- Written by Joanne Wallenstein
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Social isolation caused by the Covid pandemic has been difficult for everyone in our community. But the isolation has been especially hard for senior citizens in nursing homes who are unable to see family and friends during this difficult time.
Two Scarsdale students, Matthew and Jordan Knispel are leading the effort to help seniors in our community. The program is called Pen Pals For Life and its mission is to create connections between school-aged children and senior citizens who may feel isolated during this time.
Explaining the mission Matthew says, “As a teenager I am very lucky to have my parents and sister with me every day. But so many people are not as fortunate. When my Grandma was living in a local nursing home we visited her several times a week. When social distancing began I immediately thought of the residents in nursing homes and how lonely this would be for them. Feeling connected is now more important than ever and I am very happy to be able to bring this program to New York and help our local community.”
PenPalsForLife.com allows students and adults to sign up to become a pen pal. Each participant will be assigned an email address where they can send communications to their Senior Pen Pal. The goal is to write two letters a week to the senior during this time of social distancing. In some cases, the senior may be able to write back and in some cases, they may not. But either way, they hope that sharing stories, jokes, pictures or just a note of friendship will be uplifting and heartwarming to those elderly people alone in their communities and homes. They also believe it will be fulfilling and meaningful to the participants who choose to volunteer.
Students can send a letter, a picture, or even a short video clip to their assigned senior to brighten their day and let them know they are not alone.
Here’s an example of a recent letter:
Hi Samuel,
My name is Austin and I am in 9th grade. I am 15 years old and I love to play basketball. It's been challenging because I haven't been able to play with my friends during this time. My favorite subject in school is Spanish. Como estas?? I've been spending my days doing my schoolwork and playing my video games. When the weather is nice, I go bike riding and play with my basketball hoop outside.
I hope you are well and staying healthy. I am thinking about you and your family during this difficult time. Maybe one day, we could meet and I could get to know you better. Here's a joke: What do you give a sick lemon? Lemon aid!!!
Take care!!
Austin
Sign up here to become a Pen Pal for Life!
Gaming for Good
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Two Scarsdale High School high school students are "gaming for good.” They've launched an NBA 2k20 game tournament—with the help of NBA player Larry Nance Jr. of the Cleveland Cavaliers—to raise money for COVID-19 relief efforts at White Plains Hospital. To date, the tournament has raised nearly $68,000 and counting.
Scarsdale High School juniors Noah Weber and Max Roth started the tournament in April. Noah had a very important connection to help drive the fundraising effort. In 2017, he and NBA player Larry Nance started a non-profit, Athletes vs. Crohn’s and Colitis, to raise awareness for the inflammatory bowel disease. Both Larry and Noah were diagnosed with Crohn's and wanted to inspire and mentor young athletes with the disease.
Now the two are working together to support another health crisis, this time it’s COVID-19 relief.
“My friends and I have been playing a lot of NBA 2k20 while quarantined,” says Noah Weber. "The NBA is doing a 2k tournament of their own, and we were inspired to do a similar one to help White Plains Hospital,” said Weber. Roth and Weber are both members of the White Plains Hospital’s junior board and both have parents who are physicians at the Hospital.
The tournament is open to both Xbox and PS4 users in the format of 5v5 team matchups. The click here. tournament is round-robin, followed by single-elimination. The winner on each platform gets to take on Larry Nance Jr. and his squad in a game of NBA 2k20. The entry fee is $50 per team. For info on the tournament,
Scarsdale Stays Busy While Social Distancing
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- Written by Joanne Wallenstein
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Despite the orders to practice social distancing, residents are finding ways to get out of the house. Here are some photos and observations from this weekend:
Nine year-old Rowan spent the day creating this magnificent chalk image on her driveway in Edgewood. Chalking is a great safe outdoor activity for the kids. Send us photos of the work at your house.
Carnival
In West Harrison the Verzillo family made a carnival in their yard. Today they are painting Easter signs:
Driveway Tennis
Here's a good way to keep fit and busy without leaving home. Driveway tennis! Greenacres Avenue residents set up a net across the driveway and play everyday. Fun and legal!
Coffee
Others decided to venture out to the drive-through window at the Starburks at the Golden Horseshoe. On Sunday, the line-up snaked out to Wilmot Road!
A Heathcote resident send us the following reminder:
Slow Down!
“There are many children riding their bikes, some with or without helmets and some with or without parental supervision. Please remind your readers to DRIVE SLOWLY and CAREFULLY! Thank you!
P.S. -- truly liked you reminding people to help pick up random bits of trash and gloves around the streets ... Scarsdale Sanitation is overwhelmed with corrugated box pick up and cannot be expected to pick up after neighbors. Thanks for keeping the community informed during these times. “
Another asked us to post the following:
Discard Gloves and Masks
“One thing I am noticing is discarded gloves and masks on the ground. I live near Balducci's and its parking lot is littered with them. But I see then even along the residential streets around Heathcote Elementary. Not sure if you can use your platform to urge people to dispose of their gloves and masks properly.”
How are you staying busy? Send us photos of your activities – inside and out-- to [email protected].
The Safe Coalition: Children, Families, Community Heightens Awareness About Domestic and Sexual Violence
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The Safe Coalition: Children, Families, Community, is reminding the Scarsdale community about two important items.
First- we continue to recognize that social distancing and isolation places families where there is violence at high risk. There is great concern for physical and emotional safety in homes where there is violence of any kind (domestic, child, elderly). Below are a few basic tips that we hope can be helpful:
Keep lines of communication open and stay in touch with your support network when possible
Create a safety plan, including how to leave the home and where to stay that is most safe in your own home
Create a “peaceful” space in your home for you and/or your children. This can include pictures, imagery, and positive affirmations, reminding them and you of your worth
Consider options, but trust your own instincts. Survivors are experts in their own situations. What can make one person feel safer could create increased danger for someone else
Share your concern and any history of violence at home with someone, possibly even the Police
Provide to contacts a seemingly innocuous word/phrase that you can use to alert them to that you are in a potentially dangerous situation
Know there is help and resources available!
Second- the Safe Coaliton will be participating virtually in Denim Day, a campaign on Wednesdsay April 29th in honor of Sexual Violence Awareness Month. The campaign was originally triggered by a ruling by the Italian Supreme Court where a rape conviction was overturned because the justices felt that since the victim was wearing tight jeans she must have helped her rapist remove her jeans, thereby implying consent. The following day, the women in the Italian Parliament came to work wearing jeans in solidarity with the victim. Peace Over Violence developed the Denim Day campaign in response to this case and the activism surrounding it. Since then, wearing jeans on Denim Day has become a symbol of protest against erroneous and destructive attitudes about sexual assault. In this rape prevention education campaign we ask community members, elected officials, businesses and students to make a social statement with their fashion by wearing jeans on this day as a visible means of protest against the misconceptions that surround sexual assault.
So people can demonstrate their participation, please send all pictures to [email protected] or follow/post them on our facebook page:
Together as a community we can show our support for survivors of sexual assault.
SHS PTA Executive Committee Urges Board to Include Funds to Renovate the Auditorium in 2020-21 School Budget
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(This statement was submitted to the Scarsdale School Board by the Scarsdale High School PTA Executive Committee)
The Scarsdale High School PTA Executive Committee appreciates this opportunity to comment on the proposed 2020-2021 School Budget. We would like to thank the members of the Board of Education for their work, and we thank Dr. Hagerman, Mr. Mattey and both the District and the High School Administrators, especially Mr. Bonamo, for their commitment to the education of our students and for their time, expertise, and responsiveness during the budget development process.
The High School PTA Executive Committee stands by its previous statement of support for all of the High School administration’s requests. At the same time, we recognize that we are in a period of great personal and societal uncertainty and we appreciate the School Board’s efforts to trim the proposed budget to its essential elements. In light of this, we acknowledge and agree that some requests, including the staffing additions, the renovation of Art Room 215 and the Quiet Study Space in the library, while both worthwhile and needed, are more appropriate for future budget cycles.
Though we are neither blind to the problems and fears created by the COVID-19 pandemic, nor deaf to the sentiments expressed by our neighbors that the 2020-21 budget be free from excessive tax increase, we feel that the proposed budget as presented last Monday, March 23rd, reflecting close to a $4 million cut in spending, with the prospect of cutting significantly more, does not adequately support our schools and the excellence that a Scarsdale education embodies. Under the current circumstances, we certainly support meaningful reductions but we believe that the drastic cutback the board decided on during its meeting a week ago is unduly reactive and risks negatively impacting our students safety and education, our school facilities and our property values for years to come. Further, additional reductions to recurring expenses such as not replacing retiring faculty or staff or dismissing staff, will certainly negatively affect the safety and education of our children and should be considered very, very carefully. Please remember that you are not just talking about cutting dollars; those dollars represent teachers, aides, support staff, security guards and the resources they all need to be effective. We expressly do NOT support reductions to faculty or staff that would increase class sizes, decrease curriculum offerings or negatively affect the support our students get and need from resources like the Learning Resource Center, the Math and Writing Centers, the Counseling Department or College and Career Counseling Center. And so we support the Cabinet’s recommendation against personnel cuts in this budget.
With respect to the high school auditorium project, we remind everyone that the arts are where we turn in unsettling times like these, for distraction, entertainment and solace.
Moreover, the power of arts in education should not be underestimated. As stated in the study Champions of Change: The Impact of Arts on Learning 1:
Students can attain higher levels of achievement in all subject areas through engagement in the Arts. . .. The arts engage students of all abilities in innovative, creative and critical problem solving.
We continue to support the full auditorium project as necessary for the safety and education of our students and all community members who use it. We have consistently objected to the decision by every Board since the 2014 Bond vote to ignore that community directive, to use the money that was designated specifically for the auditorium project to fund overages for other projects, and to continue to fail to accomplish promised auditorium renovation.
Further, we disagree that any part of the high school auditorium project is unnecessary; rather we believe that the need for the repairs and upgrades proposed in the auditorium project is real and has only been exacerbated and made more urgent by the Board’s failure to attend to it for the past 6+ years. Those who have implied during this budget development process that the purpose of this project is merely aesthetic are either ignoring or unaware of the full rationale behind the project. We direct those folks back to the comprehensive presentations by Mr. Mattey during Budget Study #2 and by Mr. Mattey, Lisa Forte, District Coordinator of Music & Performing Arts, and Tobias Peltier, HS Theater Coordinator & Technical Director, during the public meeting on February 28, when members of the community were invited to hear the details of the project and tour the auditorium to see the need up close. In reality, every line item of the auditorium project wholly or primarily serves pressing safety and educational objectives.
We have already stated how much and how frequently the auditorium is used by our high school students, students from our other schools, and the community at large, so I won’t repeat that here, but I will attach a representative list of all the events that take place in the auditorium in a given year, compiled by Lisa Forte, so the Board has the facts in front of them.* We will also post this statement and that list on our SHS PTA website.
All that said, we do respect the Board’s decision to trim next year’s budget in response to economic concerns related to COVID-19. We strongly urge the Board to act on Mr. Finger’s idea, expressed during the March 23rd meeting, to use the approximately $730,000 that was part of the original 2014 Bond earmarked for the auditorium in the 2020-21 budget to accomplish at least some of the most critical items on the auditorium project list. Depending on what is most practical from an architecture and construction perspective, we would suggest any of (1) repairing the concrete floor and replacing the seats and carpeting to fix the numerous broken seats that must be roped off as dangerous and the tripping hazards caused by flapping aisle carpets, (2) upgrading the stage rigging so that lights do not fall to the stage as they did on two separate occasions this year, and so that our Theater Technology students can actually learn by doing rather than just watch their teachers work on outdated equipment, or (3) upgrading the sound system so, again, our students can learn by doing on modern equipment-- much like we did for STEM students with the iLab and the Design Lab-- and to include assistive listening capability so that our hearing-impaired students and community members can hear what the rest of us do during concerts, meetings and events.
The mission of the Scarsdale School Public School system is “to sponsor each student's full development, enabling our youth to be effective and independent contributors in a democratic society and an interdependent world” (emphasis added). The Board of Education’s responsibility is to make policy decisions to uphold that mission. We remind the Board and the community that this budget is for the entire upcoming school year-- a year, I sincerely hope, that our children can enjoy with each other and their teachers using our school buildings and grounds to their full capacity and potential. We must develop and pass a budget that can support that learning and activity. We must plan for our children’s educational future in a way that upholds the excellence of Scarsdale schools.
Again, we appreciate your time and efforts on behalf of Scarsdale High School, our students, and the larger community and for your consideration of our comments this evening.
The SHS PTA Executive Committee
Deb Morel, President,
Leanne Freda, President-Elect
Rokaya Hassaballa, VP Membership and Events
Jennifer Rossano, VP Programming and Volunteers
Seema Jaggi, Treasurer
Beth Cukier, Recording Secretary
Dana Matsushita, Corresponding Secretary
Delivered at Scarsdale Board of Education Budget Forum on March 30, 2020
The High School auditorium is a space that is used throughout the school year by students, parents and members of the community alike. This is a representative list, compiled by Lisa Forte, the District Coordinator of Music & Performing Arts, gave us a list of just some of the events, classes and other ways our schools and community use the High School Auditorium:
● School assemblies, multiple times during the school year
● Concerts for all SHS performance ensembles – 2 per year for each of the Chorus, Chamber Choir, Band and Orchestra
● SHS plays, including the annual musical, dramatic play, the student-directed
play, the drama department showcase, and senior class play
● All Studio and Theater Technology Classes
● Awards Ceremonies, including the Academic Awards night
● Jabberfest, an annual showcase of a large variety of our high school students’ talents
● Speech and Debate tournaments
● Student Government elections and other SO activities
● Shakespeare Festival
● The biennial Gap Year Fair, organized by the Counseling Department
● The biennial STEAM Day, organized by the PTCouncil, taught by many of our High School and Middle School faculty and students and attended by our elementary school students
● Student orientation meetings
● District-wide staff meetings, including the annual district convocation in August
● Parent meetings for a variety of school departments, like College Info Night for Juniors and their parents, organized by the Counseling Department
● Community organization events, like the Friends of the Library Spelling Bee
● Adult School speaker events
● And many others
1. Champions of Change: The Impact of the Arts on Learning, Fiske, Edward B., President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, (1999). The Champions of Change study also states, “The Arts reach students who are not otherwise being reached... while at the same time providing new challenges for those students already considered successful.”