Friday, Dec 27th

GA6The sun may not have shined on Greenacres this July 4th, but everyone seemed to relish the comfortable, breezy mid 70's degree weather. A huge turnout of our neighbors celebrated our nation's birthday with watermelon, bagels, lemonade, coffee and donut holes as well as games, races, candy hunts and patriotic activities sponsored by the Greenacres Neighborhood Association. The celebration culminated in the ever popular water jets propelled by a Fire Department engine on an appreciative crowd of children and adults.

Here are the results of the races and games:

3 LEGGED RACEGA4
Parent/Child
Round 1: 1st – David Jakubowicz/Hudson Jakubowicz
2nd –Brad Joyce/Mark Joyce
Round 2: 1st – David Jakubowicz/Hallie Jakubowicz
2nd – Andrea Lorenzo/Vanessa Thurman
3rd – Avi Masry/Benjamin Masry

2nd – 3rd Grade
1st – Blair Rudsenske/Alyssa Marvin
2nd – Leo Huynh/Ben Weiner
3rd – Allison Kahn/Kayla Jakubowicz

 

4th – 8th GradeGA3
1st – Elena Amidor/Hallie Jakubowicz
2nd – Leon Rode/Damon Rode
3rd – Vanessa Thurman/Lisa Thurman

 

Adult – Teen
1st – May Cowan/Todd Cohen
2nd – Elya Lavi/Diana Naranpis
3rd – Mitchell Breakstone/

 

SPOON RACE
Pre-School
1st – Phoebe Schutzer
2nd – Mila Lundy
3rd – Julia Marvin

K – 1st GradeGA2
Round 1 – 1st – Benjamin Roberts
2nd – Mark Joyce
3rd – Lauren Zoland
Round 2 – 1st – Nicholas Faraco
2nd – Matthew Weiner
3rd – Benjamin Masry/Maxwell Richardson (tie)

2nd – 3rd Grade
1st – Nicholas Faraco
2nd – Ben Weiner
3rd – Leo Huynh

 

4th – 8th Grade
Round 1 – 1st – Jacqueline Joyce
2nd – Lisa Thurman
3rd – Juliana Joyce
Round 2 – 1st – Nicole Zhou
2nd – Cecilia Wang
3rd – Leon Rode

Teen – AdultsGA1
1st – Jacqueline Joyce
3rd – Francisco Faraco

SACK RACE
Pre-School
1st – Phoebe Schutzer
2nd – Mark Joyce
3rd – Mila Lundy
K – 1st Grade
Round 1 - 1st – Michelle Meiselman
2nd – Neely Mannor
3rd – Nicholas Faraco
Round 2 -1st – Ozan Kopelman
2nd – Alyssa Marvin/Timothy DesChamps (tie)
3rd – Whitney Rudsenske
2nd -3rd Grade
1st Matthew Zoland
2nd Isabella/Juliana Appel (tie)
3rd Matthew GlassmanGA7
4th – 8th Grade
1st Lisa Thurman
2nd Hudson Jakubowicz/Isabelle Mezger (tie)
3rd Mitchell Breakstone/Elena Amidor (tie)
Teen – Adult
1st Julian Higgins 3rd Jacqueline Joyce

DASH

Pre-School 1st Julia Marvin

K – 1st Grade Round 1 – 1st Nicholas Faraco
2nd Michelle Meiselman
3rd Lauren Zoland
Round 2 - 2nd Andrew Marvin
3rd Benjamin Masry
2nd – 3rd GradeGA5
1st Isabella Nwokeji
2nd Matthew Glassman
3rd Ben Weiner
4th – 8th Grade
1st Julian Higgins
2nd Cindy De Dianous
3rd Mitchell Breakstone
Teen – Adult
1st Avi Masry
2nd Julian Higgins
3rd Steven Greene

FOUL SHOTS
2nd – 3rd Grade 1st Leo Chavis
4th – 8th Grade 1st Vanessa/ Lisa Thurman (tie)
2nd Leon Rode
3rd Gabriel Lesser
Teen – Adult 1st Warren Breakstone

Photos and Text, Barry Meiselman, Race Results, Mona Longman

perth australia mapG'day Mate! Three Scarsdale students are heading off to Perth Australia to participate in an exchange program with St. Mary's Anglican School. The rising tenth grade girls will attend school in Australia from July 12 to August 24 and experience both the school environment and the world around, traveling in Australia as well. Two of the Scarsdale students will be living with host families, while the third will be at the boarding school with the St. Mary's student.

St. Mary's Anglican School is part of the Global Learning Alliance, a program started by the Teaching College at Columbia University and the Scarsdale Public Schools system. As a result of this relationship, the idea of an exchange program was developed between St Mary's Anglican School and Scarsdale High School. St. Mary's Anglican School has an active exchange program, partnering with many schools internationally.

Three students from the St. Mary's Anglican School will come to Scarsdale for six weeks during September and into October to live with the Scarsdale families. The students will also do some traveling around New York City and the area, similarly to the traveling the Scarsdale students will be doing.

The program is being organized by Assistant Principal Sue Peppers, who will travel to Australia and also hopes to set up a similar exchange program with a boys school.

Clara Enders, one of the three girls going on the trip said, "I'm so excited for the exchange program! I'm looking forward to exploring Australia, getting to know my host family, making new friends, and becoming more independent. I've already become friends with the girl whose house I'll be staying at. We've chatted on the web and Skyped, and we've swapped pictures of our families and houses, and even the views out our windows. I feel like I know her already!"

uke1Over the Moon Music and More LLC, featuring Music Together classes in Scarsdale, Chappaqua, Mount Kisco, Tarrytown, and Tuckahoe, will celebrate its 10th year in business on June 20, 2015. In conjunction with the anniversary and the continued success of the company, owner Jackie Freimor has announced that she is expanding the Scarsdale storefront location -- Over the Moon Music's headquarters at 78 Garth Road – with 3,000 additional square feet and new offerings including birthday parties, parent-child art classes, a children's imagination play space, an area for Music Together concerts and other special events, and a retail shop for art and music supplies.

According to Freimor, "I started the business with 25 Music Together classes, four locations and five teachers with about 200 families enrolled. Now we have five locations and offer close to 40 classes a week. I am so proud of our growth, and most importantly how Westchester county families have embraced the value of Music Together and the gift of making music with their children for the past ten years!"

In addition to Music Together classes for children and their caregivers, Freimor also teaches Music Together Guitar for Grownups, as well as Uke U., a mommy-and-me beginner ukulele program developed by Freimor. With these offerings, Over the Moon now averages between 350 and 400 families enrolled each semester.

Earlier this year, Freimor brought on co-manager and co-director Nicole Zinn, to help support the company's expansion. Zinn has more than 20 years of experience as an executive in corporate communications and advertising. She will be bringing her expertise in the visual arts to parent-child art classes in the new space.

Freimor explains, "By bringing on a business partner and constructing a space three times the size of our original studio, we are taking Over the Moon to where I had always hoped it would go -- to become a Westchester destination for fun family play through music and art. I am thankful to the community here in Scarsdale, as well as at our teaching locations in Chappaqua, Mount Kisco, Tarrytown and Tuckahoe, who have greatly contributed to our success."

Zinn adds, "I am so excited to be part of Jackie's dream of expanding Over the Moon to bring additional family offerings to the Westchester community."

Freimor has been performing as a singer and guitarist over-the-moon-2015since she was a child in Queens, NY, and played her first professional gig at age 15. She is a self-taught pianist, and also plays the lute and the viola da gamba. Most recently, she was the rhythm guitar player and backup vocalist in a Manhattan-based alternative rock band, Liquid Scintillation Cocktail. She first experienced Music Together when she enrolled her daughter in the program in 2003 and she remains eager to share her and her daughter's experience and deep love of the program with other families. Freimor began her first semester as a licensed Music Together center director in 2005.

Music Together is an internationally recognized early childhood music program for babies, toddlers, preschoolers, kindergarteners, big kids, and the adults who love them. Launched in 1987 the Music Together curriculum, coauthored by Kenneth K. Guilmartin and Dr. Lili Levinowitz, is based on the recognition that all children are musical. All children can learn to sing in tune, move with accurate rhythm, and participate with confidence in the music of our culture, provided that their early environment supports such learning. Music Together offers programs for families, schools, at-risk populations, and children with special needs, in over 2,500 communities in 41 countries around the world. The company is passionately committed to bringing children and their caregivers closer through shared music-making and helping people discover the joy—and educational value—of early music experiences.

More information visit www.OverTheMoonMusicAndMore.com or contact Jackie Freimor, 914-722-2025, [email protected]

stopwatchFor many juniors around the country, the scariest and most difficult part of the school year is preparing for and taking standardized college admission tests. Most take the tests more than once, and prepare for months in advance and use their weekends to take full-length practice exams. Taking the practice exams can consume entire days and are dreaded by the students involved. Students have little control over the process, and are often anxious and stressed. That's why an error on the timing of the tests by the College Board on June 6 has caused so much anger.

The SAT is structured into 10 sections; three written sections that are divided into one essay and two multiple choice sections, three math sections, three reading sections, and one experimental section which does not factor into the student's grade. The first seven sections of this exam are 25 minutes each, and are comprised of two math sections, two reading sections, two writing sections (one multiple choice and the essay), and the experimental section. The final three sections are shorter; a math and reading section that are 20 minutes each, and a ten-minute writing section. During the exam on June 6, due to a misprint on the exam and confusion with the exam proctors, some students received 25 rather than 20 minutes to complete the last two reading sections. As a result, the College Board has decided not to score those two sections.

As can be expected, students, deans and parents are concerned. Two sections un-scored means that 22% of the true exam --that is the exam that goes towards a student's score -- would be lost. So in addition to losing the results of these two sections, the scored sections will be more heavily weighted. Some people are calling for the College Board to arrange a makeup exam, at their own expense. The College Board has said, "The SAT is designed to collect enough information to provide valid and reliable scores even with an additional unscored section." Even if this is true, the unscored section would still have the potential to change the student's score by some margin. Unfortunately, for most juniors, there won't be another opportunity to improve their scores, so the incorrect score they receive has even more potential to affect their futures.

This mishap could also affect future students, as sophomores begin to decide which standardized test they want to take in the future ... the SAT, or ACT? Since 2006, fewer high school students have taken the SAT each year, while at the same time more students have opted to take the ACT. From the students we sampled, more juniors in Scarsdale appear to take the ACT exam, and more sophomores seem to be considering the ACT.

We asked Scarsdale High School Dean Andrea O'Gorman for her advice for students who took the flawed test. She said, "My advice to students is not to panic. Testing is a process, not a one-shot endeavor. Students should wait to see their individual scores and compare them to their practice scores and ultimate test scoring goals. If the scores are in line with these measures, that's great. If not, they can look to future test dates for other opportunities. Regardless of their scores, the deans are available to help students fine tune their testing plan."

In other news on the event, a student from Long Island has filed a class-action lawsuit against the College Board for "breach of contract and negligence", arguing that the abbreviated test does not properly represent the SAT, calling it instead "SAT with an asterisk." Read more about the suit here.

16U CHAMPIONSHIP Team Pic1On Memorial Day Weekend, Scarsdale Baseball Club (SBC) hosted its 13th annual Westchester Baseball Classic. This invitational event drew 18 teams from across Westchester to compete in 3 age brackets: 14u, 15u and 16u. Teams came from as far as Ossining and as near as New Rochelle. SBC entered 2 teams in15u and 16u and Scarsdale Little League entered a team in the 14u bracket. In all, over 300 players were involved in the 3-day event.

For the first time since the inception of the tournament, Scarsdale's 16u team claimed the first place trophy. They came from behind to tie the Elmsford Regulators in the Saturday opener 1-1, and then beat House of Sports 5-3 in Saturday's second game to even their record.

15u Team PicOn Sunday the Raiders beat Croton Bombers 4-2. Then the Raiders had to face Elmsford again in the Championship game. This time the Raiders jumped on the Regulators early and were up 6-0 after 2 innings. Sophomore Devin McDonald pitched a scoreless game through four innings. Roy Krishnan came in to relieve and Tyler Mandel can in for the 7th to slam the door on the Regulators as the Raiders held on to win 6-3.

The 14u team played their opening game at Dean Field at Scarsdale High School on Friday night. It was their first time these middle schoolers had the chance to play on the big field and they stepped up to play their best. They battled Tuckahoe Crush into extra innings but came up short in the eighth inning in what may have been one of the most exciting games of the tournament. The mostly 13 year-old squad had a great experience as they went 2-2 against the older teams including a tense 3-1 victory over the NY Mayhem in their final game on Sunday.

14u Team Pic2

Other bracket winners included:

15u
Champion - Diamond Buddies Hawks
Runner Up - New Rochelle Braves - Blue

14u
Champion - Larchmont/Mamaroneck Wildcats
Runner Up - Westchester Academy