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Teacher Mike Mol, students Matt Edmonds, Shane Caird, Mike Guindon, Mike Barr

Sydenham High School students in Mike Mol’s technology class received a small grant from the Limestone Learning Foundation last year for materials.

The students, Mat Edmonds, Shane Caird, Mike Guindon and Mike Barr designed and built a nifty bi-directional log splitter that will be featured at the Limestone Learning Foundation’s annual fundraising golf tournament next month.

There were plans to raffle off the splitter with proceeds to go to the Learning Foundation, but those plans have not been finalised.

In other news from SHS, Kole Hoover, an Ontario Youth Apprenticeship Program student who takes a program in masonry that is jointly administered with St. Lawrence College, has received a silver medal at the provincial skills competition that was held in Waterloo last week.

Published in SOUTH FRONTENAC

Last Saturday, Land O' Lakes Public School held a 3-pitch tournament to raise some much-needed money for gym equipment, and, as usual, the community came through for us and had some fun to support our children.

The tournament, held at the Olden ball field, got underway at 8:30 am, and continued non-stop throughout the day until 8:30 that night. The weather couldn't have been better, and there was some great baseball to enjoy. In the end, Kelly Barr's team took first place, and very graciously donated their prize money back to the school, with many thanks. Our total for the day was $770, which will go a long way towards getting the equipment we really need.

Thanks also go out the Olden Rec. Committee who worked all day in the canteen, and to the many players who volunteered to umpire a game or two throughout the day. Very special thanks to Cory Thompson, for without him, this day would not have happened. Cory acted as a contact for teams, put his own team into the tournament, set up the canteen, raked and lined the field in the morning, and acted as an umpire when he had the time. No one worked harder than Cory to make this tournament happen, and we truly appreciate his effort to help our students.

The money we raised will be put to use right away, as we are ordering items like volleyballs, trainer volleyballs, basketballs, soccer balls, badminton raquets, birdies, floor hockey blades, floor hockey pads and stopwatches.

Once again, on behalf of all the staff and students at Land O' Lakes Public School, thank you to everyone who helped out and participated in what turned out to be a great day for us all.

Published in CENTRAL FRONTENAC

Teacher Mike Mol, students Matt Edmonds, Shane Caird, Mike Guindon, Mike Barr

Sydenham High School students in Mike Mol’s technology class received a small grant from the Limestone Learning Foundation last year for materials.

The students, Mat Edmonds, Shane Caird, Mike Guindon and Mike Barr designed and built a nifty bi-directional log splitter that will be featured at the Limestone Learning Foundation’s annual fundraising golf tournament next month.

There were plans to raffle off the splitter with proceeds to go to the Learning Foundation, but those plans have not been finalised.

In other news from SHS, Kole Hoover, an Ontario Youth Apprenticeship Program student who takes a program in masonry that is jointly administered with St. Lawrence College, has received a silver medal at the provincial skills competition that was held in Waterloo last week.

Published in SOUTH FRONTENAC

Megan Cruickshank with the two artworks selected by the Hotel Dieu students’ art gallery.

North Addington Education Centre student Megan Cruickshank has two pieces of art in the Hotel Dieu Students’ Art Gallery in Kingston. Megan and her family attended the opening ceremony at Hotel Dieu Hospital on Monday, May 10. The opening ceremony consisted of a slide show of all the artworks, followed by a viewing of the artworks on display in the gallery.

Megan is in Grade 9 at NAEC. While she is a gifted art student, the two pieces which were selected were completed in Megan’s spare time. This year, there were over 2,500 submissions, and 100 pieces were chosen, so it is particularly impressive that Megan had two pieces in the gallery.

Mr. R. Westgarth, a teacher at Elginburg Public School, organized the exhibition, along with several volunteers. The gallery has about 75,000 visitors per year. Mr. Westgarth joked that the visitors tend to be a “captive audience” who are at the hospital for medical reasons, but it is still an extensive number of visitors for any gallery.

Submissions came from Limestone District School Board, Hastings Prince Edward District School Board, and Algonquin Lakeshore Catholic School Board.

 

North Addington students investigate Canada’s art and the Cold War by Valerie Allan

Joanne Butler and Robert Maciag walk through the Diefenbunker on NAEC's school trip

A busload of NAEC students set off for the nation’s capital on Tuesday, May 11 to learn about Canada’s art and Canada’s Cold War experience. The Grade 9 art class, the Grade 8 class, and the School to Community class attended the trip with their teachers.

The first stop for the students was the National Gallery of Canada, where they learned about Canadian artists. The Grade 8 class focused on Contemporary Canadian art. The Grade 9 art class concentrated on Canadian artists from the first settlers up until WWII. Students made sketches of some of the works in the gallery. The School to Community class toured the Canadian Collection and the Aboriginal section.

After an enjoyable couple of hours, the students boarded their bus and headed off to the Diefenbunker, Canada’s Cold War Museum. A guide led the students on an hour-and-a-half journey through the Deifenbunker, far below the ground. They saw the living, recreation, and working conditions of the bunker inhabitants. The Diefenbunker was designed to house the government in the event of a nuclear attack by the USSR on the United States.

School trips are a fun way for students to learn more about the world. Two more trips are planned in May and June, one to the Science Museum and Museum of Nature in Ottawa, and another to the Cataraqui Conservation Authority in Kingston.

 

Published in ADDINGTON HIGHLANDS

Pat Chase, Laurie Handforth, Tanya Collett, Terra Collett-Stewart and Brenda Hunter outside the new library at HPS

Students, staff, community members and school and township dignitaries, along with members of the Handforth and Collett families, gathered on May 6 at Harrowsmith Public school for the official dedication and opening of the Audrey Handforth and Jewel Collett Memorial Library.

The library was named for two women, both now deceased, who worked at the school library and dedicated their time and energy on a daily basis to enhancing and cultivating student literacy and the love of reading at the school.

The ceremony began in the gym where a number of speakers, LDSB Trustee Barb McLaren, Director of education Brenda Hunter, Mayor Gary Davison, President of CUPE 1480 Donna Jackson, HPS council chair Murray Aitken and Pat Chase, chair of the HPS library committee, spoke fondly of the two women who inspired the project.

Principal Jim Horan opened the ceremony and spoke of the two women whose “legacies are now infused into this community for many generations to come.”

After the official ribbon cutting outside the library, guests gathered inside where members of both families were inundated with hugs and kisses and reminisced with guests about the women who inspired the project that will serve the school and community for years to come.

 

Published in SOUTH FRONTENAC

Members of Central Frontenac Council expressed concerns about the future of schools in the township as they anticipate the release of the final report from the senior staff at the Limestone District School Board.

The report will be released to a meeting of the School Enrolment/School Capacity committee of the Limestone Board of Trustees at 6:00 on Monday, May 17 at the school board office in Kingston.

The Board of Trustees is scheduled to make a final decision at their regular meeting on June 16.

The draft staff report, released in March, called for the closing of Hinchinbrooke Public School in Parham, Land O’ Lakes Public School in Mountain Grove, and the elementary and secondary schools in Sharbot Lake. It calls for a new comprehensive school (K-12) to be built at the site of the existing Sharbot Lake High School.

A committee that included representatives from the school communities had earlier made a similar recommendation, except it called for Land O’ Lakes Public School to remain open and was less definitive about the location of a new school.

After the draft senior staff report was released, a public meeting was held in Sharbot Lake, and the vast majority of the presenters spoke in favour of keeping Land O’Lakes Public School (LOLPS) open.

Central Frontenac Council sent a letter in favour of keeping LOLPS open to the school board and the Ministry of Education.

At a Central Frontenac Council meeting on Tuesday night, May 11, Councilor Gary Smith asked if the township’s submissions to the school board and the Ministry of Education had elicited a response.

CAO Duchene said they hadn’t.

Smith asked that Duchene attempt to contact both of them to confirm the letter had been received, and asked that Mayor Gutowski attempt to contact the Minister of Education Leona Dombrowsky to advocate on behalf of LOLPS.

Duchene and Gutowski said they would do as Smith had requested.

Minister Dombrowsky happens to be familiar with Land O’Lakes Public School and Sharbot Lake High School because she was the MPP for Frontenac County for eight years and visited both schools several times.

“I have no sense of where this is going to go,” said Gutowski, “I have left a message for Mrs. Goodfellow [the school board trustee for Central and North Frontenac] but I have not heard back from her.”

Gary Smith did not seem to hold out much hope for LOLPS. “I understand that the final staff report is going to be a very similar report to the draft report, at least in terms of its core recommendations,” he said.

When asked, Smith declined to name the source of his understanding.

The final senior staff report will be posted at Limestone.on.ca under the “Accommodation” banner on May 18. 

Published in CENTRAL FRONTENAC

An experienced group of actors who work beautifully together, are performing a three-night run of The Importance of Being Earnest at Sydenham High this weekend. This last and best of Oscar Wilde’s plays is full of biting humour, poking fun at marriage, social hypocrisy, and rural life: “When one is in town, one amuses oneself: when one is in the country, one amuses other people.”

It’s the story of two young men living double lives of respectability, spiced with wild weekends in the city. Eventually, of course, their dual identities catch up with both of them in a fast-paced, very funny melodrama of confused identities and furious fiancées. There is a young heroine hoping to find a man who needs reforming, a governess with a shady past, and an elderly aunt who’s determined to uphold the family reputation at all costs (almost).

“Most of this group has performed together for several years, and they’re outstanding,” says Director Dan Raponi, “It’s a shame we can’t reward them with larger audiences.”

For most of them it’s their last year at SHS.

Earnest is playing this Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, May 6, 7& 8, at SHS. Doors open at 6:30, show starts at 7:00.

Published in SOUTH FRONTENAC

The planting crew rests after planting a crabapple tree-back row,l-r Mrs. Walker and Corrie-Lyn Shields, front row, l-r- Julie White, Sarah Watkins and Tori Klatt-(missing are garden friends Emily and Janet Brooks). Photo courtesy of Jayne Walker

Students at Clarendon Central Public School in Plevna expanded their school garden last week and on April 28 planted three new fruit trees- one plum, one crabapple and one serviceberry tree.

The garden project, now in its second year at CCPS, was spearheaded by teacher Jayne Walker, who last year received a $2000 grant from the Limestone Learning Foundation to start a school garden. The garden is comprised of five raised beds that feature native perennials and annuals, flowering plants and bulbs plus and now three new fruit trees.

The garden supports various types of curriculum offered at the school, especially science, and offers students a first-hand opportunity to learn how plants grow and develop and how to classify plants and seeds.

Jayne Walker explained, “The curriculum is no longer abstract for students and the garden allows students to get out of the classroom and learn by interacting with all of their senses.”

Walker has always been interested in gardening with children for years and she foresees the project continuing to grow and evolve over time. “The sky’s the limit as to what we can do with the garden in the future.”

 

 

Published in CENTRAL FRONTENAC

Sydenham’s Golden Eagles squad take second place at the Nationals. Photo courtesy of Miranda Roy

After placing first in their division in mid-February the Sydenham Golden Eagles competitive co-ed cheerleading team placed second at the Nationals, which were held at the Hershey Centre in Mississauga this past weekend. The team competed against seven teams in the intermediate division from all over Canada. 

The Eagles put on a tremendous performance, finishing just 2 points (out of 800) behind the first-place winners, Eden High School from Hamilton. Seeing that of the 26-member team only one is an actual gymnast, they chose to focus on technical difficulty. Head coach Jenn Mizerovsky said, “We took a big chance and focused on big precision stunts like pyramids and tosses and it ended up paying off.”

In the preliminary round, worth 40% of their score, the Eagles finished in second place with a score of 280.5, just 1.5 points behind the first-place team. They incurred a small deduction in an otherwise clean performance.

In the second round, worth 60% of their final score, they scored 287.7, just 0.7 points behind the leading team.

The team’s second-place finish was even more remarkable given that they lost seven members leading up to the competition, and were forced to make a number of last-minute changes to their routine just weeks before the event.

Jenn Mizerovsky said, “We were feeling pretty nervous going in and though we were still shooting for a top spot we all knew that it could either turn out very well or really badly.”

Grade 10 student and team member Katrina Roy spoke to me by phone after the win and said, “We’re all so proud. We practiced so hard for this and it all came together in the end.”

The team also took the award for most creative use of music, beating out the 150 teams that participated.

The coach credited the team for their drive and determination and said, “They did an outstanding job, and with so little time to prepare they performed with confidence and precision and also managed to keep smiling the entire way through.”

Published in SOUTH FRONTENAC

Dan Richard and Tessa bring Environmental Education to students at Land O’ Lakes P

Students at Land O’Lakes Public School in Mountain Grove were treated to a special presentation on April 29 by Dan Richard and his feathered friend Tessa.

Dan, who recently graduated from the environmental technology program at Loyalist College, is now partnering with them and bringing his environmental/raptor presentation to various local schools.

Dan returned to school hoping to pursue a career in environmental education for children and now is doing just that through the college’s environmental education programs. The aim of the programs is to help students of all ages understand and appreciate the environment and natural resources in the hopes that they will develop lifelong environmental connections and concerns.

Dan explained, “I’m hoping to show kids how they can impact the world and their future in a positive way.”

Dan’s presentation began in the classroom, where he covered a number of topics including basic ecology, current environmental issues and concerns, conservation, recycling, and other related topics. Throughout he presented the students with the cold hard facts: such as that Canadians on the average each use 600 litres of water per day when in fact just 1-2 litres per day of water are necessary.

He spoke of how in the last 60 years 10% of the of the world's tropical rain forests, which contain 50% of all living species on the earth, have been cut down at the alarming rate of 200,000 acres per day.

He spoke of the environmental impact of DDT on nesting birds and the pollution caused by burning garbage in barrels. 

Students had a chance to mull over these facts and figures and later discussions ensued about the difference between our wants and needs and how students can make practical changes in their daily lives.

Dan saved the most impressive part of his presentation for the last. He invited the students outside to meet Tessa, an immature female Harris hawk with whom Dan has been practicing falconry since September.

He spoke about birds of prey in general and predator/prey relationships in the natural world. In order to demonstrate Tessa’s keen ability to snatch prey from the wild, he invited a student to run across a field with a stuffed animal tied to a line. In full flight Tessa was able to grab the toy in the blink of an eye.

Dan, who is a passionate and licensed falconer, was encouraged by his professor at Loyalist to incorporate falconry into his presentation and the staff at Loyalist were so impressed with this presentation that they partnered with him to bring the presentation to local schools.

Barry Harding, who teaches grade 7 and 8 students at LOLPS, was thrilled with the presentation and spoke about how it ties in perfectly to the curriculum he is currently teaching in his class - namely ecology, ecosystems and the diversity of living things. 

Dan hopes that he and Tessa are “helping to reconnect kids with the wonders of nature and make them see how all species are interconnected”. In closing he added,  “I’m hoping to touch the kids in some way and encourage them to realize that small changes can make a very big difference.”

Anyone interested in bringing Dan and Tessa to their school can contact Dan at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or at 613-335-4475

Published in CENTRAL FRONTENAC
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With the participation of the Government of Canada