Posts Tagged ‘scholastic trophies’

Chaffey High hoists Academic Decathlon trophy

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Trophy news from San Bernardino County…
Chaffey High hoists Academic Decathlon trophy

trophies

trophies


After years of fighting tooth and nail to unseat rival Redlands High School in the San Bernardino County Academic Decathlon, Ontario’s Chaffey High School has succeeded.

A jubilant Chaffey High team took home the towering Academic Decathlon trophy Thursday night during the 26th annual awards ceremony at the National Orange Show Events Center.

Head coach Steven Mercado, in his 12th year, and fellow coach Patty Gulino also carried off first-place trophies in all categories, including math, economics, social science, language/literature, music, art, essays, speech and interviews.
he team captured first in the Super Quiz at Arroyo Valley High.

Mercado attributed Chaffey’s success to hard work studying before and after school. His team was comprised heavily of seniors, and it beat out second pace Redlands High, with two seniors, five juniors and two sophomores. (more…)

Rhyddings Business and Enterprise School head leaves at ‘pinnacle of career’

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Trophy News from the Lancashire Telegraph………
Rhyddings Business and Enterprise School head leaves at ‘pinnacle of career’
trophies award

RHYDDINGS Business and Enterprise School headteacher Barry Burke gave his farewell prize night speech last night.

Mr Burke became head of the Oswaldtwistle school in 1999. In 2005 it was named as one of the fifth most improved schools in the country.

At the end of this term Mr Burke will leave to take up the post at a new inner city academy in Manchester.

Mr Burke told patrents and pupils: “Tonight is the last time I’ll speak to you as headteacher of Rhyddings Business and Enterprise School.

“As you know, I’ve been given the opportunity to take some of the ‘Rhyddings Magic’ and plant it in a new school in Manchester.

“So you see, it’s really your fault I’m leaving at the end of this term.

“After all, you’ve demonstrated to the world that Rhyddings’ students improve their performance year on year with your year group achieving the best all round set of results ever, and that makes me look good!

“And just like Joe Calzaghe’s decision to ‘quit’ while he’s at the top, I’m able to leave Rhyddings at the pinnacle of my teaching career – all because of your outstanding success.”

Mr Burke thanked pupils, staff, governors and parents and added: “I’ll take my Rhyddings ‘snapshots’ with me to make me happy when times get tough and call on the support of my friends when I inevitably meet those apparently insurmountable obstacles.

“Standing on the shoulders of giants, like those in Rhyddings, has made me successful but, more importantly, happy.”

>> PRIZEWINNERS

100 per cent attendance: One year, Katie Collins, Kirsty Evans; five years, Daniel Duckett; Art and Design: Aqsa Munir; Business Studies: Daniel Duckett; Engineering: Liam Koral; English Language: Farheen Mohammed; English Literature: Nafisa Tahir; French: Rebecca Entwistle; Geography: Katie Collins; Health and social care: Leanne Slattery; History: Farheen Mohammed; ICT: Kirsty Ormerod; Mathematics: Daniel Duckett; Media Studies: Sameena Waheed; Performing Arts: Emma Ward; Physical Education: Danny Wilkinson; Religious Education: Zisham Abid; Science: Rebecca Entwistle.

Technology (Catering): Katie Collins; Graphics: Louise Pike; Product Design: Aqsa Munir; Technology, resistant materials: Drew Owens; Textiles: Zakkeha Begum; Travel and Tourism: Louise Pike; Urdu: Zisham Abid.

School Trophies: Moore Trophy for service to the school: Mark Braysford; Governors’ Trophy for service to the community, Annabel Johnson; Rhyd-dings Trophy for effort, Moinuddin Anwar; Banks Trophy for achievement, Emma Ward; Mim’s Trophy for extra-curricular perfor-mance, Christopher O’Connor; Rhyddings Trophy for outstanding academic achievement, Rebecca Entwistle.

Originally posted by Catherine Pye

A Trophy Just for Showing Up

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Trophy News From Las Vegas

Oh, for the days of expectations in public education. There was a time when attendance was an afterthought — teachers and parents demanded that students be in class every day, barring illness, and that they pay attention in class, study at home and be able to read, write and perform basic calculations with ease.

Students faced undesirable consequences at home and at school for not fulfilling their charge.

Now it’s the schools themselves that face punishment if the kids decide to play hooky. Under the federal No Child Left Behind Act, poor attendance rates can get a campus designated inadequate, even if the students who actually come to class exceed academic benchmarks. That can cost schools funding.

So schools have taken steps that would have been considered disgraceful just a few generations ago — they’re offering trophies to children just for showing up. Clark County School District campuses are providing academic awards ranging from free yearbooks and prom tickets to bicycles and iPods.

Compared with some parts of the country, the valley’s schools are showing restraint. A couple of systems have offered cars to kids with perfect attendance.

“We shouldn’t have to bribe kids to come to school,” Clark County School Board Trustee Terri Janison said during a recent board meeting.

The trophies are worsening “this generation’s sense of entitlement” and absolving students and parents of their “sense of personal responsibility,” she said.

Exactly. What’s the point in rewarding a middling student with another distraction device such as an iPod?

Clark County School District brass say the goods are funded through donations, campus vending machine revenues and other student-generated fees, not tax revenue. That’s certainly appropriate.

But principals should ask themselves whether they’re sending the right message to students by providing trophies for good attendance. If schools decide to stay in the business of providing material incentives, is it too much to ask that they reward … excellence?

Originally Written in the Las Vegas Review Journal

Golden Apple Trophy awarded

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

Trophies News congratulates a Stowe, MN teacher!

Every month a teacher in Minnesota is awarded the Golden Apple Trophy. December’s recipient has taught several generations in her long career.

Marilyn Pavlich has been teaching one student’s family for 34 years. “I had his mother in first grade and also his uncle in first grade. There’s a lot of history here and I’m grandmother to a lot of them.”

Teaching runs in this Grand Rapids native’s family. She started teaching swimming lessons at 16.

Along with a golden apple trophy, Mrs. Pavlich’s award included money from Duluth Teachers Credit Union and the Slyvan Learning Center.

She plans to use the cash to buy books so her kids can keep on learning.

About the Trophies
Northland, Minnestoa teachers are working hard to educate area students. A local news station is giving students an opportunity to show their teachers how much it is appreciated with the Golden Apple Trophy.

Reward your teacher or students with a unique trophy, award, medal or plaque!