Wednesday, October 26, 2005

Weekly Email October 27, 2005

Dear Parents,

I have had many occasions to think in the past few weeks about traditions. There have been three signature events recently that represent new incarnations of venerable LREI traditions. Let me speak first about our visitors from Germany. Immediately after September 11, 2001, students from the Gunter-Stohr-Gymnasium School outside of Munich, Germany felt the need to reach out to students from a school in downtown New York City. Out of this initial correspondence, the German exchange program was founded. Ten German students and their chaperone arrived nearly two weeks ago, and they have fully integrated themselves into our community over these past days. On our website, we note that, "Eighty years ago Elisabeth Irwin revolutionized American education by taking students out of the classroom and into the world." Now in its fourth year, this exchange represents a natural manifestation of that philosophy.

Next, Minimester: Last week, all students from grades eight through twelve, plus our German exchange students, participated in mixed grade groups in our three-day immersion term of mini-courses designed to engage students in a stimulating range of subjects. Students are afforded extraordinary opportunities to learn and experience a subject on multiple levels - immersion in one topic, an interdisciplinary approach and freedom from the constraints of the regular schedule. Minimester itself is only five years old as a tradition, but the spirit behind Minimester springs from the long history of LREI as a laboratory school. This year's offerings (descriptions attached): Contemporary Art; Food; Kinetic Sculpture; Foreign Culture Through Cinema; Bollywood Musical; Drumline; Buddhism; Genealogy - Learning About Your Family; From Pictures to Print: A VERY Concise History and Exploration of Publishing; Pinhole Photography; Box Sculpture: Remnants of Memory - Sculpture, Painting, and Collage; Broadcasting; The Sikh Faith; Religious Observance in New York City. Students built robots and pinhole cameras; visited galleries and restaurants and schools and houses of worship; analyzed foreign films and modern art trends; made exotic dishes and decorative book jackets; formed a drumline, recorded part of a radio show and filmed a Bollywood musical; and investigated themselves by designing family trees, creating personal history box sculptures and interviewing family members about their religious traditions. The final presentation on Friday afternoon, which consisted of visual presentations outside of the PAC and performances/demonstrations inside, showed what students can accomplish together when they are engaged in meaningful work. An entire community left for the weekend exhilarated by the fruits of this collective progressive endeavor.

One other LREI tradition that is very much alive is that of service to the community. Last week, I wrote about the Hurricane Katrina Benefit Concert, the second benefit concert in two years. Through a long history of activism and of involvement in a variety of movements, most notably the Civil Rights movement of the 1960's, LREI students have, as long as the school has existed, poured their minds and their bodies and their souls into the service of the community and of those in need. And, when all goes well, administrators are smart enough to get out of their way.

Other long-held LREI traditions continue as well. While we do not go on one trip per week as an entire school, as the whole of LREI did for many years at its inception, just recently - along with the many Minimester trips referenced above - twelfth grade Data Analysis students visited the New York Stock Exchange; tenth and eleventh grade music students went to hear Itzhak Perlman and the New York Philharmonic rehearse Mozart's Adagio in E and Rondo in C, Schubert's Symphony No. 3 and Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 4 at Avery Fisher Hall (see the New York Philharmonic website for more open rehearsal dates); tenth grade history students went to explore the Slavery in New York exhibition at the New York Historical Society; eleventh and twelfth graders from the Dangerous Language English elective traveled to Bleecker Street and Sixth Avenue to teach lower school students about banned children's books; and on, and on. These trips all serve a common purpose, just as they did in 1921 - to inspire students who are blessed with a rich, interdisciplinary, rigorous, progressive educational experience, one I see in classrooms every day.

What traditions will the High School Principal be writing about in twenty, thirty, forty years? What tradition will your child start?

Important announcement
Bhawanie Singh, LREI High School Biology and Environmental Science Teacher since 1994, has decided to retire in the middle of this year in order to pursue his many outside-of-school passions. Prominent among these are the Bhawanie Singh Sunday Night Show. From his website:
Bhawanie Singh has been hosting radio shows for approximately five years. He's currently hosting The Bhawanie Singh Sunday Night Show on WWRL 1600 AM Super Radio. The show is aired every Sunday Night from 8.30 - 10.30 pm. The Bhawanie Singh Sunday Night Show is in its third year and is listened to by a population with a density of approximately 4 to 5 million people in the tri-state area.

The Bhawanie Singh Sunday Night Show offers two full hours of solid entertainment. Listeners get a chance to interact with Bhawanie Singh on matters of Hinduism, Sensitive Community Issues, The News from Guyana and Trinidad and Provocative Indian Songs. Listeners described the experience as truly thrilling and rewarding. The show specially targets the Indo- community in the Tri-State area, an amalgamation of people from India, Guyana, Trinidad, and the rest of the world. Prior to this Bhawanie hosted the Local Talent show on WPAT 930 AM radio for three years. He also did some work on WBAI 99.5 FM.
A search for Bhawanie's replacement for the remainder of this year is already underway, and several excellent candidates have been identified; the new teacher will start at the beginning of the second trimester. Bhawanie has graciously agreed to continue to work for the school through January in order to ensure a smooth transition for the students, the continuation of trips to such places as the Gowanus Canal and our connection with the River Project at Pier 26. I will be in touch with the parents of Bhawanie's advisees directly. Please join me in wishing Bhawanie the best as he begins this next chapter in his life.

Events coming up soon/attachments:

Please see Director Phil Kassen's letter on the Hurrican Katrina relief efforts at LREI.

Thursday, October 27, 6:30 PM - Eleventh Grade Potluck/College Information Evening

Sunday, October 30 - Halloween Fair (see attached flyer), 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM
Don't Miss the Halloween Fair!
This Sunday, October 30th from 1:30pm-4:30pm at St. Anthony's Gym, 143 Thompson Street (between Houston & Prince)

There is still a need for volunteers to help run ghostly games, creepy crafts and the haunted maze. Please sign up in the Sixth Avenue lobby or contact PamDalton@aol.com or ZedPicayo@aol.com.

For those who want to help set up and decorate, please come to St. Anthony's Gym on Saturday, October 29th from 10am to 6pm. Childcare will be available.

Don't miss the fun!
Tuesday, November 1, 6:30 PM - Ninth Grade Potluck

Thursday, November 3, 6:30 PM - The first Parents of Children who Receive Academic Support meeting, Charlton Street
If there are any questions please contact Lisa Auerbach at Luna671@aol.com.
Thursday, November 10, 6:30 PM - Tenth Grade Potluck

Friday, November 4 - Saturday, November 5 - High School Musical: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum

Tuesday, November 15, 6:30 PM - High School Parent Reps Meeting
Grade level meetings followed by group meeting. Ninth grade parents will meet at 6:00 PM for a discussion group facilitated by NYC- Parents In Action, Inc.; other grades meet at 6:30 PM. Minutes from the last meeting are attached.
Take care,

Tony

CALENDAR
October
* Thursday 27 Eleventh Grade Potluck, 6:30 PM
* Sunday 30 Halloween Fair, 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM

November
* Tuesday 1 Ninth Grade Potluck, 6:30 PM
* Thursday 3 The first Parents of Children who Receive Academic Support meeting, Charlton Street, 6:30 PM
* Friday 4-Saturday 5 High School Musical
* Thursday 10 Tenth Grade Potluck
* Tuesday 15 High School Parent Reps Meeting
* Wednesday 23 School closes at noon for Thanksgiving
* Tuesday 29 Last day of Trimester I classes
* Wednesday 30 Trimester I Exams/Presentations

December
* Thursday 1-Friday 2 Trimester I Exams/Presentations; End of Trimester I
* Monday 5 Trimester II begins

As always, please browse the web site at www.lrei.org. Also, note the links to the Middle and Lower School weekly emails on the right. Please take a look at what the students in the other two divisions are up to!

All attachments are in .pdf format. To view these files, please download Adobe Reader, if you do not already have it. Click on this link or paste it into your browser: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readermain.html.
If you are having trouble opening the attachments, go to http://www.lrei.org/weekly/ms/ to access the files.

Thursday, October 20, 2005

Weekly Email October 20, 2005

Dear all,

Words cannot describe how exciting the Hurricane Benefit concert was, or how proud I was to be a part of a community that would throw its energy and resources into such a terrific event. Stars from Broadway joined Middle and High School LREI students to raise funds for victims of Katrina. The entire event was organized by twelfth grader Javier Picayo; I will let his words speak for themselves:
Thank you to the LREI community for making the Katrina benefit concert a huge success. With all of your support, we have raised over $16,000.00 so far to go to Habitat for Humanity. It was an amazing night, but what I will always remember is that together, we made a difference.
Thanks again,
Javier Picayo
Events coming up soon:

Wednesday, October 19 - Tuesday, October 25: Hurricane Katrina Book Drive; Wednesday, October 26 - Book sorting for Hurricane Katrina Book Drive

In conjunction with the first Literary Evening of the year on Wednesday, October 19, the LREI Literary and Community Service Committees are organizing a book drive for two schools in Louisiana. We are collecting gently used books to benefit students at Scotlandville K-8 School in Baton Rouge, and Grace King High School in Jefferson Parish. Scotlandville is a school that was opened to service students evacuated from areas affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and Grace King High School just re-opened last week with 2/3 of its students as well as displaced students. Our mission, at this critical time, is to get students as many books as possible, since the schools' resources have been stretched with the new arrivals and many students and staff lost books due to flooding.

About the Drive
When: Monday, October 17 through Tuesday, October 25

Where: Drop off in any of four boxes which are located in both Sixth Avenue and Charlton Street libraries and lobbies.

What: Gently used books for K - 12. Scotlandville School, K - 8, is in particular need of Early Readers and books by African American authors including Eloise Greenfield, Jerry Pinkney, Mary Hoffman, Patricia McKissack, Ezra Jack Keats, Ashley Bryan, Nikki Grimes, Sharon Draper, Jacqueline Woodson, Virginia Hamilton, Walter Dean Myers, Mildred Pitts Walter, and Faith Ringgold. The High School librarian is interested in all books with special requests for The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, The Scarlet Letter, Jane Eyre, Angela's Ashes, Confederacy of Dunces, Poisonwood Bible, Coming of Age in Mississippi, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, and Twelve Years a Slave.

How: Books will be shipped to the schools in Louisiana. The Literary and Community Service Committees are asking for cash donations to manage shipping costs. Buckets will be set up near the book boxes. Checks can be made payable to LREI, with an indication in the "memo" that says "Book Drive".

Why: Scotlandville K-8 School and Grace King High School need our help.

Please help us sort and pack the books on Wednesday October 26, 2005 at 8:45 AM. We will start in the Library at the Sixth Avenue Campus. Please contact Chris Wiggins
email her at cvee99@aol.com if you can help!

Thanks so much for your generosity.
Saturday, October 22, 7:00 PM - Coffeehouse!
In the candlelit PAC, come enjoy a snack and listen to music provided by an assortment of players - faculty, students and friends - presenting a variety of musical styles.
Thursday, October 27 - Eleventh Grade Potluck, 6:30 PM

Sunday, October 30 - Halloween Fair (see attached flyer), 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM
THANKS to everyone who has signed-up and delivered toys and trinkets (suitable for Prizes) to the Lobby Box. If you're still planning on contributing, please do so by next Thursday, October 27. That's when we'll start spinning magic for the Howlin' Halloween Fair which takes place SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30 from 1:30 PM until 4:00 PM in the haunted Gym of St. Anthony's School. ENTER IF YOU DARE on Thompson Street between Houston and Prince St.

WANTED: Halloween Hooligans for Volunteers: Middle and High School students to help with haunting, Parents to help with setting-up beforehand and the day of. Details are posted in the Sixth Avenue Lobby. Any Questions Call: Pam Salisbury @ 212-995-1992 or Zoe Picayo @ 917-690-1412.
Tuesday, November 1, 6:30 PM - Ninth Grade Potluck, 6:30 PM

Thursday, November 3, 6:30 PM - The first Parents of Children who Receive Academic Support meeting, Charlton Street
If there are any questions please contact Lisa Auerbach at Luna671@aol.com.
Take care,

Tony

CALENDAR
October
* Wednesday 19 - Tuesday 25 Hurricane Katrina Book Drive
* Saturday 22 Coffeehouse!, 7:00 PM
* Tuesday 25 High School Open House, 6:30 PM
* Wednesday 26 Book sorting for Hurricane Katrina Book Drive
* Thursday 27 Eleventh Grade Potluck, 6:30 PM
* Sunday 30 Halloween Fair, 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM

November
* Tuesday 1 Ninth Grade Potluck, 6:30 PM
* Friday 4-Saturday 5 High School Musical
* Thursday 10 Tenth Grade Potluck
* Tuesday 15 High School Parent Rep Meeting
* Wednesday 23 School closes at noon for Thanksgiving
* Tuesday 29 Last day of Trimester I classes
* Wednesday 30 Trimester I Exams/Presentations

December
* Thursday 1-Friday 2 Trimester I Exams/Presentations; End of Trimester I
* Monday 5 Trimester II begins

As always, please browse the web site at www.lrei.org. Also, note the links to the Middle and Lower School weekly emails on the right. Please take a look at what the students in the other two divisions are up to!

All attachments are in .pdf format. To view these files, please download Adobe Reader, if you do not already have it. Click on this link or paste it into your browser: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readermain.html.
If you are having trouble opening the attachments, go to http://www.lrei.org/weekly/ms/ to access the files.

Thursday, October 13, 2005

Weekly Email October 13, 2005

Dear all,

A short installment this week. Two important announcements:

* This Monday, October 17 at 6:15 PM (NEW TIME!) we will have the Hurricane Katrina Benefit Concert! This concert will feature the High School Jazz Band, the Middle School Band and several stars from Broadway and beyond! For more information about LREI's efforts to aid the victims of Hurricane Katrina please go to http://www.lrei.org/whoweare/katrina.html.

And one more big event coming up this week - "Tweens Going on Twenty: Thirty Books in Thirty Minutes - A FREE evening panel discussing reading choices for fourth grade through ninth grade readers" - this Wednesday, October 19 at 7:00 PM in the Charlton Street PAC - see the attached flyer.

I also include, for your perusal, a list of the descriptions of next week's upcoming Minimester electives. I will write more about Minimester - which will run from Wednesday, October 19 through Friday, October 21 - and about our German visitors next week.

Other dates in October:

* The first Coffehouse! of the year is at 7:00 PM on Saturday, October 22. All are welcome!

* The Eleventh Grade Potluck Dinner, with preliminary college process information provided by our own Amy Shapiro, has moved to Tuesday, October 27th at 6:30 PM.

* And coming on Sunday, October 30, from 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM: No Body is a nobody when the HALLOWEEN FAIR rises again! Location: St. Anthony's Gym (enter on Thompson Street). The Zombie-Committee would love your undying help and support. Please volunteer that day or contribute to the pre-production of this event. Sign-up sheets and supply wish-lists are in the Sixth Avenue Lobby right now! The Toy-Prize Donation Box is also in the Lobby. BOO There, or be square! Enjoy a spook-alicious fun time featuring:
Scary Stage Show, Maskerade Parade,Fearful-Photo Opportunities, T-Shirt Boo-tique, Witchy Crafts, Gruesome Bake Sale, Decorate Deadly Cupcakes and Great Pumpkins of your very own, Face-Painting and Masquerading, Plenty of Ghoulish Games and Skullduggery Stories.

Other items:
* Note the link to the right connecting you to the current list of outside-of-the-school community service opportunities, compiled by High School Community Service Coordinator Nick Sullivan. For more information, you can call email Nick at nsullivan@lrei.org.

* Second reminder: Parents of children who receive academic support: The PA is interested in forming a parent group for parents of children who receive academic support in or out of school. This can be a place to meet, exchange information and learn more on the subject of learning style differences. If you are interested in this group please contact Lisa Auerbach at luna671@aol.com.

Take care,

Tony

UPCOMING EVENTS
October
* Thursday 13 School closed - Yom Kippur
* Monday 17 Katrina Benefit Concert, 6:30 PM
* Tuesday 18 Last day of 9th Grade Arts Rotation #1; High School Parent Rep Meeting
* Wednesday 19 Literary Evening, 7:00 PM
* Wednesday 19-Friday 21 Minimester
* Saturday 22 Coffeehouse!, 7:00 PM
* Tuesday 25 High School Open House, 6:30 PM
* Thursday 27 Eleventh Grade Potluck NEW DATE, 6:30 PM
* Sunday 30 Halloween Fair, 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM

As always, please browse the web site at www.lrei.org. Also, note the links to the Middle and Lower School weekly emails on the right. Please take a look at what the students in the other two divisions are up to!

All attachments are in .pdf format. To view these files, please download Adobe Reader, if you do not already have it. Click on this link or paste it into your browser: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readermain.html.
If you are having trouble opening the attachments, go to http://www.lrei.org/weekly/ms/ to access the files.

Thursday, October 06, 2005

Weekly Email October 6, 2005

Dear all,

Even if you have done this kind of thing before, there is nothing quite like the pit in your stomach when you are balancing yourself on a log 30 feet up in the air. This activity, and others like it, formed the culminating "high ropes" portion of the ninth and tenth grade Ramapo trip. (Yes, we were all perfectly safe.) Ninth and tenth graders and faculty members all cheered one another on as challenges were met and fears were conquered. Afterward, members of each grade talked of new friendships formed, and ninth graders especially talked of feeling more fully integrated into the life of the school. All in all, a terrific trip.

October is turning out to be a fantastically busy time in the life of the High School and the school in general:

* This Tuesday, October 12th at 6:30 PM, we are excited to have Marjorie Terry of Freedom Institute present a talk in the Charlton Street PAC, "High School Student Drug Use Across the Nation and in the Independent Schools of New York City" (see the attached flyer).

* The following Monday, October 17 at 6:15 PM (NEW TIME!) we will have the Hurricane Katrina Benefit Concert! This concert will feature the High School Jazz Band, the Middle School Band and several stars from Broadway and beyond! For more information about LREI's efforts to aid the victims of Hurricane Katrina please go to http://www.lrei.org/whoweare/katrina.html.

* In just a little more than a week, our German exchange students will arrive; the next week,from Wednesday, October 19 through Friday, October 21, we will have Minimester, our collection of three-day, cross-grade educational laboratory courses, with the eighth grade and the German guests joining the High School.

* Our German guests will also be with us for the first Coffehouse! of the year, at 7:00 PM on Saturday, October 22. All are welcome!

* The Eleventh Grade Potluck Dinner, with preliminary college process information provided by our own Amy Shapiro, has moved to Tuesday, October 27th at 6:30 PM.

* And coming on Sunday, October 30, from 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM: No Body is a nobody when the HALLOWEEN FAIR rises again! Location: St. Anthony's Gym (enter on Thompson Street). The Zombie-Committee would love your undying help and support. Please volunteer that day or contribute to the pre-production of this event. Sign-up sheets and supply wish-lists are in the Sixth Avenue Lobby right now! The Toy-Prize Donation Box is also in the Lobby. BOO There, or be square! Enjoy a spook-alicious fun time featuring:
Scary Stage Show, Maskerade Parade,Fearful-Photo Opportunities, T-Shirt Boo-tique, Witchy Crafts, Gruesome Bake Sale, Decorate Deadly Cupcakes and Great Pumpkins of your very own, Face-Painting and Masquerading, Plenty of Ghoulish Games and Skullduggery Stories.

Other items:
* Note the link to the right connecting you to the current list of outside-of-the-school community service opportunities, compiled by High School Community Service Coordinator Nick Sullivan. For more information, you can call email Nick at nsullivan@lrei.org.

* Please see the attached minutes from the most recent Parent Reps meeting. Thanks to Denise Adler for the minutes. The next meeting is on Tuesday, October 18 at 6:30 PM.

* Reminder: Parents of children who receive academic support: The PA is interested in forming a parent group for parents of children who receive academic support in or out of school. This can be a place to meet, exchange information and learn more on the subject of learning style differences. If you are interseted in this group please contact Lisa Auerbach at luna671@aol.com.

* Asian-American Families Breakfast -- Please bring your whole family for this group's first get-together of the year. Friday, Oct. 7th, 7:45 a.m.-9:00 a.m., 6th-Avenue Cafeteria. If you have to come late or leave early, that's fine, it's very informal. It's also potluck, so please let Ruth Yang (ryang@walzyanglaw.com) know what food you will bring. And if you forget to sign up or can't bring anything, please still come!

All the best,

Tony

UPCOMING EVENTS
October
* Thursday 6 High School Open House, 6:30 PM
* Friday 7 Asian-American Families Breakfast, 6th Avenue Cafeteria, 7:45 AM - 9:00 AM
* Monday 10 School closed - Columbus Day
* Tuesday 11 "High School Student Drug Use Across the Nation and in the Independent Schools of New York City," Charlton Street PAC (see above), 6:30 PM
* Thursday 13 School closed - Yom Kippur
* Monday 17 Katrina Benefit Concert, 6:30 PM
* Tuesday 18 Last day of 9th Grade Arts Rotation #1; High School Parent Rep Meeting
* Wednesday 19-Friday 21 Minimester
* Saturday 22 Coffeehouse!, 7:00 PM
* Tuesday 25 High School Open House, 6:30 PM
* Thursday 27 Eleventh Grade Potluck NEW DATE, 6:30 PM
* Sunday 30 Halloween Fair, 1:30 PM - 4:00 PM

As always, please browse the web site at www.lrei.org. Also, note the links to the Middle and Lower School weekly emails on the right. Please take a look at what the students in the other two divisions are up to!

All attachments are in .pdf format. To view these files, please download Adobe Reader, if you do not already have it. Click on this link or paste it into your browser: http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readermain.html.
If you are having trouble opening the attachments, go to http://www.lrei.org/weekly/ms/ to access the files.