fbpx
Library from quad

Students excel at German Day competition

March 22, 2018

CA students of German had a wonderful time at the NC German Day Competition on March 14, 2018. Each year at German Day there are approximately 20 school represented from across the state and about 500 students who participate. This year the event took place at UNC-G in Greensboro. 

Overall School Scores

First Place: Providence High School, Charlotte

Second and Third Place: Cary Academy! (both divisions)

Individual Results

Middle School:

NIKLAS HAGSTROEM :  1st place in Poetry Recitation Level 1

JANE  SIHM : 1st place in Poster Design 

NINA  NATAN-RYBICKI : 2nd place in Poster 

ABBY  SMETANA : Honorable Mention in Spelling bee

NICK HALFERTY, CHRIS BUTULIS, ALEX DIETRICH, EDDIE BRICIO, SEDEF IZ, KENDYLL GEORGE : Honorable Mention in Skit Level 1

Upper School:

DAVID GO: Honorable Mention in the Verb Bee

ADDIE ESPOSITO: First Place in Heritage Level Poetry Recitation, where she wrote her own poem, and First Place in Extemporaneous Speaking Level III

MAX FELIU MERCE: Second Place Extemporaneous Speaking Level II

TEO FELIU MERCE: Honorable Mention in Extemporaneous Speaking Heritage Level

XAVIER DESOUZA, KENNY EHEMANN, MATTHEW CROW, MAX FELIU MERCE: Second Place in Karaoke

DORRIT EISENBEIS, HANNAH GEORGE: Second Place Scavenger Hunt

DAVID GO, PARKER PERKINS: First Place Scavenger Hunt

Written by

CA Curious

Beyond the numbers

Community

Sandra Gutierrez opens her kitchen – and her heart – to hungry viewers

Upper School

Acclaimed historian addresses Upper School on how everyday people can change the world

CA Curious

3D Printing in MS: Small steps, small designs, big learning

February 7, 2018

We like to tell stories of student successes. That’s what we’re about.

Behind the scenes, though, our faculty are continually exploring and collaborating to set the stage for those great stories. Here is one small example involving a new 3D printing initiative in the MS:

At the end of last year, the MS purchased six portable 3D printers. Once they arrived, it quickly became evident that a smaller group of core faculty would need to take ownership of learning the intricacies of 3D printing and of developing 3D CAD skills.  The Middle School Instructional Technology Team (ITT) was tasked with the initiative.

Under the leadership of 7th grade math teacher, Leslie Williams, the five-person team of cross-curricular and cross-grade level teachers meets weekly with the focus of enhancing student learning and supporting curricular goals via technology.  The team explores educational technologies, trains middle school faculty, and supports implementation in the classroom. Members of the team, Katie Levinthal, Tyler Gaviria, Andrew Chiaraviglio, Kimberly Shaw and Leslie regularly present ideas and research at middle school faculty meetings during Tech-in-Ten time.

Starting in January, the team delved into the details of CAD and 3D printing.  One afternoon I wandered into an ITT meeting and observed the messy and creative process of design exploration.  The small printers (designed for children’s hands) were a challenge to calibrate with adult hands. There were printing issues until it was discovered that the designs were not adhering to print plates, and the measurements had to be absolutely exact. In this exploratory stage, the team modeled resiliency, perseverance, and a growth mind set (concepts we teach to our students) by continuing to plug away until it was successful with printing larger scale models.

At recent faculty meetings, ITT members shared team successes and ideas for classroom use.  Several faculty members have now reached out to learn how 3D printing and CAD could be integrated into upcoming projects.  For example, 6th grade world cultures teachers are interested in having students design items for their Japanese dioramas.  In German class, students are creating a virtual German village in Prezi and will design models of the buildings to be printed. To wrap the project, the class will create a 360-degree video of its own.  Ideas and connections are developing for future projects in other classes.

Excitement about designing and printing is being fostered on the student side as well.  Last week, all middle school students were invited to participate in a 3D-design challenge to create a CA Middle School logo by the end of second trimester.  Interested students must learn design skills through Tinkercad to participate.  The response has been overwhelming positive, and we anticipate fierce competition and an outstanding product.  To keep the initiative rolling, Ms. Williams is offering a third trimester club called Tinker, Code and Create which adds 3D printing design skills to her existing Coding club.

As with all worthwhile initiatives, this one is taking time and small steps, but big faculty and student learning outcomes are anticipated!

Written by Marti Jenkins, Head of Middle School

Community

Leslie Williams offers “technical” help for protecting people

Upper School

Student entrepreneurs win Power Pitch Award from the Conrad Challenge

CA Curious

Giving Tuesday: Celebrating 25 years of community partnership

Library from quad

Nair (’22) wins CA Geographic Bee

January 22, 2018

Congratulations to 8th grader Aryan Nair for winning the Cary Academy Geographic Bee! Aryan will now take a test to determine his eligibility for the state bee. The National Geographic Bee is an annual competition organized by the National Geographic Society, designed to inspire and reward students' curiosity about the world. Students in grades four through eight (4-8) from 10,000 schools across the United States will compete in the 2018 National Geographic Bee.

 

Written by

A Look Ahead

Community Conversations

Green iniatives on campus

Alumni News

CA to celebrate Homecoming with fall and winter festivities

Library from quad

Eight honored in band

January 22, 2018

Congratulations to the eight students were named to the All-District Band or All-Region Jazz Band, a tie for best in Cary Academy history. Auditions were held on January 13, 2018 in Greensboro. 

All-District Bands 2018
Ian Fan (’24) – clarinet
Rishi Goswami (’20) – clarinet
Aarav Gupta (’22) – trumpet
Abby Li (’22) – flute
Max Li (’23) – clarinet
Emily Wang (’22) – flute

All-Region Jazz Band 2018
Luke Ramee (’24) – trombone
Charlie Zoetrmulder (’23) – trombone

Learn more about the process here

Written by

Athletics

Chargers close out a fantastic spring season

Art

CA Junior’s one-act plays earn accolades

Upper School

Putting their game face on

Library from quad

MS Field Hockey wins U14

October 25, 2017

After a successful season, seven members of the Cary Academy middle school field hockey team played in the 5-on-5 format Tar Devils Tournament at Wake Forest University on Sunday, Oct 22.  With participation from teams across the state, the CA team placed first in the U14 division.  The team included middle school team members Cassidy Young, Gabriella Cicuto, Sarah Haddix, Lakshmi Wood, Alex Butulis, Alessia Cicuto, and Gabby Matejowsky (not pictured).  Special thanks to middle school coach Alysia Tacinelli for volunteering to coach the team at this post-season event.

Written by

Art

Stats and Storytelling

Athletics

Senior Night: Varsity Boys’ Track and Field

Upper School

Student entrepreneurs win Power Pitch Award from the Conrad Challenge

Library from quad

Nair (’22) Geo Bowl regional champ

October 24, 2017

Aryan Nair (’22) competed in the Let Explore Africa (LEA) Geography Quiz Bowl at NC State University on October 21, 2017.

Nair won the Geo Quiz Bowl on Africa in the division among 8th-12th graders from different schools across the region by a huge margin. He had 77 points after the final round, and the second place winner had 32 points.

Nair will now compete in the NC State championship at Duke University in November.

 

Written by

CA Curious

There’s a Crackle in the Air

World Language

2024 NC German Day Results

Magazine of CA

The Right Fit

Library from quad

Students attend International Festival

October 23, 2017

Friday, Oct 20, our Novice-High World Language students attended the International Festival of Raleigh. They witnessed a Naturalization Ceremony (127 candidates from 49 different countries) with Congressman David Price, explored various cultural booths, and collected stamps from over 30 countries for their "passports." Lunch included time at the world bazaar and an international café (27+ cuisines). Students interacted with people from all around the world, completed a Young Diplomats Questionnaire, and joined a Scavenger Hunt. Many students had the opportunity to practice language skills by asking questions to native speakers.

Written by

Athletics

Chargers Wrap Spring Season

Magazine of CA

The Right Fit

Athletics

Senior Nights: Varsity Softball

Chart

CA Curious

The Portrait of a Graduate, Unleashed

October 19, 2017

They’re big, they’re blue, and they’re cropping up all over the school!

This may sound like the trailer for a low-budget horror movie, but the reality is something far less dramatic.  Those large blue “strangers” appearing in our classrooms and our hallways are simply poster versions of one of Cary Academy’s cornerstone documents:  the Portrait of a Graduate.

It’s likely that many of you have never heard of the Portrait of a Graduate, even though it’s been around for quite some time.  The Portrait was originally developed by faculty as part of the school’s 2010 strategic plan, which challenged us to examine our learning goals for students in the context of the mission priorities of the school.   Our focusing question:   What fundamental abilities and traits do we want all Cary Academy students to have by the time they graduate in order to succeed in a rapidly changing world?

In an effort to answer this question, we asked each academic department to explore what it meant for a student to be committed to discovery, innovation, collaboration, and excellence in its particular discipline.  Emerging from those conversations were some clear commonalities in the skills and attitudes valued across all content areas–commonalities that became the basis for the Portrait of a Graduate.

Over the years, the Portrait of a Graduate has served quietly in the background as a reflection tool for teachers in a variety of professional development contexts, from our annual training program for new faculty to our current curriculum renewal process.  It has also long had a home in the “About Us” section of the school website to help clarify the mission and culture of our school.  One thing we haven’t really done, however, is actively share the Portrait of a Graduate with students—until now!

Take a stroll around campus today, and you will find poster-size versions of the Portrait of the Graduate in all Upper School classrooms, as well as in Upper and Middle School hallways and other key locations around the school.  These posters were created to introduce the Portrait to our learners in a highly visual format and to provide a point of reference as we begin to talk more intentionally with students about the broad and enduring skills we want them to develop while at CA.

The eight overarching qualities laid out in the Portrait of a Graduate are not only a focus of the academic curriculum, but are also part of the teaching and learning that occurs in advisory, athletics, clubs, community service and other school activities.  By introducing our students to the Portrait and engaging them in purposeful reflection around the specific ways they demonstrate the Portrait characteristics both in and outside of the classroom, we hope to help students better understand our goals for them and the progress they are making in their individual learning journeys.  We further hope that as students develop fluency in using the Portrait as a guide for reflection and self-assessment, they will be able to present a more complete and compelling picture of their learning and growth to others.

It is important to recognize that the Portrait of the Graduate was from the beginning designed to be a living document that would be revisited periodically as our students’ needs evolved.  Likewise, the new poster versions of the Portrait are first-iteration visual representations that will undoubtedly be reviewed and refined — ideally in collaboration with our students.  We certainly look forward to hearing their thoughts and questions over the coming months as they encounter and contemplate the Portrait for the first time, and we welcome thoughts and questions from parents and other members of the community, as well.

While our conversations with students around the Portrait of the Graduate will take place primarily in the Upper School in 2017-18, we also plan to find ways to bring Middle School students into the discussion at a level appropriate for that age group.   Ultimately, we want those mysterious blue placards on our walls to lose their “alien aura” and become familiar friends to all of our students in the journey toward a Cary Academy diploma.

Written by Martina Greene, Dean of Faculty

6th

Homecoming Heroics

Math

MATHCOUNTS team brings home championship, heads to states

Middle School

Earth Day at Cary Academy

Library from quad

18 named to Honors Band

October 17, 2017

Congratulations to the 18 students named to the NCAIS Honor Band. The large concert band is comprised of the most talented 6th-12th grade concert band musicians from the NC Association of Independent Schools. Students are nominated by their band director and selected by a committee of participating directors. 

The 2017 NCAIS Honor Bands include over 170  students from 24 independent schools, conducted by Dr. Evan Feldman and Dr. Arris Golden from UNC-CH.  

 

Chris

Butulis

8th

MS

Trumpet

Will

Capps

7th

MS

Clarinet

Ethan

Chou

8th

MS

Trombone

JR

Cobb

8th

MS

Euphonium (BC)

Aarav

Gupta

8th

MS

Trumpet

Max

Li

7th

MS

Clarinet

Abby

Li

8th

MS

Flute

Rohin

Patel

8th

MS

French Horn

Luke

Ramee

6th

MS

Trombone

Charlie

Zoetmulder

7th

MS

Trombone

Griffin

Baird

9th

US

Trombone

Ryan

Erickson

10th

US

Euphonium (BC)

Rishi

Goswami

10th

US

Clarinet

Uri

Joseph

10th

US

Alto Saxophone

Jay

Sagrolikar

9th

US

Alto Saxophone

Will

Snider

12th

US

Percussion

Harrison

Truscott

9th

US

Trumpet

 

Written by

6th

Homecoming Heroics

CA Curious

Reframing the Question

Band

CA musicians start 2021 on a high note