RPS Update
January 27, 2023
Photo Caption: K-12 ELA Team at the Board of Education Meeting
Dear Families, Faculty, and Staff,
While some of our students may have been wishing for more snow on Wednesday, we were glad to be able to stay in school safely for part of the day. The Extended Early Dismissal schedule is new to RPS this year– where students still dismiss early, yet, an hour later than our traditional Early Dismissal.
We had a Board of Education meeting this past Monday where the public had the opportunity to communicate feedback on the budget in addition to our K-12 team sharing highlights of the work happening across all levels in ELA, as well as an update on the District Priorities.
Our team is hard at work creating two podcasts for next week (no show this week-binge time!). One will be focused on the proposed budget with Jill Browne, Director of Finance, and me, while the other podcast (expected to be released mid-week) will highlight the Visual Performing Arts with some very special guests. Tune in! I learn something new each time I listen!
We receive feedback in many different ways, and always listen to understand and look for opportunities to continuously improve. We know our District is doing amazing, innovative work; our faculty is exceptional, which we highlight each week with our RPS Update. Families can expect us to highlight the innovative work of the District more intentionally in upcoming RPS Updates.
I would like to extend my thanks to my colleagues for their tireless efforts to support the students of RPS in ways that can never be captured in an update, meeting, or podcast throughout the year, but especially during the busy month of January. Don’t forget to take a look at the new website, you can find it here.
Warmly,
Susie
Susie Da Silva, Ed.D.
The Ridgefield Press Covers Dr. Da Silva's Inspiring Path
Please click here to read Sandi Fox's inspiring profile of Superintendent Dr. Susie Da Silva in this week's Ridgefield Press to find out about this RPS leader's modest upbringing, her path to success, her big heart, and her advice to her own children (and ours).
Art LEAP! Elementary Art Enrichment
Ceramic Food Made by RES Fifth Graders.
Your dentist might not be happy if you sink your teeth into the Ridgebury Elementary Art LEAP (Learning and Enrichment Art Program) sculptures. These delectable but potentially tooth-breaking creations showcase the elementary art enrichment happening at all six elementary art schools this year. Art LEAP is an enrichment program run by RPS elementary art teachers for fifth and, for the first time, fourth graders who want to pursue their creative sides. Just as with professional chefs, "plating" was part of this fun grade 5 assignment under the tutelage of RES art teacher Rachael Penney. Read more about the program below.
Crepe by McKenzie W.
Hamburger by Chris L.
Donut by Ella R.
Tacos by Annaliese D.
Breakfast by Ben A.
Pizza and garlic knots by Maya L.
Director of Elementary Education Linda Johnson said that offering Art LEAP at each elementary school was important to the district's goal of providing equitable programs at each of the six schools. She commends the art teachers: Alison Anderson, Meagan Kounnas, Rachael Penney, and Jennifer Zeyer for their collaboration, creativity, and leadership. “We have aimed to develop a consistent experience in all essential classes (Art, Library and Media, Music, and PE),” reports Johnson. “Art LEAP is an example of this. This is the first time this experience has been extended to our 4th graders and is no longer by invitation. This is a choice offered to all students during non-instructional time and is inclusive for all.”
Important District News and Reminders
NEW! VPES Psychologist Gives Parent Workshop on DBT
RPS Innovator: Jeffrey Lovelace: VPES Psychologist
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) has been a growing initiative across RPS and is a tool school psychologists, special education teachers, and district leaders have been incorporating into their buildings as they can. Veterans Park Elementary psychologist Jeffrey Lovelace reached the point of wanting to invite parents to join with students and staff and paraprofessionals in learning the philosophy and skills associated with DBT. On Tuesday, Mr. Lovelace invited Veterans Park parents to come learn more about ways to use DBT at home. He plans to offer more workshops (virtual and in-person) in the future.
The Boys and Girls Club of Ridgefield partners with RPS to offer quality before school care to students at the RPS elementary schools with start times of 9:10 am (Barlow Mountain, Farmingville, and Veterans Park Elementary). In response to parent demand, the BGCR will offer 10-visit punch cards to these families. Read about the program and the new punch card system here.
2023-24 State BOE Student Member Search
The CT State Board of Education is beginning the search process for the 2023-24 student Board members. The application package is attached and can be downloaded from the Department’s website: SBE-Student-Application-2023-2024. Note: the deadline for application submission is February 24, 2023. If you have any questions, please contact the State Board Office at 860-713-6510.
The main RPS website got an update last weekend. This update will make our main website more modern and easier to navigate. Some of the information that used to be found on the left (Parent Portal, Lunch Payment, etc). is now on the top tab.
New! Virtual Curriculum Presentations: Elementary and MS Math Placement
On Wednesday, January 25, the RPS Curriculum team hosted a virtual presentation on K-12 Math Pathways. To learn about the pathways and view a recording of this enriching program, please visit the RPS Curriculum YouTube Channel. Mark your calendar for a separate virtual parent presentation on math placement for rising sixth, seventh, and eighth-grade students on February 8 at 11 am (snow date, February 15 at 11 am). Link here.
Internet Safety: A Presentation for Parents and Guardians
More information about the program can be found here.
The RHS PTSA and Ridgefield Council of PTAs present, "Do You Have the Tools to Talk?," a workshop for parents about how to talk about differences in race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and ability in our modern world on February 28 at 7 pm. More information about the speakers and registration information here.
The RPS Preschool Program is currently accepting Peer Model applications for the 2023-24 school year. Please go to the website for more information and click on the Peer Model Application to apply. Applications are due by March 1, 2023.
In the Classroom
RHS Cupcake Wars: Creativity With Good Taste
RHS Celebrates Lunar New Year!
Today, Friday, and yesterday, RHS students wore red to celebrate Lunar New Year with a fun, post-midterm party in Mandarin classes. RHS Class of 2019 alum Mackenzie Robson was the special guest during second period today. Robson, who will start a job in Shanghai in September, shared her passion for Mandarin and her favorite RHS teacher, Ms. Hsu. Hsu brought in eggs from her chickens to make delicious fried rice. Student Izzy Nguyen rolled her own boba for sweet bubble tea and gave out envelopes of money to her classmates for good luck. RPS Communications got the lucky $2 bill! The Year of the Rabbit is looking auspicious. 新年快乐
The HeARTS of RPS
FES Film Fest
RPS Innovator: Laura Kosky: FES Media and Library Specialist
We just wanted to remind you of the story in last week's RPS Update about the Farmingville Elementary film fest. These stop-motion shorts put together by FES fifth graders under the tutelage of librarian and media specialist Laura Kosky are family-friendly and free (no subscription required:). Here is a link to the FES stop-motion films. Don’t miss their FES Listen Loudly Podcast to learn more about the film projects.
RHS Theater Show "Winter Briefs"—TICKETS AVAILABLE
The Ridgefield High School Theater Department invites you to "Winter Briefs," Four short plays to help you warm up from the cold. This PG-13 show will run on February 3 and 4 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are available here.
Save the Date for the RHS Spring Musical
The Ridgefield High School spring musical, "Into the Woods," will run March 10, 11, 17, and 18. More information to come!
Beyond the Classroom
It Starts With Hello at VPES
Veterans Park Elementary kicked off "It Starts with Hello" week on Monday with an all-school assembly led by the Grade 5 Student Council. "It Starts with Hello" is a powerful program that gives students the skills to recognize classmates who are struggling or isolated and provides techniques for reaching out to those peers. Each day this week, VPES practiced a different approach to making the school climate one where all students and staff belong. Sometimes, they learned, all you have to do is say, "Hello."
Girls Dance Team Keeps Winning!
The 2022 New England Champion Ridgefield High School Dance Team kicked off their first competition by taking first place at Dancin' in the Woods. Let's go!
This Saturday, the Girls and Boys RHS Varsity Basketball teams will face off against Danbury in a back-to-back double-header that will raise funds for cancer. The girls tip off at 1 pm and the boys follow at 3 pm at the O'Neill Center at WCSU. All tickets $10.
Wrestling Hits the Mat on Sat.
The RHS Wrestling Team has a home match on Saturday, January 26. Tickets here.
RHS Seniors Learn About Scholarships
The RHS counseling department recently invited a few benefactors from local scholarship organizations to meet with current seniors to educate students about a few of the local scholarships being offered and how to apply. Thank you to Chris Nolan (right) from The Ridgefield Scholarship Group and a representative from The American Legion for their generosity.
Alumni Spotlight: Speechwriter and Author Cody Keenan
When Books on the Common and the Ridgefield Library discussed a book event with RHS alum Cody Keenan, the publisher wanted to find a famous person to moderate. "We weren't going to do that," Keenan says. "It was a no-brainer to ask my RHS English teachers because they are the people who made me who I am." Keenan was President Obama's chief speechwriter and author of the New York Times bestseller Grace: President Obama and Ten Days in the Battle for America. Last fall, RHS English teacher Kathleen Wassall and retired English teacher Robert Cox joined Keenan on stage for a lively discussion about Grace and a celebration of inspiring teachers.
Wassall, who still teaches at RHS, was Keenan's junior-year English teacher and the first person who ever gave him a "C" on a paper. "I went up to her after class," Keenan reports," "and said something like, 'What is the meaning of this?' She walked me through each edit and that entire year she worked me and made me a better writer. The first paper actually looked a lot like the comments President Obama would make on our speeches."
Keenan continues, "My senior year, Bob Cox taught me to be a critical and thoughtful reader. This is very important to being a great writer. I think of both [Wassall and Cox] even more now that I'm a teacher [Keenan teaches speech writing at Northwestern University] and have to grade papers. It's the worst part of my job." Mr. Cox had a tradition of giving each student a book from his personal collection. At the event, Keenan surprised Cox by reading from the book he received, Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Keenan still had the note from Cox, which concluded with the wish, “Hope life brings you only rewarding challenges. Love, Bob.”
Keenan says that the most important part of a great speech is to "talk like a human being. To tell a story with a beginning, middle, and end." He thinks each president needs to have a colloquial style that works for them. He hasn't spent much of his career studying great speeches of the past but his favorite speech is the one John F. Kennedy delivered at Rice University in 1962, which promised to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade. "It's funny and inspirational," Keenan says. "And if anyone gave a speech like that today, everyone would think they were crazy."
President Obama and RHS graduate Cody Keenan work on the president’s 2016 Democratic National Convention from the photo gallery in Keenan’s book, Grace. Photo Credit: Official White House photo by Pete Souza
More Photos from the Week
Spanning the Centuries
Ridgebury Elementary tried writing with a quill and donned their Colonial finest for a PTA-Sponsored grade 4 enrichment program while Farmingville was all about the 80s (the 1980s that is) for Principal Nancy Caron's big birthday.
ERMS Green Team
East Ridge Middle School teachers David Bozzuto and Sarah Dalton attended a professional development hosted by the CT DEEP in the fall with the intent of being certified as a Green Leaf School. They have been working with staff to create an inclusive committee with the goal of enacting a high-impact, high buy-in, and low individual initiative. Students pitched in to join the Green Team. A team to bet on! Thank you!
Local Leaders Recognize RHS All-American Charlotte Kemp
Girls Basketball Youth Night
Holly McClellan's photos from last Friday's Girls Basketball Youth Night give a much-needed lift to spirits after this dreary week of weather. Younger children turned out to greet the team, collect athletes' signatures, win raffles, and watch great basketball games. We couldn't choose just one or two so here are ten:). Photo Credit: Holly McClellan
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