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Nocona NIE Week 13

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Nocona MS OAP

The Nocona Middle School 2014 UIL One-Act Play production of “Jane Eyre” won second place in the UIL West Zone District 9 AAA competition on Nov. 19, at Graham Municipal Auditorium in Graham,
Holliday Middle School received first place with “The Actor’s Nightmare” while City View Junior High School placed third with “The Bathroom Door.”
Troupe members recognized to the All-Star Cast include eighth graders Kambryn Pierce as Jane Eyre (narrator) and Connor Barrett as Mr. Rochester; seventh graders Kolbie Waldrip as Mr. Mason/St. John Rivers, and Madison Murphey as Jane; and sixth grade student Cobi Womack as Adele. Listed to the Honorable-Mention All-Star Cast include eighth grader Karlee Keck as Mrs. Reed/Bertha, seventh grader Mallory Melton as Brocklehurst/Mrs. Ingram/Rev. Wood, and sixth grader Hannah Dyer as Young Jane Eyre.
Students receiving technical awards for their work backstage include 7th grade student Madison Womack for her role as stage manager and fellow seventh grader Rowdy Blevins for overall outstanding stage technician for the day from among all the schools participating.
Other cast and crew members include Delaney Magruder, Maria Hernandez, Rowdy Waters, Angelina Wages, Kaeleigh Ramsey, Josh Dingler, Kobe Harrington, Jessica Dingler, Olivia Storey, Maddie Ferguson, and Martiza Gomez.
The play was directed by Karla Murphey and Norman Waters.

Nocona First Grade

Deana Melancon’s first grade class at Nocona Elementary participated in a disguise a turkey family project.

 

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BISD trustees may fill assistant principal spot

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Trustees of the Bowie Independent School District will meet in a called session at 7:15 a.m. on May 25 to fill the junior high assistant principal position.
The board will go into closed session and return to take any action in open session. Possible action on a teacher certification waiver also is on the agenda.
This administrator position came open recently as Jason Childress left that job after he was named Bowie Intermediate School principal two weeks ago.

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Mathnasium celebrates one year anniversary

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A look at the world of education over the past 30 years would show that there has been a number of changes to the way children are taught. Trends have swung wildly in all directions in an attempt to help children do well in school. The introduction of high-stakes tests like the STAAR has only added to the pressure schools are under to help students achieve. This pressure is especially true with math. Many people break into a sweat when confronted with a page of numbers, and this fear is communicated to children. When one considers the limitations placed on a child who isn’t comfortable with math, the pressure makes sense.

For many parents, the goal of helping a child be able to choose any path he wishes means outside help will be needed. One such place to receive such help is Mathnasium of Wichita Falls, a math-only learning center getting ready to celebrate its one-year anniversary in North-Central Texas. Owned by Dr. Susan Cooper, Mathnasium is a franchise with over 700 locations worldwide. Rather than providing the traditional tutoring many parents think they want, the Mathnasium Method takes a more targeted approach to help a child catch up, keep up and get ahead.

Rather than only helping a child get through tonight’s homework and Friday’s test, the Mathnasium Method uses a comprehensive assessment to identify the very specific skills missing from a child’s math arsenal. This assessment is then used to put together a learning plan that will fill in those gaps and move the child toward independence and success. The curriculum does this using a combination of mental, visual, verbal, tactile and written exercises to teach a child conceptually, rather than relying on rote memorization. The fact is, most people cannot remember a list of rules or directions that have no meaning for them. Think of the child with a list of chores. Most parents will tell you that, if those chores are given orally to the child with no way to recall them, it will be a great day if the child remembers the first two in a list of six. However, this is exactly how we try to teach math when we ask children to remember a set of steps rather than making sure the steps are understood.

Mathnasium works with children grades two through 12 on developing this understanding through personalized instruction that focuses on how each child understands a concept. Despite what many think, there is rarely a single way of solving a math problem. The key to a child’s success is to allow each individual to find the way that makes the most sense to them. Mathnasium’s instructors have the ability to do that while working with each child. They can help the child make the connections between the method being taught by the school’s curriculum and what actually makes sense to them.

Mathnasium of Wichita Falls recently celebrated its one year anniversary. The staff looks forward to many more years of helping students. In an increasingly high-tech world, both mathematical fluency and logical reasoning are keys to the future success of children, and success in math is a key indicator of both these critical attributes. Through the services of Mathnasium, children can get the help they need to develop these skills to be ready for future success. For more information contact Mathnasium of Wichita Falls, 3001 Garnett, Ste. 200, Wichita Falls, 940-386-9556, www.mathnasium.com/wichitafalls.

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Saint Jo NIE 2015 Week 9

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Saint Jo Elementary

Saint Jo Elementary PAWS winners for the week of Oct. 16 were: Trent Gaston, Sam Martin, Lilly Calabrese, Maxey Johnson, Blaine Firmino, Damon Byrd, Isaac Powers, Tatum Morman, Olivia Stewart, Francesca Voth, Damien Deich, Caleb Roe, Valicity Rubio, Ethan Nunneley and Corbin Johnson.

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