Hello Ridgecrest Community, Last Friday was the last day at Ridgecrest for one of our beloved staff members, office manager, Toni McDonald. For many of us Mrs. McDonald was the keystone of Ridgecrest Elementary. She was the person who brought together and connected all the parts. We will always remember Toni for her amazing attitude, her love of purple, and her wealth of knowledge about everything at RC. At the PTA Meeting on February 26th, we voted to rename our Angel Lunch Fund to “The Toni McDonald Angel Fund”. The PTA wanted to honor Toni not only for her years of hard work and patience, but for taking over our struggling program, whipping it into shape, and making it what it is today; a program aimed to help students, whose lunch accounts have gone negative, a chance to continue eating a regular lunch until their family can add money to their account. Toni, thank you for giving this program the kick it needed. You will be missed! Features Legislative Update............. 2 Around Our School ............ 3 Math Olympiad...............4-5 Upcoming Activities .......... 6 Community Events............. 7 Calendar & Details ............ 8 Following our celebration of Toni, we moved on to voting in next year’s PTA Board Members. Our Nominating Committee had their work cut out for them as every position was vacant. However, Julia Prosser and crew, recruited up a storm and we have a new board of amazing Ridgecrest parents. Please join me in welcoming: President: Vice-President Programming: Vice-President Fundraising: Treasurer: Secretary: Jessica Symank Amy Walgamott Susana Guzman Tracy Begley Gena Margason The Ridgecrest Community always seems to step up to the plate. Thank you everyone. Kristin Leffler and Philip Scott PTA Co-Presidents LEGISLATIVE UPDATE: New King County Youth Plan Approved The What, Why, Who, and How of the Youth Action Plan What: On January 21, 2014, the Metropolitan King County Council approved legislation calling for the development of a Youth Action Plan that will set King County’s priorities for serving infants through young adults. The Youth Action Plan will guide and inform the County’s annual investment of more than $75 million in services and programs serving infants through young adults. The Youth Action Plan is to be developed by an appointed Task Force comprised of representatives from a broad range of organizations and entities with substantial expertise and knowledge relevant to children and youth, but that is also diverse in its views and experiences, including but not limited to geographic, racial, and ethnic diversity. Why: 1. Because kids matter: King County is committed to social justice and equity for all who live here. A key component of that work is helping kids grow into adulthood with opportunities that allow them to achieve their full potential. Many “downstream” conditions such as homelessness, incarceration and substance abuse could be addressed and likely prevented early on if all kids were provided with safe, healthy childhoods, access to quality education and other opportunities. 2. Because we have a rich history of supporting kids: Since the 1960s, King County has participated in and funded programs aimed at assisting children, youth, and young adults. Today, King County spends over seventy-five million dollars annually on a wide range of programs that influence children and youth at all stages of development from birth to young adult. The services and programs for youth and children are provided across King County government by several departments and agencies. 3. Because we are one partner of many working for kids: County agencies and departments contract with a number of community-based organizations and local nonprofit organizations that work in collaboration with each other, the county, and other governments to serve children, youth and their families, and young adults. These community-based organizations serve a variety of youth populations, including but not limited to: o geographically focused populations o specific cultural and ethnic populations o gay, lesbian and transgender youth and young adults o justice-involved or at-risk youth. We need to work together to leverage our strengths and focus on measurable outcomes for kids. 4. Because its time: With the onset of the Great Recession and the fiscal challenges that counties across the state are facing with limited financial resources and growing demands, King County must collaboratively and transparently examine its practices, investments, and outcomes so that we can best serve children, youth, and young adults in the most effective and efficient ways possible. Who: Members of the Youth Action Plan Task Force were appointed by King County Executive Dow Constantine and the County Council through Motions 14097 and 14112. Task Force Member List with biographies When: The Council’s legislation calls for a proposed Youth Action Plan to be submitted to the Council and the Executive on April 15, 2015. A progress report is due to the Council in September, 2014. How: This work is unanimously supported across King County government and is endorsed by many community organizations. To ensure that King County continues to be a strong partner with the state, cities, private sector, non-profit and philanthropic organizations input will be welcomed from these entities and other community members. The Ram Rock Page 2 April 2015 PTA General Meeting April 14th – 7 p.m. Ridgecrest Library Friday, April 3rd 8 to 8:30 a.m. Drawings for WATCH DOG beanie and “My Dad is a WATCH DOG” shirt. April 9 & 10 7 p.m. Popcorn Day! Friday, April 17th during lunch PTA provides one bag per student We are super excited that two of our Ridgecrest students made it to the Washington State Reflections Art Competition! This year’s theme was “The World Would Be Better If…”. Noah Bender (3rd grade, Mrs. Gochnour) composed a musical piece “The Tofu Factory”. Cassandra Chesnut (2nd grade, Ms. Ramfar) created a short movie “World Mobile”. Reflections is a National PTA and WSPTA cultural arts competition. We have an open gallery in the school library every year in November. We encourage all students to express themselves through art and to participate next year! The Ram Rock Page 3 April 2015 On March 14, 2015, 66 Ridgecrest students opted to forego their usual Saturday morning activities to: solve math problems! Specifically, they competed in the annual Shoreline Math Olympiad held at Shoreline Community College, where 735 elementary and middle school students from every one of the city’s public and private schools (20 schools) participated. Over 200 volunteers under the able direction of Lisa McDonald (a Shoreline schools parent who has given thousands of hours of time) worked together to make it happen (https://sites.google.com/site/shorelinematholympiadwa/ ). Instead of sleeping in, our RC Mathletes arrived at 8am to take part in 2 oral tests of "mental math" plus 2 individual written tests as well as an additional 2 group tests in which teams of 3-4 students compete. Since the fall, over 80 RC mathletes in grades 3-6 have been training on Tuesday afternoons, improving their math skills in a fun, social environment. At Ridgecrest, this is a PTA organized, all-volunteer effort of parents who coordinate the program. The students’ main motivation? According to most of the Math Olympiad participants, they attend because it is “so fun”! After the competition, they have a pizza party for lunch and then enjoy over an hour of entertainment, this year from a local hip hop dancing group as well as a professional magician. A cameo appearance by Principal Dr. Sue McPeak, who revealed a hidden talent of catching cardboard pizza pies, further added to the fun. Of course, the medals given during an elaborate award ceremony may be another enticement, with Ridgecrest once again faring very well. As Math O Coordinator this year, I have had all the fun while the four coaches and their dedicated parent assistants (including Ron Smevik, Bob Tribo, Fred Liu, Lynn Muneta, and Laurie Kiser) and high school volunteers (Clio Jensen and Emma Silber) did all the work each week. Thank you all! I hope every parent will encourage their children (in both High Cap and Gen Ed classrooms!) to participate next year. Contact Jane Simoni (jsimoni@uw.edu) if you are interested in becoming involved next year. Sixth Grade Fifth Grade Participants had a great time, according to coach Dana Campbell, and did a spectacular job. Every one of the 20 6th grade mathletes who trained during the year made it to the competition, and everyone went home with at least one medal. Eighteen of the 20 earned individual medals; four placing within the top 10 scores in the district (Bonnie Yang, Owen OnstadHargrave, Thalia Jensen, Amaya Simoni-Walters, who took 2nd, 3rd, 6th, and 7th place respectively). In addition, all of the six teams earned medals: two 1st places (98 and 92 percentile), three 3rd places, and one 5th place! Coach Dana adds that 8 of the 6th grade mathletes are enthusiastic for more competition, and will participate in the Washington State Math Championship in Blaine, Washington on March 28. She has offered to continue to work weekly with the students, because “coaching these kids is super rewarding and fun!” Mustafa Patwa, the 5th grade coach, reports that 11 of the 13 students competing got individual medals, constituting 7 out of the top 13 overall scorers for fifth graders (out of over 150 participants). The top 3 individual scores in the whole competition came from RC students: Ronin Crawford, Mathew Gardiner and Thaddeus Knowles. Ronin got a perfect score on the individual portion (all 36 problems solved correctly!). This is a fantastic achievement that no other elementary school student at any grade level was able to accomplish. The fifth grade teams did well also, earning first, second and fifth place medals. The team of Ronin Crawford, Mathew Gardiner and Aly Patwa got a first place medal. Fourth Grade The 4th graders, coached by Jessica Cote, were also impressive. Coach Cote noted that every single 4th grade team medaled, with two teams in fourth place and two teams in 6th place. Additionally, 12 of 16 4th graders took home individual medals as well. Third Grade According to coach Julia Crawford, the third-graders did an “awesome” job! She reports that of the eighteen 3rd graders in Math O this year, fourteen of them competed in the Olympiad – and at the 4th grade level because there is no 3rd grade division. Escher Crawford, Elijah Glesener, Aniah Haupt, Brendan Rudberg, Jack Smevik, and Jack Tribo all received individual medals, and one of the Ridgecrest 3rd grade teams (Escher, Brendan, and Jack S.) got 5th place in the 4th grade team competition! Way to go! The Ram Rock Page 4 April 2015 CONGRATULATIONS MATHLETES!! The Ram Rock Page 5 April 2015 TASTE OF RIDGECREST Our year-end multi-cultural potluck is starting to plan for this fun-filled family event that happens each June. We are looking for 3-4 people to help with the planning and organizing of this event. Please contact Melissa Gates at bma030903@comcast.net to volunteer. The Toni McDonald Angel Fund Renamed in honor of former RC office manager, Toni McDonald who was instrumental in turning this PTA-sponsored fund into the wonderful program it is today. It exists to assist in paying for lunches when students do not have enough funds in their account. A student is allowed to have negative $10 before receiving an emergency lunch. If you would like to contribute, please send a donation to the school office and label it “Angel Fund”. Thank you! Ridgecrest continues to happily accept your Campbell soup labels and Pepperidge products. Please send in any UPC you have collected. These labels are used to purchase sports equipment, art supplies, and books used for Boxtop prizes! The Ram Rock Page 6 There will be weekly to bi-weekly prizes from now to the end of the school year! BIG FUN prize for the classroom who brings in the most Boxtops throughout the year. Keep clipping as we are so close to our goal of $1,700 for the school year!! April 2015 Shoreline Stem Festival Attention Young Scientists and Artists!! You won’t want to miss the expanded Shoreline STEM Festival on May 9, 2015 at Shoreline Community College, with a student science fair, hands-on STEM fun, robotics demonstrations, and STEM Career expo. You can design and present a project in the science fair, or just come to experience the exhibits and demonstrations. This year will be bigger than ever with the UW Mobile Planetarium, Reptile Man, Boeing engineers, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Army Corps of Engineers and more – all on site and ready to share their passion for knowledge and inquiry! The festival is brought to our community with the support of Shoreline Community College, Shoreline Public Schools Foundation, and Shoreline School District. Details for all can be found at www.shorelinesciencefair.org. Registration deadline for the science fair is April 3, 2015. Registration and entrance to the festival are all completely FREE! Shorecrest Astronomy Club There will be plenty of food and fun activities to partake in for all ages from coloring to a real working planetarium from the University of Washington. This year’s theme is “Star Wars”. Everyone is encouraged to participate and bring family and friends! The Ram Rock Twelfth Annual Astronomy Night Tuesday, April 14th 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Shorecrest H.S. Commons Page 7 April 2015 Since 1998, Toni was instrumental in running the Ridgecrest office. It is with much sadness that she is leaving. During her last couple of weeks, Toni was honored at the March PTA meeting and was named Student of the Week for the primary grades. Toni, you will be missed; we wish you the very best! April PTA Board Members Co-Presidents: Secretary: Treasurer: VP, Fundraising: VP, Programs: The Ram Rock Kristin Leffler & Philip Scott Anne Musquiz Heather Corbin Gena Margason & Mickey Telling Melissa Gates & Neha Raichur Page 8 3 ..................... Donuts with Watch D.O.G.S. (8 a.m.) 6 ....................................... No School (Staff Work Day) 9-10................................ School Play: Mulan (7 p.m.) 14 ................Shorecrest Astronomy Night (7 p.m.) 14 ............................... PTA General Meeting (7 p.m.) 17 ...................................................................Popcorn Day 20-24 ....................................No School: Spring Break April 2015
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