Tag Archives: academics

Mental Athletics with Robots: Williston Team Heads to FIRST

6938478305 78038985da oThe silver robot bumped gently against a wall, reversed, and then ran over a blue racquet ball, where it lodged, rocking slightly. Chris Berghoff sighed.

“If it really shuts down when it hits one of the balls, and there’s going to be 100 of them, I’m pretty sure that’s a problem,” he said to his teammates, who were typing at computers around the room.

“Come along, robot,” Berghoff said, plucking the machine off the ground and carrying it into a workroom. A hacksaw could soon be heard grinding away.

None of the team members appeared very concerned by this. When you’re preparing for a state-level robotics competition like FIRST Tech Challenge, there’s a lot of tinkering involved.

See a full gallery of the team at work.

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Mock Congressional Hearings: An 8th Grade Lesson in Civics

IMG 5748Caroline Borden ‘16 was in the hot seat. Her team had finished making their case for why judicial review was an important part of the United State’s constitutional system. Now it was time for a panel to quiz the three girls.

“I’m curious what you would say would be checks on judicial review,” said science teacher Matt Spearing, one of the panel’s judges.

Borden thought for a moment.

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A Pivotal Moment: Dr. Duane Jackson on Meeting Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Dr. Duane Jackson was 17 when he met Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. for the first time. On Monday, in commemoration of the minister and his works, Jackson recalled that day for the assembled student body of The Williston Northampton School.

“You will have three, four, maybe five pivotal points in your life,” Jackson told the students.  “Meeting Dr. King was a pivotal point for me.”

Check out photos of Jackson’s visit on Flickr.

Jackson’s keynote was the highlight of events designed to celebrate the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the diversity that his efforts inspired. Other events included a Friday-night lecture on cultural diversity with four members of the Williston community.

While he would begin the day describing de facto segregation, 1960s sit-ins, and racism, by mid-afternoon, Jackson would be deep in discussion about the mating habits of lightening bugs and defensive strategies of butterflies.

Jackson, an associate professor of psychology at Morehouse College, took it all in stride, switching easily from anecdotes about meeting Dr. King, to his research in animal behavior. As Jackson quipped during assembly, “I don’t need notes because I’m talking from life experiences.”

In his keynote, Jackson took his audience back to the deep south of the 1960s and what he called the “Cotton Curtain”—the racial equivalent to the Iron Curtain of communism.

“You would look on TV and see dogs and water hoses” being turned on protesters, Jackson said.

Jackson, who had been born and raised in Chicago, said that he had initially had big plans to attend either the University of California, Los Angeles, or the University of Hawaii.

When his father pushed his alma mater of Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, 17-year-old Jackson resisted. The two visited the College and neighboring area, but Jackson still refused.

Finally, in a last-ditch attempt, the elder Jackson took his son to the lobby of an Atlanta office building.

“I went in a room, and there was a man standing at the window. He turned…and it was Martin Luther King,” Jackson said. “He said, ‘What’s wrong with you? I graduated from Morehouse. My father graduated from Morehouse. Your father graduated from Morehouse. Are you too good to go to Morehouse?’

“I didn’t say anything,” Jackson told the Williston Northampton audience. “He said,
‘What are you going to do?’ I said, ‘I’m going to Morehouse.’”

Jackson would meet King again during a protest march in Atlanta when the minister stepped in to prevent supporters and rally opponents from coming to blows.

Jackson urged the Williston Northampton students to use the King’s model of non-violent action—and incorporate modern tools such as cell phones and Twitter—to make their own positive changes.

“It was amazing that we were able to organize and we didn’t have cell phones, we didn’t have Twitter,” Jackson said. “If we had the technology you all have…I don’t know. It might have been much faster.”

Dr. Duane Jackson of Morehouse College talks with students at The Williston Northampton School
In the afternoon, Jackson stopped by the Williston Northampton Middle School to talk about African-Americans contributions to science. The seventh- and eighth-graders listened carefully to his description of the contributions of George Washington Carver, Charles Turner, and Earnest Just.

Jackson concluded the talk with a few quirky facts on insect behavior and hands shot into the air.

“Can fireflies bite?” asked one girl. “Have you ever eaten any bugs?” asked a boy. “What is the firefly glow made of?” asked another boy.

The answers came just as quickly: no, their mouths are too small; yes, lemon ants which taste like lemon drops; it’s made of two chemicals that mix to form bioluminescence.

When a student then asked why he studied insects—rather than animals or birds—Jackson paused.

“Insects were just a hobby, but the hobby grew into something,” he said. “Things don’t always happen the way you think they will. Things just happen.”

Author and Humanitarian John Bul Dau at Williston

International humanitarian and author John Bul Dau visited The Williston Northampton School on Tuesday, November 8. Mr. Dau addressed the entire student body in the Athletic Center in the morning. Parents and alumni were invited to view his presentation via a live webcast. Following his presentation, Mr. Dau spent time in Williston’s classrooms, meeting with students and participating in class discussions.
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In preparation for his visit, many students, including those taking World Civilizations and all Middle School students, read his memoir, God Grew Tired of Us. The book chronicles Dau’s journey as one of the “Lost Boys of Sudan.” He traveled over 1,000 miles by foot, subsisted in the desert, and finally arrived in the United States as a refugee. He has since attended Syracuse University and created the American Care for Sudan Foundation, which has raised more than $170,000 to build a clinic in southern Sudan.

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Poet Nikky Finney Visits Campus October 27

Nikky Finney at Williston

Poet Nikky Finney, recently nominated for a National Book Award, will be visiting the Williston Northampton School campus on Thursday, October 27 at 7:00 p.m. as part of this year’s Writers’ Workshop. She is the author of four collections of poetry: On Wings Made of Gauze; Rice, recipient of a PEN America Open Book Award; The World Is Round, recipient of the 2004 Benjamin Franklin Award for Poetry; and Head Off & Split. A recipient of the Kentucky Foundation for Women Artists Fellowship Award and The Governor’s Award in the Arts, Finney has taught at Smith College and Berea College, and is a former faculty member at Cave Canem, a writing home for African American poets.

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