All posts by Admin

Language and Life from Cubicle to Classroom

Emily Vezina’s enthusiasm is infectious. “I love language, and I love words,” says this teacher of Latin and English in Williston’s Middle and Upper Schools, who transmits daily her excitement to her students. “I’ve been told my vocabulary tests are fun,” she boasts.

And the school can boast that we have an editor of the dictionary as a member of our faculty. After graduating from Vassar College with a degree in Latin, Vezina worked for four years at Merriam-Webster in Springfield, MA, as a general definer before she started teaching in 2005. Now she brings the same level of care and attention to teaching that she once spent on word defining and editing.

emily vezina
Emily Vezina reviews vocabulary during Family Weekend

“We use words to describe everything,” Vezina points out. She found the process of researching for the dictionary infinitely fascinating, such as when she was tasked with revising the definition of “theremin” for Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate® Dictionary, Eleventh Edition and learned all about this “purely melodic electronic musical instrument typically played by moving the hands in the electromagnetic fields surrounding two projecting antennae.”

Vezina even has her picture in the dictionary under “pince-nez.” When she heard that the staff illustrator was in need of models, she volunteered. The resulting picture is a combination of Vezina in her reading glasses and a woman from an 1800s Sears Roebuck catalog.

Vezina taught Latin at Worcester Academy for three years before coming to Williston. Now she enjoys “getting to know kids and supporting their experiences in learning about language and literature as well as life.” Her approach to teaching vocabulary is based on the fact that, “when you come upon a word, it’s not isolated from other words and ideas. You want to look it up because you heard or read it somewhere and you want to know what it means.” So her seventh grade English students help her to pick words out of the texts they read in class. Using a calendar and webpage in WillyNet, Williston’s intranet, students receive a schedule for their words, then post definitions and example sentences for their classmates to review.

When it’s time for a test, Vezina includes questions that ask students to demonstrate nuanced knowledge of a word, such as writing a pep talk telling a friend not to “defer” their dreams. “This is a more realistic test of their knowledge, since words always occur in context,” Vezina emphasizes. “I want them to show me that they know what a word means, not just tell me.” She credits her conversations with colleagues, as well as the inspiration of her own teachers, as contributing to successes such as this in the classroom.

Like many Williston teachers, Vezina believes learning extends beyond both the classroom and the topic at hand. In addition to teaching, she is an advisor for PRIDE (formerly the Gay/Straight Alliance) and a dorm parent in Logan House. Early on her teaching career, she “realized pretty quickly that teaching Latin or English is good and fulfilling but the most important thing is to teach kids how to be happy good people.”

Community Service Club Donates Stuffed Animals

community service club
Club members with Easthampton police officers

The Community Service Club at The Williston Northampton School has collected over 400 new and used stuffed animals that will be given to children experiencing traumatic situations. The club teamed up with the Easthampton Police Department, which has agreed to distribute what they can to local children. Any excess animals will be given to other charitable organizations such as the Red Cross.

Senior Jeff Eichenberger, a boarding student from Midland Park, NJ, is the community service club president. He got the idea for this project because he had a pile of stuffed animals that were “no longer getting love” in his house. He researched what to do with them and found a group called Stuffed Animals for Emergencies (SAFE) that collects stuffed animals to be distributed by law enforcement personnel and firefighters to children in emergencies. Jeff says, “Though I myself have been fortunate enough to never have experienced such a situation, I found the concept of donation very appealing.”

Since there is no Western Massachusetts chapter of SAFE, and the club had decided they would like to make the effects of the collection accessible as locally as possible, they worked with members of the Easthampton Police Department, who agreed to take the donations. Jeff says, “This is a prime example to the giving nature of the Williston community, and I imagine many children will be delighted to have a companion in their time of need.”

From November 2010 through January 2011, a total of 408 stuffed animals were generously donated by Williston students, parents, faculty, and staff members.

Winter Athletes Represent Williston at Championships

As February draws to a close, a number of Williston athletes will be competing in conference and national championships, and the varsity hockey teams will play their last home games of the season.

Tony Alvarez ‘11

Two Williston wrestlers, Tony Alvarez ‘11 and Connor Adams ‘12, qualified for the National Prep Wrestling Championships taking place February 24-26 at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA. They are the first Williston wrestlers to qualify for the Nationals since 2008. Tony qualified by finishing 6th at the New England Championships in the 160-lb weight class last weekend. Coach Matt KaneLong says, “Tony is a two-year captain who struggled all last season with shoulder injuries, but honed his craft and has come back strong after off-season surgery. He lulls opponents into a sense of security and then pins them.”

Connor Adams ‘12

Connor qualified after successfully petitioning for entry after he was unable to compete in the 2011 NEPSAC Wrestling Championships held last week at Brooks School. Coach KaneLong says, “Connor has been our most-winning wrestler over the past 2 years.”

Other Williston teams competing in championships this weekend include the boys’ and girls’ squash teams competing in the New England Squash Tournament. The girls will be competing at Westminster and the boys at Brooks. Peter Gunn coaches the girls’ squash team and Stan Samuelson coaches the boys’.

A number of Williston swimmers will be competing in the Western New England championships at Hopkins.

Finally, the last girls’ ice hockey varsity home game is tonight at 5:00 at Lossone Rink against Winchendon. The last boys’ home game is tomorrow at 3:30 against Pomfret.

Photographer Ken Sklute Speaks at Williston

ken sklutePhotographer Ken Sklute will give a lecture at The Williston Northampton School’s Photographers’ Lecture Series in the Dodge Room of the Reed Campus Center on March 1, 2011, at 6:30 p.m.

Ken Sklute has been passionate about photographing both people and drag racing for 32 years. His images have been published in National Dragster Magazine, Sports Illustrated, and ESPN the Magazine. He has received numerous awards, including Drag Racing Photographer of the Year from CompetitionPlus.com, Wedding Photographer of the Year and Photojournalist of the Year from the Professional Photographers of California, as well as receiving 13 Kodak Gallery awards and 14 Fuji Masterpiece Awards. He was also awarded Photographer of the Year and Best in Show from the Western States Regional Print Competition. Ken spends much of his time teaching and lecturing both nationally and internationally and has been honored as one of Canon’s Explorers of Light, a designation shared by only 48 photographers worldwide.

Remaining Lecturers in this year’s series are scheduled as follows:

Michael Lesy, April 1

Thatcher Cook, April 18

 All presentations, which are free and open to the public, take place in the Dodge Room of the Reed Campus Center at The Williston Northampton School. Full biographies of the visiting lecturers can be found at www.williston.com/photographers. For more information, please call 413-529-3237. Dates are subject to change.

“This I Believe” Series Continues at Williston

this i blieveStudents and faculty members have been sharing some of their personal beliefs at The Williston Northampton School’s weekly assemblies. Based on the series of the same name that is a weekly feature on National Public Radio, “This I Believe” invites individuals to reflect on what is important to them.

Williston chaplain and teacher Daphne Burt developed the series in 2010 by inviting SA Fogleman ’10 and Maike Blakely ’10 to speak. Language Department Head Nat Simpson kicked off the 2010-11 series when he spoke on his belief that the study of language can change one’s life.

Now, Pastor Burt says, “students have really seen how cool it is,” and they have begun volunteering to speak as part of the series. This winter and spring the Williston community will hear presentations by Chad Adams ’12, Walter McLaughlin ’12, Marisa Roth ’11, and David King ’11.

Videos of several of the speeches can be found at www.williston.com/video.