Physical
Education Student Leader Awards
In
a ceremony at Hudson Valley Community College on May 4,
24 Greater Johnstown School District students were
recognized by the Capital Zone of the New York State
Association of Health, Physical Education, Recreation
and Dance with the Sandy Morley Physical Education
Leadership Award.
Click here to read more.
Third Quarter
Honor Roll Announced
The third marking period
ended on April 3 and report cards were issued to Knox
students on April 9. Those grades have been used to
calculate the
third quarter honor roll. Congratulations to all of
our academic achievers!
Revolutionary
Times
Seventh
graders in Mrs. Schuttenberg's English classes and Mrs.
Sweeney's social studies classes have been studying the
American Revolution. The students are learning about the
time period in social studies and reading Avi's The
Fighting Ground in English. A work of historical
fiction, The Fighting Ground highlights the facts
of the Revolutionary War through the story of thirteen
year old Jonathan, who experiences the hardship and
heartache of war over a twenty-four hour period.
To
supplement the interdisciplinary unit, Mr. Neil Martin,
an active Revolutionary War re-enactor, was invited to
share his story. He arrived dressed in Colonial
fashioned clothing and brought several props to share
with the students. Mr. Martin told the story of John
Brothers, a soldier who actually fought in the war. His
assistant portrayed Bob, a young fife player fighting
with the Patriots. Mr. Martin entertained several
questions posed by the students and shared albums
containing several Revolutionary War re-enactment
photographs.
The students will conclude this unit with a
Revolutionary War battlefield project. They are
researching Revolutionary War sites that have been
turned into either state or national parks and are
creating a travel pamphlet, brochure or collage of the
location. They will also assume the role of a person who
was at the site during the war and write a diary entry
or letter to a loved one from that person's
point-of-view, followed by a current diary entry, letter
or postcard from the point-of-view of a tourist visiting
the site in 2009.
The Votes are In
and the Winner is...
A total of 204
Knox students made use of an actual voting machine on
November 4, following a special interdisciplinary
election project. Prior
to a mock debate on November 3, students in Mrs.
Keller's social studies class researched such political
issues as the war in Iraq, healthcare and the economy;
Mrs. LaMena's science students researched alternative
energy; Mrs. Hart's math class learned about the
electoral college; and Mr. Greco's English students
wrote a business letter to their representatives.
Following the tallying of the votes, 115 students (56%)
chose Obama, while 89 (44%) favored McCain.
Click here to see pictures from the student debate
and election.
Revisiting the Knox Knights
As
part of Homecoming Weekend and Johnstown’s 250th
Anniversary, guest speakers were invited to Knox for an
assembly on October 10, to talk about Knox history and
share recollections of what it was like to attend school
there in 1933 and later years. Of special interest was
the information that, at one time, Knox had its own
logo, the Knox Knight, as well as its own colors of
orange & black. Knox eventually adopted the Sir Bill
logo and purple & gold colors of the high school, in
part to save money on uniforms and decorating/painting
their shared gym facilities. Students and staff were
encouraged to wear orange and black for the assembly
and, in the photo above, current Knox students proudly
display orange & black "Knox Knights" t-shirts they
made.
History Fair
 Students
in Mrs. Bruno’s eighth grade social studies classes
culminated a six-week unit on American History with a
“History Fair,” covering the time period of 1865-1890. Working
in small groups, the students researched and created a
fictional identity based on the following "characters"
of this time era: cowboys, ranchers, carpetbaggers,
immigrants, Plains Indians, sodbusters, railroad workers
and robber barons.
 On
October 15, each group presented their fictional
character through visual displays and games they had
created and the projects were judged by four JHS
seniors. Knox students and staff also had a chance to
visit the cafeteria to view and evaluate the projects.
Seventh Grade
Scientists Celebrate the Cell
Mrs. Lamena’s seventh grade science students have been
learning about the organelles of plant and animal cells
and, as part of their studies, were recently assigned
the task of creating a cell model using one of five
methods.
Working alone or in pairs, and based on their
own interests, the students selected either a writing
project, a drawing project, a building project or a
cooking project, each of which needed to include
information on major cell parts, including the nucleus,
cell membrane, mitochondria, ER, ribosomes, Golgi
bodies, vacuoles, chloroplasts, cell wall and lysosomes. Displaying
amazing creativity, the students constructed models of a
“Cell City”, assigning cell parts to buildings (i.e., a
nucleus as city hall or the library); drew posters and
maps of cells in great detail; and made cell models out
of edible ingredients. In the photo above, a
student prepares to take a bite out of the “nucleus” of
a cell. See additional photos of the cell projects
here.
Knox Students
take part in Johnstown’s 250th Anniversary Essay Contest
The
Johnstown Celebrates 2008: Time Marches On Committee has
invited Johnstown junior and senior high students to
participate in an essay writing contest as part of
Johnstown’s 250th Anniversary Celebration. The committee
plans to announce two winners from Knox and two from JHS
during October, with the winning authors each receiving a
U.S. savings bond and the winning entries being placed
in a historical time capsule to be buried near City
Hall.
As
part of an interdisciplinary unit developed by English
teacher Laura Schuttenberg and social studies teacher
Jennifer Jurica-Sweeney, Knox students will brainstorm,
research and organize essay material as part of their
classroom experience during the week of September 22,
while also working on the project at home.
Seventh
graders will focus on Sir William Johnson and the trials
and tribulations the colonists and Native Americans
faced during the 18th century, while eighth graders will
discuss Rose Knox and the trials and tribulations faced
by women in the 19th through mid-twentieth centuries. On
Monday, September 29, students will turn in two copies
of their essays. One copy will be delivered to the
Johnstown Celebration Committee on September 30 for
consideration in the contest, while the other copy will
be graded in social studies and English and returned to
the student.
For
more information on the contest rules and classroom
assignments, download the
seventh grade essay assignment, the
eighth grade essay assignment and the
essay assignment timeline.
Best of luck to all essay writers and thank you to the
committee for the invitation to participate!
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What do
you know about the history of Knox Junior High?
Members of the Knox Yearbook staff, together with
their advisors, visited the
Greater
Johnstown School District Museum, located behind
Knox Junior High School. The museum curator, Bill Pollak, helped them to
locate items
for use in their 2007-08 yearbook, the theme of
which was based on the 75th Anniversary of
Knox.
75
Fascinating Years of Knox Heritage
is ours to remember! |


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