Tuesday, October 26, 2010

 

 

What's New???

 

Bassick Lions Roar at NY International Film Festival

Film Focusing on Bassick High School Sports Teams wins Best Documentary Award

 

    On Wednesday, November 3, 2010, please join the Bridgeport Public Education Fund for the reception and screening of "Pride of the Lions," an awarding- winning documentary chonicling the challenges and adversity that faced the football and soccer teams at Bassick High School, and while capturing some of the most transformational moments in the school’s recent history. The reception and screening will take place at the Tower Room at University of Bridgeport from 5:00 pm-6:30pm. Please save the date!

 

    For more details about this award-winning documentary, please see the article below, courtesy of the New Haven Independent.

 

    Winning a prestigious 2010 New York International Film Festival Award in the category of Best Sports Documentary last week, was another in a series of surprises for Westville resident and Bridgeport high school arts and media teacher Kathy Silver. “The Pride of the Lions,” a 20-minute documentary film, chronicled the challenges and adversity that faced the football and soccer teams at Bridgeport’s Bassick High School, while capturing some of the most transformational moments in the school’s recent history.

The documentary’s “life-imitates-art” story line was not conceived in the mind of a Hollywood script writer, but is a gutsy, real-life story written in real-time by the athletes and students of Bridgeport’s smallest, and arguably, poorest of three high schools. The award winning video was directed by Silver and features footage shot by her video classes as part of an interdisciplinary effort integrating communication skills, reading, writing, technology, video editing and artistic creativity, according to Silver. The film’s narration was done by student athletes, some of whom were in Silver’s video classes. Their passionate voices tell a story of pride, determination and the leadership that catapulted them to a series of dramatic and improbable victories on and off the field.

 

    The 20-minute video is the stuff of classic sports movies, complete with a thrilling climactic scene: a tied football game with 15.5 seconds left.  Against all odds, the underdog Bassick Lions, who had once owned the state’s longest losing streak at 0-60-2, shock cross-city rivals Harding High, on the last play of the game. The pivotal scene shows Bassick Lion quarterback Rodney Lanham scrambling, then connecting with his receiver, Davonte Franklin, who smashes through defenders to reach the end-zone in a blaze of celebratory bedlam. Footage of the play, which came to be called “The Final Play,” was shot by Silver’s crew, and would have future implications beyond demonstrating the team’s mettle, by becoming the winning video highlight in a nation-wide contest sponsored by State Farm Insurance Company.  Of some 350 entries, in the “Friday Night Feats” highlight contest, Bassick’s entry would pass several “Zone” hurdles on the path to winning the coveted cash prize of $15,000.

 

    Entering the contest was not without its own adversity. Team Bassick had only days to edit and submit their entry. Intermittent challenges required mass internet voting on YouTube, in support of the video once it was completed.  “That created a problem because many of the school’s students do not have readily available internet access, and at school, You Tube access is blocked” noted Silver.  Ron Remy, Silver’s supportive former principal, secured special permission to unblock the site for several days and the student lines soon began to form at available computers.  After the school’s entry passed the first round of cuts, making it one of 52 remaining videos, the critical mass necessary to get into final contention seemed within grasp.  “We hope we come out on top… we really need the money”  said a hopeful Jordan Claude, the Lion’s football Captain.

Silver’s frustration when discussing the obstacles faced by Bassick student athletes is palpable: “Our kids practice on fields with no goal lines, no bleachers, no uprights, and no home field advantage.” She recounted an incident that played into her decision to become more involved and help change perceptions about the students at her inner-city school. While at a game, she overheard a chain-link crew (assistant referees that measure downs) talking among themselves as they berated visiting Bassick athletes with demeaning comments.  “They were ignorant and I was appalled. They had no idea what our kids go through to get to there” said an incredulous Silver.

 

    Bassick High, the only Fairfield County Interscholastic Athletic Conference (FCIAC) school without its own sports facilities, is forced to hold team practices at Went Field Park, an off-site public park where athletes often endure distractions of noise, traffic, and even verbal abuse from some park goers. Games are played at Kennedy Stadium, a City park that is actually the home field for Bridgeport’s Central High School.

Unlike other schools where teams stroll out of their lockers onto a home field, Bassick football players walk four urban blocks, often in inclement weather, to get to practice.  “Practice at Bassick is very tough” explained athlete-narrator Keith Teele - “Other schools have their own fields, their own lights, their own water supply, their own everything. We have a public park where people are everyday, bothering us with their nonsense. Our practice field is surrounded by the hood. There’s a lot of gang activity and violence going on while we try to practice. Sometimes people ride dirt bikes and motorcycles through our field so we have to duck and dodge them.” Also featured in “The Pride of the Lions” is Bassick’s gritty soccer team. School hallways serve as make-shift locker rooms for the team. Bus transportation to their off-campus pract ice site remains problematic, with occasional hour-long waits or no-shows. Football and soccer teams practiced at Went Field Park until recently, when soccer coaches decided to move their team to a place they could embrace as their own.  Assistant coach Michael Silver, Kathy Silver’s husband, explained: “We decided to move practices and home games to Seaside Park in an effort to create a home for ourselves. [Though] we still face obstacles like poorly maintained fields, tattered nets and no benches for the team to sit on.”  The team has grown to appreciate the natural elements and beach terrain they nick-named “The Sandpit,” as assets in their training. Team captain Alex Andujar, said coaches Hanaif and Silver taught the team that they “can make something from nothing” and the team earned a winning record last season to prove it. The documentary celebrates the team’s remarkable change in culture from that of perennial lose rs, to qualifiers in the State Soccer Championship Tournament for the first time in over 30 years.

 

    Mrs. Silver credited the athletic program’s turnaround to a change in coaches two years ago and a shift to higher expectations, in addition to inspiring “heart, jive and spirit” among the athletes. She hopes the film will help build on that momentum and deliver a positive statement about the character and capabilities of the school and its students. It was head football coach Frank Marcucio who originally suggested submitting a documentary to the highly competitive New York International Film Festival (NYIFF). As with the Friday Night Feats contest highlight, which figures into the NYIFF submission, the completed entry would require an extraordinary production effort under the pressure of an imminent submission deadline. 

 

    On July 24, Silver (bottom left) took a group of 13 students to the festival screening of “The Pride of the Lions” at New York’s Village East Street Cinemas. For some of the students, train and subway rides were a first-time experience, along with the honor of attending the highly-regarded festival. The film’s screening generated enthusiastic applause and excitement, drawing considerable attention to the Bassick contingent after the lights went up.  “It was important that students were with me,” said Silver, “I like students being exposed to opportunities that empower.”

 

    Silver started getting emails from Festival organizers a couple of week ago indicating that the Bassick Lions have once again, triumphed over extremely long odds. She will be attending a ceremony in New York City in the Spring of 2011, to receive the Festival’s award for Best Sports Documentary.

 

“The Lions Den,” a cable show produced by Silver’s classes can be viewed on Public Access channel 78, at 9:30 a.m./ p.m. throughout the year.  The show, which received a Tommy Award from The SoundView Media Center last year, will be re-screening “The Pride of the Lions” as part of the program beginning at month?s end. “I do not know what this coming school year will bring” said Silver, “I do know that whatever we do, it will reflect the pride, passion, and higher standards set by past students.”

 

 

 

Bridgeport Sound Tigers Hockey Club's

Cool Fun 101

Educational Day Game

 

   

    On Wednesday, November 3, 2010 at 11am the Arena at Harboryard,  3500 Greater Bridgeport students will watch as the Bridgeport Sound Tigers face off against the Springfield Falcons during the Annual "Cool Fun 101" game. The event stresses the importance of a quality education partnered with hockey.

 

"By having this game we are promoting the importance of education regardless of whether you're a second grade student or a player for the Sound Tigers," said Sound Tigers' President Howard Saffan.

 

This event is sponsored by Click it or Ticket - Department of Transportation and People's Bank.

 

 

Sweet Dreams to Come for Bridgeport Students in Need through the Pajama Program

 

 

 In an effort to aid Bridgeport scholars who may be financially disadvantaged, the Bridgeport Public Schools will collect new pajamas and books for children of all ages. On Tuesday, November 9, 2010 the BPS will kick off the first round of deliveries for the Pajama Program.

 

    The event is scheduled for 10:00 a.m. in City Hall Council Chambers at 45 Lyon Terrace in Bridgeport.

 

    The Pajama Program, a 501(c)(3) organization, provides comfort and love in the way of new pajamas and books to children-in-need, many waiting and hoping to be adopted. Snuggling up in new, warm pajamas with their very own book to read gives lonely children a secure and nurturing bedtime environment.  Please help make a difference by: donating new pajamas—all sizes are needed, donati ng new books, and/or make a financial donation.

 

    Although BPS is making an effort to support and nurture Bridgeport youths through this event, the Pajama Program has traditionally served many children that have been abused or those who have been abandoned, and have never enjoyed the feeling of having a mother or father tuck them in with a story at bedtime.

 

Pajamas and books are needed for all children/scholars.

 

    For more information about the Pajama Program, please visit their website atwww.pajamaprogram.org.

 

Aquaculture School's Wave of

Open House Events

 

 

Parents and students are cordially invited to attend the Bridgeport Regional Aquaculture Science and Technology Education Center's Open House Events scheduled for Thursday, October 28 and Tuesday, November 9 from 6-7:30pm on both nights.

  

    The recent completion of a $31.5 million expansion to the existing facilities offers secondary students a unique opportunity to investigate, evaluate, research and create in an environment that is global in scope and virtually infinite in possiblities.

 

Geraldine W. Johnson School

Witnesses History in the Making

(courtesy of the CT Post)

    Often when Geraldine W. Johnson comes to the school named after her students passing by in the halls will turn around to stare and wave. Sometimes there is a hug.

 

    "When that happens I know their teacher has said `That's Mrs. Johnson," said the 92-year-old Johnson in a whisper from the two-year-old school's library Friday before the start of a History Makers Day assembly.

 

    A program designed to bring young people face to face with African-Americans who have made history, Johnson seemed to relish the role of living legend, answering questions and telling the pre-K through eighth grade school's upper classmen that teaching seventh and eighth grade was always her favorite.

 

    A lifelong Bridgeport resident Johnson, was the city's first African-American school superintendent, a position she held from 1969 to 1976. She later served as an Interim Superintendent of Fairfield schools and Associate Dean of Fairfield University. In retirement, she has served in many roles, including director of the Council on Adolescent Pregnancy, and has received honorary doctorate from Sacred Heart University, Fairfield University, and University of Bridgeport.

 

    The Board of Education broke with tradition in 2008 when it decided to name the new school being built on the corner of North and Lexington Avenues after someone who was alive.Johnson comes to the school as often as someone will pick her up from her home at 3030 Park Ave. and bring her there. Next week she will be there to do a read aloud. Friday was about telling students the secrets to her success.

 

    "I am absolutely certain that if students work hard and focus on their education not only will they succeed this year and the rest of their lives, but America will succeed too," said Johnson. As a child growing up on the city's East End, Johnson was the third of seven children. Her idea of fun was playing hopscotch, and especially school.

 

    Destiny Douglas, 12, asked if it was hard to become a teacher. Johnson told her about commuting by train every day to the New Haven Teachers College – now Southern Connecticut State University -- to get a degree and competing for the job with others. Destiny confided her dream is to become a singer.

 

    Johnson came to the program with Barbara Clemons, who was one of her seventh students at McKinley School in 1949. From the front row in the cafeteria, Clemons called Johnson a strict teacher, in a very kind way.

 

    Denajha Bogle asked Johnson why she decided to stay in Bridgeport.

 

    Johnson said for her, it’s always been a good place to be.

Malaysia Douglas asked what the "W" stood for. Johnson told them Whiting, her mother's maiden name.

 

    "How hard was it to achieve your goals?" asked Gabriella Moss, a seventh- grader.

 

    Johnson said it wasn't easy to go to school or to college. "Yes it's hard ... but there are things you have to do to achieve whatever it is you want to do. I would say it’s worth the journey."

 

Columbus School TAG Program

Takes Flight with Sikorsky Aircraft's

Recycled Helicopter Project

 

 

    The Columbus School 7th and 8th grade TAG Program, under the direction of teacher Ron Rapice, has partnered with Sikorsky Aircraft on a helicopter design project. The Sikorsky team members and the Columbus students have combined art, technology, and creativity to creat Sikorsky model helicopters from recycled materials.

 

   The program's goals include introducing students to Sikorsky Aircraft and its history; to educate students to engineering concepts from materials used; to demonstrate how helicopters are designed and built; and to give an appreciation, knowledge and benefits of recycling.

 

    The program is designed to foster positive team involvement and participation.

 

 

This message was sent from Veronica Douglas-Givan to vdouglas-givan@bridgeportedu.net. It was sent from: EBM, Inc., 45 Lyon Terrace, Rm 308, Bridgeport, CT 06604. You can modify/update your subscription via the link below.

Email Marketing by
iContact - Try It Free!

 

Manage your subscription