Monday, October 15, 2012

Post #12 Quick Story Monday - Contents of Mysterious Quad Box Revealed

As students began classes in September, they were greeted by a mysterious maroon boxcar-like object sitting in the quad, looming over them as they shuffle from class to class. What did that enigmatic box hold? A cache of jewels? A time machine? A portal to a magical snow-covered forest? Four adorable homeless children who solve mysteries?

"Masonry equipment," said TA Resource Officer Jeff Cook in late October. "You know how they're fixing that wall on the main building? That's what that is."

Disappointing.

According to Cook, the Quad Box (as it has come to be affectionately referred to) belongs to a portable storage company and has been rented by P&G Masonry Restoration, Inc. in order to store tools and materials needed to restore the wall of the main building annex. Over the course of the past few months,  workers have been steadily repairing the wall after school hours.

"And I think they're done," said Cook. "It'll probably be gone soon."

The Quad Box most likely contains bricks, wheelbarrows, shovels and trowels, masonry hammers and chisels, and other various construction paraphernalia. Keeping these materials on campus is easier and more convenient than lugging them back and forth to and from P&G's offices in Old Orchard Beach.

The treasured piece of TA landscape was removed at the end of October, but the dark rectangle of dirt where it once stood will forever remain as a tribute. At least until it snows.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Blog #10: Rough Draft


Rough Draft


Why Should Politics Matter to Teens?

The vast majority of teens are completely apathetic about political issues and voting. For that matter, so are the vast majority of adults. I personally plan to vote when I'm older, but right now I intend to enjoy the apathy of not-being-able-to-vote while I still can (and I think that's a popular opinion). Is that bad? Is that harmless? Why should the average teen care about something that a) they can't effect, and b) has no immediate effect upon them?

Also: Effect that views of parents have on political views of teens
Charlie Conellan
Amelia Courtney
Various other politically inclined students/alumni

Interview Non-politically inclined people. See why politics disinterests them.

Mr. Beliveau

Linda Valentino (running for state senate) - ask her this question. Get the perspective of an older professional in the field of politics - probably hasn't been asked this question too often.
http://www.lindavalentino.com/home.htm
and I'll use that contact information you gave me.

Interview Cynthia Dill - running for US senate. Ask her this question for same reasons as listed above, except more so.

On the other end of the spectrum, interview Justin Chenette (running for state Rep). He has probably been asked this question incessantly, becoming involved in politics from a very young age - and I want to know why.  His name is familiar to every Thorntonite who doesn't have their head in the ground.

You wake up every morning a half hour after your alarm. You throw your things haphazardly in a backpack, skip your breakfast, and go off to spend 6 hours at school attempting to process information your brain doesn't care to process. You come home, take a nap, procrastinate on the internet for a few hours, take a few stabs at doing homework, eat dinner, text your friends, and go to bed. Even if you're not as apathetic as this introduction is making you sound, you probably simply don't have time to care about who's president or state representative or president representative. If you're like most teenagers, you also have an extracurricular activity, family problems, or a job to worry about - not to mention that thae television doesn't watch itself. Whenever you do bother to turn on the news, it's just pundits making faces at each other and presidential candidates calling each other liars. It's just like Mean Girls, but boring. Why should you, the average teen, care about politics? Maybe I should make THIS point through interviews with students. And then have Linda Valentino and Justin Chenette respond to that through their answers to the questions.

“Because,” said Linda Valentino, current Maine state representative for District 134 and hopeful state representative, “it’s your future that we’re deciding up there.”
Valentino then immediately went to fetch an article from the Portland Press Herald from the recycle bin to further her point. The article detailed a vote by the University of Maine System’s board of trustees to extend the current tuition freeze (a government mandate restricting colleges from raising tuition). They did this, however, on the condition that the state provide $176 million a year for education and general operations at the University of Maine.
Sounds boring. But as Valentino goes on to point out, what this signifies is that the money that YOU - yes, you - will have to cough up in order to continue your education is usually decided by people like Linda Valentino: elected officials, often at a state level. The only reason many University of Maine students can still afford to go this year is because of a vote from the Maine senate and house of representatives.
Even if you don’t plan to go to college, politics still affect your life (talk about driver’s licenses, length of school year, minimum wage, # of hours you can work during school week, other stuff government affects in high school student’s life: Then move on to what affects your life after high school if you don’t go to college, or for that matter after college: taxes, ???)
“There isn’t a thing that doesn’t affect you,” said Valentino.

When 2009 TA graduate Justin Chenette was attending high school here, he interviewed many significant political figures on The Issue, TATV’s news and politics show. After one interview, he remembers that a woman running for office asked him his age. When he responded that he was 17, she replied, “Oh, you’re under eighteen. Your opinion doesn’t matter.”
“As young people, we have to make ourselves heard,” said Chenette. “You need to be informed before you turn 18 - whoever you want to be, you need to figure that out at this point in your life.”
According to the U.S. Census, the demographic of voters aged 18-29 has fallen steadily since 18-20 year-olds gained the right to vote in 1972, hitting a low in 2000. The twenty-first century, however, has seen a rise in young voters - especially in the 2008 election.
That’s one of the remarkable things Obama did with his campaign in 2008, remarks Chenette: He made young people feel like they had a voice.


-Young people do care about issues. they just need to talk about it in an engaging way. Political discourse at a teen level needs to be conversation, not just someone talking at you.

“Having young people run for office or in leadership roles can inspire other young people to either get involved, or at least learn about the issues in their community or in their own lives.”

The larger issue isn’t even politics. It’s about being immersed in the world around you, finding something you’re passionate about - and, if you don’t like something, changing it.
“If young people pursue something they’re passionate about, they end up being a productive member of society.”’

Chenette listed following ways of getting involved:

  • Volunteer/intern with campaign. Huge resume builder.
    • communication
    • leadership
    • interaction
  • Intern w/ City Hall
    • Chenette was a communications intern in high school: Even if you don’t have a direct interest in politics, there are plenty of offshoots, if you’re interested in writing, video, or any kind of media, it’s a good place to hone your abilities/start out
  • Just stay informed somehow. Just being aware of what’s going on in the world around you and what affects you. And you can affect that, even without being able to vote (see above methods)
  • Just posting on your facebook
    • “Social media can be a tool to learn to talk back, and to interact with your extended community”
    • Provides safe environment for teens to make their voices heard on issues they care about.

getting involved in current issues helps


Questions:

  1. Principal Question: Why should politics matter to teens?
  2. Were YOU interested in politics as a teen, or younger? Why?
  3. With all the shenanigans going on with the current presidential election, many people are of the opinion that politics is becoming petty and dysfunctional. Do you agree? Would you say that it's different on a local level? What are some key differences between voting for a president and voting for a state senator or representative?
  4. What can teens who are interested in these issues do to get involved?

Questions to ask normal students:
  1. Have you been following the current presidential election?
    1. If not, why?
    2. If so, what do you think of each of the candidates?
  2. Do you have any interest in local politics?
  3. Name and grade

Monday, October 1, 2012

Vocab-news-lary: Blog #9

http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-obama-romney-campaign-tactics-20120927,0,1823647.story

The Obama and Romney Campaigns' Respective Tactics
by Balthasar Salazari.

The Romney campaign has been promising a metamorphosis from their current, nonchalant nature to a stygian, supercharged campaign that will land their candidate in the White House. Republican strategists, however, would seem to think that starting a donnybrook wholloping Obama's image right away would be unwise. Besides seeming contemptuous, it could very well hurt Romney's image as well. Attempting to launch  a vicious ad campaign labeling Obama as a brigand with carte blanche over the country may come back to bite Romney, and we've seen very few ads of that sort.

Conversely, the Obama campaign has been lobbing many negative ads the republican candidate's way, seemingly hoping that enough anti-Romney incantations will magically change voters' minds. One ad features Romney's supposedly procrustean view of the 47% of Americans who don't pay taxes: another depicts Romney in interlocution with one of his GOP opponents, saying "I like to be able to fire people," as well as "I'm not concerned about the very poor." These ads exhibit the worst of politics and are rife with sophistries, taking many of Romney's quotes out of context.  The current Democratic outlook seems to have only vestiges of the hope and energy of the 2008 campaign.

Okay. . . so this has got to be the most biased thing I've ever read. We don't deal in opinion pieces, Balthasar. Rewrite it. Also, are you seriously actually thinking of voting for this guy?
-Autumn

Not all of us vote the way we do just to appear as cosmopolitan as possible.
-Balthasar

Shut up.
-Autumn