Sending Our Hearts

Sending Our Hearts

A small group of Upper School students wanted to show solidarity with the Parkland students and to honor those lives lost in school shootings this week, so they decided to have students stand in a formation of a heart during morning break. Fifth and sixth graders will take part in their afternoon break and seventh through twelfth graders did so on their morning break.  Students will stand together in silent commemoration for the 17 lives lost and to show their care for all victims of gun violence in schools.
Advisory Scavengers

Advisory Scavengers

This week the Middle School Community Council organized a scavenger hunt using clues written in the Daily Bulletin indicating a location in the school. One student from each advisory competed by racing to that location to find a faculty member holding a dress down pass for their advisory.  Ms. Coppola-Klein’s class won the first clue, which directed them to the Music Room.  The Scavenger Hunt is a great way to wake up the brain and body and remind students to get to advisory on time!
Pi is like love: real, irrational & never-ending!

Pi is like love: real, irrational & never-ending!

For Pi Day, middle school students took part in the annual competition to see who could memorize the greatest number of digits for this never-ending irrational number. The winners in each grade competed for the title. In fourth place was sixth grader Charlotte Lin, who memorized 28 digits, and fifth grader Sophia Smith memorized 107 digits. Second place finisher and repeat finalist was eighth grader Bruno Bakel, who recited 113 numbers, and in first place was repeat finalist Audrey Kim, who memorized 121 digits. For each winner, and a few lucky individuals who bought raffle tickets, they had the ultimate reward: a delicious pie baked by the teachers to bring home and the chance to hurl whipped cream at their math teachers and other brave volunteers. Bottoms up!

Seniors on the Road

Seniors on the Road

Last week while the rest of the Upper School took part the PSATs, seniors went on various field trips and took part in community service projects.  One group visited the Harriet Tubman Museum at Church Creek, MD. Another visited a Food Bank, and another went to the African-American museum. A final group took part in Latin Soul, the soup and sandwich distribution to the homeless that Ms. Foster organizes each week.

Scientific Symposium

Scientific Symposium

 Last week twelve biology students joined Ms. Jost to attend the Junior Science and Humanities Symposium at Georgetown University. At the symposium, students heard from faculty speakers including a neuroscientist and an astrophysicist, toured different science labs, and evaluated peer research presentations.
Poetry Pride

Poetry Pride

Sophomore Felicity Ryan won the 2018 D.C. Poetry Out Loud citywide competition. Latin’s champion competed against 9 other finalists to take the title, and she will now proceed to the national Poetry Out Loud Finals April 23-25.  Her stunning renditions of “A Boat Beneath a Sunny Sky” by Lewis Carroll, “The Children’s Hour” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and “Time does not bring relief; you all have lied” by Edna St. Vincent Millay earned her a first place finish for the city along $500 in poetry books for the school and a $200 cash prize for herself.  We wish her continued success in the finals!