NEWS

 

SCHOOL NEWS

Read about what is happening at Latin!

History in the Making

History in the Making

The Upper School Black Lives Matter club, advised by Mr. Torrence and led by senior Zoe Edelman and junior Nia Matthews-Cox, highlighted Black History this week with various activities devoted to African American leaders and writers. On Monday, the club honored Langston Hughes with a reading of his poem “Dreams” in the Daily Bulletin. On Tuesday, the club invited middle schoolers to join the club on Tuesday for a special presentation on activism. The club encouraged students to utilize social media and conversations with friends to highlight African American figures in politics, history, activism, art, and literature and to wear black on Friday as a symbol of solidarity. The middle school will have an assembly February 24th focused on Black History month, and students may submit photography, poetry, art, essays, or other artifacts to share at the assembly with Ms. Bradley

South African Adventure

South African Adventure

Fifth grader Julian Skolnik’s mother, Erica Skolnik, shared some of her impressions of South Africa with Ms. Mujal’s fifth grade geography class on January 12. She and her family traveled there for four weeks in 2010. She shared photos from the trip and we learned about the varied wildlife, including baboons and penguins there. She shared the view of Cape Town from the top of Table Mountain and showed us what a township looked like then. She also shared photos of Nelson Mandela’s house in Soweto and the apartheid museum there. The fifth grade geography class has been studying the continent of Africa, and is currently reading a book entitled A Long Walk to Water by Linda Sue Park, which is about Sudanese refugee Salva Dut’s life

Cheers for Certamen!

Cheers for Certamen!

On Saturday 3 teams from Washington Latin competed at the Virtual Flint Hill Certamen tournament. Eighth graders Sophia Smith, Ben Blier, and Niamh O’Donovan came in 2nd place in the finals of the Intermediate Level, after finishing in first place for all three rounds. Eighth graders Lucia Claire, Michael Tichy, Max Aaron and Alice Pittard came in fifth place overall. Sixth graders Sadie Greenhalgh, Nora O’Donovan, Zane Wood, Orode Omatete, and Madelyn Zeller, also competed in the Novice Amateur. The team is advised by the middle school Latin teachers Ms. Rose and Ms. Sisk with additional assistance from Mr. Moore.

We’ll Bee Moving On!

The schoolwide spelling bee resulted in a three-way tie between eighth grader Niamh O’Donovan, seventh grader Reva Kelly, and sixth grader Gideon Chaffee. These three will proceed to the Cluster Bee, which will be on the online platform in which they will compete against spellers from other nearby schools. Kelly and O’Donovan both attended the Citywide Bee last year. 

Hands on Science

Upper school students have continued to evaluate scientific ideas using hands-on labs and experiments. Students will be showcasing some of their research in February at the digital science fair. Recently senior Hawa Sturr conducted an experimental taste test of organic vs store bought fruits for A.P. Environmental Science with her sister and two senior peers in her quarantine bubble. They correctly guessed which was which at about an 80 to 90 percent success rate, across 4 different fruits and a beverage. The organic products were all produced within 100 miles from DC, and the store bought were all shipped from over 500 miles from DC.