Students should not view schedules as a rough draft September 4, 2015 — by Sweeya Raj When students decide on what classes to take in the spring, many decisions are made with the mindset that they can sign up for difficult classes and just drop them later if the workload seems overwhelming, causing unnecessary inconveniences. read more » 100 Word Rants September 4, 2015 — by Kevin Chow and Shreya Tumu Rants about Trump and Miley Cyrus, and Hillary Clinton. read more » Both at-home essays and in-class essays are necessary September 3, 2015 — by Frederick Kim Whether in-class or take-home, each type of essay has its purpose. With at-home essays comes great pressure, because having more time and resources means being graded more harshly. At the same time, the more stressful in-class essay prevents procrastination and pushes students to think faster. read more » Facebook’s usefulness wanes September 2, 2015 — by Claire Rhee Facebook is no longer the social media site that everyone is obsessed with. read more » AP classes should give more practice problems and tests May 28, 2015 — by Jenny Qian AP teachers should administer more AP practice tests and integrate more AP style practice problems into their courses prior to the real tests. This will help students perform better while also alleviating their last-minute cramming stress. read more » Election changes limit student involvement May 21, 2015 — by Summer Smith Although the new rules allow more students to get involved in ASB, few students actually want to do so. Students should not be limited in the number of student government positions they can run or apply for simply because there are not enough people who have the desire to get involved. This leaves those who are passionate about bettering the school unable to make as significant of an impact as they want. read more » The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
100 Word Rants September 4, 2015 — by Kevin Chow and Shreya Tumu Rants about Trump and Miley Cyrus, and Hillary Clinton. read more » Both at-home essays and in-class essays are necessary September 3, 2015 — by Frederick Kim Whether in-class or take-home, each type of essay has its purpose. With at-home essays comes great pressure, because having more time and resources means being graded more harshly. At the same time, the more stressful in-class essay prevents procrastination and pushes students to think faster. read more » Facebook’s usefulness wanes September 2, 2015 — by Claire Rhee Facebook is no longer the social media site that everyone is obsessed with. read more » AP classes should give more practice problems and tests May 28, 2015 — by Jenny Qian AP teachers should administer more AP practice tests and integrate more AP style practice problems into their courses prior to the real tests. This will help students perform better while also alleviating their last-minute cramming stress. read more » Election changes limit student involvement May 21, 2015 — by Summer Smith Although the new rules allow more students to get involved in ASB, few students actually want to do so. Students should not be limited in the number of student government positions they can run or apply for simply because there are not enough people who have the desire to get involved. This leaves those who are passionate about bettering the school unable to make as significant of an impact as they want. read more » The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
Both at-home essays and in-class essays are necessary September 3, 2015 — by Frederick Kim Whether in-class or take-home, each type of essay has its purpose. With at-home essays comes great pressure, because having more time and resources means being graded more harshly. At the same time, the more stressful in-class essay prevents procrastination and pushes students to think faster. read more » Facebook’s usefulness wanes September 2, 2015 — by Claire Rhee Facebook is no longer the social media site that everyone is obsessed with. read more » AP classes should give more practice problems and tests May 28, 2015 — by Jenny Qian AP teachers should administer more AP practice tests and integrate more AP style practice problems into their courses prior to the real tests. This will help students perform better while also alleviating their last-minute cramming stress. read more » Election changes limit student involvement May 21, 2015 — by Summer Smith Although the new rules allow more students to get involved in ASB, few students actually want to do so. Students should not be limited in the number of student government positions they can run or apply for simply because there are not enough people who have the desire to get involved. This leaves those who are passionate about bettering the school unable to make as significant of an impact as they want. read more » The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
Facebook’s usefulness wanes September 2, 2015 — by Claire Rhee Facebook is no longer the social media site that everyone is obsessed with. read more » AP classes should give more practice problems and tests May 28, 2015 — by Jenny Qian AP teachers should administer more AP practice tests and integrate more AP style practice problems into their courses prior to the real tests. This will help students perform better while also alleviating their last-minute cramming stress. read more » Election changes limit student involvement May 21, 2015 — by Summer Smith Although the new rules allow more students to get involved in ASB, few students actually want to do so. Students should not be limited in the number of student government positions they can run or apply for simply because there are not enough people who have the desire to get involved. This leaves those who are passionate about bettering the school unable to make as significant of an impact as they want. read more » The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
AP classes should give more practice problems and tests May 28, 2015 — by Jenny Qian AP teachers should administer more AP practice tests and integrate more AP style practice problems into their courses prior to the real tests. This will help students perform better while also alleviating their last-minute cramming stress. read more » Election changes limit student involvement May 21, 2015 — by Summer Smith Although the new rules allow more students to get involved in ASB, few students actually want to do so. Students should not be limited in the number of student government positions they can run or apply for simply because there are not enough people who have the desire to get involved. This leaves those who are passionate about bettering the school unable to make as significant of an impact as they want. read more » The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
Election changes limit student involvement May 21, 2015 — by Summer Smith Although the new rules allow more students to get involved in ASB, few students actually want to do so. Students should not be limited in the number of student government positions they can run or apply for simply because there are not enough people who have the desire to get involved. This leaves those who are passionate about bettering the school unable to make as significant of an impact as they want. read more » The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
The benefits of summer classes May 20, 2015 — by Apoorv Kwatra and Neehar Thumaty Summer prep classes are a great tool to get ahead in certain subjects while also learning new material that may not be taught in school. read more » More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
More uniform grade policies necessary for academic fairness May 18, 2015 — by Caitlin Ju and Amulya Vadlakonda On the first day of school, you’re flooded with multicolored syllabuses from each of your classes. You immediately check the rounding policies and dedicate yourself to keeping them straight for the rest of the year. Your math teacher doesn’t round up, your science teacher does and your English and history teachers both do, but only between a B+ and an A-. read more » 100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
100 Word Rants May 18, 2015 — by Cassandra King, Isabelle Tseng, Oksana Trifonova and Jason Zhao Rants about school starting earlier each year, the smarter balanced tests, fanfictions, and badminton. read more » Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast
Going stag to prom is a viable option April 26, 2015 — by Megan MacInnes Going single to prom is a viable option for anyone, and doesn’t detract from the fun of the event in any way. read more » firstprevious...1020304050...114115116117118...130140150160170...nextlast