I. hate. flies. September 30, 2021 — by George Huang You’re sitting in class and trying to pay attention. It’s 90 degrees outside and nearly as hot inside with classroom doors always open for COVID-19 prevention. You sweat in your seat as a tiny swarm of black monsters begins to circle your head. You try to ignore the droning of their wings until your head […] read more » New rough/final draft test format harms students in the long run September 20, 2021 — by Benjamin Li and Nilay Mishra With in-person learning beginning to resemble what school looked like before the pandemic, it would be expected that testing would revert to normal, closed-book testing. Several math teachers in AP Calculus AB and AP Statistics, however, are now adopting a rough/final draft system for tests in order to ease the transition between remote and in-person […] read more » 100 Word Rants September 17, 2021 — by Vicky Bai, Apurva Chakravarthy, Sarah Zhou and Zachary Zinman Is a school lunch potato worth $5? $5 — baked potato, the school lunch menu read. Beneath the aluminum foil, I expected — at the very least — a fluffy, golden potato topped with sour cream, bacon, butter and cheese. As I removed the foil, my high hopes for potato nirvana were crushed. It was […] read more » Staff editorial – Title IX: topic too big for tutorial September 17, 2021 — by Andy Chen and Esther Luan Students may recall a wondrous feeling of freedom upon hearing the bell ring at the end of second period on Friday during the first week of school, signaling the start of tutorial. Most students then remember the sudden drop in their stomach when their second-period teacher proceeded to inform the class that all students had […] read more » Controversial testing framework makes changes for the better September 10, 2021 — by Michael Fok In the stressful year of online learning, the novel rough/final draft testing format has revolutionized test-taking. In this system, students take the test during class as a rough draft graded on completion; they then revise their rough draft with an open-book policy to be submitted as a final draft for test credit. This new form […] read more » No right turn on red: Prevent blocked intersections on Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road September 9, 2021 — by Shaan Sridhar Not many of us enjoy being late to school, especially if it happens regularly. But it’s so much worse when you leave 30 minutes before school starts, only to be delayed by flawed traffic laws favoring those from a different part of town. Buckle up for some metaphors and allow me to explain. It’s story […] read more » California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
New rough/final draft test format harms students in the long run September 20, 2021 — by Benjamin Li and Nilay Mishra With in-person learning beginning to resemble what school looked like before the pandemic, it would be expected that testing would revert to normal, closed-book testing. Several math teachers in AP Calculus AB and AP Statistics, however, are now adopting a rough/final draft system for tests in order to ease the transition between remote and in-person […] read more » 100 Word Rants September 17, 2021 — by Vicky Bai, Apurva Chakravarthy, Sarah Zhou and Zachary Zinman Is a school lunch potato worth $5? $5 — baked potato, the school lunch menu read. Beneath the aluminum foil, I expected — at the very least — a fluffy, golden potato topped with sour cream, bacon, butter and cheese. As I removed the foil, my high hopes for potato nirvana were crushed. It was […] read more » Staff editorial – Title IX: topic too big for tutorial September 17, 2021 — by Andy Chen and Esther Luan Students may recall a wondrous feeling of freedom upon hearing the bell ring at the end of second period on Friday during the first week of school, signaling the start of tutorial. Most students then remember the sudden drop in their stomach when their second-period teacher proceeded to inform the class that all students had […] read more » Controversial testing framework makes changes for the better September 10, 2021 — by Michael Fok In the stressful year of online learning, the novel rough/final draft testing format has revolutionized test-taking. In this system, students take the test during class as a rough draft graded on completion; they then revise their rough draft with an open-book policy to be submitted as a final draft for test credit. This new form […] read more » No right turn on red: Prevent blocked intersections on Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road September 9, 2021 — by Shaan Sridhar Not many of us enjoy being late to school, especially if it happens regularly. But it’s so much worse when you leave 30 minutes before school starts, only to be delayed by flawed traffic laws favoring those from a different part of town. Buckle up for some metaphors and allow me to explain. It’s story […] read more » California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
100 Word Rants September 17, 2021 — by Vicky Bai, Apurva Chakravarthy, Sarah Zhou and Zachary Zinman Is a school lunch potato worth $5? $5 — baked potato, the school lunch menu read. Beneath the aluminum foil, I expected — at the very least — a fluffy, golden potato topped with sour cream, bacon, butter and cheese. As I removed the foil, my high hopes for potato nirvana were crushed. It was […] read more » Staff editorial – Title IX: topic too big for tutorial September 17, 2021 — by Andy Chen and Esther Luan Students may recall a wondrous feeling of freedom upon hearing the bell ring at the end of second period on Friday during the first week of school, signaling the start of tutorial. Most students then remember the sudden drop in their stomach when their second-period teacher proceeded to inform the class that all students had […] read more » Controversial testing framework makes changes for the better September 10, 2021 — by Michael Fok In the stressful year of online learning, the novel rough/final draft testing format has revolutionized test-taking. In this system, students take the test during class as a rough draft graded on completion; they then revise their rough draft with an open-book policy to be submitted as a final draft for test credit. This new form […] read more » No right turn on red: Prevent blocked intersections on Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road September 9, 2021 — by Shaan Sridhar Not many of us enjoy being late to school, especially if it happens regularly. But it’s so much worse when you leave 30 minutes before school starts, only to be delayed by flawed traffic laws favoring those from a different part of town. Buckle up for some metaphors and allow me to explain. It’s story […] read more » California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
Staff editorial – Title IX: topic too big for tutorial September 17, 2021 — by Andy Chen and Esther Luan Students may recall a wondrous feeling of freedom upon hearing the bell ring at the end of second period on Friday during the first week of school, signaling the start of tutorial. Most students then remember the sudden drop in their stomach when their second-period teacher proceeded to inform the class that all students had […] read more » Controversial testing framework makes changes for the better September 10, 2021 — by Michael Fok In the stressful year of online learning, the novel rough/final draft testing format has revolutionized test-taking. In this system, students take the test during class as a rough draft graded on completion; they then revise their rough draft with an open-book policy to be submitted as a final draft for test credit. This new form […] read more » No right turn on red: Prevent blocked intersections on Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road September 9, 2021 — by Shaan Sridhar Not many of us enjoy being late to school, especially if it happens regularly. But it’s so much worse when you leave 30 minutes before school starts, only to be delayed by flawed traffic laws favoring those from a different part of town. Buckle up for some metaphors and allow me to explain. It’s story […] read more » California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
Controversial testing framework makes changes for the better September 10, 2021 — by Michael Fok In the stressful year of online learning, the novel rough/final draft testing format has revolutionized test-taking. In this system, students take the test during class as a rough draft graded on completion; they then revise their rough draft with an open-book policy to be submitted as a final draft for test credit. This new form […] read more » No right turn on red: Prevent blocked intersections on Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road September 9, 2021 — by Shaan Sridhar Not many of us enjoy being late to school, especially if it happens regularly. But it’s so much worse when you leave 30 minutes before school starts, only to be delayed by flawed traffic laws favoring those from a different part of town. Buckle up for some metaphors and allow me to explain. It’s story […] read more » California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
No right turn on red: Prevent blocked intersections on Saratoga-Sunnyvale Road September 9, 2021 — by Shaan Sridhar Not many of us enjoy being late to school, especially if it happens regularly. But it’s so much worse when you leave 30 minutes before school starts, only to be delayed by flawed traffic laws favoring those from a different part of town. Buckle up for some metaphors and allow me to explain. It’s story […] read more » California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
California recall elections are fundamentally flawed September 9, 2021 — by Nilay Mishra California governor recall elections, such as the one Newsom faced on Sept. 14, are simply political maneuvers by a minority of overzealous conservatives in a predominantly blue state. Given the ease of starting a recall in the state, they occur with astonishing frequency. Not only does this repeatedly distract the incumbent governor from running the […] read more » New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
New bell schedule lacks consistency and wastes too much time September 8, 2021 — by Ethan Lin This year, the school board elected to change the bell schedule in order to shore up the instructional minutes at both Saratoga and Los Gatos, among other reasons. Although well-intentioned, from a student’s perspective, the new bell schedule limits productivity and instead creates a new set of issues: most notably, inconsistencies across Red and Blue […] read more » An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
An asynchronous Wednesday reflection: When we needed them most, they vanished June 5, 2021 — by Anjali Pai The last four weeks of school have been a slog, and that is generous. read more » Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast
Performance activism can be a cop out without meaningful change June 5, 2021 — by Harshini Velchamy and Tiffany Wang Bringing awareness without providing specific ways to take action leaves issues the same as it was before. read more » firstprevious...1020...3132333435...4050607080...nextlast