Category Archives: Community Notes

Safe Routes to School yard sign contest – deadline extended!

Massachusetts Safe Routes to School has extended their deadline to May 1st for their annual yard sign design contest. This year’s theme is eliminating distracted driving, especially in and around school zones. The contest is a way for students to use their creativity to help promote safe routes for cyclists and pedestrians in their communities. Winning entries will be made into yard signs – signs from prior years are on display around Newton.

Signs may be hand drawn or created digitally. Either way, please submit them digitally; also, a school signature is no longer needed unless your student’s design is selected as a winner.

The contest is open to students in grades 2-8. Guidelines and more details here: https://www.mass.gov/doc/yard-sign-design-contest-signups-and-guidelines-2020/download. Direct questions to NewtonSafeRoutes@gmail.com.

Newton South Faculty and Staff Variety Show on Zoom!

Announcing the Faculty and Staff Variety Show on Zoom! Saturday, April 18th, at 7:00 pm.

See Newton South faculty and staff members sing and dance (mostly sing) for an evening of joy and humor to celebrate our community, even at a distance.

Click Here on Saturday night for the show–from 7:00 – 9:00 pm.

Your enthusiastic hosts,
Rachel Becker, Tori Parker, and Alan Reinstein

Project Driveway: Grocery Delivery to Help Prevent the Spread of COVID-19

Project Driveway is a group of students from a variety of schools in the Greater Boston area such as Brookline High School, Newton South High School, Needham High School, and more. With school out and not much to do, we decided to invest our time and energy into giving back to the amazing communities during this time of crisis. The COVID-19 pandemic is causing many elderly and immunocompromised residents to be a lot more vulnerable than they previously have been, and that makes it a lot more difficult for them to get the groceries we need. Us teenagers are significantly less susceptible to the coronavirus so we can go and get the specific groceries that others need. Our volunteers will go to grocery stores around the area, pick up groceries, and bring them right to the driveways of those in need. We all follow strict sanitization guidelines which can be viewed here in order to prevent the spread of the virus and ensure that the people we deliver food to stay safe.

More here: Project Driveway

Newton Schools Foundation grants $85,500 to NPS for student access to online learning

Newton Schools Foundation this week approved a grant of up to $85,500 for the Newton Public Schools to purchase 300 Chromebooks for students who need access to online learning during school closures. NSF is committed to closing gaps in achievement and opportunity as part of its mission to advance educational excellence and equity in the Newton Public Schools. When the schools closed unexpectedly, NSF committed to working with school administrators to make available the balance of unrestricted NSF grant funds for this year for emerging system needs due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The district has already distributed more than 400 Chromebooks to families. As additional requests for Chromebooks continue to come in, this NSF grant will help the Newton Public Schools fulfill the need to support remote learning for students who otherwise wouldn’t have access to educational opportunities online. For more information or to donate click www.newtonschoolsfoundation.org.

Student Volunteer Group for COVID-19

Learn about the Greater Boston hub of Students Against Corona, a worldwide student volunteer organization. This organization works to connect low-risk volunteers to at-risk people to help them with everyday tasks such as grocery shopping, walking the dog, etc.

Recently, the worldwide organization has been getting media attention such as the Oxford branch appearing on a BBC News article. Let’s help to spread awareness to better help our community during this crisis. Please click here to see the flyer with additional information.

Feedthefight

In partnership with the Rotary Club of Newton, FeedthefightBoston was founded to support local restaurants by feeding healthcare workers on the frontlines of COVID-19. Within the first week of operation, FeedthefightBoston raised enough to feed more than 1,000 healthcare workers in 4 major hospitals with healthy meals purchased from local Newton restaurants.

Donations of $500.00 or greater allow donors to select a favorite restaurant for a meal delivery donation.

Please visit www.feedthefightbos.com  or Facebook at FeedthefightBoston or Instagram at FeedthefightBoston

Virtual Guitar Teacher for Beginners

Check out a great opportunity for kids/parents sheltering at home. You just need a guitar and desire to have fun and learn some chords and songs. Half hour lessons. Max Greenberg can get you started and advance your level.

It’s lots of fun. Mandolin beginners too. Please contact him at Max_Greenberg@yahoo.com for more information.

Free SAT/ACT Prep Test & Review Program

Kyoko Horowitz, Artistic Director of the Boston Music Institute (BMI), announces a wonderful academic program being provided by former BMI students under their academic firm CPC Boston. Please click below for information about Free SAT/ACT Prep and Review Programs that they will be holding for two weeks from April 13th to the 26th.

SAT/ACT Prep and Review Programs

 

Need Help? Want to Help? In many languages

 

Created by: Newton Neighbors Helping Newton Neighbors

Parent Tips for at Home Structured Learning Environments

By Alison Malkin, NNHS Prevention/Intervention Counselor

This is an unprecedented time that is causing uncertainty and worry. Parents/guardians are juggling their own employment and familial health concerns and are asked to assist their children and teens with academic enrichment. The CDC states that “consistency, predictability, and follow-through” are the keys to creating structure (CDC, 2019) and it matters little that the focus of this article is for younger children. This list provides suggestions and resources for building that structure.

1. Acknowledge that this is a surreal and stressful time and that having a schedule and routine can truly help normalize what is atypical.

2. Establish a time to wake up. Creating a wake/sleep routine prepares everyone for the day ahead. Although teens would love to sleep until 3pm and go to sleep at 3am it is very important to maintain a healthy wake/sleep pattern. And they may well argue with you but remember it is their job to push the envelope and your job to set limits and say no. The longer they are able to have a relatively healthy sleep and wake routine the easier it will be for them to access their muscle memory of learning.

3. Agree on a time to have a “family meeting” to plan out the day and the expectations.

4. Showering and changing clothes each morning helps prepare for the day.

5. Be sure to include time for breaks, meals, and a walk outside or virtual time with friends or exercising or meditation and, if possible, include some humor together. “Lightening the mood” does help.

6. Make a plan for where your children/teens will complete the enrichment work. It is all too easy for teens to seek their beds when doing work but that will only accomplish creating fatigue and a desire to fall asleep (Division of Sleep Medicine at Harvard University, 2007). Encourage them to use a desk or table – somewhere their bodies/brains will learn that this is the place to be focused and learn.

7. Ask about the work they are doing and talk about the process. This is new to them and if you are working from home there may be new tasks you are learning. Share with them your challenges and frustrations. [My 20 year old had to help me with the camera of my laptop. He’s still laughing.]

8. The ages of your children will determine how long they can stay focused and absorb material. For younger children, 20 minutes of an assignment followed by 10 minutes of physical exercise may work effectively and longer stretches for older children (healthychildren.org, 2020).

9. Let your children know what your work schedule is (either from home or from work) so they are aware of your availability and when your work day is over.

10. Encourage everyone in the home to stay hydrated: drinking water is so important.

11. Reach out to your children’s teachers, counselors, administrators. Please know you are not alone and we are a community working together.

References and Resources

American Academy of Pediatrics, 2020. Working and learning from home during the COVID-19 outbreak. Retrieved on March 25, 2020 from www.healthychildren.org/English/health-issues/conditions/chest-lungs/Pages/Working-an d-Learning-from-Home-During-the-COVID-19-Outbreak.aspx

CDC, 2019. Building structure. Retrieved on March 25, 2020 from https://www.cdc.gov/parents/essentials/structure/building.html

Division of Sleep Medicine at Harvard University. Twelve simple tips to improve your sleep. Retrieved on March 25, 2020 from http://healthysleep.med.harvard.edu/healthy/getting/overcoming/tips

Quartz, 2020. We are all teachers now: resources for parents and kids cooped up at home. Retrieved on March 25, 2020 from https://qz.com/1819166/how-to-teach-your-kids-at-home/