All posts by teamcomm

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Student Update April 12, 2013

Yesterday morning I started my day off in Water Polo cut doing some swimming drills with our coach Scottie.  He told us we were halfway done with our swim track, which means the super swim is getting closer everyday! We did some work on our strokes to make sure we were swimming efficiently, and finished with some all out sprints.  Swimming back the sun was rising over the trees and created a beautiful array of colors in the sky.

After a wonderful breakfast of French toast from Mooch, I headed out to Sunset Beach to complete an art project with my partner Read.  This week we have been learning about the artist Andy Goldsworthy who makes art out of the natural elements around him.  He works very patiently and delicately to make pieces of art out of stone, wood, ice, leaves, and other surrounding materials.  In class, Nadine and Maria introduced us to the idea of representing your sense of place through art and through this project. So Read and I decided to make a circular stone structure underwater. We choose to work with water because of the importance of it here at The Island School, and the circle construction was inspired from works of Andy Goldsworhty. We collected rounded stones from the beach and swam them off shore to a sandy spot about 10-15 underwater.  Documenting the whole thing, we swam down to the bottom and placed the stones in a circle.  As soon as we laid the first rocks down, juvenile parrotfish started circling the rocks and decided to treat it as their new home.  Continue reading

Student Update April 11, 2013

Hello! My name is Isabel Jamerson and I am from Seattle, Washington. I will be the new student blogger this week and I am thrilled to share some stories about The Island School life.  Tuesday morning, after our long exercise, I went out in the field with my Marine Ecology class.  This week’s focus is water, so we focused on Mangroves and how important they are in our ecosystem.  We drove to a local marina where we trudged in the water looking at the different types and aspects of mangroves.  Our teachers, Peter and Becky, taught us about how mangroves can live in salt water and how each species deals with this differently.  We then traveled back to campus where we got in the water just a mile away from The Island School.  There we snorkeled around, looking at the fish and organisms living in the mangroves.  I observed many juvenile fish hiding in the roots of the mangroves, especially the small fairy basslets. The two-inch purple and yellow fish timidly peaked their heads out of rocks and roots as we passed by, and were very hesitant to leave their protected home. We floated along the shoreline for about a half an hour identifying and observing the life around us.

On Wednesday morning, I had my Human Ecology three-hour block, where we continued to look at water.  Continue reading

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Student Leadership Update – New Cacique Council Selected

Each week, a group of students is selected for their unique potential as leaders to come together as the 5 student Cacique Council, “Cacique” meaning leader in ancient Lucayan. During that week, the group will plan special activities for their peers, run morning and evening circles, facilitate communication between students and faculty, and fulfill other important roles as needed. Members of the council are welcomed into the new role during Community Meeting, in which a public acknowledgement of each individual’s leadership qualities is read aloud. Enjoy these “Cacique Pass-Offs” written by last week’s Cacique Council. Join us in welcoming the next group of young leaders: Noelle, Hannah, Brad, Jack, and Sarah H.

I have no doubt in my mind this next outstanding individual will make an excellent Cacique. Her amazing energy and spirit is contagious between anyone she is with. Whether she’s telling stories to a running group, or performing ridiculous dances at dinner contests, she never fails to cheer people up and get people motivated. The vigor she brings to every task makes any challenge seem small. She has shown us all what it means to create an “intentional community.” Congratulations to Noelle for being elected to this week’s Cacique Council.

Hannah has really stood out for her positive attitude. She is always getting involved and trying new things like free-diving. Continue reading

Summer Opportunities for Alumni

Our friend from Ocean Research and Conservation Association (ORCA), Edie Widder, sent us these two summer opportunities that would be perfect for some of our alumni! One opportunity runs from July 13-20 and takes place between Montreal, Quebec, and Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In collaboration with Dr. Sherri Mason of SUNY Fredonia, this Pangaea Exploration is an Environmental Research and Communications course, held aboard a 72 foot Challenger sailing yacht, the Sea Dragon. Participants will get the opportunity to take part in data collection, sampling and research reporting, while also learning sailing skills and techniques. The program will also focus on ways to present current environmental issues to the world through social media, activism and community participation. For more information, please visit the course description on Pangaea’s websiteTo register, contact Asta Mail, Expedition Coordinator, at asta@panexplore.com.

Another opportunity is an Apprentice Deckhand during the Sea Dragon’s expedition to the Great Lakes ecosystem this summer. The apprenticeship runs from June 24-August 27. For more information about the apprenticeship, see the description here: Pangaea Apprenticeship. Pangaea is accepting applications for those 16 years and older until May 20, 2012. Please forward Curriculum Vitae, cover letter and letter of reference to: info@panexplore.com. 

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Student Update April 7, 2013

Hello again. There’s one thing I forgot to mention on the last post. On Monday night, there was a crazy dry lightning storm that could be seen from campus. It was decently far away, so there wasn’t too much danger. Lightning danced horizontally across the sky, lighting up the boathouse dock where many of us watched. I have to say it was one of the coolest things I have ever seen. This photo is by Cole Vanacore.

Thursday, April 4th, kicked off with an average morning exercise. Swim track had interval training while run track ran about four miles on The Loop, cutting across Sunset Beach for the view. We had classes afterwards. It was my Human Ecology class’ turn to help cook. We pulled the left over pork from Wednesday’s dinner to make tacos for lunch, and filleted Tilapia from CEI for dinner. It was nice to experience what the kitchen ladies do for us each day. Normally on Thursday afternoons we have Community Outreach, where we go down to Deep Creek Middle School. However, as our buddies at Deep Creek are on Spring Break, we had dorm bonding instead.  Continue reading

Eleutheros

The Ecology, Histories, and Literature Departments have collaborated on a series ongoing personal reflective essays called Eleutheros. Each week students are asked to write a reflective essay that demonstrates their understanding of the themes from their coursework and effectively links these themes to their unique thoughts and experiences.  For each essay, students are asked to answer a new interdisciplinary prompt which inspires an integrated reflection on class learning. Our final essay asked students look at their academic semesters holistically and consider the value of their learning. In the coming weeks, look forward to some articulate examples of how our students have deeply and personally engage with these essential questions. This week’s prompt: What is your worldview, how did it come to be, and has it been changed, challenged or enforced since you arrived at The Island School? 

By Brayden Beardsley

Having grown up in a rural town in Maine, I feel that I was sheltered from the world until I grew older. The first time I ever realized that not everyone saw things how I did was when I was six years old in Rennys. A man walked into the store carrying a small bag and was asked to leave it at the front of the store. I looked up at my mom who was also carrying a small bag, and asked her why the man had to leave his bag at the front of the store and she didn’t. She responded that some people don’t trust people who are black and that she didn’t have to leave her bag at the front of the store because the man working at the store was something called prejudice, a term a didn’t understand at the time. All I knew was that the man had been treated differently for some reason and that was wrong.

For me, my world view means how I perceive what happens around me based on my outlook and values; much like the “lens” that we talked about during our first Human Ecology class. Even from a young age, I had very strong values and morals because the aspects of my life that have affected my world view are what I care about the most. Collectively, my parents, Akihisa, Biruk and Eden, and Tom and Brandon have all worked accidentally or intentionally to shape my lens in which I view the world through.

One of my most vivid memories of Akihisa (our exchange student from Japan) was when we were just sitting on his bed talking about anything that came to mind. He told me about the differences between our cultures; how no one ever hugged anyone else (even family members), how when you reached five years old, you couldn’t use the flavored toothpaste anymore or cry unless you were physically injured, how everyone was an atheist but they all believed in ghosts, how pigs were said to say “boo, boo” instead of “oink, oink”, the list went on and on. I realize now, especially after our Histories class on the Nacirema tribe that was actually describing America, that it is very easy to judge a culture at a glance and be slightly ethnocentric, but to truly understand it, you have to delve deeper, as I was able to do with Akihisa after staying with him for a year. Continue reading

Student Update April 6, 2013

I realize there hasn’t been a student update in a few days so I’ll jump right into it. Monday, April 1, started with a relaxed morning exercise of capture the flag played across a small ocean cut next to campus. While there was a lot of arguing about who was or wasn’t out, it was a fun way to start off the day. For classes, everybody had Research, Human Ecology, and Art. In Art, we continued to work on our plastics project. Students chose between an art for advocacy piece or an upcycling piece (turning something useless into something useful). The majority of the materials we use is plastic we found on the beaches. Some pretty cool designs are being made. After classes, students had the choice of qurencía or a dive, followed by an hour of exploration time. Although it was April Fools, no major pranks were pulled. That was probably a good thing. It was a pretty relaxed and regular way to start off the week.

Tuesday began with a long distance exercise in our run and swim tracks. Swim track started at Sunset Beach and swam to No Name Harbor and back. The distances have been increasing, and the total swim was around a mile and a half. For run track, there is an extremely long road that goes down most of the island, which is where the actual half-marathon will take place. Runners went for half an hour in one direction, then turned around and ran back to campus. Some of our more experienced runners even went 10 miles in just about an hour. Classes followed exercise, including Marine and Human Ecology. Students continue to go on dives for Marine Eco, and as a follow up to the food unit, Human Ecology classes helped the kitchen staff to prepare dinner this week. On Tuesday night, in celebration of local foods for Human Ecology, we had barbecue chicken from Abaco, invasive lionfish, and coconut cake! It was pretty tasty. However, the most exciting activity of the week occurred on Wednesday morning. Continue reading

Fall in Love with Marine Ecology

In order to demonstrate their newly discovered knowledge of marine species (the good, the bad, and the attractive…) Marine Ecology students have been creating original “Match.com” profiles for local marine life.  Check out this hot profile from The Yellowline Arrow Crab who wants you to call him Daddy…”Daddy Long Legs of the Water” that is.

by Danny Goldman:

Well, hello there pretty lady!  My name is Robert and I am of the finest species in the entire ocean: the Yellowline Arrow Crab (Stenorhynchus seticornus).  I will let you drool over my gorgeous profile picture below while I talk about myself.  To start, I am beautifully tan (golden-brown) and have a toned triangular body.  My legs are long and thin, my claws have violet tips, and my shell makes me one of toughest animals in the water.  Only the finest weather is suitable for me, so I reside in the lovely tropics of Florida, the Bahamas, and the Caribbean.  Yes, I may only be 1.5-2.5 inches, but that makes me able to squeeze into tight crevices away from any possible predators (if they even dared).  My favorite foods are fish feces and dead animals (yum!) specifically parrotfish poop and dead fish.  If you desire, I’m even willing to share!  Continue reading