Monday, October 11, 2010

2nd Six Weeks - Week 2

Polar Bears suffered a tough loss to Bremond on Friday. Although outmanned in numbers and size, the Bears fought for paydirt until the very last tick of the clock. Polar Bears play Dawson next week in an area rivalry here at the Tundra at 7:30.

Lady Bears took an explosive Kerens Lady Bobcat team to five games on Saturday, but fell short of a match win. The girls will play at Crossroads on Tuesday at 5:00 and will host Trinidad next Saturday at 10:00am.

In junior high action, Lady Bears defeated Cross Roads last week and play Trinidad here on Monday starting at 5:00.
Junior High Polar Bears tied with Bremond on Thursday showing their toughness against much larger boys. The final score was 6-6. Junior High will play at Dawson on Thursday at 6:00.

Week of Oct. 11-14 - At a glance:
Monday - Junior High Volleyball vs Trinidad (Here)
Tuesday - Varsity Volleyball @ Cross Roads 5:00
Wednesday - PSAT for Juniors @ 9:10 am
Thursday - Absentee Photo Day - FALL SPORTS/Cheerleaders Photos ---Junior High Football at Dawson - 6:00 pm
Friday - Pep rally at 2:40 - Varsity Football vs Dawson 7:30 pm. (HERE)
Saturday - JV & Varsity Volleyball vs Trinidad (HERE) 10:00 am


Classroom Week At A Glance:

Monday - Selection Test - Baseball -Begin Grammar Worksheets - The Basic Sentence - Practice 1&2 pg 49-50 - Finish for homework

Tuesday - Complete Subject and Predicates pg 51-52 - Homework - Compound Subjects & Verbs pg 53
Wednesday - Special Problems Packet
Thursday - Reading Comprehension Worksheet pg 59 Analogy, pg 26 Vampires
Friday - Pep Rally - Begin Review for C-scope test Unit 2 - TAKE HOME PACKET



Vickery's Vit & Visdom

"Ants are good citizens: They place group interests first." ~Clarence Day~
"There can be no daily democracy without daily citizenship" ~Ralph Nader~

When I was in eighth grade, I was surprised and pleased to receive the Citizenship Award at the end of year awards assembly. I have not received many awards or trophies in my life, and I still remember how excited and surprised I was when I received it. Obviously, it made an impression on me, since I remember it almost forty years later. After I received the award, I had to secretly ask my teacher what it meant. She said that it meant that I was a good example of an excellent citizen in our school community. I still didn't know what citizenship really meant. She then explained that it means getting involved, doing the right thing, and generally being a good person. I felt so proud. I knew that I tried to do those things, but to realize that other people saw that I was trying, made me feel great about myself. Enough about me. How about you.
Do you consider yourself a good citizen? Do you pitch in when needed, or do you sit back and let others do the work? Are you a team player, always put team first, or are you in it for yourself?
Do you try to do the right thing when faced with a moral decision, or follow the crowd even when they are wrong? Do you consider yourself a good person or do you not care if you are good or bad? These are questions that we must face every day. We have been taught right from wrong since we could walk, but we choose to follow our own path as we grow up.
We all have the potential to be good citizens in our nation, state, town, school and in our families. Reaching that potential is up to you. This week, during athletics, during lunch, in class and in the hallway, look around and see if you notice good citizenship from others. At the end of the week, we will have a journal prompt regarding what you witnessed this week. Hopefully, most of your journal entry will be the positive things that you saw.
Good Citizenship is contagious. PASS IT ON!

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