Tag Archive for: #VANCECoProud

@VanceCoSchools Youth Empowerment Academy

— courtesy Vance County Schools — VCS Photo

Randall Q. Bullock, a Vance County native now living in New Jersey and mentoring young men, spoke to male students in the school system’s Youth Empowerment Academy on November 3.

Bullock talked with the six students, who are in the academy on long-term suspension from their middle schools, about their focus on the important things in life and about making good decisions.

He explained to the students that he moved to Vance County at an early age and attended school at New Hope Elementary, Eaton-Johnson Middle and the former Vance Senior High School, now Northern Vance. Bullock stressed to the students that he wanted to tell them his story to help them for their futures. He said he always loved playing football in school and continued playing football when he completed high school at Ravenscroft, a private school in Raleigh. After graduating from high school in 1984, he attended the University of Virginia where he played on the varsity football team.

“I enjoyed my time playing football,” he explained. “I was a wide receiver in college and I played, but I think back even now on what I could have done more at that time to improve and be better. Would it have made a difference in my future? Could I have actually played in the NFL?”

Bullock admitted he didn’t work as hard as he should have in college. After completing his time at Virginia, Bullock moved to New Jersey where his father lived.

He said he eventually realized he needed a plan for his life and that he needed to “look at the big picture.”

“That’s what I want you to do,” he told the students. “Look at the macro, your big picture for your life and where you want to go. You can also look at the micro, which is what you want to do for right now.”

He emphasized to the students that they need to make good decisions now and work to get back on track with their school work and their behavior.

“You are hurting your life resume,” he said. “You must get an education to be successful and you must stay out of trouble.”

Bullock talked with the students about Booker T. Washington, who transformed himself from a former slave to a successful businessman and is known today as one of the most influential African-Americans in our history. He also told the students the story of Ben Carson, a national leader among brain surgeons who ran for U.S. President in the 2016 election. Carson was raised in poverty by his mother, but with her always pushing him and his brother to do well in school and get a good education he overcame many obstacles and is a very success African-American today, Bullock added.

Bullock was brought to the academy by Dr. Ralphel Holloman, coordinator of the academy, to mentor the young male students. He plans to visit the students each month and continue to work with them as a positive, adult role model. Bullock said he is in Henderson about every three weeks visiting and assisting his mother who still lives here. He also plans to bring additional speakers with him when he visits with the students.

 

@VanceCoSchools #VANCECoProud “State of Our Schools”

— courtesy Vance County Schools

Parents, students and community members are invited to attend “State of Our Schools” events hosted by the school system on Tuesday, October 24, at Clarke Elementary School, and on Wednesday, October 25, at New Hope Elementary School.

Both events will be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. in the schools’ multipurpose rooms.

Superintendent Anthony Jackson will be sharing valuable information about our public schools and all 17 of our schools will have information tables with educators available to answer questions.

All Vance County residents are urged to attend at least one of these events and learn more about our local public schools.

Those who attend can learn about how students can apply to attend the Vance County Early College High School, located at Vance-Granville Community College, and the STEM Early High School, located at Southern Vance High School. Interested persons also can learn more about the STEAM Academy at the year-round E.M. Rollins Elementary School and opportunities for children in pre-kindergarten and kindergarten classes in all of our elementary schools. Our Advance Academy, located on Charles Street in Henderson, is providing educational opportunities for high school students who are behind academically to assist them in completing their high school careers. The Vance Medical Academy and Fire and Public Safety Academy, both located at Southern Vance, are providing excellent training for students who want to pursue careers in these areas.

Representatives from these schools will be on hand to share information.

Join us for these “State of Our Schools” events!

Carver Elementary Yard Sale & Silent Auction

— courtesy Vance County Schools

Plan to attend the Carver Elementary School “Make a Difference Day” yard sale and silent auction at the school on Saturday, October 28, from 8 to 11:30 a.m.

The event is sponsored by the school’s PTO and Partnering, Educating, Empowering, Role modeling and Service (PEERS) student organization.

School staff, parents, students, business leaders and local citizens will be participating in the event. Everyone in our community is urged to volunteer at the event, donate items for the yard sale and silent auction and attend the event to purchase items for the fundraiser.

The goal of the day’s event is to fill Peer Cheer Pouches, involving one-gallon-size storage bags packed with new items such as toiletries, hand sanitizer, washcloths, non-perishable foods or snack items, school supplies, games, toys, stuffed animals, clothing and more. The Peer Cheer Pouches will be given to needy families in the Carver school area, a local shelter, orphanages, hospital and other charitable organizations. Carver’s goal is to fill 600 Peer Cheer Pouches.

Please get involved in this very worthy “Make a Difference Day” event!

For more information you may contact Teresa Hicks, counselor and PEERS adviser, and Henri Parham of the Carver PTO, at the school at 252-438-6955.

@SVHS_Athletics vs @LouisburgHSFCS

Vance County Friday Night Football is on the air Friday night at 6:45 pregame and 7 p.m. kickoff.  Live on 1450 AM and on wizs.com!  Listen for all the live play by play.  Northern Vance is off this week.  Please see full schedule below the scouting report.

Southern Vance is now 4-4 overall and 3-2 in the Northern Carolina Conference !  The Raiders are tied with Warren County for 4th place in the NCC, which sets up a fascinating match up between Southern and Warren next week that may detemine the playoff fortunes for both teams.

To Recap the Raiders’ season so far:  After a very impressive 2-1 start to their conference schedule, followed by a very physical (almost brutal) 51-6 beating from undefeated South Granville 2 weeks ago, Southern had the difficult task of preparing to meet the other unbeaten team, Roanoke Rapids, last week.  Raiders’ Coach Darry Ragland certainly did something right during the week running up to the home game with the Yellow Jackets, because his team, which left Creedmoor the preceding Friday night severely battered,  pulled off a stunning 44-27 win over RR to knock the Jackets out of the unbeaten ranks and into 2nd place in the league. That win can be rightly called an upset, given the disparity in the records of the two teams, but it did not look much like an upset while it was happening.  Raider QB Elijah Stewart, who was knocked out of the South Granville game at halftime with a foot or ankle injury, never passed better, and his receivers were never more sure-handed, than they were against the Jackets last week; and the defense, which had not been a consistent strong point for Southern this season, kept the Roanoke Rapids running backs bottled up for most of the game.

Southern Vance has gotten back on the wining track at a good time, and their home game against Louisburg this Friday night gives the Raiders every opportunity to improve to a winning record of 5-4 going into the Warren showdown.  Southern has already bested the other 1A member of the conference with their 50-19 victory over Granville Central, and should be able to knock off Louisburg.  Although the Warriors won their season opener 41-0, that was against KIPP Pride, which has been shut out or clobbered by most of the area 1A and 2A teams, (e.g., Granville Central beat the Pride 33-8), and Louisburg has been struggling mightily ever since.  They were the victims of Northern Vance’s first win of the season two weeks ago, and they come back to Vance County this week dragging their 1-6 record behind them like Marley’s chain.  They have had a week off to recover, but the Warriors do not seem to have what it takes this year to compete with a team which, like Southern Vance, has tasted the blood of victory and is on its way up.

Louisburg has been shut out three times this season and has a 13 point-per-game scoring average.  They have a freshman quarterback who might be quite good in a year or two, but who only passes for about 25 yards per game.  The Warriors rely on a running game centered around Sr. RB Amonte Moses who has averaged 66 yards rushing per game, along with another 20 yards per outing in receiving yards.   Moses has 2 of his team’s 9 TDs this season, and Soph Elijah Mitchell has 2 rushing scores.  Five other players have rushed for TDs, which suggests that Louisburg does have some depth in the backfield, and can look forward to a better season next year.

Robin Littlejohn is a Rockstar

— courtesy Vance County Schools

Robin Littlejohn, a member of the faculty at L.B. Yancey Elementary School, has been recognized as a Rosetta Stone Rockstar.

Rosetta Stone is a nationally recognized foreign language software application used by L.B. Yancey Elementary and schools across our state and the nation to assist students, who don’t speak English as their native language, in learning how to speak and write in English.

Littlejohn leads the foriegn language efforts at L.B. Yancey and has been assisting Rosetta Stone officials in planning the first K-12 User Conference for the software application company. The theme of the conference is “Shaping the Future” and it will be held November 15-16 in Nashville, Tenn.

NVHS “EOC Night”

— courtesy Vance County Schools

Northern Vance High School is hosting an “EOC Night” on Thursday, October 12, at 6 p.m. in the school’s media center.

Students and parents are encouraged to attend.

Teachers will meet with parents and students to discuss academic progress. They also will share information on course requirements, the importance of state accountability standards, the alignment between grades and state testing levels, available tutoring for students, how parents can help their students at home and the impact of academics on potential college acceptances.

@VanceCountySchools Bus Driver Training

— courtesy Vance County Schools

Vance County Schools will host school bus driver training sessions Monday, November 6 through Wednesday, November 8, at Northern Vance High School in Room I-103.

Participants must attend the training on all three days to receive certification. The training sessions will begin at 8 a.m. and end at approximately 3 p.m. each day.

Those interested in participating in the training sessions must register five days prior to the sessions with the school system’s Transportation Department, located at 226 Welcome Avenue off Raleigh Road south of Henderson. For additional information, call the Transportation Department at 438-5012.

@VanceCoSchools State of Schools

— courtesy Vance County Schools

All Vance County residents are invited to attend “State of Our Schools” events hosted by the school system on Tuesday, October 24, at Clarke Elementary School, and on Wednesday, October 25, at New Hope Elementary School. Both events will be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m.

Superintendent Anthony Jackson will be sharing valuable information about our public schools and all 17 of our schools will have information tables with educators available to answer questions.

Virtual Reality Mobile Lab

— courtesy Vance County Schools

zSpace, Inc. sponsored a visit by its Virtual Reality Classroom to the campus of Southern Vance High School on September 21, with the lab available for viewing by local students and educators throughout the school system.

Students and educators had an opportunity to go inside the traveling classroom, contained in a large, mobile trailer, and view 3D hands-on demonstrations to enhance classroom instruction in science, technology, engineering, the arts and mathematics (STEAM).

Clarke student using the 3D software for dissections

There were approximately 12 computer monitors available for students and educators to view 3D images ranging from various kinds of animals, to mountain landscapes, to parts of the human body. Once at the computer screens, viewers wore 3D glasses and used a special stylus to manipulate the 3D images. They could actually dissect the images electronically using the stylus to see the various layers of the image. The process seemed especially fun for students in dissecting animal images and seeing their various body parts and layers.

The zSpace Virtual Reality Classroom came to Vance County at no cost to the school district. The classroom is designed to provide K-12 school districts with a firsthand demonstration of the zSpace technology available to enhance classroom instruction in the core subject areas. With schools now engaging in new phases of innovation and transformation with the creation of STEAM focused programs, zSpace is striving to provide them with the latest virtually reality based learning experiences. With the help of zSpace representatives, the 3D technology is showing how the computer software and devices can be incoporated into lesson plans and curriculum.

STEM students using the 3D software for dissections

Students visiting the mobile STEAM lab were from Clarke Elementary School, the STEM Early High School and Southern Vance High School. They went into the lab in small groups of about 20 students over a four-hour period. After listening to a short presentation by a zSpace coach on how to use the 3D technology, the students were able to experience the hands-on demonstration at the individual computer terminals. Each student group had about 20 minutes to visit the mobile lab.

Each demonstration for the student groups featured standards based activities, lesson plans and video tutorials aligned with Common Core and state standards.

School administrators and several teachers from all Vance County Schools were able to visit the mobile lab and see the demonstrations.

Group of students listening to a zSpace representative explain how to use the software

Mobile Dairy Classroom visits Southern Vance

The Mobile Dairy Classroom from the Southland Dairy Farmers association, based in Texas, visited with Career and Technical Education students at Southern Vance High School during three class periods on September 20.

 

Courtney Bumgarner of the association, led each of the presentations to students. Her mobile classroom included a trailer, which is the “on the road” home for Clarice the Holstein cow, who is part of the presentations.

 

Bumgarner talked about the process of milking a cow, noting that most cows now are milked by machines with the process taking about eight minutes as opposed to 30 minutes when a person milks by hand.

 

She also shared with students the details of dairy production and the importance of dairy products and milk to our diet.

 

The mobile classroom is one of several across the United States provided through the farmers’ association. Bumgarner, who is based in Greensboro, visits schools across North Carolina. The Mobile Dairy Classroom makes presentations to students free of charge.

 

Dr. Laike Green, agriculture teacher at Southern Vance High School, arranged for the Mobile Dairy Classroom to visit at the school.