BC News September 2016 - Banner Christian School
Transcription
BC News September 2016 - Banner Christian School
Banner Christian School B.C. September, 2016 NEWS “Christ first, education second to none.” An observation most of us have made as we drive to and from church on Sunday morning is all the people who are involved in other activities: mowing the yard, riding bicycles, heading out in swimsuits. It is a saddening sight. In Romans 15, Paul speaks of his hardships and endeavors to preach the Word to those who have never heard it. We do not know Paul’s last name, nor do we know what he looked like. No one has his picture hanging on the wall. However, his goals and determination, along with others, helped to change the world. The world remembers him for what he did to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ. This triggers the question: What will the world or even the community remember about each one of us? Attending a funeral may cause you to ask, “What will people reminisce and recollect about me?” Will I be memorialized for the “things” I acquired, for my invention, for the contributions I made to the community, for my charming personality? If you had to write your elegy, what would, what could it say? This is something each one of us should consider as we plough through each day. Of course, if you are reading this, you must in some way be a part of Christian education, of Banner, which indicates that you are more passionate about Jesus Christ than just a trip to church on Sunday morning. You are somehow immersed or participating in shaping the lives of our youth; this takes love, commitment, and oftentimes sacrificing part of our income. However, in a post-Christian world, and we only have to listen to the news for five minutes to conclude that we indeed live in a radically post-Christian country and world, our mission field is often right in our backyard. And what greater objective can one have than to invest in the next generation! B.C. News 1 Banner Christian School September, 2016 The Case for Cursive Why cursive? At a time when technology has made our lives easier and more efficient, writing by hand, especially in cursive, has begun to decline with students in many schools. As we continue to utilize and appreciate the use of communicating electronically, there are more apparent reasons we should (as parents and educators) support cursive writing. Research indicates that both print and cursive, when learned and practiced, benefit an increase in brain activity, have an impact on performance across all academic subjects, and provide a foundation for higher-order skills. Since a child’s fine motor skills are not fully developed until around age 10, continual practice in the early years needs to be encouraged. Experts suggest that handwriting can actually lighten a student’s cognitive load through fluency and automaticity, thereby enabling students’ neurological resources to a larger degree to be freed up for critical thinking and thought organization. (Peverly, S. “The Relationship of Transcription Speed and Other Cognitive Variables to NoteTaking and Test Performance.” Presented at Handwriting in the 21st Century?: An Educational Summit, Washington, D. C., January 23, 2012) As the student advances to cursive, the brain’s synapses and synchronicity are stimulated between the left and right hemispheres, which have positive effects in the linguistic skills (reading, writing). Researchers Shadmehr and Holcomb of Johns Hopkins University published a study in Science magazine showing that their subjects’ brains actually changed in reaction to physical instruction such as cursive handwriting lessons provided by PET (Positron Emission Tomography) scans as evidence of these changes in brain structure.These changes resulted in improvement in fluency, which further developed neural pathways. Cursive, which is fluid, connecting a physical left-right motion and reinforcing reading skill development and lateral directionality (mirrors the written left to right movement of written language), is lacking in both printing and keyboarding. In addition, by crossing the midline, cursive writing stimulates the integration of the two brain hemispheres, while the joining of the letters requires fluidity of production, thereby supporting fluency in reading also. Through practice of these handwriting skills, the researchers concluded that acquired knowledge became more stable. (Sortino, Dr. D., “Brain Research and Cursive Writing,” August 11, 2016). Finally, it has been shown that the memory is activated when words are written by hand rather than when typed via keyboarding. Again, Magnetic Resonance Imaging shows cursive can improve idea composition and expression and aiding in fine motor-skill development. In a study from a 2008 study in the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, handwritten characters resulted in stronger and longer-lasting recognition of the proper orientation of the characters, suggesting that motor memory from writing aids in identification of shapes; therefore, handwriting undergirds reading. So write on: there is a case for cursive! by Demetria Heatwole NILD (National Institute of Learning Development) Level III trained B.C. News 2 Banner Christian School September, 2016 Congratulations, Anne Peters Congratulations to Anne Peters, a 2016 graduate, whose poem has been selected as one of the top ten winners in the United States and Canada by Creative Communication. Anne will also receive a cash prize. An Insomniac in Flight Peter Pan, if you’re out there, I’m all ready to go. The windows are wide open, And no one here will know. Whisk me from this city. It’s only half past one, An hour past restless, And forever until dawn. The sky is deep sapphire. The moon, a dazzling gem. The sun is as absent As I soon will be from them. While the world is asleep, I sit here on the ledge. In the morning when they wake, They’ll find an empty bed. The wind whispers to come. My heart says not to stay. The stars shimmer to follow. My tears say, “No way.” Neverland is not real. It kills me deep inside, But was made by insomniacs Who had a lust to fly. They grasped that their lives Were relative in a sense. They could adventure where they wish At reality’s expense. So tonight that’s where I’ll be, If only in my mind, Soaring past my worries, Oh, the worlds that I may find. Now perched on my windowsill, Peter Pan has just arrived. So if tonight the skies look strange, Know there’s an insomniac in flight. B.C. News 3 Banner Christian School Questions to Ask Before We Gossip September, 2016 Article by Stephen Witmer Scripture: Proverbs 16:28 Perhaps you’ve had the unsettling experience of finishing a conversation, walking away, and wondering whether what you just said was gossip. Sometimes it’s hard to tell. Gossip is a shadowy sin, blurry around the edges. When are our conversations hushed on account of discretion, and when are they simply the delightful whispers of the gossip (Proverbs 18:8)? When we learn new information about another person, we have several options. We can speak to that person about what we’ve learned, speak to other people about it, or keep it to ourselves and speak to God. Gossip is saying behind someone’s back what we should say to his or her face, or not at all. But life is complex. Sometimes we must seek prayer and wisdom from godly friends when struggling with difficult relationships with a child, spouse, neighbor, co-worker, or fellow church-member. It’s in these situations that we should be particularly careful that our counsel-seeking doesn’t simply become an excuse for gossip. Here are eight diagnostic questions to help you discern with me whether, in talking to others about another person with whom we’re struggling, we’re actually gossiping. If you’re involved in conflict with another person, are you talking to others only about that person’s sin and never about your own? If so, it’s probably gossip. Is your conversation with friends about this other person intended to prepare you for a productive conversation with the person? If not, it’s probably gossip. If you’re seeking counsel from others about how to deal wisely with this person, do you keep the person’s identity secret except when necessary? If not, it’s probably gossip. Do you enjoy sharing this information with your friends? If so, it’s probably gossip. Gossip is tasty (Proverbs 18:8). Seeking counsel in a broken, difficult situation is good, but it is painful, not enjoyable. What’s the tone of your voice and the tenor of your heart? Are you meek, humble, and broken-hearted when you share this other person’s sin, or do you feel angry and righteous by comparison? If so, it’s probably gossip. Are you talking to God about this person as much as you’re talking to your friends? If not, it’s probably gossip. Are you limiting the number of friends you speak to? If not, it’s probably gossip. Gossip seeks to spread communication widely, but Jesus seeks to restrict certain delicate communications narrowly (Matthew 18:15–17). Do you think of those with whom you’re sharing sensitive information as passive recipients or involved participants? Jesus’s goal for us in speaking to others is never merely to vent. Those who receive information must be prepared to go with us to the person we need to speak to, in order to serve as witnesses (Matthew 18:16). If you don’t understand your hearers as having this active, participatory role, it’s probably gossip. Unfortunately, I’ve crossed the line into gossip far too many times in my life. But there have been some victories. Several years ago, I heard a juicy tidbit about another person. I can’t remember now what it was, but I do remember arriving home and wanting to share it with my wife. Then I stopped and asked myself, Why do I want to share this? I realized it was gossip. So, I didn’t say it. God was honored, and my community, and my marriage, and my own soul were saved the corrosive effects of gossip. continued on next page….. B.C. News 4 Banner Christian School September, 2016 Gossip breeds dissension and distrust, destroying communities (2 Corinthians 12:20) and friendships. “A perverse person stirs up conflict, and a gossip separates close friends” (Proverbs 16:28, NIV). Let’s avoid it, and instead pray that our mouths will be fountains of life for those around us (Proverbs 10:11). Stephen Witmer (@stephenwitmer1) is the pastor of Pepperell Christian Fellowship in Pepperell, Massachusetts and teaches New Testament at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. He is the author of Eternity Changes Everything and a 12-week study in Revelation. He and his wife Emma have three young children. Perspective by Barbi de Haas, School Counselor My older sister is visiting from Montana and we haven’t seen each other for more than three years. I just met her youngest daughter for the first time and her other children are re-acquainting with us slowly. The first day we were together, my five-yearold niece, Courtney, picked my phone up off the table and, looking at the picture on the back, asked, “Aunt Barbi, are these all your children?” With four children, my family is on the larger side of “normal,” so I am used to that question. Random people at the grocery store and other public places have been asking me that for years. “Are they all yours?” they ask with surprise. I smiled at Courtney and said, “Yes, those are all my children.” She gazed at me solemnly and said, “You have a teeny tiny family.” You see, she is one of eight. My younger sister, who lived this past year in Montana with my older sister, has six. So, for many months, there were fourteen “siblings” in that home. Sooooo, to Courtney, my four children seem very few indeed. Perspective makes all the difference. We make many decisions every day and in our roles as parents, we make them for our children as well. Some of these are easy for us to make and easy to for them to understand. “May I play in the street? Eat cake before dinner? Stay up to watch the Redskins game on a school night?” Take a zero instead of doing this project?” But other times we must make harder choices that our children don’t like or understand based on our knowledge of “the Big Picture.” We know that broccoli is a better side dish than potato chips. We know that walking the dog is better than sitting on the couch. We know that choosing your friends carefully will help keep you out of trouble. We know that loving and obeying God with all our heart, mind, soul, and strength is the very point of our existence. So, sometimes we have to say, “That skirt is too short. That movie is too risqué. That song is not appropriate. That friend is not edifying. That attitude is not honoring. The answer is no.” B.C. News 5 Banner Christian School September, 2016 And sometimes the response is not the cheerful, “Yes, ma’am or Yes, sir” that we would like. They do not always believe that we are on their team and making the best decision we know for their good. It is not infrequent that I hear the phrase “And that is why you’re not the fun parent.” Perspective makes all the difference. I receive the Proverbs 31 daily devotional and found one this week that illustrates this point in our parent/child relationship with our Heavenly Father that I would like to share with you. It begins with the author’s son choosing to re-define her “No” answers and respond to them as if they were “Yeses.” Her insight on this interesting perspective is below. My challenge this month is that we all might evaluate the way we see the world and perhaps re-adjust our perspective to reflect our position as sons and daughters of the one parent who really does know what’s best and who is always always good. Let’s adopt a Kingdom perspective. It makes all the difference. When God Says No CHRYSTAL EVANS HURST (previous content edited for length) "No." That cute boy waved his hands in the air while saying, "Yeaaaaaah!" And then it dawned on me ... my son was on to something. He was choosing to believe my "no" was actually a "yes" and that changed his attitude. It changed his response. It changed his reaction. It made me wonder: What if we responded to God in this way? What if we believed that even when He said no, it was because He was really saying yes? Because He is. We have a good Father in God, who, just like a good earthly father, desires to give His children what's best for them later even if He has to say no to something they want right now. The question is: Do we really believe that He's good? If we did, wouldn't that be cause to celebrate, whether He says no or yes? It's hard when prayer requests go unanswered or desires go unmet. I can easily feel deflated and frustrated with God. Hope turns to hopelessness, confident expectation becomes disappointment and faith turns to despondent despair. But what if we really believed God was good? What if we believed that He was always saying yes—maybe not to what we are asking Him for right at that moment—but saying yes to His best. What if we trusted His heart, even when His hand seemingly withholds the very thing we so desire? What if we chose to celebrate all of the previous, “yes” answers He's given us despite His current no? I think it would change how we respond. I think we would find joy, keep hoping and smile despite what we see. I know how badly you want your,” yes”, but hang in there. Keep hoping. Keep praying. Keep believing. And if God says no? Choose to give thanks. I have been walking with God long enough to know that many times God has said, “no” because He has a greater, “yes” in store for me. I have been walking with God long enough to know that even if I don't like His answer, I can respond to Him with expectation, hope, and joy. I have been walking with God long enough to know He's good; and although He doesn't always give me what I want, He always gives me what He knows I need. In some way, shape or form, He's always saying, “yes”. B.C. News 6 Banner Christian School September, 2016 History of Labor Day Labor Day: What it Means Labor Day, the first Monday in September, is a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well being of our country. Labor Day Legislation Through the years the nation gave increasing emphasis to Labor Day. The first governmental recognition came through municipal ordinances passed during 1885 and 1886. From these, a movement developed to secure state legislation. The first state bill was introduced into the New York legislature, but the first to become law was passed by Oregon on February 21, 1887. During the year four more states — Colorado, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York — created the Labor Day holiday by legislative enactment. By the end of the decade Connecticut, Nebraska, and Pennsylvania had followed suit. By 1894, 23 other states had adopted the holiday in honor of workers, and on June 28 of that year, Congress passed an act making the first Monday in September of each year a legal holiday in the District of Columbia and the territories. Founder of Labor Day More than 100 years after the first Labor Day observance, there is still some doubt as to who first proposed the holiday for workers. Some records show that Peter J. McGuire, general secretary of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners and a cofounder of the American Federation of Labor, was first in suggesting a day to honor those "who from rude nature have delved and carved all the grandeur we behold." But Peter McGuire's place in Labor Day history has not gone unchallenged. Many believe that Matthew Maguire, a machinist, not Peter McGuire, founded the holiday. Recent research seems to support the contention that Matthew Maguire, later the secretary of Local 344 of the International Association of Machinists in Paterson, N.J., proposed the holiday in 1882 while serving as secretary of the Central Labor Union in New York. What is clear is that the Central Labor Union adopted a Labor Day proposal and appointed a committee to plan a demonstration and picnic. https://www.dol.gov/general/laborday/history 7/25/2016 B.C. News 7 Banner Christian School September, 2016 Update and Needs on Property and Building • Cross county track delayed until fall do to an injury to our Banner parent installing the track. • Soil tested and approved for septic. This will be a waiver request to the county to save the installation cost of running the sewer line to the property. • Surveying the Courthouse Road entrance to determine if ther are any issues prior to our filing of the Master Plan. • Still looking for a bobcat and a operator to clear the field and plant grass. Let me know if you have a contact. • Still working on the liability issues for Timmons to release their survey. This will minimize the cost of a new survey. Master Plan to be filed on August 29, 2016. Keep praying and keep working. Please contact Larry Burkett if you feel that you, or anyone you know, can help out in any of these areas: [email protected] B.C. News 8 Banner Christian School September, 2016 Bible Buddies Bible Buddies is a program in which our upper school students interact with and mentor our lower school students. B.C. News 9 Banner Christian School September, 2016 Four steps to a stress free start this school year ADJUST YOUR ROUTINE Start each day with a healthful breakfast. During the week establish an evening schedule for homework, dinner, television, outdoor activities, baths, and bedtime. On the weekend, try to maintain your week day schedule for evening activities. GET ORGANIZED Have a “get ready the night before” rule. Lay out clothes, pack your non-refrigerated lunch items, gather all completed homework/projects and pack your backpack prior to going to bed. Keep all sport bags packed and ready to go with your backpack and lunch box. Post a copy of the school calendar on the refrigerator or in a visible location. PLAN HEALTHful MEALS AND SNACKS Use the weekend to plan what you want to pack for lunch and a snack all week. Don’t forget, a healthful breakfast, snack, and lunch helps keep your brain engaged during the school day. Staying hydrated throughout the day and during sports practices or events is a must. Pack water instead of a sugary drink in your lunch. DON’T STRESS OVER HOMEWORK Decide the best time for homework and stick to it. Have a well-lit, quiet, designated area for homework. Keep supplies for homework organized and easy to reach. Healthful Snack: Strawberry Iced Tea 2 cups Fresh strawberries 1/4 cup Fresh lemon juice 1/3 cup Sugar 5 cups Unsweetened, brewed tea In a blender puree the strawberries and lemon juice. Pour into a 2 quart pitcher. Add brewed tea and sugar. Stir until sugar is dissolved. Chill and serve. B.C. News 10 Experiencing the American Civil War On the second Thursday of this school year, the seventh graders headed downtown to experience the War Between the States (otherwise known as the American Civil War) from Richmond’s perspective. Trips to Belle Isle and Tredegar Iron Works yielded insight into our city’s role as the foremost iron producer in the South. In the afternoon a tour of Jefferson Davis’s former house showed how the short-lived confederacy was governed. Students also experienced the war through the eyes of soldiers on both sides of the conflict, with a focus on the medical practices associated with the costliest war in United States history. FACTS ACCOUNTS As you know, we are currently using FACTS to pay for tuition. However, as many of you found out already, Renweb does not bill you right away when you order lunches (as it did last year). Instead, what happens every Friday, the charges get posted to your Renweb account for the following week. From here you have three options: 1) You can pay them through Renweb when they appear. 2) You can wait until the end of the month to pay for them on Renweb; this way you do not have to make weekly payments 3) After 30 days, if your Renweb account has any charges on it, they will be moved over to FACTS. You will receive an email informing you that charges have been added to your FACTS account and they will be withdrawn with your next tuition payment. If you do not have a tuition payment, the balance will be withdrawn from your bank account on the 1st of the following month. Originally, we were just going to move over any balance on your account to FACTS each month, but a number of parents wanted to keep tuition payments separate. However, any balance, whether it be sports fees, lunch, aftercare, or other miscellaneous charges on your Renweb account that have been there for 30 days, will be added to your FACTS account and be withdrawn from your bank account. VISITING? All visitors need to report to the front office to sign in and receive a visitor badge. The badge must be returned to the front office to sign out prior to leaving the premises. In the event of a fire, the "Visitors’ Log" is taken outside, allowing us to account for everyone in the building. If you have not signed out, we will send a firefighter in to search for you. Thank you for your assistance. LOST & FOUND Lost something? We may have found it! There are numerous items being found each day. Remember to LABEL, LABEL, LABEL!!! BANNER CHRISTIAN SCHOOL • 1501 S. PROVIDENCE ROAD N. CHESTERFIELD, VIRGINIA 23236 B.C. News P: 804-276-5200 • F:804-276-7620 • WEB:WWW.BANNERCHRISTIAN.ORG 12