My Dad has a blog and you’re looking @ it.

March 25, 2008

Virtuous Cycle: College Applications and Selectivity

Here’s a great way to set yourself apart from the masses: become a student correspondent for Marketplace and report on the state of College Admissions.

Marketplace: College admission is a marketing game

College admission is a marketing game

Morrisa Brenner

Commentator and high school junior Morrisa Brenner is taking tests and filling out applications to get into college. In the process, she’s learned that colleges are selling themselves just as much as prospective students.

December 14, 2007

NPR: Vail High School Teaches on the Slopes

Filed under: High School, NPR, Skiing, Vail — Tags: , , , — xyz212 @ 1:43 am

Wow. This sure sounds like a terrific experience. is there anything similar for other sports?

Flickr Tags: ,,,

from the All Things Considered Series: Innovative Trends in High School

Vail High School Teaches on the Slopes

by Larry Abramson

Listen Now [6 min 0 sec]

All Things Considered, December 13, 2007 · One of the toughest challenges faced by many high schools is keeping top athletes interested in academics.

But in the Colorado Rocky Mountains, a new school has developed a way to teach and train promising young ski racers. Students at the Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy (VSSA) spend half of their day on the mountain and the other half in the classroom.

VSSA may be the first public ski academy in the country.

Plans to Go Pro

At 8 a.m., students up and down the Vail Valley in Colorado are entering the doors of the local high school.

But not freshman Abby Ghent. She is standing on the snow at Vail Ski Resort and using a heavy, metal wrench to screw a racing gate into the snow. The gates — the bright poles that skiers race around at the Winter Olympics — have to be screwed in tight so they don’t rip out when the girls come racing down the mountain.

If they want to attend the Vail Ski and Snowboard Academy, these girls have to be willing to do dirty work like this, carry a lot of gear and stay ahead in school.

“You have to be really on top of it. Like, know all your classes, know where you’re standing, keep track of all your homework and stuff,” Abby said.

Abby, like most girls at the school, wants to go pro.

It takes a lot of chutzpah to dream of being a pro skier. The competition is fierce, and the road to the top is often measured in hundredths of seconds.

And first, these students have to graduate from high school.

This school, which enrolls students in grades 8 through 12, leverages students’ powerful desire to keep skiing: If their grades drop too low, athletes can’t race.

Even though VSSA is a free public school, parents must pay the Ski and Snowboard Club Vail for ski training.

Brett Donaldson, a Ski and Snowboard Club Vail coach, says that skiing while in school remains a struggle. Skiers can’t train at night. What’s more, their schedule is often upset by bad weather and equipment problems.

“As opposed to, let’s say, a basketball team. They go to the gym, and it’s the same every day,” Donaldson said. “Ours is drastically different every single day.”

(more…)

Theme: Silver is the New Black. Blog at WordPress.com.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.