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Academy
Of Our Lady
180
Rodney St.
Glen
Rock, NJ 07452
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Phone:
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201-445-0622 |
| Nurse: |
201-444-3890 |
| Fax: |
201-445-8345 |
for
more info e-mail:
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Archdiocese
of Newark
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Academy
of Our Lady 180 Rodney
Street Glen Rock, NJ 07452 (201) 445-0622
In
God We Trust:
Serving Others as a Reflection of Jesus' Love
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VALUE
CENTERED LEARNING THROUGH SERVICE LEARNING
Character building skills are an integral
part of the curriculum at Academy of Our
Lady School. The faculty and
administration enthusiastically adopted a
service-learning format during the Middle
States reaccreditation process in 2003-04
that included the implementation of values
into themed monthly lessons.
September began with “Responsibility”
and value-centered service projects;
October’s theme was “Attitude”
and lessons revolved around compassion and
tolerance of others. November
brought out “Citizenship” and the
student body held a mock election for
President of the United States as well as
a school-wide election of the Student
Council. Each homeroom voted
for two representatives to the student-run
government and all members were inducted
in a candle-lighting ceremony in a school
assembly. Father Dominick swore in
each candidate and Mrs. Diane Lautermilch,
moderator of the student council announced
the eighth grade commissioners. The
student council president remarked that it
was a hard-fought campaign with many
excellent candidates who worked hard
lobbying for votes. The students viewed
the National elections, studied the voting
patterns, learned about qualifications,
listened to the debates and voiced their
own opinions in the debate club.
Mrs. Patricia Keenaghan, Principal,
believes that this form of
character-building skills is critical for
the students to foster civic
responsibility and tolerance for others.
“It is a mirror of what our nation spoke
of the need for moral values today.” She
continued, “We are fortunate that our
students have an opportunity to learn and
grow in this environment.”
Academy of Our Lady also participates in
the Congressional Youth Leadership
Council’s program in Washington, D.C.
sending students each year for a week long
seminars where the students meet and
interact with national and international
leaders, visit the Capitol and the White
House, and sit in on peer discussion
groups building and sharpening their
leadership skills. This year, three
seventh graders attended the summer
session and one student just completed the
October session. All of the students
remarked at the diversity of attendees and
how they made friends easily and still
e-mail each other. Service
learning projects in December included
collecting teddy bears for children in
area hospitals utilizing our monthly theme
of “Caring”. The students
collected more than 150 bears! We also
sent “books across the bridge”
as a project with the Fathers’ Guild.
The students sorted and boxed their
donated books and tallied 4000 books which
were brought to Mary Queen of Heaven
School in Brooklyn. Our Second Grade
teachers organized H.A.N.D.S. ( Helping
Another Neighbor Down South) and the
school raised $1200 which was sent to two
families who lost everything in the
hurricanes. Now we are working on
grade-level projects for the tsunami
victims in Southern Asia as part of
January’s theme of “Leadership”.
It is interesting to note how connected we
are around our country and the world.
The second grade teachers know a physical
education teacher in Winter Haven Florida
and she asked them if our school could
help two of her school’s families. In
Sri Lanka, Fr. Philip who worked in New
Jersey and is now involved with St.
Joseph’s Orphanage is our connection.
Our children are truly becoming more
globally aware of the needs of others as
they grow in their faith and understanding
that they can make a difference.
LEARNING THROUGH SERVICE
Academy
of
Our Lady
students have been busy helping our community as well as enhancing their
learning through service. Service
learning has been designed to foster civic responsibility into the
school’s curriculum. It is
an outgrowth of President George Bush’s desire to infuse character-
building skills into our nation’s schools. Students learn through
thoughtful active participation in age-appropriate projects designed to
serve the needs of specific community organizations.
The students have found that their projects have brought an
enthusiasm and generosity as well as an understanding of the needs of
the communities around them.
Although all grades participate in service learning, the fifth
through eighth grades were asked to comment on the projects they liked
best. The eighth grade
really enjoyed making apple pies for the
Glen
Rock
Community
Church
’s Thanksgiving dinner for the homeless.
In this project, led by the principal, Mrs. Patricia Keenaghan,
they experienced math skills in weights and measurements, science in
chemical reactions, language arts in reflective writing, and social
awareness in the needs of homeless
people. “We were happy
that we could make someone’s holiday brighter” and “we learned how
to make delicious apple pies which we can now make for our families.”
Another student commented that, “I liked this project because I
had a chance to give back to my community.”
Last spring, the sixth graders planted a garden and gave the
vegetables to The Center for Food Action. This was a major undertaking
that required teamwork to complete including choosing the site for the
garden, preparing the soil, fencing it in, maintaining the watering and
weeding, and harvesting the crops. All
the students learned farming skills and were visited by a representative
from the NJ Dept. of Agriculture. They
kept journals of their involvement and their science teacher, Mrs.
Michele Meli, designed a
rubric so each student could chart their learning progress.
Satisfaction was evident when a student wrote, “…our hard
work paid off when we realized that the food we grew would feed hungry
people in our area.” The
garden continues to be a part of our school’s service learning as a
new class of sixth graders learns from tilling the soil.
Fifth graders enjoyed painting pumpkins for the children at the
Audrey Hepburn Children’s House at
Hackensack
University
Medical
Center
. They also gave up their
Christmas grab bag presents and instead donated the money to Several
Sources, an organization that helps unwed mothers and their babies.
Last year, a baby shower was given to benefit this organization
with some of the new mothers and their babies attending.
It will be done this year in March with the students planning the
entire shower. A fifth
grader stated, “ It felt good because I wasn’t thinking of myself
and getting a gift, I was helping needy mothers and babies. The fifth
graders initiated a school-wide collection of videos this year to
benefit the Audrey Hepburn Children’s House for abused and neglected
children when it was learned that the children had only five movies to
watch. The students
collected over 800 videos, counted and catalogued them and wrote notes
to the children. Several
students went to
Hackensack
to deliver the videos and to get a tour of the facilities.
Another
school-wide event initiated by the seventh grade was a book collection
for St. Elizabeth’s in the
Bronx
. They titled this project
“Books Across the Bridge” and were overwhelmed when over 5000 books
were donated. “Out of all the other projects we did, this was by far
the best…we gave students a chance to learn, to read, and to have
fun.” Another student
summed it up, “ I liked this service project because it was children
helping children.” “ The
students from St. Elizabeth’s wrote back to our students and now an
ongoing dialog among the children opens up a more conscious awareness of
the world, commented Mrs. Bonnie Moore, Assistant Principal of
Academy
of
Our Lady
. “Our students know they
can make a difference. At
our school, the students are learning through service and building their
self-esteem and character to make their world a better place.” |
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ACADEMY OF OUR LADY RECEIVES
MIDDLE STATES ACCREDITATION
This is the second ten-year certification for the school
. The Middle
States Commission on Elementary Schools has conferred accreditation for
Academy
of
Our Lady School
in Glen Rock, NJ. The
official certificate and congratulatory letter were received by the
principal, Mrs. Patricia Keenaghan, and assistant principal, Mrs. Bonnie
Moore after the commission’s April 2004 meeting.
The award was announced by Dr. Patricia Kelly-Stiles, Chair of
the Commission and she stated that
Academy
of
Our Lady
was one of over one hundred schools in the Middle States region so
honored.
Academy
of
Our Lady
was initially accredited by this Commission in 1993.
Middle States accreditation signifies the educational community
of
Academy
of
Our Lady
has engaged in a rigorous process of developing self-knowledge; has
hosted an evaluation team of independently-appointed educators; and has
created an on-going strategic plan for the school. This year-long
process was chaired by two faculty members, Mrs.
Nancy Casey
and Ms Barbara Romeo, who oversaw all aspects of the re-accreditation
process. The protocol chosen
by the faculty and administration followed a plan of action to create a
service-learning school where the students learn civic and social
responsibility through their curriculum and their actions toward others
in the community. Many
projects throughout the grades included a garden designed and maintained
by the 6th graders and yielded food for the food pantries in the area.
A baby shower for Several Sources Foundation who house mothers
and their babies was executed by 5th graders; pies were baked
for homeless people and brought to the
Community
Church
in Glen Rock by the 8th graders; and Pre-K, kindergarten, 1st
graders and 2nd graders made toiletry bags for the homeless
in area shelters. Recently, students in grade 7 participated in cleaning
up the Arboretum in Glen Rock for Arbor Day.
Accreditation also signifies that
Academy
of
Our Lady
has met the Middle States Commission on Elementary Schools standards for
a quality school. These
standards reflect current research and best practices from throughout
the education profession. During the ten-year term of accreditation, the
school community will engage in a Commission-directed series of reports
and/or site visits to maintain the vigor of the accreditation process.
The Middles States Association is the second oldest regional accreditor
of public, private, and parochial schools.
The Commission also accredits high schools and colleges within
its region. Accreditation by MSCES is recognized around the world as an
indication of trustworthiness, educational quality, and a commitment to
on-going school improvement. F.
Laird Evan, Ed.D., Executive Director of the Commission, offered his
congratulations to the entire
Academy
of
Our Lady
community, adding: “MSCES accreditation is a recognition of both prior
achievements and a commitment to greater future accomplishments.” |
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A
KNACK FOR KNITTING
Knitting has swept through
Academy
of
Our Lady School
in Glen Rock. Students in
grades 2 through 8 are knitting up a storm as they apply the basic
knitting skills to their hats or scarves.
Ms. Schiller, the knitting club’s moderator and AoOL’s second
grade teacher notes that, “ Not only are children learning this
treasured needle art, but they are developing fine motor skills,
dexterity and math problem-solving skills.
They are exploring their creativity, learning about the different
yarns, textures, and combining colors in their projects as well as
building self-esteem as they work together.”
Mrs. Keenaghan, the school’s principal,
believes strongly that, “The knitting club is a fine example of using
the Multiple Intelligence approach to teaching and it reaps many rewards
for the students. I’m glad we are able to offer diversified learning
experiences at
Academy
of
Our Lady
so our students can feel accomplished.” This after-school enrichment
club is just one of the many activities that the school offers including
chess, debate, running, art, chorus, dance, science and environment,
French, Spanish, Quiz Bowl, Web Page, literary magazine, newspaper,
student council, drama, and math league.
Members of the faculty and staff have knit six dozen baby hats for
Rockland Family Shelter and for Birthright of Bergen County as part of
the school’s commitment to service. The faculty took on this project
as a way to role model the values of giving to others.
Academy
of
Our Lady School
is a service-learning school where the students learn through a varied
curriculum that encourages civic and social awareness and
responsibility. |
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