SCHOOL
SECTION F, JANUARY, 2015 • CALLICOON, NY
A look at activities in theFallsburg Central School District
A S p e c i a l S u p p l e m e n t t o t h e S u l l i v a n C o u n t y D e m o c r a t
SCENE
2F FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT JANUARY, 2015
Call for details (845) 292-3288
1234 Old Route 17, Ferndale, NY [email protected]
Hours:Thu - Fri: 7pm-10pm,
Sat: 1pm-4pm & 7pm-10pmSun: 1pm-4pm
2270
1
LIBERTY STUDENTS
BOGOGet 1
ADMISSION PASS
FREEwith every purchase
FALLSBURG STUDENTS
2270
STOP INAND MEETOUR NEWMANAGER.
24/7 EMERGENCYPROPANE SERVICE
GUARANTEED PRICINGPROGRAMS
MONTHLY PROPANEAND SERVICE SPECIALS
(845) 434-77102458
0
845-434-5051800-770-6347
Sullivan County’sOwn . . .
Locally Raised . . .
19832
See Our Website For More Info murrayschicken.com
5190 Main StreetS. Fallsburg, NY
he faces tell it all. As part of anew website and Facebookpage for Fallsburg CentralSchool District, a scrolling
display of photos captures studentstapping industriously on comput-ers, singing from the stage and smil-ing into the camera with theirteachers.
The media project/slide show,entitled “The Faces of Fallsburg,”showcases the daily doings insideand outside classrooms, underlin-ing the great things happening inthe District.
“Fallsburg,” emphasizesSuperintendent of Schools Dr. Ivan
Katz, “has many faces – teacherswho work long and hard to supportour kids, kids who strive to exceland achieve great things for them-selves and their school, employeeswho come to work every day tomake a positive difference in thelives of our students.”
There are faces of parents andcommunity members, and success-ful Fallburg High School graduateswho have gone on to powerful pur-suits.
Last year, Fallsburg made unfortu-nate headlines when several inci-dences of drug use and salesimpacted the schools, a matter still
under police investigation. But the episodes have jumpstarted
some healthy new initiatives on thepart of the 1,500-student District.
REACHING OUT TO OTHERSThe new Superintendent’s
Community Advisory Council
(SCAC) brings together parents,community members and schooldistrict staff to meet regularly withDr. Katz. The group offers input intomatters affecting the school com-munity and also gains accurateinformation about the successesand challenges of the District.
In December, the group organizeda successful community forum thatenhanced awareness of drug abuseproblems and highlighted existingprevention programs. The SCAC willmeet early this month (January) toreview and discuss the forum’s feed-back and distribute the findings tothe school community.
In another initiative, Fallsburg haspartnered with Every PersonInfluences Children (EPIC) to draft astrategic family engagement plan.
EPIC is a national non-profit thatoffers services to parents, schoolsand communities.
School communitygalvanizes to work on
projects, problemsT
A school year of promise and accomplish-ment, with an engaged constituency ofparents and community members, hasSuperintendent of Schools Dr. Ivan Katzsmiling.
Like most school dis-tricts, “We have been chal-lenged in engaging par-ents in meaningful waysthat result in improvedstudent achievement,”said Dr. Katz. “Withincreasing expectationsfrom the New York StateEducation Department,we need to better engagewith our parents and armthem with strategies theycan use with their chil-dren at home.”
EPIC is now gatheringdata and working withstaff and community tocreate the blueprint foraction. EPIC will also train teachersand parents on the impact of fami-lies on student success in school.
MOVING INTO NEW PLACESThis school year opened with
three veteran teachers serving asinstructional coaches for their col-leagues. Kasey Conrow in theJunior-Senior High School and PeterDworetsky and Catrina Gladding inthe elementary school offer supportin aligning curricula with Common
Core LearningStandards and in thekey areas of teachingEnglish languagearts and math.
“The coach visitsclassrooms and pro-vides embeddedsupport (duringdaily classroomactivities and rou-tines) for teachers,”explained Katz.
I n s t r u c t i o n a lcoaches also helpimplement the new“response-to-inter-vention” framework,which insures that,
through early identification andsupport, students with learning andbehavior problems receive the helpthey need.
In other personnel matters, formerDistrict Technology Director JaneTinsley now serves as Director ofStaff Evaluation and Student Data,allowing for the hire of KeithEdwards as Director of Technology,who has focused on helping teach-ers use technology more in theirclassroom instruction.
PHYS ED ADVENTURES
Construction of Fallsburg’s newProject Adventure course – fundedby a federal Carol M. White PhysicalEducation Grant – got underwaythis summer and will see studentuse in warmer weather. The dynam-ic phys ed course uses cooperative-problem solving activities to buildteamwork, leadership and trust atthe same time as it challenges stu-dents physically.
Such opportunities abound atFallsburg Central School District.
“Fallsburg is defined,” the super-intendent said, “by the many won-derful things that happen in ourschool district throughout the yearin the name of educating our stu-dents and in providing them withthe best opportunities available.”
JANUARY, 2015 SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE 3F
Investment AdvisorsCreating and Preserving Wealth
Philip Coombe III, CFP®
Catherine Bender, CFP®
Lynn McDonald
Office locations:Main Office:
P.O. Box 333 / 6872 Route 209
Wawarsing, NY 12489
548 Broadway
Monticello, NY 12701
Call for appointment
Phone (845) 647-4800 • (800) 4 COOMBE
www.coombebender.com
Email: [email protected] 11232
5.062"; 5.25"; 1; -; Display Ad; Black; Server Files:Pre 1 DisplayPDFs:10823.pdf; 514; No; No; No; Boces
Mon-Fri 7 to 5 • Sat 8 to 12 • Sun 9-1213 Laurel Ave., South Fallsburg, NY
434-6161Fax 434-6997
SERVING THE AREA SINCE 1908
BOOM TRUCKDELIVERY
FREEDELIVERY
Everything to Build Anything!
• Benjamin Moore Paint
• Composite Decking
• Hardware
• Roofing Supplies & Materials
• All Your Building Needs
DEALER 2144
9
������������
����Options for All Ages:
Career Building ~ College Prep ~ Online Courses ESOL Instruction ~ HS Equivalency Diplomas
Where FuturesBegin & DreamsAre Achieved !
(845) 295-4000www.scboces.org
����������� ���������������������
10823
‘...we need to betterengage parents andarm them withstrategies they canuse with their children at home..’
Dr. Ivan KatzSuperintendent ofSchools |
Credits:All photographs and stories for this special
School Scene are by Sul livan CountyDemo crat Photo grapher/Reporter
Kathy Daley. The Democrat would also like to thank the
Fallsburg Central School District for all itscooperation in this project.
Music makes the world go ’round at Cosor ES
4F FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT JANUARY, 2015
CALL NOW! 845-292-8810w w w. p t a n d c h i r o p a i n r e l i e f . c o m 12
021
For ANY “BODY”... SHAPE YOUR LIFE
* $7 Registration Fee May ApplyAll Sales Expire January 30th
3 MONTHS$105
6 MONTHS$189
START YOUR NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION WITH US!
Monday-Friday 6am-9pm • Saturday 8:30am-4pmSunday 8:30am-3pm
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE
85 N. Main St., Liberty • 845-292-0756
OPEN 7DAYS
Ballroom DANCE PARTIESFebruary 7th & March 7th at 7:30pm
PERSONAL TRAININGSERVICES
Our WEBSITE: www.LibertyFitnessCenter.net
MEMBERSHIP INCLUDES... Yoga, Zumba, Pilates, Andre Turan, SilverSneakers and INSANITY! Come join in the fun!
For Women, Men & Teens
OR
REGISTER NOW!
TRXSUSPENSIONTRAINING
Every Friday at 4:45pm w/Andre!
DROP-IN CLASSESFOR PEOPLE WITHOUT GYM MEMBERSHIPS
TYPES OF CLASSES:ZUMBA • Yoga • Adult Fitness
INSANITY • Kettle Bells • Spinning
Group Training w/Andre
Step Aerobics • Line Dancing
and SilverSneakers!
Male or Female Trainers
Available to Assist YOU
in Your Fitness Journey!
JOIN US
for FUN and
FITNESS!
Check Out Our
COUPONS on
Facebook!
Adults
ANY 10 CLASSES
$80*
ORHigh School/
High School Students
ANY 10 CLASSES
$50* ID REQUIRED
GOLDEN TANNING10 Tans for $50 1 Mo Unlimitedfor ONLY $60
Get Your
Winter TanHERE...
Join our GYMfOR THE
NEW YEARand YOU
Choose Howto LOSE!
BALLROOM DANCE LESSONSEvery Monday at 7:30pm
1 YEAR$349OR
SUPPLEMENTS SOLD HERE!
Myofusion, Gold Standard, Amino’s,Jacked, Mass Gainers,
Test Boosters and More!!!
Spinwith Us!
NEW
CLASSES
ALL WEEK
LONG!
2223
3
he halls are alive with the soundof music.
On Fridays, students atBenjamin Cosor Elementary Schoolsing or play the instrumental versionof “The Star Spangled Banner” acrossthe public address system.
Sometimes, the school resoundswith a musical “flash mob” with, forexample, the whole third grade of 115kids meeting suddenly in the front cor-ridor to belt out a tune they’ve learned.
On regular days, Cosor students findthemselves humming a piece they’vestudied in music class as they maketheir way through the rest of their aca-demic day.
“With music, I feel I can be myself,”says sixth grader Madelin Moran. “Itsets my soul free.”
The teachers behind all this joy andgood will – music teachers Andrea
Henderson and Lauren Bernard – saythat for certain, the benefits of singingand of learning to play instruments aremany.
“Music teaches logic, workingtogether to achieve a goal, commit-ment, problem solving, creativity,” saidHenderson. “Math, science, history,you name it, music is there.”
In fact, students involved in musicand art tend to do better on state test-ing and on Regents exams as well, sheadded.
Bernard noted that recent studiescorroborate music-making’s fascinat-ing effect on the brain.
“Neuroscience is revealing that partsof the brain actually light up when youplay or sing – and that that doesn’thappen with anything else,” she said.
Musical training also helps developthe left side of the brain, which
processes language development, shesaid.
At Cosor, all 800 students studyGeneral Music. Henderson teacheskindergarten through fifth grade,imparting music basics like beats andrhythms and how to use your singingvoice instead of your talking voice.Students first learn to play recorders,and then guitars by the end of fifthgrade.
A Fallsburg teacher for 26 years,Henderson also instructs students inchorus, bell choir, and recorderensembles.
Bernard teaches fifth and sixth gradeband and piano skills, along with sixthgrade General Music. In the latter, stu-dents learn to compose basic rhythmsand to perform their compositions onclassroom instruments. She alsoteaches fifth and sixth grade band and
keyboarding.A music teacher in Fallsburg for eight
years, Bernard is thrilled to supervisethe District’s newest musical purchase
T
Performing musician Lauren Bernard teach-es in new keyboard lab at Fallsburg’s CosorElementary, along with General Music andband.
JANUARY, 2015 SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE 5F
2099
5
JOINOUR TEAMBecome part of a dynamic group of professionals at the nation’s premier specialty center for children and adults with complex and chronic disabilities, medical frailties and autism.
THE REGION’S EMPLOYER OF CHOICE
employee wellness programs
OPENINGS CURRENTLY AVAILABLE FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:• Residential Associate• Teacher Associate• Whole Foods Cook• Baker
NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR• Summer Camp Counselors
APPLY ONLINE: thecenterfordiscovery.org
ofessionals at the nation’of prart of a dynamic grBecome p
FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:sOPENINGS CURRENTL
ofessionals at the nation’oupart of a dynamic gr
FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:AILABLEVVAY AAVRENTLLY
ogramsemployee wellness pr
EMPLOYER OF CHOICETHE REGION’S
frailties and autism.onic disabilities, medicaland chr
en and adults with complexchildremier specialty center forpr
ofessionals at the nation’of pr
ograms• Summer Camp CounselorsNOW ACCEPTING APPLICA
• Baker• Whole Foods Cook
eacher Associa• TTe• Residential AssociateFOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:
onic disabilities, medicalen and adults with complex
emier specialty center forsofessionals at the nation’
• Summer Camp CounselorsTIONS FORNG APPLICAAT
• Whole Foods Cookeacher Associate
• Residential AssociateFOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS:
Y ON
MONTICELLO, NY 1270129 HOLMES ROADHUMAN RESOURCES DEP
APPLLY
discovery
TMENTARRTPPA
: thecenterforY ONLINE
O APPLT PTTSMAR
AN WSCCA
g.ordiscovery
NOWYLLY PHONE
AN WITH25
187
te:
a modern digital piano lab with 16 stu-dent keyboards.
“The keyboards have an interfacesystem that allows interactionbetween students and teacher,” saidBernard. “I can also isolate one studentelectronically to help him or her with-
out the rest of the room hearing. I canbroadcast one or more students to therest through the headsets.”
Fallsburg is one of the few districtsthat provides use of its instrumentsfree of charge, opening doors to stu-dents who would not otherwise be
able to learn clarinet, alto saxophone,flute, tuba, trombone, trumpet andpercussion.
Groups like band and chorus are alsoopen to all versus the audition systemthat prevails elsewhere.
“We take bright kids, needy kids,challenging kids, and we work withthem to get them on the same playingfield,” Bernard said.
Some students find their true homein music class.
“There are students who can’t thriveelsewhere, whether it’s socially, aca-demically, behavior-wise,” saidHenderson. “They come here and dowell.”
And that often is not easy. In anensemble, for example, a student mustknow which note to come in on, howto play the note and know their placein the ensemble. And to do it all differ-ently the next second.
“I love watching the children grow,”said Henderson, who serves as organ-ist for a church in Claryville on week-ends.
Her co-worker Bernard is a perform-ing musician who has played clarinetand bassoon with the Pine BushCommunity Band and others for seven
years. She agrees there’s nothing liketeaching music.
“I love instilling the love of learningand of creativity that is so self-motivat-ing,” Bernard said, “and that goes forwhether a student becomes a profes-sional musician or a hobby musician.”
Gabrielle Pantel, Jamie Rein and Madelin Moran work on their flute playing during recess.
A veteran music educator, Andrea Hendersonhelps student Genesis Zelaya on recorder.
6F FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT JANUARY, 2015J
Mobile technology on the move into
Fallsburg’s classroomsSome experts argue schools are
way behind in embracing thekind of technology that the big
world outside the classroom acceptsas second nature.
School districts like Fallsburgwould challenge that thinking.
Skype, “flipped” classrooms, hand-held tablets as teaching tools, wire-less in every classroom – it’s happen-ing there now.
“We are a Google school,” addsFallsburg’s Director of TechnologyKeith Edwards, explaining thatFallsburg’s relationship with Googlepermits a focus on curriculum and
technology integration through onesystem, with parents, students andstudents going to one place to getinformation.
Outreach to the communitybeyond the school walls is a must forEdwards. He’s designed the new dis-trict website and is aggressive inposting information on facebook andtwitter “so people can see how muchgood we do on a daily basis.”
Edwards has also created aFallsburg app to be downloaded ontablets or phones.
“We recognize that most Internettraffic is from mobile devices,” rather
Fallsburg Technology Director Keith Edwards consults with teacher Amanda Scully, who isexploring a ‘flipped classroom,’ whereby she videotapes a lesson, sends it out to her stu-dents at home, and then in class, works on the lesson.
We don't just sell cars, we are a Full Service Dealership. We Service what we sell. We Inspectwhat we sell. We warranty what we sell, and we offerextended warranties up to 48 months.We also do oil changes, car washing, detailing andNY State inspections.
S & M Auto Sales is a Full Service Auto Dealership.We have been in business for over 15 years and allwe do are cars & trucks. And if we don't have it on ourlot, we can get it for you!!!
845-436-9447 • www.sandmautosales.com1175 Rte. 52, Loch Sheldrake, NY Next to Sherman’s Service Center
22590
CATSKILL DERMATOLOGYSteven J. Fishman M.D. • Board Certifi ed in Dermatology
Member of The American Society for Dermatologic Surgery
www.catskilldermatology.com110 Bridgeville Rd., Monticello, NY 1997 Route 17M, Goshen, NY
845-794-3030 845-294-6123
Biologics For Psoriasis • Surgical/Non-Surgical Skin Cancer/Mole TreatmentsIPL/Laser For Blood Vessel/Hair Removal � Botox For Sweating � Blulight For Acne & Sun Damage
ACNE, WARTS, SKIN ALLERGIES, MOLES & GENITAL WARTS
All New Aesthetic & Laser CenterVisit Our Website
For More Information
All disorders of Skin, Hair & Nails
Mount Sinai Medical Center -Assistant Clinical ProfessorZECHARIA LIND RPA-C
LOREE ANN STANTON RN, HT
2122
8
Pre-School Day Care • Developmental EvaluationsSpecial Need Services
Nancy McDonald, M.S. in Ed. CCC, Director504 South Woods DriveMonticello, New York (845) 794-6037
BFSI-11046720749
LEE FELDMAN
SNOW TIRESMany BrandsTo Choose From
845-434-8890
TRUCK TIRES
After Marketand OEWheels
Self ServiceCar Wash On
Premises
And MostMajor BrandsTires For Anything
5334 Route 42 • South Fallsburg, NY 14194
GO COMETS!
JANUARY, 2015 SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE 7F
ShopLike aGeniusShopLike aGenius
Back-to-SchoolSchool SuppliesArt Supplies
ComputersMultifunction PrintersSales & Service
Furniture
1973
3
KRISTT COMPANY
Your local source forAll Your School & Art Supplies!
Hours of operation: Monday thru Friday 8:30AM - 5:00PM
WWW.KRISTT.COM
Our main place of business:Kristt CompanyMonticello Location
369 Broadway, P.O. Box 548Monticello, NY 12701845-794-6639
863 Main StreetHonesdale,PA 18431
570-253-9011
Our branch offi ce:Kristt CompanyHonesdale Location
5.062"; 2.5"; 1; -; Display Ad; Black; Server Files:Pre 1 DisplayPDFs:23754.pdf; 514; No; No; No; Lava Towing & Recovery
89 Rock Ridge Dr., Monticello, NY 12701(845) 791-7444Fax (845) 791-7450
“Where It’s Always ReigningCats & Dogs”
Boarding & Grooming
MEMBER
20793
Rock Ridge Kennels
We Proudly Welcome
Ronen Bar-El, FNPto the offi ce of
PAUL D. SALZBERG, M.D.
Our patients are very important to us.
Serving the local community and beyondfor over 30 years
Directions: SR 97 north, 1.5 mi. from blinking light in Callicoon.Brick Building, second from Holy Cross Church
845-887-61129741 State Route 97, Callicoon, NY 12723
MEDICARE & MOST MAJOR INSURANCES ACCEPTED
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE OF OUR NEW HOURS:Mondays 8am-Noon, 1pm-5pm
TUESDAYS 8AM-NOON, 1PM-5PMWednesdays 8am-Noon • Thursdays 2:30pm-6:30pm
Fridays 8:30am-12:30pm
Board Certifi ed in Family PracticePediatric through Geriatric Medicine
Certifi ed in Geriatrics
A hometown doctor where you’re more like family than a patient
2445
423754
7873 State Route 52Narrowsburg, NY 12764
24-Hour Service • Local & Long DistanceBruce M. Gettel Owner
845-252-7200cell 845-665-9827
Wrecker & Flat Bed Service,Lock-Outs, Equipment Hauling,etc . . .
LAVA TOWING & RECOVERY
than at-home or at-work computers,he said.
Included are news feeds, theDistrict calendar, school lunchmenus, information on athletics, theBoard of Education and on schoolclosings. The student managementsystem can also be accessed via the
app.“We’re added text messaging to the
roster of new (outreach) initiatives,”he said.
Students in the two Fallsburgschools work on 250 GoogleChromebooks – light and inexpen-sive laptops – available on carts.
Chromebooks are designed for usewith most applications and dataresiding “in the cloud” rather than onthe computers themselves.
This month (January), the Districtwill introduce 50 Android tablets –Google’s version of the small, hand-held iPads by Apple – into the firstclassrooms.
“We’ll have one classroom in theelementary school and one in highschool Spanish with the tablets,” thetech director said.
In the case of both theChromebooks and the tablets, “we’vechosen devices that are easy to useand manage,” he added.
The nearly one-on-one availabilityof electronic devices sets a new stan-dard for the schools.
“My vision,” said Edwards, “is thatwe will have work stations in everyclassroom utilizing the tablets.”
The tablets all possess apps to meetcurriculum needs. Math in first grade
offers access to addition and subtrac-tion applications; in EnglishLanguage Arts, applications allowsstudents to focus on word problemsand to create storybooks with anima-tion, graphs and writing.
Teachers can distribute assign-ments electronically, and studentscan complete the assignment andsend it back for feedback and gradingfrom the teacher.
In classrooms like Amanda Scully’s,the “flipped classroom” allows theteacher’s direct teaching to becomehomework via electronics. Scullyrecords a video of herself teaching ascience lesson, and the video isaccessible to her students at homethrough the District’s GoogleClassroom system. Then, in the class-room the next day, Scully delves intothe work and teaches with smallgroups.
A much different world from that ofonly a few years ago, agrees Edwards.
“It wasn’t that long ago that the onlyway kids could access informationwas by going to a computer lab orbeing clustered in a corner of theclassroom,” he noted. “WithChromebooks and tablets, all youneed is wifi, and we’ve got it goinginto every classroom.”
High School student Oscar Beltren takes atest on a classroom computer, while newmobile electronics make their way intoteaching and learning in the District.
8F FALLSBURG SCHOOL SCENE SULLIVAN COUNTY DEMOCRAT JANUARY, 2015
Fidelis Care offers quality, affordable New York State-sponsored health insurance for children and adults of allages and at all stages of life.
From NY State of Health: The Official Health Plan Market-place, to Child Health Plus, Medicaid Managed Care,Medicare Advantage, Managed Long Term Care andmore, we have a program that meets your needs.
And, with our growing provider network, you can see a Fidelis Care doctor almost anywhere you go in New York State!
We have a health insurance program that's right for you –and the ones you love.
(1-888-343-3547) •
Quality health coverage. It’s Our Mission.
Products not available in all counties.To learn more about applying for health insurance including Child HealthPlus and Medicaid through NY State of Health, the Official Health Plan Marketplace, visit www.nystateofhealth.ny.gov or call 1-855-355-5777.
1-888-FIDELIS | fideliscare.orgTo renew your coverage each year, call 1-866-435-9521
Save the Dates for Open Enrollment!Product:
• Metal-Level Products in NY�State of Health
• Child Health Plus• Medicaid Managed Care
H3328_FC 14160 CMS Accepted
Enroll From:
November 15, 2014 - February 15, 2015
All Year Long!
“I want a health plan that helps my son breathe easier.”
2128
7