Upper School Students Continue Tutoring Partnership with Local Elementary School

A group of Harker upper school students signed on to volunteer with The Tutoring Network (TTN), a Stanford-based nonprofit organization that offers free after-school tutoring at local elementary schools.

Launched in 2008, TTN’s goal is to provide meaningful service experiences for high schoolers. For the second year in a row, Harker volunteers have tutored students at the Empire Gardens Elementary School in San Jose. 

Called the Harker School-Empire Gardens Partnership, this year’s group comprises a board led by site co-directors Sadhika Malladi, grade 11, and Vienna Wang, grade 10. Joining them as board members are fellow Harker students Edward Sheu, Kristen Ko and Madison Tomihiro, all grade 11, and Allison Kiang, grade 12.

Malladi said she became interested in TTN in eighth grade, when she decided that all of her extra time should be put to good use doing community service. She went on to found the (now discontinued) Blackford Elementary School TTN site and is currently focused on growing the Empire Gardens site. In addition to serving as site co-director, Malladi helps to oversee board operations.

Wang said she began working with TTN because her sister had previously volunteered with the program. When she first joined TTN, she especially enjoyed teaching children math and watching them have fun while learning.

The commitment for the Harker TTN volunteers is two days per week, with the program running until June. The goal of improving the basic math skills of students in grades 2-5. The curriculum covered by tutors is set up by TTN volunteers and school staff.

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Volleyball Team, XC Runners Advance; Football Ends with Big Win; Tennis Matches Record

Volleyball

In front of a raucous home crowd, the girls crushed archrival Sacred Heart Prep for the third time this season, advancing past the CCS quarterfinals and into the semifinals. This Wednesday, they will take on Soquel at 7:30 p.m. at Notre Dame-Belmont High School. Stay tuned for information on a rally bus that will take Eagles fans to the game!

 Cross Country

Senior Corey Gonzales and sophomore Niki Iyer gave spectacular performances at the CCS finals last Saturday in Salinas to qualify for the state meet this Saturday in Fresno. Iyer had the fifth-best time of the day across all runners in all divisions, placing third in the Division 4 race, while Gonzales placed eighth out of 100 runners. Juniors Jack Rothschild and Alex Dellar also ran personal bests on Saturday’s course.

You can see the results here: http://www.cifccs.org/playoffs/results/14-15/XC%20results%202014.pdf

 Football

The Eagles ended their season with a triumphant win, dominating St. Francis-Watsonville 48-15 on senior night. Freshman quarterback Nate Kelly led Harker to a massive 480 yards of total offense, including touchdown passes to three different receivers. Seniors Christian Williams and Sid Krishnamurthi pulled down touchdown passes from 42 and 39 yards, respectively, while junior Miles DeWitt caught touchdowns of 21 and 19 yards. Krishnamurthi also intercepted a pass to set up a scoring drive, as did freshman Anthony Contreras. The Eagles also scored on a touchdown by sophomore Will Park and two extra points by senior Alyssa Amick.

 Tennis

The girls varsity squad won its first-round CCS match last week, beating York School 4-3, before falling the next day to league rival Menlo to end the season. The Eagles finished their year with a 15-7 record, tied for the most victories in a season in Harker girls tennis history.

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Fourth Grader Receives Academic Honor from Johns Hopkins Talent Search

Fourth grader Amiya Chokhawala was awarded high honors by Johns Hopkins University for being among the highest-scoring participants in its 2014 international Talent Search! The award, bestowed by the university’s Center for Talented Youth, is based on a test that measures verbal and mathematical reasoning ability. Sima Shah, Amiya’s mother, noted, “This is a result of strong community work between Harker and family.”

In 2009 Liza Turchinsky, then in grade 3, now grade 9, was recognized by the center.

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Grade 2 Students Deliver Colorful Painted Pumpkins to Neighbors

Grade 2 students recently painted and delivered colorful pumpkins to residents living near the lower school campus in an effort to thank them for being such good neighbors. The pumpkins were created on Oct. 24 and delivered the following week.

The pumpkin painting and delivery is an annual outreach and community service project for Harker’s lower school students. Last year the painting was moved to the art room, where it will remain. Students painted in the art room during their health education classes with members of the BEST staff on hand to assist in the effort, according to lower school art teacher Gerry-louise Robinson.

Robinson said the second graders enjoyed walking around their school’s neighborhood, leaving pumpkins and cards on porches – bringing about both the spirit of Halloween and the spirit of giving.

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Grade 8 Students Receive Top Honors at Local Robotics Competition

The Eaglebots, a VEX Robotics team comprising Harker students, is off to a strong start with this year’s VEX Skyrise challenge. The team – Andrew Chang, Christopher Gong, Rithvik Panchapakesan and Kaushik Shivakumar, all grade 8 –competed in the Dougherty Valley High School VEX Robotics Tournament on Oct. 25 and the South Bay VRC Middle School Tournament on Nov. 8. The Eaglebots made it to the finals in both competitions, finishing second. There were 70-plus teams between the two tournaments. At the South Bay VRC Middle School Tournament, the Eaglebots received the Robot Programming Skills Award and the Excellence Award, qualifying the team for several upcoming VEX Robotics State Championships tournaments in early 2015.

The Excellence Award is the highest award presented in the VEX Robotics Competition. The recipient is a team that exemplifies overall excellence in building a well-rounded VEX robotics program. This team excels in many areas and is a shining example of dedication, devotion, hard work and teamwork. As a strong contender in numerous award categories, this team deserves to be recognized for building a quality robot and a team committed to quality in everything that they do.

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Frosh Golfer Has Best-Ever Harker Finish; Volleyball, XC, Tennis All Head to CCS!

Big news out of Harker sports! An Eagles golfer made it farther than any other Eagle, while varsity volleyballers achieved one of the highest seeds in Harker’s history. Two cross country runners finished second in league and join two teammates for what is sure to be an epic CCS race this weekend. Tennis is off to CCS as well, while both water polo teams ended the season with wins. Let’s get to the news! 

Golf

At the CCS Golf Championships last Tuesday at Rancho Canada in Carmel, freshman sensation Katherine Zhu shot a 3-under-par 69, the best-ever Harker golf finish, catapulting her into the Northern California Championship in Salinas – the furthest any Eagles golfer has ever advanced! There she finished 19th out of 84 golfers, capping off a season in which she also won the WBAL individual league championship.

You can see the CCS results here: http://www.cifccs.org/playoffs/results/14-15/ggolfsectresults2014.pdf

You can see the Northern California Championship results here: https://www.ghintpp.com/ncga/TPPOnlineScoring/ResultsStroke.aspx?type=players&id=1618

Volleyball

After defeating Sacred Heart Prep on senior night to earn the WBAL league co-championship along with Menlo, the girls varsity squad earned a No. 2 seed in the CCS Tournament, tying them with the 2007 team for the highest-ever seed achieved by an Eagles girls volleyball team. This Saturday night, they’ll have the opportunity to advance in the tournament when they host a quarterfinal match at Blackford against either Del Mar or Sacred Heart Prep. You can be a part of the action, too! For CCS contests, there is an admission price of $8 for adults and $4 for students. The girls finished their regular season with a 16-8 overall record and a 9-1 league record.

You can see the CCS bracket here: http://www.cifccs.org/playoffs/results/14-15/Volleyball%20girls%20D4%202014.pdf

Cross Country

Senior Corey Gonzales and sophomore Niki Iyer each finished second on Friday in the league cross country championships. They will be joined by two additional qualifiers – juniors Alexandra Dellar and Jack Rothschild, both in their first year of running cross country – at this Saturday’s CCS Cross Country meet in Toro Park, Salinas.

Tennis

The girls qualified for CCS! The Eagles will begin with a first-round match-up when the team hosts York School today at 2pm at The Bay Club-Santa Clara, where a win would send the girls to Menlo tomorrow.

You can see the CCS bracket here: http://www.cifccs.org/playoffs/results/14-15/TennisGirlsTeam14.pdf

Water Polo

Both the boys and girls teams ended the season with wins! The boys trumped Lynbrook 8-7 at to finish in third place with a 12-11 record, while the girls wrapped up their year in fifth place with a 12-7 victory over Cupertino, giving them a 9-12 overall record.

Football

The Eagles and the cheer squad have their senior night this Friday under the lights against St. Francis-Watsonville at 6pm. Come support senior players Sid Krishnamurthi, Keanu Forbes, Alyssa Amick, Christian Williams and Allen Huang in their final game and cheerleaders Riya Godbole, Daniela Lee, Erika Olsen and Mariam Sulakian.

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Grade 8 Students Send Halloween Care Packages to Soldiers Serving Abroad

Halloween took on new meaning this year for grade 8 students in Cyrus Merrill’s history class, who donated care packages filled with thank you letters and candy to American troops stationed around the world, including in Afghanistan.

Last year when Merrill and his students launched the project, they were thrilled to receive responses from some of the soldiers, who expressed their appreciation for the packages and also included an official certificate from troops serving in Afghanistan’s Combined Joint Task Force-10, Regional Command-East and the 10th Mountain Division. The students also received personal notes from a few other soldiers stationed elsewhere.

“The thank you from troops in Afghanistan came as a result of this simple act, which was one of several citizenship activities and charity projects blended into my course,” reported Merrill. The letter from the soldiers in Afghanistan also included an explanation of the goals and accomplishments of that particular military unit.

This year, the care packages once again included nut-free candy sealed in Ziploc bags, packaged along with a “thank you for serving” letter addressed to “Any American Soldier.” There were no stickers, construction paper or glitter allowed (apparently due to problems with soldiers’ ability to view them through night vision goggles), just simple notes and drawings.

“The packages were sent to U.S. troops stationed around the globe. The candy served as either treats for soldiers or for them to hand out to children living around where they are stationed,” said Merrill.

Students had written the letters that went along with the Halloween care packages during their advisory periods and in Merrill’s history class. In the notes, students were instructed to offer a “tiny slice of life back home.”

“The students had fun writing about things like what they did on vacations, happenings in their families, descriptions of their pets, what they like to eat, favorite movies … anything Americana-ish,” Merrill elaborated.

The timing of the note writing also made it possible for students to reflect on and inform the soldiers about their recent Grade 8 Trip to Washington, D.C., and their often newfound passion and interest in the American government.

Each year, in addition to the Halloween care package project, Merrill’s history students write letters to their national representatives in Washington, D.C., about reform issues, expressing concerns over such topics as mental health, alcohol related topics, and the treatment and protection of women. Such efforts are part of Merrill’s hands-on philosophy of “making history and not just studying it.”

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Harker Senior Honored with First Community Service Spotlight Award of the School Year

Senior Mariam Sulakian was recently honored with a Harker Community Service Spotlight Award. During a Monday morning campus meeting in early November, she received a $200 check from The Harker Upper School Community Service Program.

Sulakian donated the award money to a nonprofit organization she volunteers with, which provides medical services, food and social support for elderly Armenian residents living on their own in the Stepanakert area. The cause, known as Hanganak NGO, is funded by the Armenian Women’s Welfare Association (A.W.W.A.).

The Community Service Spotlight Awards, sponsored by Harker’s outreach department, occur several times throughout the school year. They were created to celebrate the outstanding community service completed by upper school students. Sulakian is the first of three students who will be honored this school year; the others have not yet been named.

In her acceptance speech, Sulakian explained that she began doing community service somewhat reluctantly in middle school at the urging of her sister. “Eventually she annoyed me so much that I just gave in,” she conceded.

Since “giving in” to volunteer work, Sulakian has gone on to become a passionate advocate of volunteerism. In fact, she has completed more than 1,000 hours of community service in her high school years alone. Yet, she believes that community service is “not about the hours or just something I do to pass the time. It’s about making myself part of other people.”

Throughout the past four years, Sulakian has embraced numerous volunteer activities, including tutoring children in her church, participating in benefit concerts and modeling in fashion shows for various causes. However, her most memorable volunteer moments have come from her volunteer work with the A.W.W.A., she said.

For many years, Sulakian, who speaks Armenian, has traveled to the country and volunteered for Hanganak NGO during the summer. She accompanied and talked to elderly Armenian patients on doctor visits, helped measure their blood pressure, packed up bags of food and medication, and assisted with other activities.

“The word charity can be somewhat misleading since it assumes that one person benefits in a one-way transaction. On the contrary, it is a mutually beneficial exchange. Nourish others physically, and they will nourish you spiritually,” she surmised.

Concluding her talk, Sulakian stressed that community service is what makes her proud to be herself and to be a part of others’ lives. “It in essence keeps me loving, stitching together the broken parts of myself as I help bandage those of others,” she said.

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Nichols Invitational Debate Tournament Attracts Nearly 400 Competitors

Harker hosted the 15th annual Howard and Diana Nichols Invitational Debate Tournament on the last weekend of September. A total of 380 students from 26 California schools participated in the tournament, which was run primarily by Harker debate students. In addition to various debate competitions, the event included several workshops taught by Harker debate captains.

“These workshops were dreamed up by Harker captains years ago and have become something we are known for as our successful older students teach Harker and outside students who are new to debate,” said Harker debate teacher Carol Green.

The weekend also included a special novice public forum tournament for debaters in grades 6-8, in which 35 middle school students participated.

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Upper School Debate Wraps Up Successful October

Harker debate students continued their successful year at a debate tournament held at the University of the Pacific in Stockton last weekend. Andrew Tierno, grade 10, took second place in open dramatic interpretation, while Lisa Liu, grade 11, earned third place in open humorous interpretation.

Meanwhile, the team of David Jin, grade 11, and Alex Lam, grade 10, as well as the team of freshmen Derek Kuo and Justin Xie, each finished in the top eight of open public forum debate.

Earlier in the month, at the St. Mark’s School in Dallas, policy debaters Ayush Midha, grade 12, and Panny Shan, grade 11, reached the semifinal round, finishing third out of 76 teams. Midha was named 14th speaker in the tournament and, on the invitation of a group of debate coaches, gave a special speech at St. Mark’s. These results qualified Midha and Shan for the Tournament of Champions. Additionally, Karen Qi, grade 11, reached the double-octofinal in Lincoln-Douglas debate.

At a Lincoln-Douglas debate event held at Presentation High School, Pranav Reddy, grade 12, was named the first-place speaker in the round robin and invitational events, in addition to reaching the semifinal round of the invitational and qualifying for the Tournament of Champions. Qi reached the quarterfinals of the invitational, placing her one step closer to qualifying for the Tournament of Champions.

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