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CONNECTING PEOPLE & PLACE
TO BUILD COMMUNITY


The views and opinions in the WCCDA blog do not necessarily reflect those of The WCCDA or it's staff.

‘Youth’ Category

April 5th, 2011 in Education, Youth | No Comments


Courtesy of Katy at the Pacific Science Center, who contacted us today about this great new program:

With the support of JPMorgan Chase Foundation, we will be offering FREE engaging, hands-on science workshops to Seattle youth (grades 3-8) in Rainier Valley, White Center and the International District this summer.

Each Summer Science Program consists of five 1-hour workshops, offered once a week for five weeks at your site.  Workshop activities may include: experimenting with electricity and circuits, constructing bridges, cracking codes, and exploring the stars in our portable planetarium.  At the end of the summer, participants and their families will be invited to visit Pacific Science Center free of charge for a special Family Science Day.

Check out the attached FAQ sheet for program details.  If you have additional questions, feel free to contact me by phone at (206) 443-6607 or by email.

Interested?  Applying is easy!  Just fill out the attached application form and email it to kmccown@pacsci.org or fax it to (206) 443-6600.  Applications submitted by April 30 will be given priority scheduling.


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March 22nd, 2011 in Education, Health, Youth | No Comments


(CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE)

white-centeralcohol-forum-march-28th

Interpretation in Cambodian/Khmer, Vietnamese and other languages will be available, according to Mike Graham-Squire, Drug Free Communities coordinator.

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March 21st, 2011 in Education, Health, Youth | No Comments


learning-through-cooking

Family Connections, a program of the White Center CDA, always puts on great events to help bridge school to home learning opportunities.

Learning Through Cooking is just one of the many family centered social networking gatherings central to Family Connections.  Always planned by teachers and parents together, our literacy and math events bring new ideas about health and learning to White Center families.

The most recent school based activity helped to build stronger relationships between teachers and families through pasta salad and yogurt parfaits. The activities reinforced early numeracy through fractions and measurement, and further embedded literacy skills with reading, reporting and listening components. And it was delicious!

There are two more Learning Through Cooking nights scheduled for this school year, along with other important Early Learning and Parent Engagement events. Hope to see you out there in the community!

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March 14th, 2011 in Education, Health, Youth | No Comments


wch-runners

White Center Heights Elementary School’s Food and Fitness project is a school wide effort to get our kids moving more and eating well. Always on the lookout for local opportunities to walk that talk, Wellness Coordinator Rob Frisholz put together a team of runners who blasted through the rain. On March 13, several students took part in Burien’s Cove to Clover fun run. Event sponsors not only waived the race fee for our students, but also bought each of our runners a new pair of shoes.

Special thanks to Wellness Coordinator Mr. Frisholz and ELL Coordinator Mr. Huppe for organizing the day for WCH students. The White Center CDA was able to help provide transportation, documentation and cheerleading  for our awesome runners. Great job, Dolphins.

proud-finishers-in-their-new-ts

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March 14th, 2011 in Education, Youth | No Comments


cats-in-hats

White Center is a community that is committed to the academic success of all our students. Through community wide programs offered by partners and the White Center CDA through Family Connections and Mount View Healthy Learners, locally relevant activities engage student and families in fun and learning.

Every year on or around March 2nd, the entire student body of our own White Center Heights Elementary School gets together for a community reading celebration. The students each make their own hat, indicating their favorite Dr. Seuss book.  Mr. Dave, the school principal and biggest kid, leads the school in a “Happy Birthday Dr. Seuss” cheer.

The official Dr Seuss website is a really fun way for White Center kids to read, play and develop literacy skills. http://www.seussville.com/

dave-in-the-hat

More photos after the jump!

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February 28th, 2011 in Education, Video, Youth | No Comments


Via youtube: A parody of “Teach Me How to Dougie,” by Cali Swag District, made by teachers and staff at Denny International Middle School, in Seattle, WA.

Read about the making of this video here.

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February 22nd, 2011 in Community, Partners, People, Video, Youth | No Comments


It is the last day of filming for Director Zia Mohajerjasbi and crew at Cascade Middle School for Seattle rapper Macklemore’s song “Wings”, and the students are excited to be a part of what will be a great music video. Video gear, crew, students and staff are packed into one classroom this morning, where filming will continue in the hallway and cafeteria this afternoon. We were on the set this morning, and will make sure to post the final product here and on Facebook in the near future.

photo-3

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Above photos and video by White Center CDA staff, to not be used without permission of the CDA.

The song itself is a moving portrait of Macklemore’s love for Air Jordan (Michael Jordan) sneakers, and the consequences that come with it. You can listen to the song here:

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February 17th, 2011 in Community, Education, Health, Partners, People, Youth | No Comments


In White Center, the YES Foundation, along with Community Schools Collaboration, partnered up with Cascade Bicycle Club in 2009 to create the Major Taylor bike project, an “after-school cycling program for young people aged 11-18 integrating bicycle riding, healthy living, cycle maintenance, road safety awareness, and the importance of working toward individual goals” (link). The project continues to offer opportunities to youth in White Center involving bike riding that they couldn’t find anywhere else.

But who exactly is “Major Taylor”? For Black History Month, we’d like to offer a brief profile of this bicycling great.

major1Marshall Walter “Major” Taylor (26 November 1878 – 21 June 1932) was an American cyclist who won the world 1 mile (1.6 km) track cycling championship in 1899 after setting numerous world records and overcoming racial discrimination. Taylor was the first African-American athlete to achieve the level of world champion and only the second black man to win a world championship—after Canadian boxer George Dixon.

Taylor was the son of Gilbert Taylor, Civil War veteran and Saphronia Kelter, who had migrated from Louisville, Kentucky with their large family to a farm in rural Indiana. He was one of eight children, five girls and three boys. Taylor’s father was employed in the household of a wealthy Indiana family, the Southard’s, as a coachman, where Taylor was also raised and educated. When Taylor was a child, his father would bring him to work. The employer had a son, Dan Southard, who was the same age and the two boys became close friends. Taylor later moved in with the family and was able to live a more advantaged life than his parents could provide.

This period of living and learning at the Southard house lasted from the time he was eight until he was 12 when the Southard’s moved to Chicago and Taylor “was soon thrust into the real world.”

At age 12, Taylor received his first bicycle the Southard’s and became such an expert trick rider that a local bike shop owner, Tom Hay, hired him to stage exhibitions and perform cycling stunts outside his bicycle shop. The name of the shop was Hay and Willits. The compensation was $6 a week, plus a free bike worth $35. Taylor performed the stunts wearing a soldier’s uniform, hence the nickname “Major.”

When he was 13 in 1891, Taylor won his first race, an amateur event in Indianapolis. Two years later, in 1893 at age 15, Taylor beat the 1 mile (1.6 km) amateur track record where he was “hooted” and then barred from the track because of his color.

Although he was greatly celebrated abroad, particularly in France, Taylor’s career was still held back by racism, particularly in the Southern states where he was not permitted to compete against Caucasians. The League of American Wheelmen for a time excluded blacks from membership. Other prominent bicycle racers of the era, such as Tom Cooper and Eddie Bald, often cooperated to insure Taylor’s defeat. During his career he had ice water thrown at him during races and nails scattered in front of his wheels, and was often boxed in by other riders, preventing the sprints to the front of the pack at which he was so successful.

In his autobiography, he reports actually being tackled on the race track by another rider, who choked him into unconsciousness but received only a $50 fine as punishment. Nevertheless, he does not dwell on such events in the book; rather it is evident that he means it to serve as an inspiration to other African-Americans trying to overcome similar treatment. Taylor retired at age 32 in 1910, saying he was tired of the racism. His advice to African-American youths wishing to emulate him was that while bicycle racing was the appropriate route to success for him, he would not recommend it in general; and that individuals must find their own best talent.While Taylor was reported to have earned between $25,000 and $30,000 a week when he returned to Worcester at the end of his career, by the time of his death he had lost everything to bad investments (including self-publishing his autobiography), persistent illness, and the stock market crash. His marriage over, he died at age 53 on June 21, 1932-a pauper in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood, in the charity ward of Cook County Hospital-to be buried in an unmarked grave. He was survived by his daughter.

In 1948 a group of former pro bike racers, with money donated by Schwinn Bicycle Co. (then) owner Frank W. Schwinn, organized the exhumation and relocation of Taylor’s remains to a more prominent part of Mount Glenwood Cemetery in Glenwood, Illinois, near Chicago. A monument to his memory stands in Worcester, and Indianapolis named the city’s bicycle trapock after Taylor.

Information via Wikipedia

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February 10th, 2011 in Community, Education, News, Partners, People, Politics, Youth | No Comments


The educational Levy’s voting results  from this week’s special election are out, with 31% of voters reporting to the polls. Our partners at the Highline School District tell us how happy they are with the results.

“We are grateful to Highline voters for their remarkable show of support for their local schools,” says Catherine Carbone Rogers, Highline Public Schools director of Communication and Community Development. “The election results show that this community really values education and wants to invest in our children and schools.”

Below are the results as of February 9:

HIGHLINE SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 401

Ballots Cast Registered Voters
17892 56549


31.64% voters reported

Proposition No. 1 Replacement of Expiring Educational Programs and Operation Levy

YES NO
10855 (60.72%) 7022 (39.28%)


Source: King County Elections

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February 8th, 2011 in Employment, Partners, Youth | No Comments


We’ve posted a new job opportunity in our Classifieds section!

CLICK HERE FOR THE DIRECT LINK

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