Friday, November 9, 2012

NMS Spelling Team

Can You Spell C-O-M-P-E-T-E-S!

Our newly formed NMS Spelling Team competed in its first official competition last Friday, November 2, in Swansea. 

Our team was led by our two fabulous co-advisors, Ms. Andrea Borges and Ms. Wendy Conant.  They both expressed how well the team did, and how they truly exhibited everything we would have wanted for exemplary students.

The team is made from 7th and 8th graders:

Grade 8
Jack Knowlton B202
Logan Teceno B104
Matt Lamoureaux B102
Meghan Boucher B104
Rebecca Lamoureaux  B104
Sarah Cote B102
Hannah McCarthy B106

Grade 7
Shannon Lawler C204
Sarah Stearns C204
Daebreon Henry C206
Olivia Shaw C203
Timothy Powers C206



Excellent job, Team and Ms. Borges and Ms. Conant!  That's how we spell G-R-E-A-T!

Friday, November 2, 2012

Message from Mr. Geoghegan

1st Quarter Ends on Thursday, November 8

It is unbelievable to think that one-quarter of the school year is almost over.  It really, truly does fly by. 

I feel like I was just having "meet and greets" for Mr. McLaughlin and myself with you.

With the first quarter coming to an end, I just have a short piece that I found on the Association for Middle Level Educator's website.

It is very quick but gives some helpful advice, which I have individualized for NMS.

There may be something you may find helpful.  Check it out if you get a chance.

Five Ways to Help Your Young Adolescent Be Successful in Middle School

·         Plan now for the rest of the year, including MCAS time. Don't wait for things to go wrong. The first few weeks are the honeymoon period of every new school year when good intentions are uppermost with students, parents, and teachers. This is the time to talk honestly with your young adolescents about what worked last year: studying after school and not after supper; eating breakfast; keeping an assignment notebook; and checking their Agenda and their homework nightly. Talk about what did not work: staying up too late on school nights; procrastinating on long-term projects; trying to participate in too many activities, etc.
·         Know what your young adolescent is doing by talking to him/her every day. Don't grill him/her, but find a time when you can sit down and really talk about his/her day. Many families still make it a priority to sit down for dinner most nights where they can talk about the events of the day in a calm and unhurried manner. If dinnertime doesn't work for your family, perhaps a short walk in the evening or a time before bed when you can connect and talk about what is important.
·         Stay in touch with the school. Middle schools are generally organized by teams, so the team should be your contact. Make sure you know your child's teachers and stay in contact. Schools allow you to phone in to hear about assignments; other schools have Web sites with lots of information about the school; or just email or call. It doesn't take long to stay in touch so you know what is going on.
·         Encourage your young adolescent to become an active citizen this year. Have your child practice doing for others. Visiting a special senior citizen; helping with community clean-up; or becoming an advocate for recycling, literacy, or kindness to animals will help your young adolescent be an involved member of society and maintain that balance between caring for others and attending to her own needs.
·         Remember that middle school is a time for students to explore new opportunities. Doing well on tests and learning are critical, of course, but students are also learning a great deal about themselves. So, think carefully about what being successful really means. Is it more than receiving all As? Is it learning to be a self-starter? Is it learning to follow through on commitments?

Have a great weekend.  Thank you for your commitment to your child's education,

M R Geoghegan

Message from the NMS Media Center

Fall Scholastic Book Fair

I would like to inform parents about the upcoming Fall Scholastic Bookfair.   The fair
will begin on Nov. 29 and run through Dec. 7th.  I am planning on having the family event
during parent/teacher conferences Nov. 29, 6-8pm, and Tues. Dec 4, 4-6:30.   Students will
be visiting with their homeroom teacher during SSR.

You may visit our Book Fair website at:  http://bookfairs.scholastic.com/homepage/nicholsms

Anyone wishing to volunteer to work during the book fair or any questions, please contact me.

Hope to see you there; thanks,
Ms. Walgreen
508-946-2020 x205

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Wednesday, October 31 is an A-Day Rotation

Good afternoon -

I hope everyone is doing okay after Sandy.

I have received phone calls and emails inquiring about the day rotation for tomorrow, Wednesday, October 31. 

It will be an A-Day rotation, as it was originally scheduled.

Again, enjoy the day, and we will see you tomorrow.

Thanks,
Mr. G

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Message from the PTSA

KIDSTUFF Coupon Books


Parents, Teachers, and Students,
We need your help. We are looking to finish up the Kid Stuff Coupon Book fundraiser. Please return any books that you did not sell and any money from books you did sell. We don't want to have to pay for any outstanding books.

If you did not purchase a book and would like to; Maria's Hallmark Store and Lakeville Card and Gifts are helping us sell them in their stores. You can also contact me at govonik@comcast.net if you would like to purchase any books. They make great presents. You can earn your money back very quickly by using just a couple of the coupons! The price is $25 a book.

Please help support our kids and buy a book. They money made goes directly back to the students for enrichment programs and fun activities to make their learning experiences better.
Also, there is a link to the PTSA blog at the right for you to click at any time to get to the new PTSA blog.
 
Thank you for helping us.

Friday, October 12, 2012

A Message from Mr. Geoghegan


October is the Month of the Young Adolescent

October is the Month of the Young Adolescent, an annual international collaborative effort of education, health, and youth-oriented organizations.  Initiated by National Middle School Association (NMSA, now the AMLE -- Association for Middle Level Education), the Month of the Young Adolescent brings together a wide range of organizations to focus on the needs of this important age range, ages 10 to 15.  The key messages for the celebration are:  1) The importance of parents being knowledgeable about young adolescents and being actively involved in their lives; 2) The understanding that healthy bodies plus healthy minds equal healthy young adolescents; 3) The realization that the education young adolescents experience during this formative period of life will, in large measure, determine the future for all citizens; and 4) The knowledge that every young adolescent should have the opportunity to pursue his or her dreams and aspirations, and post-secondary education should be a possibility for all.

For the most part, the general public has lacked an adequate understanding of youth in the transition period between childhood and adolescence.  As a result, young adolescents often have been "growing up forgotten."  The English language contains no single word for this life stage, having only the terms infancy, childhood, adolescence, and adulthood to designate periods of life.  Yet it is during the period of early adolescence, generally between the ages of 10 and 15, when young people leave childhood and move toward full adolescence that they make major decisions about their values, standards, attitudes, and personal beliefs.  Many of these decisions direct their behavior throughout their lives.

Working together, we can highlight the need for strong educational partnerships among the school, parents, students, and community members so that every 10- to 15-year-old will have the opportunity to become all he or she can and should become.  That’s why October has been declared Month of the Young Adolescent, and why everyone in a community should ask, “How can I help a young adolescent reach his or her potential?”  This collaborative approach continues to be important to the success of this initiative because it will take all of us working together to make a real difference in the lives of 10- to 15-year-olds.  We invite you to join with us in this important initiative.  The young adolescents with whom we work and live on a daily basis deserve our best efforts if each is to have the chance to become all he or she can and should be.  Together, we can make a difference ... to insure a bright future for all young adolescents.

Most of the ideas above emphasize the thought that we are a team:  parents, community, and school.  We have to work together in order to insure all students succeed; it is an essential key to that success.  One which will reap major rewards for all constituents:  parents, school, community, and especially, the students themselves.
 
This blog isn’t much from me, but I am a person who feels that there are many times when people can say it better than I can.  In that vein, I will finish with an article excerpt from Richard W. Riley, former U.S. Secretary of Education.  It is worth noting because it discusses the role of adult figures in the ever changing lives of middle school aged children.  The complete article and many others can be found at the website of the Association for Middle Level Education, http://www.amle.org/ .

 
“Pay Attention to Our Adolescents”

“Young people grow up fast these days and adolescents are making critical choices about their lives and what they hope to become.  The gawky eighth grader who is struggling to define who he or she wants to be may decide to be a high school dropout by the tenth grade or may realize that going on to college is much more rewarding.  If ever there was a time to pay attention to our children, it is in these middle years.  For that reason, I believe it is absolutely essential that every student have a parent, a counselor, or a caring adult mentor who can help guide them as they make important choices about their present and their future.  Growing up is full of pushes and pulls, stops and starts, and detours along the way.  The middle school years are the starting point for this unique phase of our children’s lives.  Kids try out new versions of themselves, experiment, stop, start and go in other directions, and certainly test boundaries.  Adults have an important role to play during this intense period when growing up takes place in so many different ways.  We need to ‘hang in there,’ despite all the ups and downs and trials and tribulations that occur during the adolescent years.  Parents who have attended countless PTO meetings during the elementary years have a tendency to cut back when students get to those middle years.  The truth of the matter is that parents need to be just as much of an active presence in the lives of their children during these transition years and stay involved in school activities.  Above all, parents, educators, and other adults need to help children develop a value system that allows them to make healthy and smart choices about who they are and what they hope to become.”


Thank you,

M. R. Geoghegan

Thursday, October 11, 2012

NMS Music Department Is On Twitter

  FOLLOW US ON TWITTER  @tigermusicNMS

·        The NMS Music Department is now on twitter!

·        Our twitter account will be used for reminders, updates and other music department related information.

·        Families and Students can follow us on twitter:   @tigermusicNMS

·        There is no obligation to join or follow twitter, but we hope you will join us so we can all benefit from more frequent communication.

·        Remember “tweets” are public, so student specific information should not be tweeted. Ms. Burnham & Mrs. Young are both available by phone and email.


·        Music Office 508-946-2020 x. 125