SEPTA Strike

​As of 12:01 am on Tuesday, November 1st, SEPTA is on strike. 

In addition to Dr. Hite's email that we sent home last week, we wanted to give you some SLA specific information about how we are handling the strike. As a reminder, all School District of Philadelphia information about the strike can be found here: http://webgui.phila.k12.pa.us/offices/s/septa-strike

1) We have set up a carpooling system located here: http://bit.ly/SLACarpool -- if you can give rides, please register your car and how many spots in your car you have. Please list your neighborhood for "City" and list the cross-streets where you'd meet in the "Notes" section. If you need a ride, go to the site and see if there are any spots in cars from your neighborhood.

2) Students who cannot make it to school can log into the SLA website to work remotely. Teachers will be updating Canvas with all the work students can do remotely, and we are taking a close look at all benchmark due dates to make sure students are not negatively impacted by the strike. Students who are logging into Canvas and working remotely will be marked Present -- Off-Site. (Students who do not log in and are absent will be marked Excused Absent once they bring a note as per SDP policy.) 

3) We welcome all alternative forms of transportation, and if your student chooses to ride their bike or scooter to school, please make sure they wear a helmet or they will face an appropriate level of grief from Jeremy Spry, Mr. Lehmann and Mr. Gerwer.

Boys Ultimate Beats Masterman To End Fall Season

The Boys Ultimate team beat Masterman 15-11 to end their fall season on Friday. The team was led by the defensive efforts of senior co-captain Kobe Nabried and juniors Nate Little and Saamir Baker. SLA, which had lost two close games to Masterman earlier in the season, was determined to avenge the earlier losses. The team played some of their most cohesive Ultimate of the season, overcoming an early 2-0 deficit to take the first half 8-5. Junior Eli Block led the offense with several key early deep passes for scores.

Masterman came back early in the second half to tie the game 8-8, and another classic SLA v. Masterman match was in the works. The teams traded points until SLA pulled ahead to stay at 11-10, when senior Griffin Gallagher threw a score to Block to take the lead. SLA closed out the game -- and the fall season -- on a 4-1 run to beat their in-city rivals 15-11. The team will now take November and December off before beginning winter training for a march to the PA State Championships in the spring.

Go Rockets! 

Freezing Eggs:

Science: Typically the sperm and embryos are easy to freeze however the egg is the largest cell in the human body. Freezing eggs is the process in which a woman's eggs are removed, frozen, and stored until ready for use later in life. All women undergoing this process have to have an hormonal injection first (IVF) or in vitro fertilization. It takes about 4 to 6 weeks for an egg to completely freeze. Eggs can be frozen for years and still be valuable. 

Society: This has an impact on society because some women want to freeze their eggs at a young age since they tend to age. Other women could've been diagnosed with cancer or other health issues and want a surrogate. Some women feel freezing eggs is a good thing while other women prefer a natural birth. 

Self: Personally, I think this is a very interesting thing and a great alternative for women. Like all things it comes with it's advantages and disadvantages, but I think it's something more women should look into. After doing some research I found that women have been 65% successful with having children after freezing their eggs. 

References: 

1.) Egg Freezing FAG's. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://uscefertility.org/egg-freezing-faqs/ 

2.) Egg Freezing Raises Fundamental Issues of Ethics and ... (n.d.). Retrieved October 31, 2016, from http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2014/10/15/freezing-plans-for-motherhood-and-staying-on-the-job/egg-freezing-raises-fundamental-issues-of-ethics-and-fairness 

3.) Harrington, R. (2015). Elective Human Egg Freezing on the Rise. Retrieved October 31, 2016, from https://www.scientficamerican.com/article/elective-human-egg-freezing-on-the-rise/ 



Quarter 1 Artworks

​On the first week of Art class, we created and designed our own ceiling tile. We could either design it with our own ideas or with the help of the internet. To create this ceiling tile, we first thought of an idea and drew it on a piece of paper or put it on our computers to be traced to the tile.  Then, after it's approved we transferred our drawings to the tile and painted it directly on the tile. I created a dream catcher for my ceiling tile and figured that I should put quotes relating to the drawing. The colors that I used varied but my background is purple since it is my favorite color. 
The next artwork we created in this class was a self-portrait using a charcoal pencil and a big white poster. The process for me was easy and quick since all I did was look at a picture of myself on my computer and drew it freely to the poster. In this artwork, I wanted it to look realistic since it is a self-portrait so, I smudged the charcoal pencil in places that needed some shadow and I created some crease or wrinkles either on my face or my shirt. Also, I tried to make my hair look realistic as well by drawing strands of hair on both sides of my head and even on top of my head to show that my hair isn't stiff or perfectly straight.

Project Q1 How we met Tina

 Welcome to my site this is the just of what my story is about: 

A gay man enlists his lesbian best friend to be their surrogate but she denies. Afterwards the gay best friend convinces her to inseminate herself while she's blacked out drunk. Months later she is showing symptoms and he has to come out with his dirty doings with his husband and especially his best friend. Later they find out an true odd turn of events...

http://tvelazquez-rivera.wixsite.com/mysite

I hope the reader learns to tell the truth right away so everything is clear and you arent living a lie.
This is my site feel free to read whatever thanks! 

My portfolio blog

My ceiling tile has a lot of meaning for me. It is an anime character named Natsu, from one of my favorite animes called "Fairy Tail." Behind him is the fairy tail symbol. Natsu has fire magic so that's why the fire in in the picture. Whenever I see this symbol or Natsu, it reminds me to be strong and work hard towards the goals I want to achieve in life. I am very proud with how it turned out, and I like my art style. I drew everything by hand and eye, no tracing. Next in my self portrait I challenged myself to again not tracing and using hand and eye skills. I started out with shapes and made my way into detail. It was difficult at first. In fact I have another picture of the same thing that I drew of myself, on a smaller paper. They look different. This portrait looks just like me, but the other had better details in the shading. I absolutely am prod of my work. 

Ben Fink's Art Gallery

For this semester, I created two pieces of art, which I then took pictures of and put in my slideshow. My first piece of art was a painted ceiling tile with an art design of my choice. Due to my passionate stance on love, peace, and compassion, I drew a large heart with a peace sign embedded into it, the sun and moon to represent equality, a smile to represent happiness, and a plus sign to represent positivity. My second piece was a rough self-portrait on a piece of poster paper. 

E1 U1 Serenity, Derek, Emmett, and Michaela

Emmett is really Barack Obama. Michaela is confused and speaks to him in a rude manner. What does his bodyguard, Derek, do in defense?

Emmet and Serenity both want to go outside even though Michaela warns them of the bad weather. Will they suffer the consequences?
Derek wants to invite Michaela to his game, but she can't get the day of the week right!
Derek and Emmett go out for some Coco Colas. Maybe they should have been more careful about who their waitress was...

Spanish project video #1 (karen, Mayah, Emily, Grahm)

A group of high school students are in the middle of working out at the gym. Mayah is struggling while Grahm is flying through the push-ups and sit ups, Emily is watching and cheering on the both of them. Although Mayah only got to 10 and Grahm got to double the amount, Emily believes that they both did amazing in their own ways.


Spanish project video #1 (karen, mayah, emily, grahm)

A group of high school students are in the middle of working out at the gym. Mayah is struggling while Grahm is flying through the push-ups and sit ups, Emily is watching and cheering on the both of them. Although Mayah only got to 10 and Grahm got to double the amount, Emily believes that they both did amazing in their own ways.


Circus "Freaks"- 5 Minutes of Science

For my five minutes of science, I decided to focus on circus “freaks”. Most commonly known for their sideshow attraction in the late 1800s and early 1900s, we don’t think about them much anymore, but they are still a very large part of our entertainment industry. From people like Andre the Giant to Peter Dinklage, it is clear we still find something interesting about people who look different than us. And as American Horror Story: Freak Show shows, we still view these “freaks” as just that. They are separate and apart from us, something we enjoy marvelling at, but not welcoming into our own society. That is all fine and good until you consider that millions of people are considered “freaks”, for whatever reason. They cannot get jobs or a steady income because of their appearance, and when they do find something, it is often a capitalization of their birth defect, making them into something less than human.


These “freakish” types of birth defects can be caused by any myriad of things, from chromosomal abnormalities to genetic mutations to tumors to exposure to things like viruses, alcohol, or drugs in the womb. For example, gigantism is commonly caused by a tumor on the pituitary gland that causes it to secrete to much growth hormone, somatotropin, making them grow much taller and much faster than the average human. Something similar happens with dwarfism. While there are multiple types of dwarfism, the most common is achondroplasia, which is caused by a genetic mutation that makes the pituitary gland create less cartilage and slow the use of the growth plates much faster than they should. And those are just two of the most common.


While most “freakish” birth defects are survivable and have minimal side effects, depending upon how bad the birth defect is, some of them can be crippling. Some conjoined twins can never separate from each other, making life very dangerous for them. People with microcephaly can suffer side effects from something as mild as a shortened stature to something as severe as seizures. Not to mention that people with visible birth defects, like people with hirsutism, extreme, male patterned hair growth on women, or cornu cutaneum growths, human horns, are incredibly unlikely to get a job or the emotional support they need as humans without expense treatments and surgeries.


As someone who has studied many of these birth defects and more, at the Mutter Museum and beyond, I have found it increasingly more disturbing the way society treats these people. We allow ourselves to make a profit off of them and marvel at them in fascinated horror, but we refuse to let them work in the same offices as us or try to accommodate any side effects from their “freakishness”. While we may not stick them in side shows anymore doesn’t mean we treat them anymore humanly. We force ourselves to ignore the issues they are facing for reasons they can’t help in favor of our own comfort. This treatment needs to end and end quickly. We have been treating “freaks” like this for over a century; isn’t it time we learn?



Works Cited:

M. (n.d.). Hirsutism. Retrieved October 30, 2016, from http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/hirsutism/basics/causes/CON-20028919

McGurgan, H. (n.d.). Gigantism. Retrieved October 30, 2016, from http://www.healthline.com/health/gigantism

Memento Mutter. (n.d.). Retrieved October 30, 2016, from http://memento.muttermuseum.org/

M. (n.d.). Microcephaly. Retrieved October 30, 2016, from http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/microcephaly/basics/causes/con-20034823