Friday, October 30, 2015

Lady Scot soccer invites the community to GIRLS with GOALS Picnic Nov. 8


The Lady Scots soccer team's first annual GIRLS with GOALS Picnic will be held from 4-6 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 8 at Highlander Stadium. There will be a DJ, the button man, inflatables, games and prizes, face painting and amazing raffle baskets - truly something for all ages and fun for the entire family as well as the opportunity to meet the varsity and JV players.

Chip's Old Fashioned Hamburgers, a neighborhood favorite, will provide meals at the picnic and take-out will be available for pick up any time during the event. Picnic tickets are $10 each. Attendees may also purchase raffle tickets for the chance to win one of five baskets filled with items generously donated by neighborhood businesses and supporters. Raffle tickets are $5 each or 6 for $25. Tickets are available now, so contact your favorite Lady Scots soccer player to make a purchase or donation.

All money raised will help offset team operating costs and equipment, as well as a donation to the HP Sports Club. The team appreciates the community's support of the HP Lady Scots Soccer program. See you on the field!

In the event of inclement weather, the picnic will me moved to the Multi-Purpose Activities Center across from Highlander Stadium.  

HPISD

HPHS students share Red Ribbon Week message with elementary students


Red Ribbon Week, held Oct. 19-23, promotes the awareness of drugs and alcohol and encourages students to steer clear of substance abuse. Throughout the week, members of the HPHS Student Council visited each HPISD elementary school and spoke to classes about the dangers of substance abuse.

StuCo communicated to the younger students that drugs and alcohol are not a necessary part of the high school experience, and that there are plenty of other ways to have fun. After the classes heard the presentation, they were encouraged to ask questions, and it was great to see the impact high school students can have on the elementary kids.

HPISD

Student Council delivers anti-bullying message with a sweet treat


The HPHS Student Council is recognizing October as National Anti-Bullying Month, and students are working together to put an end to bullying. To entice students to hear its message, the Student Council offered free doughnuts and an anti-bullying message to the entire school.

The group also hung signs around campus to discourage bullying and to raise awareness of the effect it can have on people. StuCo also sponsored a "Blue-Out Day," in which students wore blue T-shirts to discourage bullying.

HPISD

Trustees recognize school leaders during Principal Recognition Month


During its Oct. 13 meeting, the HPISD School Board honored our six principals by designating October 2015 as Principal Appreciation Month in HPISD.

Highland Park ISD principals fill many roles as educational leaders, community builders, budget analysts and guardians of policy mandates and initiatives. Our principals work collaboratively with teachers to set performance objectives and maintain high curriculum standards, and they are members of a community of lifelong learners who are committed to professional growth. HPISD principals are positive role models for their students and staff, exhibiting ethical leadership, good citizenship and positive energy in their schools each and every day.

Thank you to our six HPISD principals for their commitment to providing an excellent education for every student who attends our schools:
  • Dr. Skip Moran, Armstrong Elementary School
  • Christine Brunner, Bradfield Elementary School
  • Jeremy Gilbert, Hyer Elementary School
  • Dr. Lynda Carter, University Park Elementary School
  • Dr. Laurie Hitzelberger, McCulloch Intermediate School and Highland Park Middle School
Walter Kelly, Highland Park High School

HPISD

Caniac Pregame Supper & Silent Auction rescheduled to Nov. 13


With the District 10-6A's rescheduling of varsity football to Thursday night this week, Highland Park Football's second annual Caniac Dinner has been rescheduled as well.
The good news is that the Caniac Supper and Silent Auction will now be held on Friday, Nov. 13 in the high school cafeteria, before the varsity football team's first playoff game at home.

Current tickets are still valid for the fundraiser, which includes a delicious Raising Cane's meal for $10, live entertainment and a fabulous silent auction. Dinner will be available from 5-7 p.m., with take out available from 4:30-6 p.m. on the Douglas side of the school.


Tickets and T-shirts are still on sale for the rescheduled event from your favorite high school football player, or click here to print an order form. Money raised will benefit the freshman, JV and Varsity football squads.

HPISD

More to come from Student Council's Project Purple Initiative


Heavy rains on the night of Oct. 23 did little to dampen the enthusiasm of the HPHS Student Council regarding THP Project Purple. If anything, the night served as the opening salvo of more to come.

THP Project Purple is a national initiative adopted by the HPHS Student Council that warns students of the dangers of substance abuse and underage drinking. The Student Council contacted the operators of four of Dallas' iconic buildings - Reunion Tower, the Bank of America Tower, the Omni Hotel and One Arts Plaza - to have each light their buildings in purple on the night of October 23. In addition, both the Highland Park High School and Mesquite High School football teams wore a special decal on their helmets to show their support for the initiative. Rainy weather took a little of the focus away from the work of the student leaders, but they remain undaunted.

"We are far from finished calling attention to this issue," said Carson Yeager, president of the HPHS Student Council. "While Oct. 23rd was a great event - despite the rain, it is just the beginning. Our next effort will be to sell yard signs that say 'We Are Purple' in order to keep the momentum going."

The Student Council is requesting $10 per sign to cover their costs. The idea is that when a parent buys a yard sign, he or she is pledging to have a drug-free house and not to serve alcohol to underage drinkers.

HPISD

Highland Park High School Varsity Tennis Team Advances to Regionals



The Highland Park High School Varsity Tennis Team defeated Irving High School 10-0, Richardson High School 10-0 and Lake Highlands HighSchool 10-0 this past Tuesday and Wednesday in the Area Tennis Tournament help at Lake Highlands High School and Fair Oaks Tennis Center.  They will advance to the regional playoffs next Friday in Mansfield where they hope to continue their winning streak and bid for their second state title in division 6A Tennis.

Park Cities BubbleLife

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Extraordinary Students / Extraordinary Homes


Highland Park High School honored 16 students who were named National Merit Semifinalists during an Oct. 6 luncheon at the Dallas Country Club. Students are selected based on performance on the Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test. The semifinalists' scores are among the top 1 percent of high school seniors in the U.S.

During the luncheon, HPHS Principal Walter Kelly congratulated the students, and also recognized the parents who were in attendance. 

"Today we celebrate the extraordinary achievement of these 16 exceptional young scholars as individuals and to recognize the contribution they have made to the academic reputation of our school," Kelly said at the luncheon. "We also want to thank the proud parents who have made education a priority at home and who have supported these students throughout their years in school."
The 16 students will continue in the National Merit Scholarship Corporation's competition for 7,400 scholarships worth $32 million that will be offered in the spring. 

HPISD

Highland Park students deserve better than schools dressed up in faux historical detailing

It is hard not to wonder about the lessons the Highland Park Independent School District, not to mention some Highland Park residents, are imparting to their children — and never mind protesting books like David Shipler’s The Working Poor.

Today, the district released the renderings for a series of new elementary buildings it hopes to build, in the process demolishing three historic school buildings — Bradfield, University Park and Hyer elementary schools.

These are works of considerable architectural distinction and were included on Preservation Dallas’s recently released “most endangered” list. The Bradford (1925) and University Park (1928) schools were designed in handsome Spanish style by the revered Dallas firm Lang and Witchell, whose work includes the Magnolia Building (now hotel) and the Harris County Courthouse in Houston. Hyer Elementary is the work of Mark Lemmon, whose Tower Petroleum Building on Elm Street, might just be the apogee of commercial architecture in Dallas.

To add insult to the proposed indignity of their destruction, the new schools, designed by the firm Stantec, will be dressed up in faux historic detailing. This is no way to teach the next generation. A new building, and especially an educational building, should be honest about its method of construction and expressive of contemporary technologies and ideas.

More to the point, the fantasy that Highland Park exists in some ahistorical bubble is just that — a fantasy. It’s time to stop pretending 2015 is 1954.

For an example of how the new might be successfully married to the historic, HPISD supervisors might venture to the Arts District for a tour of Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, the Dallas magnet school for the visual and performing arts. Here, a handsome 1933 building by Lang and Witchell was expanded in 2008 by the architect Brad Cloepfil in a sharp modern language that is both complementary and distinctive.

In its report, Preservation Dallas noted that “a blend of old and new buildings would celebrate the importance of physical examples of civic history when educating young, elementary-aged children.”

They deserve nothing less.

Mark Lamster/The Dallas Morning News


HPISD unveils 'first-look' renderings of Bradfield, Hyer & University Park Elementary Schools

Bradfield Elementary (click the image above to view a larger version)

Hyer Elementary (click the image above to view a larger version)

UP Elementary (click the image above to view a larger version)

Highland Park Independent School District made public today early renderings of Bradfield, Hyer and University Park Elementary Schools. The three schools are slated to be rebuilt pending approval by voters in a bond election to be held Nov. 3.

HPISD Superintendent Dr. Tom Trigg said that the renderings are just the first step in the design process if the bond passes.

"It is important to note that these renderings are just the first look at what the new schools could look like, rather than what they will definitely look like," Dr. Trigg said. "Community input will greatly influence the final designs of the schools over the course of the next year or so, and these designs are just a starting point. The HPISD Board of Trustees has high expectations that the architecture for each redesigned elementary school incorporate historical elements of the original buildings, complement the surrounding neighborhood, and reflect the character and history of HPISD."

The designs were driven by input received from project design teams made up of teachers, parents and community members. The teams were facilitated by Jonathan Aldis, project manager for Stantec, the school architectural firm selected by the district from among 22 firms in 2012. Aldis said that the buildings are being designed with a nod to the past and an eye to the future.

"Our highest compliment will be if people say that these schools look like Highland Park and that they fit with the community," said Aldis. "We have spent a great deal of time and effort trying to get this right. We continue to be committed to redesigning these school facilities so that they can best serve students for the next 80-100 years in HPISD and continue to make this community proud."

A 21-member Facilities Advisory Committee, made up of community members who either have or have had children attend HPISD schools, recommended to the Board of Trustees that Bradfield, Hyer and University Park Elementary Schools be rebuilt as part of a bond proposal going before voters on Nov. 3. The proposal also calls for extensive renovations to Highland Park High School, McCulloch Intermediate/HP Middle School and Armstrong Elementary, as well as the construction of a new elementary school near Northway Christian Church near Northwest Highway. 

The facilities committee's recommendations are designed to alleviate current overcrowding in district schools, accommodate future growth and address facilities issues regarding technology, security and compliance with Americans with Disabilities Act standards.

Bradfield and University Park Elementary Schools were built in the 1920s and Hyer Elementary School was opened in 1949. All three schools are currently either at or above capacity.

HPISD

Highland Park ISD releases first look of buildings that’d replace historic elementary schools

Brafiel
A new Bradfield Elementary School would be built, if Highland Park ISD’s $361 bond measure passes (Courtesy of Stantec).


Highland Park ISD released renderings today of three new buildings that would replace historic Park Cities elementary schools if a $361 million bond measure passes Nov. 3.

The three schools — Bradfield Elementary, University Park Elementary and Hyer Elementary — date back to the 1920s and 1940s. They would be demolished and rebuilt as two-story schools to make room for more students. Some parents and preservationists are calling for the old buildings to be saved or incorporated into the new structure.

Click here to see a slideshow of the renderings and current buildings.

Jonathan Aldis, a project director for Stantec, which is designing the new schools, said that each school includes subtle references to the old buildings. For example, some parts of the old buildings, such as 1920s decorative stonework, could be re-used. “The intent is to convey to people that your history is not lost, that there are elements of the buildings that can be reincorporated into the current building without replicating a 1928 elementary school and still honor that look and that aesthetic that the community’s come to expect,” Aldis said. 


School officials sent architectural renderings of the three replacement schools in a district-wide email this afternoon. The renderings were produced by Stantec, which has worked with Highland Park ISD since since 2012. The international design firm has an office in Plano.

The $361 million bond measure is the largest in Highland Park ISD’s 101-year history. It would fund elementary-school construction; renovations at the middle, intermediate and high schools; and new athletic and parking complexes.

Along with rebuilding three elementary schools, Armstrong Elementary School, which opened in 1953, would be renovated. An additional elementary school would go up in Dallas near Northwest Highway. School officials said they will not have a sketch of that school before the election.

Demolition of the three elementary schools is a controversial part of the bond measure. Multiple generations of some Park Cities families have attended the same school and identify with their campus mascot.

Preservation Dallas, a local advocacy group, said the buildings should be preserved because of their historic and architectural value. They listed the schools among this year’s “Most Endangered Places.” Bradfield Elementary and University Park Elementary were designed by Otto Lang and Frank Witchell and built in 1925 and 1928, respectively. Hyer Elementary School, which opened in 1949, was designed by Mark Lemmon.

School district officials and a facilities advisory group of parents, trustees and other community members say the old schools aren’t designed to meet today’s education demands and are too small to accommodate the district’s growing student body. They say new schools will allow for wider hallways, larger classrooms and underground parking garages, without taking up scarce green space used for gym and recess.

Aldis said the new schools would have a traditional look and include room for technology and flexible teaching spaces. “The goal is not to recreate,” he said. “The goal is to the honor the past.”
At Bradfield Elementary, a red roof and courtyard with arches would pick up on the influence of Highland Park Village, the nearby Mediterranean-Spanish style shopping center built in 1931.

The white, ironwork sign at Hyer Elementary that’s a popular photo spot for students on the first day of school would be painted and placed back onto the school’s front lawn. Similar ironwork could be designed for above the door of the new building.

The new University Park Elementary would have a student gathering area around the front lawn’s flagpole, similar to the one at the existing school. But it would also have a ramp that allows wheelchair access.

Preservation Dallas has urged the district to hold onto the facade or the core of the buildings, demolish newer wings and build additions. They pointed to the example of Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts in downtown Dallas. The old school building, which was designed by the same architect as Bradfield and University Park elementary schools, was preserved when the campus was expanded.

Dallas ISD was required to preserve the building because it is a Dallas landmark. Highland Park and University Park do not have a way to designate buildings as historic landmarks.

Superintendent Tom Trigg said the district told Stantec to design new buildings, but he said he’s heard from people who want the district to preserve some or all of them.

Trigg said he recently asked Stantec to explore whether it could keep the facade or core of a building and add space around it. “No decisions, no guarantees,” Trigg said. “But I think we owe it to the community and to these [preservation-minded] folks to give it an honest look.”

Aldis said the architecture firm has renovated and restored other historic facilities. He cited an addition to the 1917 junior high school in Butler, Pa.; a renovation of the 1926 Norse Auditorium and addition to the Magnet School of the Arts High School in San Francisco (in association with Castro-Blanco Piscioneri & Associates); and a renovation and addition to the Cleveland Institute of Art’s 1913 McCullough Building.

Melissa Repko/The Dallas Morning News

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

47 students named National Merit Commended Students & 7 students earn National Hispanic Scholar honors Largest number of Commended Students since 1982


Highland Park High School Principal Walter Kelly announced that 47 seniors have been named Commended Students in the 2016 National Merit Scholarship Program, the largest number since at least 1982. In addition, seven students have been named National Hispanic Scholars. The students will be honored at a special breakfast Nov. 3. 
  
"Congratulations to our National Merit Commended students and our National Hispanic Scholars!" Kelly said. "With these students and our 16 National Merit Semifinalists, this class has outperformed the national average by four times over. These students have balanced meaningful lives that include an ongoing emphasis on academic performance. We are proud of the work that this represents and look forward to observing what each of these students does next in their lives."

Commended students are:
  • Claire T. Addison
  • Jack B. Arnold
  • Evan A. Baker
  • Ashley S. Batjer
  • Victoria H. Batjer
  • Julia A. Berry
  • Sunny C. Bowden
  • Madison K. Clement
  • Grace C. Coleman
  • Andie C. Dorn
  • William M. Douglass
  • Matthew J. Emerson
  • Jordan J. Fox
  • Xiaohan Gao
  • Mark O. George
  • Stanton L. Geyer
  • Jake S. Gile
  • Emily G. Henschel
  • John R. Herrick
  • Michael A. Hodak
  • Caroline E. Holland
  • Miles L. Iola
  • Brooke A. Jennings
  • Sabrina Jiang
  • Hannah J. Jurgensmeyer
  • Nathan T. Kong
  • Frederick Kraft
  • Hannah R. Kupferschmid
  • Sydnie A. LaDuke
  • Samuel B. Lesesne
  • Gloria Liu
  • Andrew V. McMullen
  • Frances Peterman
  • Adam W. Rathjen (no longer a student at HPHS)
  • Jack P. Renner
  • Jeremiah R. Rothschild
  • Iva C. Sadler
  • Sara E. Scheffler
  • Barton Showalter
  • Cheyenne Son
  • Katherine Stockum
  • Sarah Stokum
  • Madison M. Taylor
  • Tyler M. Vincent
  • Nga Vu
  • Holly Winters
  • Helen M. Zhang
An interesting note about this year's group of Commended students is that it contains two sets of twins.

Approximately 34,000 Commended Students throughout the nation are being recognized for their exceptional academic promise. Commended students placed among the top five percent of more than 1.5 million students who took the 2014 PSAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test.

In addition, the College Board National Hispanic Recognition Program identified about 5,000 of the highest-scoring students from a nationwide total of more than 250,000 high school juniors in the United States and U.S. Territories who took the PSAT/NMSQT and designated themselves as Hispanic/Latino. 

The 2016 HPHS Hispanic Scholars are:
  • Nina Flores
  • Mark George
  • Francisco Lopez
  • Frances Peterman
  • Emily Singh
  • Matthew Spicer
  • Madison Taylor
HPISD