Sunday, December 16, 2012

Excellent read from Grant Wiggins

Good vs. great teachers: how do you wish to be remembered?



There are endless articles, blogs, essays on the difference between good and bad teachers. All the frameworks for teacher evaluation highlight the shades of difference. But to my eye there are far too few adequate analyses of the difference between good and great teachers.
I actually find that latter distinction more interesting, in a similar vein to the Jim Collins inquiry on businesses: how does one go from good to great? And like Collins, I think the difference is qualitative – The actions, behavior, and attitudes of great teachers differ considerably from those of good teachers; it’s not just a matter of degree. (That’s why I find almost all the well-known evaluation systems humdrum – they focus on mere goodness instead of being designed backward from greatness. That’s for another blog).
Let me propose a set of distinctions – admittedly a bit glib – that may have value for sharpening our sense of what greatness is in teaching:
  • Great teachers are in the talent-finding and talent-development business.
  • Merely good teachers think they are mostly in the business of teaching stuff and helping students so that it gets learned.
  • Great teachers are aiming for the future: are these students better able to succeed on their own after me and without me?
  • Merely good teachers look mostly to the past: did they learn what I taught and did they do what I asked of them?
  • Great teachers decide what not to teach to ensure lasting emphases and memories
  • Good teachers cover a lot of ground while making the content as interesting as possible.
  • Great teachers delight in smart-alecks and skeptics who clearly have raw but undirected talent.
  • Good teachers are often threatened or bothered by smart alecks and skeptics.
  • Great teachers know us better than we know ourselves, especially in terms of intellectual character.
  • Good teachers merely know us as students of the subject.
  • Great teachers get more from us than we thought possible to give
  • Good teachers have high expectations and passions, and think that the rest is up to us.
  • Great teachers sometimes bend the rules and fudge the grades on behalf of raw student talent.
  • Good teachers uphold standards and grade according to the scores students earned.
Here is a report from a student’s science teacher – from the elite British school of Eton, no less – who in a final report makes clear his stance as a “good” teacher:

Alas for this teacher, the student in question grew up to be a Nobel prize winner who cheekily displays this report on his web site and has it framed in his office.
Such stories are not amusing outliers. I have personally witnessed many such reports and attitudes as a student, teacher, parent, and colleague.
I have often in workshops told the story of a former student of mine, Chris, who was mostly successful but viewed as a big pain-in-the-you-know-what by many of his teachers. I saw Chris up close not only as his teacher but as the advisor to the school paper where he was editor. He once got us all in trouble by writing an expose of the work and living conditions of the school’s cafeteria and building and grounds workers – published on parents’ day, no less. The Dean confiscated all the copies. I admired him and fought on his behalf a few times.
Chris grew up to be Chris Hedges, Pulitzer-winning report for the New York Times.
Many talented people in the arts are famously hard to deal with; John Lennon and James Brown are familiar examples. And speaking of talent recognition, Lennon and the Beatles notoriously FAILED their audition at Decca Records in 1962. (I have a high-quality bootleg of the tape: you can hear a song on my band’s site here.) Jaime Escalante, one of the most well-known great teachers, was extremely difficult to work with (as reported in the wonderful Jay Mathews account of Escalante’s work at Garfield HS). Had it not been for his Principal and some other knowing supervisors, Escalante would likely have never accomplished what he did. I saw a teacher in Portland HS in Maine years ago who was the greatest teacher I ever saw – Leon Berkowitz. He refused to join with his colleagues on school reform projects and was notoriously cranky.
There are numerous such stories about Albert Einstein, as readers no doubt know. (Alas, many of them are untrue, such as the story that he did poorly all through school.) But Einstein clearly bristled under the kind of good teachers I am describing (as recounted in Isaacson’s biography of Einstein):
He would later be able to pull off his contrariness with a grace that was generally endearing, once he was accepted as a genius. But it did not play so well when he was merely a sassy student at the Munich Gymnasium. “He was very uncomfortable in school,” according to his sister. “He found the style of teaching – rote drills, impatience with questioning – to be repugnant…the systematic training in the worship of authority was particularly unpleasant.”
Skepticism and a resistance to received wisdom became a hallmark of his life. As he proclaimed in a letter to a fatherly friend in 1901, “a foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth.”
I once led a workshop on critical thinking and asked teachers to fill out a T-chart with critical on one side and uncritical on the other. Curiously, many teachers proposed such indicators as attentive, disciplined, and follows directions and procedures carefully as indicative of critical thinkers. When I suggested that those sounded to me like indicators of compliance a teacher noted that, indeed, when she had proposed “skeptical” at her table they had rejected it as the hallmark of uncritical thinkers!
This is all very personal for me, as you might guess. I was a smart aleck; I was not a successful student for many years. It wasn’t until one high school teacher and one college teacher saw some talent in me to nourish that I turned the corner and began to believe in my worth as a thinker. I still seethe with dislike for a teacher who never once praised me for anything I did all year (though he was a very good teacher and highly respected by others). I almost dropped out of both college and grad school in the face of teachers who didn’t know me, didn’t care to know me, and only cared to give me low grades to teach me a lesson about hard work and scholarship. When I decided to be a teacher – in part, motivated to right the wrongs inflicted on me – I vowed to find and reward learners who showed potential, whether as thinkers, soccer players, teachers, trainers or unit writers. And I can honestly say that of all I have accomplished as an educator (and as a parent) I am most proud of what I have accomplished as a talent scout.
So, ask yourself, honestly: do your behaviors and attitudes suggest that you are sufficiently in the scouting and talent-development business? Or do they suggest that you are too much in the content-mastery business? (Notice I am not saying that it is impossible to be both; I am talking about the good teacher as being too focused on one and not the other).
Yes, yes, I know the pressures on you; I know the schedules, the syllabi, the standards, the evaluation system, the pressures of 700-page textbooks. Please, consider, however: do you think greatness comes without challenge and sacrifice, in teaching or anything else? More pointedly: do you really believe in the long run that it is mastery of your content that determines a student’s long-term fate? Can’t you think of teachers whose greatness lay in their ability to see and promote – sometimes at the expense of time, rules or policies – what others ignored in you? How, then, do you wish to be remembered as a teacher: merely good? Or great?

PS: For a nice story on teachers who were in the business of talent development and not content mastery, listen to Terry Gross’ re-played interview of Dave Brubeck on his death where Brubeck describes the ‘crisis’ at the end of his conservatory studies. http://www.npr.org/2012/12/07/166724259/celebrating-the-life-of-jazz-pianist-dave-brubeck

Friday, December 7, 2012



Crisis Drill Notification

Dear Creekview Community,

This notice is to inform you in advance that during the week of December 10-14, Creekview High School will be participating in a practice Crisis Drill. This drill will involve the Creekview faculty and students, Carrollton-Farmers Branch ISD security personnel, and Carrollton Police and Fire departments.

The crisis drill will involve the entire school from the perspective that we will be implementing and practicing our lockdown codes.

This rehearsed drill will impact our students and staff for approximately 45 minutes.

Sincerely,


Joe LaPuma
Principal
Creekview HS

Friday, November 30, 2012

Creekview High School’s Safe Driving Campaign Earns Top 10 Spot for 2012-2013

Check Presentation at Halftime of Varsity Boys Home Basketball Game on Nov. 27

Carrollton,TX, Nov.26, 2012 – Students at Creekview High School in Carrollton are working to reduce risky driving behaviors that lead to motor vehicle crashes, the number one killer of teens. Creekview High was selected through a competitive process as one of this year’s Top 10 Project Ignition campaigns from across the United States and Canada. Project Ignition is a service-learning program sponsored by State Farm® and coordinated by the National Youth Leadership Council®.
Creekview’s Project Ignition team will receive $5,000 to support their participation in the National Service-Learning Conference® in the spring of 2013 in Denver, CO. In addition, they will receive a $2,500 grant to implement their yearlong project during the school year. Earlier this year, Creekview was awarded a $2,000 Project Ignition grant to implement their “Good Habits + Careful Driving= Arriving Alive” campaign.
Creekview High School will also be awarded a $2,500 grant for their participation in State Farm’s inaugural Celebrate My Drive® program, which has been billed as the largest one day gathering of new teen drivers ever. The Celebrate My Drive event was on Sept 15 and involved schools in 400 cities across the US and Canada. The local event was at the Stone Briar Mall in Frisco.
To celebrate Creekview’s achievements and dedication to teen driver safety, State Farm will present a check in the school’s gym at halftime of Creekview’s varsity boys home basketball game,  Nov. 27. Tipoff is at 7:30pm as the Mustangs take on R.L.Turner. Media is invited to attend.
“Congratulations to Creekview High for this wonderful accomplishment,” said Mark Cockerham, State Farm’s Vice President of Agency for the DFW area. “We are grateful for students like these who, through Project Ignition and Celebrate My Drive, join us in promoting teen driver safety.”

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Superintendent Dr. Burns Visits Creekview

I would like to thank C-FB ISD Superintendent Dr. Burns who visited Creekview today and attended our after school faculty meeting. It is great to work in a district where the superintendent knows so many faculty memebers by name and comes out to visit with our awesome staff! I appreciate it and I know the staff does as well. Thank you Dr. Burns!

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Mock Trial & Hurricane Sandy

What an honor it was last week to be able to travel to Brooklyn, New York with the Mock Trial Team as they competed in the Empire City 6th Annual Mock Trial Invitational. The students from our Mock Trial team are a remarkable group of young men and women who have demonstrated an extraordinary amount of dedication and initiative as they prepared, planned and saved money for this academic competition! Mr Myers our Mock Trial Teacher as well as Amy Toy, Creekview's Law Academy Director have given many hours to get our students prepared for the Invitational!
The competition traveled to New York from schools in Ireland, South Korea, United Kingdom, Canada, California, Washington, Louisiana, Texas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, California, Arkansas, South Carolina, Alabama, Pennsylvania, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, and Connecticut! Yes, this is big time and the second year in a row that the Creekview team was invited! Thirty six schools from around the world were prepared to do battle in the case of Happy Land Toy Company!
The good news is that we all arrived safely and were able to participate for part of the tournament. The bad news was that Hurricane Sandy had some bad intentions that caused us to change our flight plans and Escape from New York two days early! What a great decision that was- the hurricane was heading our way and we held a meeting with the Mock Trials captains to determine the best course of action.....and yes, they delivered. The plan to leave early was not an easy decision to make...well for some it was....I must say it was not easy to leave New York but knowing the the so called FrankenStorm was bearing down on us made it a bit easier.....In spite of our early departure, it was a trip worth remembering and worth attending in the future if the opportunity arises. It was also great to see the Creekview students practicing, preparing, and delivering on the case. I could not be more proud of a group of students and I look forward to our state competition in early 2013!

Monday, October 22, 2012

2nd 9 Weeks!



Good afternoon everyone!!

As you have seen from some of the emails that have been sent today you will know that we have much to celebrate!

  • Our Speech Team had another great weekend of work winning the St. Mark’s tournament. This tournament has teams from all over the country and is very competitive. The Creekview Mustang defending state champions are an awesome team and proved it again at this tournament! Shep and his students are not only a hard working group, but obviously are very talented team as well!

  • The Creekview Band had their UIL performance this weekend at Standridge Stadium and received all 1’s from the judges!! The band looked and sounded awesome as they completed their season on a very positive note! Congrats to this hard working group of students and teachers- Mr. Ruangtip, Mr. Jordan, and Mr. Anker!

  • The Moving Ground Dance Department returned from Chattanooga, Tennessee yesterday after attending the Tennessee Dance festival. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chattanooga,_Tennessee What a wonderful experience for our students to be able to travel and learn from dance instructors from across the U.S. Ashton Overbeck received Honorable Mention for her work in the student choreography showcase!

  • Remember that this Wednesday we will have our MAP (Mustang Advisory Period) where we will hand out 1st 9 weeks report cards as well as have our first CLAY Leadership session. Please review Ms. Biggs email about previewing the materials and having access to a computer for the lesson.

  • Red Ribbon Week was kicked off last Friday with a breakfast that involved students from the Lewisville ISD, Coppell ISD, and the Carrollton Farmers Branch ISD. The message is clear- we are in a battle with drugs and we need to do our part to help our students make wise choices. Thank you for participating in the dress up theme each day!

  • Attendance & Hall Passes- Teachers- as always, it is critically important that attendance is taken accurately and timely. We have had a couple of incidents over the last two weeks where this was not done and we (Administrators and Law Enforcement) were searching for a student. Also, all students should have a pass if they leave your class. Even if it is a note on a sticky note.

  • Thank you to the core area teachers (science, math, social studies, ELA) for scanning their unit assessments on time and for the results that we have seen. Although we believe in continuous improvement, we have seen some very good scores thus far. Keep it up!!!

  • On a different note, we will be losing two of our staff members at the end of the week. Math teacher, Andrew Martens and Laura Flores in our records department have both accepted positions outside of education and will be starting at the first of November. Thank you both for your service to the students of C-FB ISD and your friendship. You will be missed!

  • Red Ribbon Week- Yes, there are dress themes each day this week and with homecoming next week we’ll get to see more dress up themes as well! If you are participating in one of our dress up themes, yes, jeans are appropriate.

  • Congratulations to our tennis team for finishing 3rd in district!!  This Friday, it is senior night at Standridge where we will recognize the seniors in football, cheerleaders, Wranglers…etc….

  • The October 2012 issue of the Mane Event news magazine is out…great job to Ms. Waters and her students!!

  • Our fine arts are in full swing…orchestra concert tonight, Choir tomorrow, Musical practice is underway….!!

As you know the school calendar is the best place to find out about the great things that are happening at CHS! Celebrate the great things that you and your students are involved in!!!

Have a great week!

-Joe

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

CHS Speech & Debate Program Recognized as Top 10% of Nation

The National Forensic League (NFL) has recognized the Creekview High School Speech and Debate program for earning more than 100 degrees last year, placing the program in the top 10% of NFL chapters nationwide. The recognition earns membership in the NFL’s prestigious 100 Club. NFL Executive Director, J. Scott Wunn, stated that, “Such a milestone is remarkable because it demonstrates outstanding commitment to teacher students essential life skills – including communication, research, listening, writing and organization.”


Thursday, October 4, 2012

Good Clean Fun

Tonight was some good clean fun Texas style! Actually, what a game! Our cross town rival, Newman Smith is a worthy opponent. Both teams played hard and fought to the bitter end....of a triple OT game! And yes, good clean fun was had by all! Well maybe not quite by all...Sorry Smith. Friday night football on a Thursday turned out to be quite a treat for the Mustangs. The all time series versus Smith is now 8 victories for Creekview and 3 victories for Smith. I think I will buy a plaque and place it in the school somewhere that lists the score of the annual Smith vs Creekview game and hopefully one day will reach 100 games played! The crowd and support from our students was amazing tonight. There must have been over 400 students in attendance yelling, chanting, and..... creating a huge baby powder cloud to start the game.
Some notable performances from my perspective were of course on offense, QB David Blough. What a competitor he is proving himself to be. As a sophomore, we saw much potential, now we are seeing a talented team leader evolving into an excellent passer and an equally dangerous runner.  He made some big plays as did #23 Adrian Williams. Adrian is back after being injured most of the season and he showed some of the running skills that makes him tough to bring down. Compact, nimble and powerful, Adrian is an added dimension to the offense and he made an impact. Two great kids on a team of great kids that performed well. On defense, #4 Cameron Adkins Jr. caught my eye on numerous plays. Cameron is a junior and showed excellent tackling ability and athleticism on defense. Jordyn Peeler was in on many tackles and had an interception tonight. Also playing well on defense was Tyler Cuccia and Alex Vasquez.  Next week is the Forney Jackrabbits....yes, Jackrabbits.... October 12th, Friday at 7:30. Go Mustangs!

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Instructional Rounds @ Creekview

The Creekview Instructional Rounds Team had a productive meeting after school today. We focused on our Momentum Plan for the 12-13 school year and engaged in great dialogue around our problem of practice. Challenging tasks, questioning and discourse are the topics that we will be focusing on this year. We we have  a CHS IR Blog up and running soon as well! The plan is also to get the students involved as much as possible! What a concept....involving the students in their own learning!! - LaPuma

Dr. Leach Presentation- Grief Counseling etc...



On Wednesday evening, Dr. Michael Leach from Richland Oaks Counseling Center will conduct a presentation in the Creekview Auditorium focusing on the topics of grief, loss, and suicide intervention.   The presentation is open to our entire Creekview community and will begin at 7:00 pm.    The information shared by Dr. Leach will be valuable in helping our students and families cope with the recent tragic events.

Thank you- JL

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Kiet Nguyen

As the principal of a high school, or any school for that matter, hearing news of a student passing is always one of your worst fears. Well, this Friday, 9/14/12 it happened.

Kiet Nguyen is the name of the Creekview high school senior student/athlete who passed away Friday. Kiet was a very popular student and friend to many. He played on the varsity football team and had many brothers in arms from this group of young men who have gone through everything from early morning work outs, two a days, spring practices, etc. Only a coach and a football athlete can relate to the bond that develops here. Many days sitting in front of the locker, just sitting and talking, exhausted from the work outs and or practice. Or being in the huddle together in the heat of battle leaning on one another and celebrating plays that have been made.  He wore #9 and wore it proudly.

I am so very impressed with our students. They are a family of students who call Creekview home. Since I set foot in the building I have always said that I knew the kids were going to be good, I just didn't know they would be this great. So many students filled with faith and with a caring spirit that will help all of us get through this loss.

This weekend was filled with so many emotions, tears, memorials, and hugs. The days ahead will be like that too and we will be calling on our faith often.

The football schedule had Creekview playing a Saturday 11:00 a.m. game. The game was against Timber Creek HS from the Keller ISD. What a class act they were. Each of their football players and coaches signed a sympathy card and sent it to Coach Cline. Their cheerleaders also made a large sign that they hung on their side of the field during the game. From behind the scenes, we considered postponing the game to a later date.  I am so glad that we did not. Although played with heavy hearts, the game was so very inspirational to so many. Kiet would have been proud of the way the Mustangs carried themselves and fought for one another. I will never forget the way the Mustangs played. They were inspired. I have seen every varsity football game over the past two years and by far this was the best game that we have played.

Kiet's memorial service and funeral will be this week and this I know....The Creekview family is strong and will support our students as the Creekview community and the Nguyen family grieve for one of our own who has been taken from us at the young age of 17. 

Kiet- it is an honor to be your principal and thank you for being one of those great Creekview students. You will be missed.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Instructional Rounds

What a great day today at Blalack Middle School participating in Instructional Rounds! Including myself, the Creekview IR team consists of our Science department chair and AP Physics teacher Wes Baker, our AP Government and World Geography teacher Cynthia MacDonald, Associate Principal Ginny Biggs, Pre-AP English teacher and Instructional facilitator Emily Johnson, our math instructional facilitator and Algebra teacher Trish Jones, and Assistant Principal Jeannette Papadopoulos.
 Dr. Maher does a great job facilitating this process and it seems like it was just a few weeks ago when we were at Harvard learning about rounds! Full steam ahead now as we have four internal rounds visits and one network visit this year! All in an effort of continuous improvement!! Go Mustangs!!

Monday, September 10, 2012

Meet the Teacher Night!

As a small reward to the teachers for having to stay up at school until roughly 9:00 pm.... I am allowing for jeans to be worn to work on Tuesday 9-11-12!

By the way, do you realize that most of our students were only young children when 9-11 occurred? Most were between 4-7 years old.....I wonder if they remember where they were that morning?

We will dedicate our moment of silence on 9-11 to the victims of that infamous day. God Bless America.

-Joe

Meet the Teacher Night!

What a great two weeks and start to the school year! Tonight, Monday, 9-10-12 at 6:30 we will be hosting our parents and students for Meet The Teacher Night! The meeting will start in the auditorium beginning at 6:30. We will dismiss teachers to their rooms a few minutes prior to 7 and before we dismiss the parents and students. We will be following a bell schedule which will allow for a few minutes of visiting with each teacher and each period. We hope to see each of our parents and students here tonight!! Class starts at 7:00!

If you haven't seen our volleyball team play, tomorrow night is your chance. We play our cross town neighbor,  Newman Smith here at Creekview. I promise, you will be amazed and impressed at the skill level of the Mustangs setters, hitters, servers, and blockers! They are an athletic, talented, and smart group of young ladies who may have one of the highest combined grade point average of any school team!! Coach Mauterer has the ladies off to a 1-0 district record as they defeated Terrell on Friday.

The Creekview Speech team is at it again! This past weekend several Creekview students competed at Plano Senior High. And yes, they made up again proud by winning the Speech tournament. Robert Shepard, aka- Shep- is the coach of the defending state champions and again has some great Creekview students to work with! 

Our first faculty meeting will be this Wednesday beginning at 4:00 p.m. Looking forward to seeing everyone there!

It was nice to see the great turnout for our spirit theme this past Friday! We had several rock n roll t-shirts from my day displayed from students and teachers. Mr. Clay Cox was my favorite rock star as I think he could have been the bass player for Guns N Roses! Great spirit displayed by Mr Cox and the many other teachers and students. This Friday, our spirit them is Nerd Day, where we will Outsmart the Timber Creek HS Falcons. By the way our Friday Night Lights game will be played on Saturday at 11:00 a.m. at Standridge. Since we don't play many Saturday games this is a great opportunity to get the whole family out to support the Mustangs!

The Friday also marks the end of the 3rd week progress report grading period! 1A Progress reports will be distributed on Wednesday September 19th.

Our goal is high student achievement for all students and as we start week 3, we are working toward making that happen!

Sincerely,

Joe LaPuma
Principal

Saturday, September 1, 2012

First week- Check!

First day to First Week in no time flat. True story, on Tuesday I was thinking that the next day was Friday! That just means I was real busy! I am sure students, teachers and everyone else can relate to being busy this first week back as we get in to our school routines.
The start date of school followed by a 3 day weekend and then Labor Day is genius! The calendar folks got that one right....even though I know that is just how it falls this year.
Speaking of falling, the Chisholm Trail football team was defeated last night 46-0! Yes, that isn't a typo. The Mustangs scored early, scored often and in a variety of ways. It was the first official high school game at CT's beautiful new stadium so I am sure they will have better nights to remember in their future. Chisholm Trail HS is in the  Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD. CTHS is also not playing with seniors as of yet, so their underclassmen got a dose of our football team that has experienced seniors and experienced underclassmen in key positions. David Blough, the Mustang QB is one of those experienced underclassmen that is a junior and a returning starter from his sophomore year. David is a team leader with great skills at the QB position. The Mustangs ran and passed the ball successfully in game one so David and the Mustangs know there are some challenging tests awaiting in the next few weeks when they play the opponents that are on the schedule for this year. The next 5 games will be at Standridge Stadium in Carrollton, so everyone will get a chance to come out and be a part of the Friday night lights experience!  On September 7, we will be playing another school from Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD, Saginaw HS. Coming to a game will include the opportunity to see and hear Creekview's marching band, the Chevals, Cheerleaders, and the Wranglers. These spirited Mustang students perform at high levels and make it just plain fun!
Speaking of fun, the Creekview Marching Band is under the leadership of our new Director of Bands, Mr. Art Ruangtip. Mr. Ruangtip has the band working hard and having fun at the same time. Last night's performance is an indication of great things to come from these talented, hard working students that make up the band and color guard. Not only are the students hard working, last night I got to talk to and see the many Creekview parents that volunteer their time and energy to support our band. Passing out water and snacks, loading and unloading the truck are just of few of the things that I witnessed last night and that is often over looked. Any band parent can relate to the amount of time and energy it takes to get a group of kids fed and hydrated, across town, and ready to perform in Texas 100 degree night! Thank you parents!

I hope everyone enjoys their 3 day Labor Day weekend and is prepared to come back to school on Tuesday, September 4 ready to meet the challenges and opportunities of week 2!

It's a Great Day to be a Mustang!

Sincerely,

Mr. LaPuma

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Creekview Lady Mustang Volleyball!!!

Last night I had the privilidge to watch our Lady Mustang Volleyball team play a couple matches at Byron Nelson HS against the Grapevine Mustangs and the Arlington High Colts. I came away thorougly impressed with the talent, hustle, team work and skill level that the ladies displayed! They beat Grapevine 3 games to 2.....and lost to Arlington in 3 straight. The third game against the Colts was 33-31. There is no quit in these ladies and they fought to the very end. Coach Mauterer had to be pleased with the way the ladies played. As this team moves closer toward district Coach M has to be happy at the progress of this team and where they are at this point of the season. Yes, it is only day 3 of the school year  and the volleyball team has been back at practice since early August- but wow, they are already very good! The competition was good too! If each game is played with the intensity that I witnessed last night all I can say is come out and watch these young ladies play! You too will be impressed!! Way to represent CHS and yourselves with such pride!
- Mr LaPuma

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Wednesday, August 29 at 6:30 pm, come on out to our annual Community Pep Rally at Creekview HS!

Monday, August 27, 2012

It was a great first day at Creekview High School in the C-FB ISD. The students hit the ground running and found their way to their first semester teacher's classes with hardly a glitch. The class of 2016, our wonderful 9th graders, asked alot of questions but made their way around the school as well. With almost 2000 students enrolled today, I couldn't have asked for a better opening day. The 9th grade football players were at school at 6:30 this morning for their football workout. Coach Cline informed me that all students were present and accounted for at 6:30 in the morning! The upper classmen have the first day down, as they have been through this routine a few times. They will lead the way as we meet our goal of high achievement for all students! It's a great day to be a Mustang!!  -Mr. LaPuma

Saturday, August 25, 2012

The First Day of School!

The first day of school for the 2012-2013 school year has arrived!! The Creekview teachers have been back  to work officially since August 20th while many have been back "unofficially" many days before the 20th! The excitement is palpable as the teachers eagerly prepare for the students whom they will impact over the coming months. Impact doesn't do justice to the positive relationships that will be built, the lessons taught, and the challenging tasks that the students will be asked to do. Memories, lessons, and learning will be created that will have an impact over a life time and inspire generations to come.

Whether it is college students, kindergartners or any grade in between, the first day of school creates an excitement and an adrenaline rush like few other single days throughout the year. First year teachers and veteran teachers are a part of this excitement as well as the administrative team! Of course, parents are part of this rush as well. The excitement and  nervousness that leads to the first day of school is gradually built by back to school shopping, schedule pick up, transitioning to a new school, the anticipation of meeting and making new friends or just the idea that summer is over and one more year has already arrived.

Every day counts and every interaction is important. The culture of high expectations will continue at Creekview as we meet the goal of high achievement for all students. Change is a constant but one thing is certain; the high quality education available to the students at Creekview High School and the Carrollton-Farmers Branch ISD. Students can and will excel in the areas of academics, athletics, and fine arts. This is what awaits the Mustangs who walk through the doors on the first day of school or any day after.

I look forward to being inspired this year by the work that will occur in our classrooms, athletic fields of competition and fine art performance halls!

It is a great day to be a Mustang!

Sincerely,

Mr. LaPuma


Saturday, March 10, 2012

Spring Break 2012 is finally here and we are ready for it! Last week was quite the  busy week as the state testing season began on Wednesday for the 10th & 11th graders with the ELA TAKS test.  I appreciate the everyone's effort in making the day a success. The student's did their part by trying their best and that is always appreciated! The school year is 75% over and when we return we'll begin our 4th and last 9 weeks of the year.
Last weekend our speech team was in Amarillo competing in the Texas Forensics State competition. What a great showing they had finishing as the top team in the state! Yes, we have the #1 speech team in the state. We are so proud of Coach Robert Sheperd and the team for their efforts throughout this year! While our speech team was at Amarillo HS, our Mock Trial team was at the Earl Cabel Courts Building in Downtown Dallas competing at the State Mock Trial Competition. They too have had a great competitive year finishing as the 2nd place Mock Trial Team in the state. Prestonwood Christian Academy took first by one vote! Yes, it was that close, with the judges voting 5-4! Congratulations to the Creekview students as well as to Peter Myers and Dr. Brian Horn for leading these outstanding young men and women.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

TMEA All-State Performances

Just returned today from San Antonio where I had the opportunity to see Creekview's All State Music students. Choir, Band, and orcherstra students from CHS represented and performed in the All-State Mixed Choir, All-State Women's Choir, the All-State Symphony Orcherstra and the 4A All-State Symphonic Band! What an honor to see these students perform! Our music directors, parents and I could not be more proud! Once I learn how to post a pic on this blog I will!

Welcome to my blog!

This blog provides news and information related to the wonderful students and staff that attend our awesome school! I will also include various topics related to education.