All posts by Katie Scott

Student success displayed in falling failure rates

SEVA HESTER  Staff writer

Northside Independent School District grows by at least 3,000 to 4,000 students each year. In the last ten years, the district has gained a total of 24,000 students. A headcount statistics report showed the attendance on campus was 3,298. With that in mind, it might seem difficult to maintain the district-wide grade averages.

  However, that’s not the case in this situation as, “Grades are mostly the teacher’s responsibility,” campus registrar Michele Turner said. “The grade report secretary, Mrs. Brown, keeps up with errors, incompletes and inconsistencies. She is basically the guard keeper of the grades.”

  Students aren’t the only numbers rising, “as of this year there was an addition of six brand new staffing positions,” Academic Dean Jennifer Bishop said.

  Enrollment is up throughout the district and some campuses are seeing record numbers. Bishop explained how our educators are working to prepare for increased numbers and provide quality instruction to maintain high academic success.

  “[Teachers] work as a ‘Professional Learning Community’, or PLC,” Bishop said. “[It is] to anticipate where students might struggle and work with that. We encourage kids to attend tutoring, and then a specific group we noticed [that was struggling more] was the ninth graders. That’s why we have Connections; other high schools were doing it too. We wanted our freshmen to have the same successes as the other high school freshmen have.”

  Connections is a program created to help students transition from middle school to high school.  Freshmen with resources to pass classes are more likely to continue to do well throughout high school.

  Students passing classes with A-B range grades are more likely to enroll in advanced placement classes.

  “Last year we did 1,500 AP tests,” Assistant registrar Amy Prichard said.

  Advanced Placement classes help students earn college credit, as long as they score a 3, 4 or 5 on the exam.

  “I think that [taking] AP classes in high school is really beneficial because it allows students to not only prepare for college courses but also lessens the load of college,” sophomore Mia Ramirez said.

  Counselors and teachers “advocate for [students] to take Advanced Placement,” Prichard said.

  But what is the reason to take AP courses?

  “Because college is not free. As for school goes, it helps your GPA and if you pass the AP test, you will earn college credit,” Turner said.

  Students recognize the importance of AP classes as well. Senior Delia Flores is enrolled in multiple AP courses including AP Government and AP Economics and understands the benefit of these courses.

  “AP is important because it gets you ahead. Regular classes just don’t give you the prep you need,” Flores said.

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Art students and water polo create art for charity

When they’re not at the pool you can find the water polo team along with Coach Haidin supporting the Bexar County Family Justice Center. Students from Coach Haidin’s art classes and water polo team created artwork to donate for an auction, and all proceeds will go directly to the charity. The Bexar County Family Justice Center helps the victims of domestic violence.

Photo by Darcy Loessberg

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Student uploads comic voice overs, gains following

LAUREN DECENA Production Editor & NICOLAS CORTES Staff Writer

Out of the many YouTubers that are active the site, the small YouTuber by the name of “frisk the-human-hybrid” happened to make her appearance. Her real name is Cora Cutkomp and she’s a senior here on campus who makes dubbed videos over popular comics. When she first started her YouTube channel Cutkomp said, “I just had so many favorite YouTubers that I watch that, [well] it looks so easy I just had to do it.” While she has had this YouTube channel for a few months she is still relatively new to YouTube and just hit 801 subscribers.

  Not only does she have 801 subscribers but one of her videos has 122k views which is extremely high considering how many views on average she gets per video. However, her videos differ from time to time.

  “Really, you don’t want it too long, I’ve done a 20 minute video plus I’ve seen others with hour long videos people don’t watch the whole thing. It needs to be a specific length because of the attention span for a lot of viewers. Some people have shorter attention spans than others,” Cutkomp said.

  So, Cutkomp bases her videos off what her audience is as well as her own opinion so she can appeal to the masses when making them.

She has also yet to have a very specific uploading schedule for her viewers, but has tried to set almost guidelines for when uploads.

  “I don’t really have one [an update schedule], I need to figure out one. I’m kind of thinking maybe two or three videos on the weekend,” Cutkomp said.

  And while these uploads are clumped together she has to do them with her phone instead of her computer, ranging from video game uploads to the voice overs she usually does.

  “I record using my phone. I go to a website called Roblox, and I play games, but I can record my screen. The players can chat with each other,” Cutkomp said.

  So she uploads a variety of content as opposed to just a complete focus on one subject.

  Along with everything she has done she has not started doing this entirely (voices for characters) until after she saw her favorite youtubers.

  She had done it earlier in life as well, “I’ve actually, done a lot of stuff for voicing, like for class. Whenever we’d read a book with the whole class I’ll do the voices for the characters. I’ve always done that,” Cutkomp said.

  So while she may have been inspired by her favorite YouTubers such as Markiplier, jacksepticeye, Pewdiepie, Popularmmos, Gaming with Jen, Supershadic50, and twilight, regardless she had done it before.

  Nevertheless, frisk the-human-hybrid is one of the many YouTubers that uploads video on a weekly basis for her audience.