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May 2017: TJ BioCode Competition – 1st & 9th Place

TJ BioCode is a bioinformatics-centered programming competition.

Six Nysmith students participated in the contest at Thomas Jefferson High School last month: Brantley Gilliard (Team Watson), Auguste Rame (Team Curie), Anand Advani (Ultracoders), Anantha Bojji (Team Berners-Lee), Luke Thistlethwaite (DNA Dudes), and Vikram Bala (DNA Dudes).

DNA Dudes won first place in the middle school category and Ultracoders won ninth place. All participants performed incredibly well considering the difficulty of the problems in the context of both biology and computer science.

These problems were meant for college level students, and it is an incredible feat that these middle school students were able to solve some of them.  Great effort and experience!


May 2017: Summer Scholarship Winner

Congratulations to sixth-grader Brantley G., who was awarded a Virginia Association for the Gifted Student Summer Scholarship!

Brantley won the $625 scholarship to attend the Northwestern University Center for Talent Development summer program 2017 where he will take JAVA Advanced Programming, an AP level high school course.

He was one of only 12 students, grades K – 12, who received the award!

Thanks to Mr. Fremlin, who has been a mentor and an advocate, for supporting Brantley’s application for the AP level course and the scholarship.

May 2017: 1st in Nation in 2016-2017 WordMasters Challenge

A team representing Nysmith School recently earned Highest Honors in the 2016-17 WordMasters Challenge™—a national vocabulary competition involving nearly 150,000 students annually. The fourth grade team scored an impressive 193 points out of a possible 200 in the last of three meets this year, placing second in the nation. The fourth graders also placed first nationally in the overall competition with a cumulative score of 573 points out of a possible 600.

Competing in the very difficult Gold Division of the WordMasters Challenge™, fourth graders Rabia Chadha, Rishabh Kumaran and Henry Pan each earned a perfect score of 20 in the recent meet.  Nationally, only 35 fourth graders achieved this result.  Other students at Nysmith School who achieved outstanding results in the last meet of the year include fourth graders Vivian Bejtlich, Charlotte Gabriel, Aurora Holloway, Ananya Kakayadi, Arielle Kouyoumdjian, Alex Landry, Lindsey Newberg and William Strong.

Fourth graders Rishabh Kumaran and Henry Pan also earned individual Highest Honors in the overall.  Rishabh was the only fourth grader in the nation to achieve a perfect score of 60 points in his division. Highest Honors are reserved for students who place among the top 10-15 students in their division.

The students were coached in preparation for the WordMasters Challenge™ by Aisha Enayatulla.

The WordMasters Challenge™ is an exercise in critical thinking that first encourages students to become familiar with a set of interesting new words (considerably harder than grade level), and then challenges them to use those words to complete analogies expressing various kinds of logical relationships.  Working to solve the analogies helps students learn to think both analytically and metaphorically.  Although most vocabulary enrichment and analogy-solving programs are designed for use by high school students, WordMasters Challenge™ materials have been specifically created for younger students in grades three through eight.  They are particularly well suited for children who are motivated by the challenge of learning new words and enjoy the logical puzzles posed by analogies.

The WordMasters Challenge™ program is administered by a company based in Indianapolis, Indiana, which is dedicated to inspiring high achievement in American schools.  Further information is available at the company’s website:  http://www.wordmasterschallenge.com

 

May 2017: 1st Place at American Computer Science League Contest

Vikram B. and Anand A. represented They Nysmith School at the American Computer Science League contest in Los Angeles, CA, in May 2017.

They were awarded 1st Place for Computer Theory.

June 2017: 7th Place in Nation in National History Bee

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The National History Bee National Championship took place in Atlanta, GA, June 1-3, 2017. It is the final stage of the National History Bee competition. Each competitor participates in several Buzzer and Test Rounds over the course of two days to determine the National History Bee Grand Champion in each grade division.

Congratulations to Nysmith seventh-grader Aaron J., who placed 7th in the Nation!

June 2017: Wins at World Robot Olympiad

On Saturday, June 10, 2017, The Nysmith School hosted the World Robot Olympiad.

Three Nysmith 5th graders were on the top two teams in the Elementary Division:  Disha B., Kinnari C., and Ishnoor B.

In the Junior High Division, the all-Nysmith team “Ctrl Freaks” placed second.  The teammates were Rohan R., Neha R., and Nicholas B.

All of these winners will be heading to Nationals at the University of North Carolina in September.  Congratulations!

ABOUT WRO:

WRO-USA is a national member of the World Robot Olympiad (WRO), an international robot competition that brings together young people from all over the world to develop their creativity, design & problem-solving skills through challenging & educational robot competitions and activities.

WRO-USA organizes competitions throughout the US at regional, state, and national levels. Top teams from the national level competition earn an invitation to the World Championships.

Participants work together with a coach in teams or two or three students to perform new tasks every year. Teams create, design and build a robot model that is capable to perform a challenge. Each year a new theme and challenge are set. The competition starts from preliminary rounds to the final judging.

Children aged between 8 and 19 years can participate in one of the three competition categories: Regular, Open or Football Category on. Participants between the ages of 17 and 25 years old can participate in the Advanced Robotics Challenge Category.

June 2017: “Alex Misiaszek spreads healing sound of music”

Michelle Marsh of WJLA/ABC7 came to Nysmith to interview eighth-grader Alex Misiaszek about his dedication to community service for their “Inspire” series.

Alex has combined his passion for service with his love of music and has been performing piano recitals for seniors in hospitals and nursing homes all over the DC area.  He said he loves the impact it has on his audience, both physiologically (classical music benefits the brain) and psychologically (it makes them happy!).  He said his family is very proud and supportive, and that he gets a sense of satisfaction from making a difference and inspiring others to develop a love for performance and a love of service.

 

Alex then beautifully performed Mozart’s “Rondo alla Turca.”

Watch the video here:  http://wjla.com/features/inspire/inspire-alex-misiaszek-spreads-healing-sound-of-music 

Aug. 2017: Nysmith Named Best Preschool and Best Kindergarten

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PoshSeven readers have once again voted The Nysmith School a best private school in Northern Virginia!

In the PoshSeven 2017 “Best of Suburbia” survey, The Nysmith School was award First Place in both the “Best Private Preschool” and “Best Private Kindergarten” categories.

We are honored that the community thinks so highly of us!


Sept. 2017: NYSMITH TEAM ADVANCES IN WORLD ROBOTICS OLYMPIAD!

On September 9th, sixth graders Disha B., Ishnoor B., and Kinnari C. competed at the World Robotics Olympiad. The competition was help at North Carolina State University, with over 40 other robotics teams. The Nysmith team, Team Thunderbots, placed in the top 8.  Team Thunderbots won first place in the regional competition to qualify to compete at this national level. Congratulations team!

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OCT. 2017: NYSMITH SCHOOL SWEEPS 1ST-5TH PLACE AT HOLY TRINITY DEBATE TOURNAMENT

OCT. 2017: NYSMITH SCHOOL SWEEPS 1ST-5TH PLACE AT HOLY TRINITY DEBATE TOURNAMENT

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Nysmith students swept 1st-5th place at the Holy Trinity Public Forum Debate Tournament in Washington, DC on Saturday, October 14th. Their topic was affirming or negating the resolution: Deployment of anti-missile systems is in South Korea’s best interest.

 

Congratulations to the following students:
1st place- Sankrith Ramani and Raed Mirza

2nd place- Anvi Kalyana and Irene Zhao

3rd place- Emma Bennett and Tanvi Bhave

4th place- Alisha Luthra and Shriya Mani

5th place- Matthew Li and Jeffrey Chen

6th place (Novice) -Dishaa Bhat and Aditi Atreya

 

The next tournament will be on November 4, 2017 with students affirming or negating the following resolution:

Resolved: The United States should require universal background checks for all gun sales and transfers of ownership.

May 2017: Nysmith Student Achieves Perfect Score on National Latin Exam

Nysmith seventh-grader Anand Advani achieved a perfect score on the 2017 Introduction to Latin National Latin Exam.

Only 299 students out of over 15,000 who participated in the entire United States, Taiwan, Canada, England, New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong, Netherlands, China, Italy, Germany, Singapore, Belize, France, Spain, Zimbabwe, and the United Arab Emirates attained this distinction.

What an extraordinary achievement!  We are so proud of Anand!

To view the full award letter, click here: Latin Exam 2017.

NOV. 2017: NYSMITH VICTORIOUS AT DEBATE TOURNAMENT

Nysmith students competed and won at the Meridian Public Forum Tournament on November 4th, 2017, affirming or negating the following resolution: The United States should require universal background checks for all gun sales and transfers of ownership.

Congratulations to all the debaters!

1st Place Varsity: Ben Joel & Aaron Joy

2nd Place Varsity: Sankrith Ramani & Raed Mirza

3rd Place Varsity: Anvi Kalyana & Irene Zhao

1st Place JV: Tanvi Bhave & Iman Lloyd

3rd Place JV: Srivasta Krishnamurthy & Swetha Madiraju

4th Place JV: Sahithi Atluri & Aanya Kolli

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DEC 2017: Regional Win for Robotics Team

The Water Ninjas, an all girl robotics team, consisting of two NYSMITH students, Pari Rana (6A) and Amal Woolridge (6C) – along with three other girls from Loudoun county, took part in a regional robotics competition organized by FIRST Lego League (FLL).

The competition was held at Osbourn Park High School in Manassas, VA where they competed against 30 teams. Water Ninjas’ excellent overall performance in robot design, research, and core values, earned them a 3rd place in the regionals.

Their research on Arsenic Poisoning in well waters drew a lot of attention from the judges and other teams. Their creative and funny skit describing the problem and team’s solution won the Judges’ Award.

As a result of being ranked 3rd out of 30, the Water Ninjas qualified to participate a state level competition to be held at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, VA on December 2nd and 3rd where more than 130 teams are expected to participate.

Water Ninjas would like to say thanks to Nysmith teachers for fostering the passion for learning and problem solving.

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JAN. 2018 Debate Team Sweeps High School Competition

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This weekend, the Nysmith Debate team competed in the Broad Run High School Invitational Tournament affirming/negating the resolution, Spain should grant Catalonia its independence. Competing against 45 schools from across the state, with 12 different speech categories, congratulations are in order to the following students:

 

1st place JV Public Forum High School Division- Sarag Arun and McKenzie Hiek

2nd place JV Public Forum High School Division- Aaron Joy and Ben Joel

 

Because students won two of the three awards, the school was also awarded the Sweeps Cup! Congratulations Nysmith Debate Team!

JAN. 2018 Science Olympiad Team Wins 11 Medals!

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The Nysmith Science Olympiad Team performed fabulously at the Regional Tournament in Charlottesville yesterday!  They came in 3rd out of 15 participating schools and 5th out of 20 participating teams (a few schools had more than one team).

Nysmith received medals for 11 events out of a total of 21 events and a third-place trophy for our school.

The following events received medals for placing in the top six positions –

First place in 1 event – Potions and Poisons

Second place in 1 event – Anatomy and Physiology

Third place in 2 events – Herpetology and Optics

Fourth place in 2 events – Microbe Mission and Battery Buggy

Fifth place in 4 events –  Experimental Design, Thermodynamics, Hovercraft, and Towers

Sixth Place in 1 event – Ecology

In addition, the Nysmith team received the following placements in the following events, making 19 out of 21 events place within the top 10 positions:

Seventh place in 3 events – Dynamic Planet, Road Scholar, and Write It Do It

Eighth place in 2 events – Fast Facts and Wright Stuff

Ninth place in 1 event – Meteorology

Tenth position in 2 events – Mystery Architecture and Rocks and Minerals

 

Our school also won a sportsmanship award because our Potions and Poisons team helped a competitor team by lending them a beaker and pH paper!!!

The team will be attending the state tournament in a couple of months.  The State Tournament is on Saturday, April 14 in UVA, Charlottesville, VA and the kids are so excited to proceed to the next level.


JAN. 2018 Nysmith Robitcs Team Helping The Community

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The Nysmith Smash Bots team competes in the VEX IQ Robotics Challenge and includes the following 3rd Graders:  Arjun, Dario, Helena, Kevin, Nathaniel, Sia and Sina.  The team is doing GREAT this season and presently has the highest Robotics Skills Score in Virginia in the Elementary School division.  They are also currently ranked 12th in the US and 29th in the World!

Even more impressive than their STEM skills is their willingness to help others!  Their competition STEM Research Project studies how robotics can be used to teach and excite elementary school students about STEM subjects.  However, they wanted to do more than research this subject.  They wanted to make a difference!  The team decided to sponsor a robotics club at an elementary school that didn’t have one.  RobotsNOW, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, founded by Nathaniel’s brothers, Chandler (Nysmith 8th Grader) and Gabriel (Nysmith ’15) helped them raise money and sponsor a Robotics Club at Joseph Van Pelt Elementary School.

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Last week, the team donated the necessary robotics equipment and provided a fun robotics demonstration in front of the entire school!  In addition to the students, members of the team also shared their robotics experiences with a Bristol VA Public School Board Member, the Principal, and reporters from the local television news station and newspaper.  Because of the team’s hard work and commitment, the school is immediately launching a 12-person robotics club with plans to significantly grow their robotics program next school year.  Seven 3rd Graders believed that they could make a difference…and did.

FEB. 2018: SMASHBOTS WIN VEX IQ ROBOTICS CHALLENGE

The Nysmith SmashBots team competed in the VEX IQ Robotics Challenge over the President’s Day Weekend. Congratulations to the following third graders who won 1st place in both the Robot Skills and Teamwork categories: Arjun, Dario, Helena, Kevin, Nathaniel, Sia and Sina! The team also had a chance to present their STEM research project for the First Lady of Virginia– Mrs. Northam! She was very impressed with their research project as well as the students’ outreach project to sponsor a Robotics Club at Joseph Van Pelt Elementary School! As state champions, the SmashBots team qualifies for the World VEX IQ Championship in Louisville, Kentucky in the spring! Presently, our team has the 10th highest robot skills in the world! Way to go students!

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APR.2018: VEX IQ ROBOTICS COMPETITION

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Congratulations are in order for 7th grader Matthew Li and his Vex IQ Robotics team – Rising Phoenix, coached by Matthew’s father, Yun Li. The Rising Phoenix team won this year’s Vex IQ Robotics Virginia State Championship for the middle school division. This year’s competition was a one-day challenge held in Doswell, VA.

Team Rising Phoenix designed and build a robot in accordance with strict VEX IQ requirements to compete against other teams in a game-based engineering challenge of multiple robotic matches played on a 4-foot by 8-foot rectangular field. Classroom STEM concepts were put to the test during the competition. The team took home the Excellence Award beating out 17 other highly skilled teams from across the state! The Rising Phoenix Team was also awarded the Teamwork Champions award.

The team’s accomplishments earned them an invitation to compete in the upcoming 2018 VEX Worlds in Louisville, KY, later this month. This will be the Rising Phoenix’s third year in a row that they’ll be competing in the Vex Worlds, which is a competition that brings teams from across the globe to compete against one another. Good luck at VEX Worlds, team Rising Phoenix!

April 2018: Debate Team Win

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This past weekend, the Nysmith School Debate Team competed in the Maret Invitational Public 
Forum Middle and High School Tournament. Nysmith teams were once again victorious! Debating the topic, Resolved: The United States federal government should increase its quota of H-1B visas, the following students were acknowledged for their stellar work!
Varsity
1st Place Sarang Arun and Cami Hiek
4th Place Emma Bennett and Ava Ghods
 
JV
2nd Place Eesha Somasundar and Ayana Ahuja
 
Novice
1st Place Amal Wooldridge and Emma Pan
2nd Place Dishaa Bhat and Kinnari Chaubal
3rd Place Esha Madamalla (Maverick)
4th Place Pari Rana and Spencer Rothka

Strategies for a More Productive Homework Routine

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The beginning of the school year may seem like a strange time for homework fatigue to already be setting in, for kids and parents alike. However, it may truly be the most difficult time of the year due to the transition from summer camps and vacations to back-to-school with its structure, routines and activities.

One of Nysmith’s core philosophies is minimal homework. We believe that homework is meant for reinforcing content but more importantly, to teach critical study and time management skills. Our guidelines follow a simple formula of 10 minutes per grade level, 4-5 times a week. (For instance, a 4th grader would have no more than 40 minutes of homework, 4-5 times per week). However, in a recent survey of Nysmith students and parents, we noticed a wide variation in responses on the volume of homework students were doing each night, with some reporting to do more than the Nysmith guideline. So what could be the disconnect?

According to Ann Dolin, author of Homework Made Simple and founder of Educational Connections, there could be many different causes at play. She suggests that one of the best things parents can do is to communicate with teachers. Dolin says there’s no way for a teacher to know if a student is spending hours and hours on homework each night unless parents talk to them and tell them what’s going on at home. Once the line of communication has been opened, teachers and parents together can try to understand what might be making a 30-minute homework load turn into 2 hours of homework each night.

Where a child chooses to do homework could also be either helpful or harmful to productivity. Dolin says that although there is no “one perfect place to do homework,” parents and students may want to try a couple of different options to see which one is the most productive. Many parents report that they’ve seen their children most productive doing homework in a common area of the household such as the dining room or kitchen table. Some children prefer the hum of a busy space and with parents nearby, they can ask questions if help is needed. Common spaces also allow parents to keep an eye on their child as they do homework and minimize any distractions.

Another tip that Dolin recommends is finding a designated time to do homework. With some students participating in activities like sports teams, clubs, and other after school activities, the “right” time of day may possibly vary from day to day. However, Dolin recommends six time of day options to discuss with your student. They are:

1)      Right after school

2)      After a 30 minute break (after returning home from school)

3)      Before dinner

4)      After dinner

5)      Before bed

6)      Before school

The best time of day for your child to do homework will vary from student to student but if you can agree on what makes the most sense and which will be most productive, you’ll cut down on a lot of homework headaches.

Having a start time and end time can also help keep your child organized. For those children who want to speed through homework so they can just be done with it, setting a designated 30-minute homework window may just be the answer. If your child finishes their homework in 10 minutes within that 30-minute time window, they can read for pleasure or start working on a project that may not be due the next day but in the next week or two. Dolin suggests setting a visible timer (no more than 30 minutes) in the area in which your child is doing homework, so that they can also keep an eye on the time.

If organizational skills are more of what your child needs, “chunking” assignments or breaking up homework by subject can help prevent children from being bogged down too long on a particular subject.  For any one homework assignment, students can also “chunk” by choosing to answer or finish the easy parts first, then moving on to the harder ones. They can also complete the first few questions or half the page of an assignment before taking a short break and returning to finish the rest.

Nysmith’s Upper School Director, Nora Webb, says that making homework time a family affair, can also help children get started more easily on homework and remain on task. For example, setting aside a specific time each night where parents and children can separately but together engage in quiet time doing homework or reading, can really help children get into a consistent routine.

Finally, when it comes to homework, knowing how to play our role as parents can be difficult. Dolin says that parent’s responsibilities in homework include setting routines, creating external structure, providing guidance, and checking for completion (not quality). And always remember that your student’s success is a joint effort between student, parent and school with communication being key.

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