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Montgomery Blair High School's Online Student Newspaper
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April 17, 2002

Three Blazers honored for their program

by Jeanne Yang, Page Editor and Annie Peirce, Page Editor
Three Blair students were honored as part of a TECH CORPS Partners press conference for their creation of a volunteer program which uses email to help elementary school students improve their writing skills.

The press conference on Monday, April 22 highlighted contributions to schools and students by technology literate volunteers.

Juniors Annie Peirce, Sarah Thibadeau, and Matt Yalowitz created their program as part of the Communication Arts Program (CAP) "Change" project, which requires students to execute a change in their commmunity. After the assignment's official completion last winter, the three students expanded their program, the Montgomery Ultimate Story Exchange (M.U.S.E.), to include more students and more interaction between the mentors and the elementary students.

Following a demonstration of their program to various Montgomery County publications on Thursday, April 18, the three students' accomplishments were honored in the Montgomery Journal and Montgomery Gazette.

M.U.S.E. currently has 16 elementary students enrolled in an after school program. Stories, poems, and other creative works are placed into individual email accounts. Each student has a high school mentor who responds to the emails with writing help and suggestions. The mentors meet with the students to discuss projects in person twice every semester. A faculty advisor at Pine Crest supervises the students during M.U.S.E. meetings as the students improve past projects and work on new pieces according to their mentors’ responses.

The three Blazers have been working on their mentoring program since the middle of their sophomore year. It began with a group of 15 elementary students and 15 high school students and has expanded to over 25 high school mentors. The Blazers currently involved in this mentorship program are all CAP students; however, they hope to incorporate more of the rest of the school soon, according to Yalowitz.

Both Pine Crest and the three Blazers have been pleased with the success of M.U.S.E. "The school was really excited because we were the first [program] that was actually successful," said Peirce.

Several other schools have also begun taking interest in the mentorship program developed by the three juniors. Colonel Zadok A. Magruder High School is contemplating adopting the program next year with its National Honor Society students.



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Discuss this Article

  • mathwin on April 19, 2002
    Good story Jeanne-it's good to know that this kind of stuff is going on.
  • KliQ on April 23, 2002
    Power to 03! Congrats, guys!
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