Search

CATS Academy Courier

"A Trusted Students News Source with an International Twist"

Category

Student life

London Exchange Program Was A Success: Interview with Michael Tran

By: Brian Nguyen

“I couldn’t wait for spring break and the London Exchange Program.  It was such a great opportunity it blows my mind now.” – Michael Tran

Why did you choose to join the London Exchange Program instead of going back to your home country like many other students?

I love finding out about the world’s history, to understand how people have changed and developed.  London is a city that has a mix of antiquity such as Oxford University, Big Ben tower and modernity like The Shard Building, the fourth-highest skyscraper in Europe, or the London Eye. They made me so curious that I couldn’t wait to visit.

What did you do in London? And what did you like most?

I visited many places such as Saint Paul’s Church,  the Bank of England,  Emirates Stadium, and the London Eye, to name a few.  Each was a great experience and a lot of fun. I visited Oxford University – which is a well-known and ancient university. It’s an excellent school which I would love to attend.  I also went to the Big Ben tower which always displays the exact time. It is built beside the Thames River, and I must say it seemed quite romantic. I liked the London Eye the most because I could see the whole of London from it.  I could see the petite alleys running between the old buildings which made London so captivating.  After visiting the sights, you can walk along the River Thames, and drink a hot cup of tea. It was such an amazing experience; it is hard to find words to describe it.   I had a great time!

How do you feel about CATS Canterbury? Are there any differences between CATS Boston and CATS Canterbury?

CATS Canterbury is a nice school with an antique-style building. I had the honor to talk to CATS Canterbury’s Principal. We had a pleasant conversation about life in the United States and England.  There were a few cultural differences, but the schools are similar in that they offer a common opportunity: to give students the best environment to study, especially students who speak English as their second language.

Is there anything else you want to share?

You should visit London. I promise you will never regret the time you spend there. It’s a beautiful city which has everything, from great landscapes, good food to very nice people. I’ll go back there whenever I have a chance!

CATS Madness Basketball Tournament

By: Tristan Fornari Hospital

On Friday, April 7th, 2017, the first CATS Madness 3 on 3 Basketball Tournament took place in our state of the art gym during the evening. The event was organized by Math teacher and Student Government Advisor Mr. Mike Cerbarano along with some students from student government. Each of these students’ passion and dedication showed through the success and meticulous organization of the event. The food, entertainment, music, mini-games, a three-point contest, and free throw competition added to the allure of the event.

The event was supported by teachers, staff members, and dorm parents who volunteered to be referees. Their role in helping the event run smoothly cannot be overlooked.

Overall the tournament was a complete success that exceeded all expectations. Mr. Cerbarano was pleasantly surprised that many student spectators came to the tournament to support their friends who were playing. This added to the positive and fun environment of the tournament. Lastly, I want to congratulate all the winners of this major event, Sebastian Uribe Munera, Horacio Ornelas Ramirez, and Guilherme Sousa Pires beating the runners up Weir (Wenzheng) Zhu, Ross (Ganghun) Kwon, and Lo Tsz Fung. Ultimately, the whole CATS Academy community deserves credit for being supportive of this wonderful event.

Survival Guide: How to Survive the Springtime

By:  Jackie Kovalcin

Spring can be beautiful. The weather becomes gradually warmer, the flowers begin to poke through the dirt, and the sun shows more and more of itself with each passing day. Spring can also be less than beautiful. With the mud, allergies, and soggy fields, spring can be less-than-optimal. Below are some tips to help guide you through this transitional season.

  • Avoid pollen: This is a common allergen that can trigger strong allergies during the springtime. In order to minimize contact with it, try to limit your exposure to the outdoors on particularly high pollen-count days. Use the air conditioner instead of opening a window, run indoors instead of outside, and try to find an allergy medicine that works for you.
  • Invest in good sunglasses, and an umbrella: With the moody weather that coincides with the springtime, both of these objects will come in handy when battling the elements.
  • Clean up: Pick a day to have a “spring cleaning”. Rid your dorm room of unwanted possessions, old papers, and garbage. Organize! It will take work and time, but the feeling afterwards is worth it. Start off the spring season clean, you’ll thank yourself later.
  • Stay focused: As tempting as it may be to start slacking off with the promise of a lazy summer just around the corner, it is important to finish off the school year strong (this goes for you too, seniors). With finals coming up, and the inevitable end of year insanity, this is the time to buckle down and really apply yourself to your studies.

Snow Days Feedback

By:  Sasha Chernysheva

In the previous publication of our newspaper, Jacqueline Kovalcin suggested some great ways to survive a frosty, long, and severe New England winter. I suppose, however, that there is one more essential factor to be added: the snow days.

On February 8th and 12th the entire CATS Academy community was happy to receive an email with the sacred words: “No school tomorrow.” CATS staff members and students could sleep in and have a well deserved rest after all.

What were some of the things that the students enjoyed doing over these days?

  • Some of the students went outside despite the bitter cold, to build snowmen and jump in the snow. Students could be seen taking pictures and laughing the entire day until the very end of curfew at 7:45pm.
  • Maya Alarcon described her snow days by stating, “My experience on the snow days was amazing because I am from Mexico and I’ve never been to a place with snow. It was new for me. I also enjoyed playing outside in snow with my friends!”
  • My personal experience was far different from many of my peers. Since I come from Russia, a very snowy country, I have experienced far too often the feeling of snow days. I prefer staying in my bed on such days, reading, watching Netflix with a mug of hot chocolate in my hands, wrapped in a warm blanket, and dreaming of the beach and the sun.

Even though different members of the CATS Academy Boston community chose to spend these days in various ways, many doing homework, they still refill you with the positive feedback and energy to go back to classes.

THE SUN ARRIVES LATER, THE LIFE OF THE THEATRE BEGINS NOW

By: Jennifer Phan

The Sun Arrives Later, CATS first student-directed and produced play, made its debut on February 16 and 17 to an outstanding success. The play grapples with its center conflict of conformity versus non-conformity through the life of Edward (Daniel O’Hare), a schizophrenic accountant in a dystopian world, his adventure to the Bass Café, house of the strange and the eccentric, and his adventure of self-discovery to reconcile between social expectations and personal longings. Told in witty dialogues and enacted through superb students performances, The Sun Arrives Later has not only set precedent as the first student-led production but also high standards for theatre in our community.
I had the chance to sit down with Gabriela Santana Taveras, the director of The Sun Arrives Later, to talk about inspirations, themes, and the possibility of a play within a play.

The title, The Sun Arrives Later, is a perfect embodiment of time as a social construct, a recurring theme in the play. It also reminds me of Ernest Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises. Would you say that your title was inspired by Hemingway’s? Were there other works that influenced your creative process?

Yes, I was definitely inspired by Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises, especially in the sense that the characters in my play were also modeled after real people. I also drew inspiration from some of my favorite plays of all time, Waiting for Godot, Equus, and Nice Fish. But I tried not to rely too heavily on classics and existing works, because this is, after all, experimental theater.
Can you tell me more about experimental theater and your experience with it?
Definitely. I think my understanding of experimental theater comes largely from my time at the American Repertory Theater. What we did for the whole first week at the ART was coming up with ideas, and somehow they all came together to create a coherent piece, World Sick. That was what I did for The Sun Arrives Later. I had ideas, but there was no concrete story. We started off with a rough draft and a single question, “Would you choose to conform to society?”, and the actors added on to the plot from there. The play as it was performed must be in its seventeenth-something version, but who’s counting, you know?
Writing a play together from scratch, that must have been very challenging for everyone.
It was, and we struggled quite a bit at the beginning. We actually lost quite a few people after the first few rehearsals. But the people who chose to stay really stepped up their roles and made it happen. The exciting part about experimental theater is, instead of having the actors adjusting for the roles, the actors can adjust their roles to what they see fit. Vladimir is absolutely made for the role for Homeless Many. On the other hand, Peace (Alice Nguyen), the hippie, was built upon Alice’s many suggestions and inputs – the monologue was her idea. And for John (Horacio Ramirez) and William (Caden Stone), I did not initially have any specific plans for them, but Horacio and Caden really took the initiatives and bringing the characters to life.
The actors’ performances went above and beyond my expectations as well. Speaking of John and William, I did notice the chemistry between them. It’s hard to miss out on that, with William comparing the colors of light in the universe to the color of John’s eyes and everything.
I’m glad you caught that! With John and William, and Charlie (Gigi Lai) and Julia (Saule Pranskaityte) portrayed as same-sex couples, Edward and Lily (Sandrine Veilleux) as a heterosexual couple, and Jean as a transgender, I really want to represent the whole spectrum.
That’s interesting; I did not notice that Jean was a transgender.
Jean was supposed to be transgender, and only Sebastian (Pranav Sultania) sees Jean for who she is. The casting did not go to plan, however, so that might have been a bit hard to notice.
Representing the whole spectrum, is that the underlying political message that you want to get across to your audience?
Yes and no. I’d say that it’s part of the larger theme of conformity versus nonconformity. You see, when I first became a part of the ART ensemble, I was really shocked. There were gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and even a transgender in the cast. The LGBTQ community is very under-represented in my country, and so, although I did not have any prejudices against them, it felt odd at first. Representation, I realized, it’s very important. I want my art to bring the LGBTQ community into the spotlight. I want to show everyone that we are all the same. I mean, John and William have a more child-like affection for each other, while Charlie and Julia’s relationship is more serious where there are responsibilities involved. But, in the end, love is love.
You said that the LGBTQ visibility is only part of the overarching theme of conformity and non-conformity. What are the other aspects in this conflict?
I think there are few subdivisions: ordinary lives versus the extraordinary lives of the artists, time as defined by society versus time inside Edward’s mine and the flow of time inside the Bass Café, civilization, as embodied by the Doctor (Norah Laoui), versus the wilderness, Homeless Many and the Tainos (Victoria Shi, Anna Merzliakova, and Shirley Li), and reality and Edward’s version of it.
Edward’s version of reality – can you tell me more about that?
So the play starts with Edward at the Doctor’s office right? Edward talks about his anxiety and hallucinations, but he says that the Doctor won’t ever understand, to which the Doctor urges him to explain it to her. At the end, when the police (Amber Nguyen and the production team) has shut down the Café, Homeless Many asks Edward to join him in the jungle, the Doctor also comes out from behind and asks Edward to come with her instead.
Since the play ends there, are you leaving it open to interpretation?
Or maybe everything, the Café, the artists, the police, is all in his head.
Wait, so none of it actually happens?
It is open to interpretation.

How to Survive Spring Break

By: Jackie Kovalcin

The recent warm weather we’ve been having can ignite excitement in anyone for spring break. Who doesn’t love a three-week break from school, the routine of classes, and endless amounts of homework? Below I have listed a few tips on how to get the most out of your 2017 spring break vacation.

Spend time with family: When you live here at CATS, you’re not living with your family. By the end of this 8-week period, you may be starting to feel a bit homesick. Take advantage of the three weeks by having fun with your siblings and your parents, even if that means sacrificing time that you could be hanging out with your friends. Your parents will enjoy it more than you know, and you won’t regret time spent with them later.

Sleep, sleep, sleep! When you’re given the opportunity to sleep in every day for three weeks, take advantage of it! Catch up on all the all-nighters and get some rest. It will benefit your mind and body immensely.

Eat! This is a given, but here at CATS you may not have access to your favorite meals and foods that you have at your home. Spring break is an opportunity to enjoy home-cooked meals with your family. Meals are a great way to enjoy conversation with your family and enjoy some delicious food.

Work on your New Year’s Resolution : Want to read more? Get fit? Learn new hobbies? Get organized? A break from school is just what you need. Surround yourself with motivation, create a routine, and have fun! This is a great time to work on yourself and try new things.

Get Outside : With the temperature increasing and the grass turning green, springtime is the perfect time of year to get some fresh air. Try going for a walk/run, plant a garden, ride a bike, go for a hike, or visit the beach (although the water may be a bit cold for swimming).

Enjoy your hometown: Go to your favorite places you may not have the chance to here at CATS Academy. Have your favorite drink at your favorite café, find a great new book at your town’s library, or have a photoshoot at your favorite locations!

CATS Cultural Fair Was A Success!

By: Anna Merzliakova

Have you ever wondered how it would be to wear a Vietnamese dress and to dance to Latin American music? Strange combination right? Although I didn’t think it would be possible, it happened at the wonderful CATS Academy Boston Cultural Fair. The successful event was organized by Ms. Romash, Mrs. Carroll, additional CATS Boston faculty, and many of the enthusiastic international students who attend CATS Academy Boston.

The Cultural Fair succeeded by giving students an opportunity to represent something special from their home nation. The fair started off with a Mexican band performing authentic music from Mexico. Students, meanwhile, had the opportunity to roam between cultural tables representing the vast majority of the 32 nations present at CATS Academy. Students were seen eating guacamole, churros, Asian noodles, Brazilian desserts, British tea and crumpets, hummus, and drinking Taiwanese bubble tea. The event then transitioned to musical chairs, a wonderful fashion show, and student musical performances. These performances were commemorated with  lots of colorful photos and videos taken that day with even more smiles shared among friends from all over the world.

The 2017 CATS Cultural Fair will not just be remembered by the pleasant memories, but will truly represent the bright future for the event at CATS Academy Boston. We can take this success to continue creating a comfortable home-like environment for all students at CATS Academy.

as

 

Different Cultures and Food United in One Country

By: Tristan Fornari Hospital

The community of Cats is very diverse regarding the different cultures that makes up the school. Our students come from countries all over the globe including, Brazil, China, Mexico, Vietnam, Russia, Albania, and more. Although each of have different life experiences, we are all united in one community and live in the United States. CATS Academy Boston truly exemplifies the concept of America being a melting pot with different cultures, foods, traditions, and thoughts. Food is truly an excellent example of how each culture uniquely identifies itself. Each country has their own unique traditional foods. I have found that going to another country with its own food can be especially hard when it’s your only choice. The positive is that you can try other cultures’ foods that haven’t tried before.

“Food from this country is very different. In my country, the food is more homemade and less from factories or  [processed]food. It can be very hard to adapt because the food can be too greasy,” said Ivan Osipov from Russia. He also said that he would like if the cafeteria tried to make some Russian entrees.

“It’s very different in my country. People eat from a big plate and share with chopsticks,” remarked Lo Tsz Fung. Lo later stated, however, that it’s not hard to adapt because some of the food that they serve in the cafeteria is like his native country of China.

American culture related with food is very different compared to a lot of cultures. American meals are eaten in very large quantities compared to many different cultures. The food in United States contains a lot more calories than other cultures, can lead to an unhealthy lifestyle. An advantage of CATS Academy is that a lot of cultures have access to food of their country. This is thanks to the cafeteria providing a variety of food. Special occasions like the lunar year give us the chance to try food from other cultures.

In conclusion, the community from CATS Academy Boston is very diverse in culture, which may seem difficult to adapt to the food. In reality, though, the CATS Academy teachers, dorm parents, and staff make the transition as smooth as possible.

#GetCultured

By: Jennifer Phan

Representing over 30 countries under one roof? Surprising.

What’s not surprising? How the 2017 Culture Fair will do just that.

Jules Verne can take us around the world in eighty days1. The Culture Fair needs only two hours. Join us at the Culture Fair on February 6th for a few hours of festivity, food, fashion, and fun!

Not persuaded? Hear it from our teachers themselves. Stay tuned for videos every day during advisory.

[1] Verne, Jules. Around the World in Eighty Days. 1956. Get reading (Keep an eye out for an upcoming book club!)

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started