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St. Johnsbury,
one of Vermont's coolest little downtowns!

SKI MAGAZINE
DECEMBER 2006

St. Johnsbury Area Schools

 

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Marion Anastasia, Principal
St. Johnsbury School

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Jack Cummings, Asst. Headmaster
St. Johnsbury Academy

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Tom Lovett, Headmaster
St. Johnsbury Academy

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Education in St. Johnsbury Area

St. Johnsbury has a rich tradition of education. St. Johnsbury Academy, founded by the Fairbanks family in 1842, is a top-ranked private preparatory school which also functions as the local high school. It offers one of the most diversified education programs in the country, with course offerings thatSt. Johnsbury Academy range from an extensive technical program to a wide selection of advanced placement offerings. The school population of almost 1,000 students includes approximately 200 boarding students from around the world, giving the school a strong international flavor. The beautiful facilities and innovative faculty bring St. Johnsbury Academy national acclaim.

St. Johnsbury has a public school system for pre-K through 8th grade, located in the heart of town. Several private elementary and middle schools are also available in the local area.

Five miles from St. Johnsbury, in Lyndonville, VT, is Lyndon State College, one of the four state colleges of Vermont. Besides providing higher education for about 1,200 students, the College reaches out to the local community through its course offerings as well as its many cultural events, which are open to the public.

St. Johnsbury Academy (grades 9 - 12 and PG)
1000 Main Street
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819
(802) 751-2129

The St. Johnsbury School (grades PK - 8)
257 Western Ave.
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819
(802) 748-8912

Good Shepherd Catholic School (grades PK - 8)
PO Box 384 121 Maple Street
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819
(802) 751-8223

The Caledonia School (grades 9 - 12)
125 School St.
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819
(802) 748-6282

Stevens School (grades 3-8)
1510 Bayley-Hazen Rd.
Peacham, VT 05862
(802) 592-3194

Lyndon State College
PO Box 919
1001 College Rd
Lyndonville, VT 05851
(802) 626-6413

Community College of Vermont
1197 Main Street, Suite 3
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819-2240
(802) 748-6673
www.ccv.edu

Springfield College of Human Services
347 Emerson Falls Rd., Suite 2
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819
(802) 748-5402, (800) 441 1812
www.spfldcol.edu/shs
shsstjohnsbury@spfldcol.edu

UVM Extension - St. Johnsbury
397 Railroad St., Suite 3
St. Johnsbury, VT 05819-1740
(802) 751-8307



Weather…Or Not!

     The Weather Center at the Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium is well known across the state. The meteorologists there, Mark Breen, Steve Maleski, and Chris Bouchard, forecast the weather and broadcast daily to listeners of Vermont Public Radio and Magic 97.7, plus provide weather forecasts for several Vermont newspapers and websites.

     Now you and your family can learn some of the secrets of the weather from one of the experts. Saturday, April 24, 2010, Mark Breen will be conducting a weather workshop for families at the museum. He’ll explain how to observe what goes on with the weather around us, using simple equipment to measure temperature, rainfall, and humidity. Mark will help families understand the clues from their observations of weather phenomena, and start you on your way to being a “Weather Wizard!” Plus, every family registered receives a copy of Mark’s award-winning book, “The Kid’s Book of Weather Forecasting.”

     Contact Tara Robinson Holt at the Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium to register for the program, being held April 24, 2010 from 9:00 am to 12:00 noon.


 



Teaching the Teachers in St. Johnsbury

From late August through early June, St. Johnsbury Academy is home to 1,000 boarding and day high school students. But for the month of July every year, a different student group takes over the school: teachers learning from other teachers at the AP Summer Institute.

Started in 1986, the Academy holds four weeks of programs for teachers to learn how to teach the highly accelerated Advanced Placement curriculum sanctioned by the College Board. This year, over 400 teachers will attend during the month, taking courses in such topics as Biology, US Government, French, Computer Science, and Studio Art, to name just a few. Twenty-six instructors, who are respected as some of the premier teachers in the country, comprise the AP Institute’s faculty this summer. Eleven or twelve courses are taught each week.

Howard Crawford is the Director of St. Johnsbury Academy’s AP Summer Institute. “The AP Institute demonstrates and strengthens St. Johnsbury Academy’s commitment to the AP program,” says Crawford. “At the Academy, we believe that the Advanced Placement curriculum sets a high standard for academic excellence.”

Crawford notes that running a successful AP Institute at the Academy raises St. Johnsbury Academy’s profile among schools in New England. “Through the AP Institute, our name is known by teachers all over the country and around the world,” says Crawford. “In fact, a teacher who attended our AP Institute a few years ago is now moving to St. Johnsbury, because she wants her own children to attend St. Johnsbury Academy for high school.”

Crawford is one of ten AP Institute Directors who consults with the College Board about the program. In 24 years of running an AP Institute, St. Johnsbury Academy’s program has become known for its high quality of instruction, along with a full roster of great activities planned for the attendees each week. But Crawford says that St. Johnsbury Academy’s AP Institute is really known for the food!  “Sodexho creates the most fabulous menus during the program,” says Crawford. “It’s just one more reason teachers from all over the country and the world attend our AP Summer Institute.”

 


 

Everything You Always Wanted to Know About the Fairbanks Museum’s “Weather Guys” (...and we’re not afraid to ask!)

If you listen to Vermont Public Radio or Magic 97.7, or if you read the Caledonian-Record, the Times-Argus, or the Rutland Herald, you are probably familiar with the weather forecasts from the team at the Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium here in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. From the literal depths of the museum on Main Street -- they are in the basement -- meteorologists Mark Breen, Steve Maleski, and Chris Bouchard research, digest, and disseminate weather data every day, developing forecasts that reach listeners and readers across Vermont and as far away as Montreal, Maine, and Massachusetts.

And when you spend a while with them down in the Fairbanks Weather Center, you find three men who live and breathe what’s happening in the skies above us. Ironic that their lair has but one tiny window, and somehow they know more about what’s happening outdoors than the rest of us ever could!

Chris Bouchard is the “new kid on the block.” A 2005 graduate of Lyndon State College’s celebrated meteorology program, he joined the team almost 4 years ago. Chris credits his interest in the weather to a movie he saw in high school -- “Twister,” about tornado chasers. While he allows that tornadoes are not too likely here in northeast Vermont, there is plenty of severe weather in our neck of the woods to interest him. In fact, Chris has become fascinated by lightning storms, and an exhibition of his photographs of lightning is on display at the Fairbanks’ Weather Center.

Chris says that one of the trickiest parts of his job at first was the radio broadcast. “I did the LSC television weather forecasts in college,” he says, “and I had to adjust to radio, where you can’t rely on visual aids of any kind -- no maps, no pictures, no numbers on the screen. We really have to make the weather come alive, just by our words.”

While Chris handles much of the weather duties during the week, Steve Maleski is the guy for the weekends. Steve was the Fairbanks’ original weather forecaster at the start of the VPR radio broadcasts in 1981. Another graduate of LSC’s meteorology program, Steve left Vermont to join the then-new Weather Channel in Atlanta in 1982, but returned two years later to the Fairbanks’ new Northern New England Weather Center. According to Steve, “Franklin Fairbanks, the founder of the Fairbanks Museum, was always a weather enthusiast. Today’s weather programs stem from Franklin’s interest in weather as part of the natural world.” Even today, they send monthly weather observations to the National Weather Service, as has been done since the museum’s founding.

Steve and Chris agree that the sheer volume of information about the weather adds challenges to the forecasting process. “Computer modeling has gotten so sophisticated and so extensive,” says Steve, “that a key part of our job is to figure out what information is the most important and most accurate, and build our forecasts from that.”

The third member of the team, Mark Breen, handles early morning weather forecasts (starting at 3:30 AM!), but the other half of his day is devoted to education and astronomy. Mark is the Senior Meteorologist and Director of the Fairbanks Museum’s Planetarium. Like Chris and Steve, Mark learned about meteorology from the LSC program. But astronomy is another story altogether. “I’ve been fascinated by the stars since I came to work at the museum in 1982,” says Mark. “I love everything about science, but the stars and planets have a special appeal. It’s partly the mythology aspect and the storytelling that interests me. Mostly, I’m drawn to the idea that the ancients studied the very same stars we still view today.”

In Mark’s “Night Sky” daily features on Vermont Public Radio, he talks about objects everyone can see in the sky without a telescope.  “I want people to learn about what they’re looking at when they gaze up into the sky, and help them answer the question, ‘What is that bright spot I see?’”

In fact, people are always asking questions of these three meteorologists. The team receives calls, letters, and emails every day from readers and listeners. Sometimes people want a specific weather forecast for an upcoming event, and sometimes they want to know what they can see in the night sky. Not unexpectedly, people are often disappointed with the forecast and want to let the group know about it. “We get lots of mail from people who think we’re not forecasting exactly for their specific town,” says Chris. “But when you cover as wide an area as we do, you can’t treat any town as the center of the forecast.”

Of course, in our town we know where the weather really comes from -- the Eye on the Sky weather team in the Fairbanks Museum, right in the middle of St. Johnsbury, Vermont!

 

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