St. Joe Community Foundation Awards FMS $13,550.00!
September 20, 2018
Pictured left to right: April Wilkes, Executive Director, St. Joe Community Foundation and Brianna Leavins, FMS Interventionist. Submitted by Sharie Smith.
Congratulations to these energetic 3rd grade students from Paxton, who were the first to earn their September mileage awards: Dalton Larkins and Lay’Shawn Sanders. Submitted by Kalli McMillan
FHS students participated in International Coastal Clean-Up 2018!
Submitted by Patty Woodard
FMS 6th grade students participated in International Coastal Clean-Up 2018 on Friday, September 14th. Students helped beautify Miramar Beach by collecting and documenting the trash littering the coastline. Submitted by Sharie Smith
Please join us on Thursday, September 20, 2018 at the Carlene H. Anderson Training Center (555 Walton Rd., DeFuniak Springs, FL 32435) at 6:00 pm for our School Advisory Council, SAC District Training. All new SAC members are encouraged to attend.
The School Advisory Council (SAC) is a team of people representing various segments of the community–parents, teachers, students, administrators, support staff, business/ industry people and other interested community members. The purpose of a SAC is to assist in the preparation and evaluation of the results of the school improvement plan.
Each school in the State of Florida must have a SAC. By law, each SAC must be composed of the principal and an “appropriately balanced” number of “stakeholders.” These individuals must be representative of the ethnic, racial and economic makeup of the community served by the school. High schools and vocational technical centers must have students on the SACs. Middle and junior high schools may include students on their SAC. The majority of SAC members (over 50 percent) must not be employed by the SCHOOL DISTRICT on whose SAC they serve.
We look forward to seeing you on September 20th.
Students in Mrs. Debbie Bush and Mr. Andy Stafford's 5th grade classes at WDE are studying ordering and comparing decimal numbers to the thousandths. The students participated in a hands on decimal lesson with the Media Specialist, Mrs. Tammy Goodman. The lesson allowed students to see how decimals are utilized in libraries. Since non-fiction books are organized by decimal numbers, groups of students used the numbering system to order the numbers from least to greatest and subsequently place all of the library books in order. This was a great hands on activity for students to better understand decimals, how decimals can be used in the real world, and to become even more familiar with the school library! Submitted by Jessica Dawkins
Image 1: Sadek Ramirez Galvez
Image 2: Lucas Cotton, Lakayla Jeffereson
Congratulations to these WHS seniors, who were recently accepted into college! We're so proud of these students and know they will continue building their legacies this year at Walton High AND in the coming years as they embark on their college & career endeavors.
Abigail Hewett - University of Alabama
Josie Barton - Troy University
Kaylee McBroom - Troy University
Submitted by Christy English
Walton High School was happy to have Brian Bonner, a firefighter at Eglin Air Force Base, speak with our career research classes today. He explained the day-to-day operations of being a firefighter and answered all of the students' questions regarding his profession. A couple of students even got the opportunity to wear his gear!
Thank you, Mr. Bonner, for taking the time out of your schedule to speak with our students about this career opportunity.
Submitted by Christy English
As part of World’s Largest Single-Day Beach Cleanup students and volunteers from across Walton County School District will join hundreds of thousands worldwide during Ocean Convervancy’s 33rd International Coastal Cleanup. On September 15, the world’s largest annual single-day volunteer effort to remove trash from local waterways, beaches, lakes and rivers will take place. Since the first ICC 33 years ago, nearly 13 million volunteers have removed nearly 250 million pounds of trash from beaches and waterway worldwide! Come out and join our students and volunteers in their efforts, and “Suit Up to Clean Up!” You can find more information at:
https://oceanconservancy.org/.../international-coastal-clean.../
NUMBER OF VOLUNTEERS] Volunteers #SuitUptoCleanup [NUMBER
OF POUNDS/KG] of Trash from [CLEANUP LOCATION] as Part of
World
’
s
Largest Single-Day Beach Cleanup
[YOUR ORGANIZATION] and [CITY/LOCATION] Volunteers Joined Hund
reds of Thousands
Worldwide during Ocean Conservancy
’
s
33
rd
International Coastal Cleanup
[Location, State, Date]
–
Today
,
[NUMBER OF VOLUNTEERS] people in [INSERT LOCATION]
participated in Ocean Conservancy
’
s
33
rd
International Coast
al
Cleanup (ICC)
,
the world's largest
single-day volunteer effort to remove trash from local water
ways, beaches, lakes and rivers.
Since the first ICC 33 years ago, nearly 13 million volunt
eers have removed nearly 250 million
pounds of trash from beaches and waterway worldwide. The [CI
TY/LOCATION
]
cleanup comes
just [weeks/days] after [LOCATION]-area beaches closed for the su
mmer.
?
When you #SuitUptoCleanup, you are advancing one of the most
immediate and impactful
solutions to keeping plastics out of the ocean,
?
said [NAME]
,
[ORGANIZATION]
’
s
[TITLE]
,
?
which
is why we are so grateful to all the amazing volunteers who came
out. Awareness has really
grown around the issue of ocean plastic and it
’
s great to see people taking action.
?
In addition to removing [
XX
] [pounds/kgs] of trash from [INSERT LOCATION]
—
including
[UNUSUAL FINDS, IF ANY], volunteers contributed to the world
’
s largest database on marine
debris by logging each trash item in Ocean Conservancy
’
s
Clean Swell app (available for free
download from the
App Store
an
d
Google Play
). Scientists, researchers, industry leaders and
policymakers rely on Ocean Conservancy
’
s Ocean Trash Index to inform policy and determine
solutions to the growing marine debris crisis.
Every year, millions of tons of trash
—
including an estimated 8 million metric tons of plastic
waste
—
flow into the ocean, entangling wildlife, polluting beach
es, and costing coastal
municipalities hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars. Last
year for the first time all ten of the
top-ten most-collected Items were made of plastic, including c
igarette butts (which contain
plastic filters), plastic bags, plastic beverage bottles, fo
od wrappers, plastic bottle caps and
plastic straws. Plastics
—
which never fully biodegrade but rather break up into smaller
and
Each week, Mr. Carnley’s ninth grade Braves read to MSE’s Little Warriors. This is a great example of schools teaming up to make epic things happen! Submitted by Krisy Spence