Sunday, September 25, 2011

Memories of Success in the Big City

  Our ride to the Big Apple in the "quiet car" of the train last April was a little more relaxed than we had expected, but the excitement began once we were met by our luxury limobus at Penn Station. The driver took us over the Brooklyn Bridge to our hotel where we stored our luggage until the rooms were ready. We ducked into a Starbucks for a quick snack and headed to Battery Park by subway to catch the ferry to the Statue of Liberty and stroll around her pedestal.

The Montessori Model United Nations Conference opened mid-month on a Wednesday evening, with a ceremony to include a Parade of Nations, for which Regina carried a fabric flag of Sweden that the AOC students had made.

Eighty-three nations were represented at the conference by approximately eight hundred thirty Montessori students in fourth through ninth grades. Students not only came from schools in the contiguous U.S. and Hawaii, but also from other countries including China, Japan, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Sweden to name a few.  AOC was recognized with a certificate during the Opening Ceremony for having been fully supportive of MMUN since its inception five years earlier. The students listened to talks given by real UN Ambassadors about "service to others," and the attendees were congratulated on their hard work throughout the school year, culminating in the submission of position papers to the committee presidents and preparing to debate.

As the sessions opened Thursday morning, our students headed to their committee rooms in pairs. Our delegation represented the Kingdom of Sweden on the UNDP, UNESCO, UNHCR and WFP committees. By lunch time, everyone was talkative, and eager to share the results of their morning work on the topics they had studied back home.

We discovered that each of our student groups had opted to raise their placards during the morning session in order to be placed on their respective Speakers' Lists, and several had already introduced their ideas in this public forum. They chatted with each other throughout lunch about the students they met from other schools, the formal language that was or was not being employed correctly in the committee rooms, and the personalities of their respective committee presidents.

The afternoon sessions progressed, followed by dinner discussion surrounding the working papers which were in progress by that point. It became clear as we rounded the second day of meetings that our students had been involved with formulating the ideas for the preliminary paperwork. In some cases our delegations were even listed as Signatories or Sponsors, a first for AOC!

Saturday morning, the children were excited enough about their work that they hopped out of bed early to check out of the hotel, get breakfast and proceed to the UN Headquarters for final voting. During these proceedings the delegations sat on the main floor of the GA Hall in the seats used by the UN Ambassadors. They cast their votes for or against the resolutions by pushing the electronic colored buttons in front of them which would light up the voting board and create a full count of the votes in the room.

Most of the draft paperwork that AOC students had been involved in passed and became GA Resolutions during the voting session. They were told that their final resolutions would actually be submitted to the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon.

During the closing ceremony, all participants were congratulated for their noncompetitive, collaborative efforts by the Secretariat and visiting Ambassadors.

Starving after a long morning and a job well done, we headed back toward Grand Central Station to eat some famous New York style pizza in a little cafe. Then, we returned to the hotel, picked up our luggage and met the limo bus once again to transport us to the Greek/Roman and Egyptian exhibits at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.



Friday, September 02, 2011

Welcome Back to School!

All students in our class officially start school on Wednesday, September 7th, but we're looking forward to you stopping by during Welcoming Day on Tuesday between 11am and 1pm. Bring a bag lunch and let your children enjoy visiting with friends on the playground if you have time.

Be sure to send a shopping bag to school full of all the requested supplies on the first day! Check over the list carefully to be sure everything is complete. Pencils should be sharpened before they are brought to school so we don't wear out our sharpener. We'll be labeling individual supplies together that first morning with special name labels.

All homework must be completed and brought to school on the first day of classes. Uniform shirts are worn beginning Wednesday. Just a reminder, there will be no after care during the first week of school. All elementary students will be dismissed at 3:00pm on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.

Please join me in welcoming new students, Landon, Alvin, Adithya and Aneesh to our class this month. So happy to have them join us for the awesome work we have ahead of us!