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Show A-6 Wed/Thurs/Fri, February 13-15, 2019 The Park Record Lights, camera, acción: Event Students tread into new terrain set to showcase Spanish films Students filmed, edited work in the foreign language CAROLYN WEBBER ALDER The Park Record When the Sundance Film Festival rolled into town a couple weeks ago, the students in the ¡Hablemos! Spanish After Hours program decided to hold a film festival of their own. The after-school program at Ecker Hill Middle School is set to host a festival of student films on Wednesday, Feb. 13, from 5 to 7 p.m. All films will be in Spanish. The event is set to take place in the school’s auditorium. Patricia Muñoz, a Spanish teacher at the school and a co-founder of the club, said the goal of ¡Hablemos! Spanish After Hours is to provide a space where students can practice their Spanish language skills while doing fun activities. Student leaders came up with the idea for a film festival a couple weeks ago, and students in the club have spent several hours storyboarding, filming and editing — all in Spanish. At the film festival on Wednesday, one professional short film in Spanish and the top 10 student films will be screened. Muñoz and William Hocking, who has worked in the film industry for several years, will determine which films will be shown. Attendees will be able to vote for the best films, and awards will be given at the end of the evening. Zachary Minter, a seventh-grade student and president of the club, said he is excited to see which films get selected. He said he and the members of his group put in weeks of work to create a film about a student who goes through his daily activities and “falls into some peril or doom, but it narrowly misses him.” He said some of the members of his group learned to step out C E c COURTESY OF PATRICIA MUÑOZ Students in the ¡Hablemos! Spanish After Hours Club at Ecker Hill Middle School are eager to show their films during the club’s film festival. They filmed and edited videos entirely in Spanish. of their shells while filming the short. “I’m proud of all my friends and proud of myself for making a film come together. It would be great to see all of us on the screen and have that feeling of accomplishment and pride,” he said. Olivia Oveson, a sixth-grade student and vice president of the club, is eager to walk on a red carpet that the club is rolling out, and to see which group wins. Her team made a stop-motion film using Legos. She has enjoyed the process of filming and editing. She said she has learned more Spanish words and phrases related to filming. Increasing the students’ Spanish vocabulary and fluency is exactly why Muñoz started the club at the start of the school year. She wanted her dual-language immersion students to have a place to practice their Spanish outside of the classroom. “I felt like we needed a forum where students would be able to do oral language in a very non-threatening way where there is not a grade,” she said. By doing activities like making blankets for a homeless shelter or cooking, the students have learned new words relating to topics they might not reg- ularly discuss in class. “It is amazing what happens to them when you are guiding an activity that they love so much,” she said. The same was true for the last few weeks as students learned to communicate about filming entirely in Spanish. Hocking, who Muñoz met through a connection at the Egyptian Theatre, volunteered to teach students filming techniques in Spanish. The club has had continued support from parents as well. They helped raise money to get the club off the ground at the start of the school year. Muñoz recently received a $7,500 teacher grant from the Park City Education Foundation to keep the club going. But, she said, parents continue to help by volunteering their time to help run the after-school program. She said both Hispanic and non-Hispanic parents attend, and it seems to be uniting the community. Muñoz said the film festival has also helped bring the 67 student members together. They are divided into groups, and they must collaborate with each other to get the project done. It’s work, but Muñoz said most of the students don’t see it as such. As Oveson said, “You just get to talk to your friends and learn more vocabulary.” PHOTO BY MEGAN MCKENNA Students from Treasure Mountain Junior High and Park City High School participate in the Park City School District’s third-annual avalanche class. The Utah Avalanche Center and Park City Mountain Resort ski patrol partnered to teach students about search and rescue techniques, as well as how to forecast avalanches, examine avalanche debris, collect weather data and observe avalanche dogs. The program, which was funded by a grant from the Park City Education Foundation, took place over three days in February. It is open to all district students between grades eight and 12. Bill would end school grades Scale ranges from ‘exemplary’ to ‘critical needs’ CAROLYN WEBBER ALDER The Park Record In the most recent state accountability reports, Utah schools were not labeled with the usual letter grades. That trend could continue. A bill from Rep. Marie Poulson, D-Salt Lake City, would remove the requirement for the Utah State Board of Education to annually assign schools a letter grade to demonstrate how they are performing. Instead, schools would receive an overall ranking using words and phrases such as “exemplary,” “typical” and “critical needs.” The bill, H.B. 198, received a favorable recommendation from the House Education Committee last week. If the bill were to pass, schools would receive an overall ranking on a five-point scale, as well as rankings for individual categories. The rankings would be “exemplary,” “commendable,” “typical,” “developing” and “critical needs.” School grades have been controversial throughout the state since they were adopted five years ago. Critics of school grades say they do not accurately reflect a school’s performance because schools are too complex to receive one simple grade. When Treasure Mountain Junior High received an “F” grade two years ago, principal Emily Sutherland sent a message to parents saying the grade was an “entirely false and invalid measurement of the teaching and learning that takes place in our building.” Other Park City leaders have said they do not value the grades at all. The grades are mostly dependent on how well students perform on state standardized tests, and opt-out rates for the exams in the Park City School District are some of the highest in the state. High opt-out rates have skewed the numbers, district officials have said. Last month, no school grades were given because the Utah Legislature voted to not assign them for 2018. The Utah State Board of Education ranked schools on the five-point scale proposed in H.B. 198 and gave no overall score. Individual indicators, including student achievement, student growth, English learner progress and Please see School, A-7 Penthouse Living Raise the Art of Après in a Penthouse that’s the Envy of Park City Après at home—your penthouse is Park City’s most stylish place to bring friends. Start with drinks in the expansive outdoor living room. Move the party indoors to the elegant great room facing spectacular mountain views. With a dramatic fireplace, kitchen made for entertaining, and separate guest suite, this 4 bedroom home is the height of luxury. Completion Summer 2019 To view, contact Mark Rodeheaver 435.659.8993 mark@reparkcity.com liftparkcity.com Lift residences are not currently being offered for sale. Reservations are expressions of interest only and may not result in a binding agreement for purchase once residences are offered for sale. All renderings and illustrative maps are conceptual only and subject to change. Errors & omissions excepted. ©2015-2019 BHH Affiliates, LLC. 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