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For more information contact: TENAFLY HIGH SCHOOL BROADCAST BUS DOES IT ALL Tenafly, NJ USA – A few years ago, Tenafly High School’s oldest small yellow school bus had to be taken out of service due to state regulations regarding aging school vehicles. It was agreed that the bus could be ideal for use in high school broadcasting so the seats were removed and students helped install new equipment funded by the high school’s Home School Association. Hand me down equipment from local broadcasting companies was also integrated. A very generous anonymous donor painted the bus bright orange and black, the school’s colors. School sports events could now be regularly recorded and then played back on Tenafly’s local access education channel. This past week, a new challenge was set forth and met. Due to construction, Tenafly High School’s graduation had to be moved to the football field, a location removed from the high school, so it became necessary to devise a way of broadcasting LIVE from the football field to the town of Tenafly. It was also necessary for the bus to have a quiet and independent power source, and a bird’s eye angle for a camera. These requirements were met through the following additions: · · A quiet new Honda generator model EU3000is purchased from KEEHN EQUIPMENT, Hackensack. It powers the TV equipment in the bus. · · Telescoping mast purchased from CLARK MASTS was installed and erects through the roof top emergency exit of the bus. Atop of the mast is a Glidecam Vista Head pan tilt head directing a SONY HVR-Z1U HD camera · · Wireless broadband network card from SPRINT enables audio and video to be streamed back to the control room via Windows Media Encoder – once there it is scan converted back to TV and broadcast live to the community · · Students operate the cameras pan tilt zoom from a homemade console with pan tilt joystick and zoom control inside the bus (connected to Nycoil looping around the mast up to the camera) These additions enabled the broadcast of the high school graduation LIVE and “C-SPAN style” to the community. All new equipment performed well beyond all expectations. All this equipment packaged in a vehicle with a lot of character rivals the capabilities of professional vehicles costing hundreds of thousands of dollars. And most importantly the students involved with the broadcast had fun and felt good about the service they provided to their community.
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SUPERVISOR LIBRARY MEDIA SERVICES Students Beaming Up to BBC World in U.S. High School
Tenafly, NJ USA - December 6, 2006: BBC World now informs students in one of New Jersey’s top high schools. In order to bring top quality international sources into Tenafly High School their library has turned to the BBC World as news channel of choice on their newly acquired flat screen monitors installed at both entrances of the school’s library. In front of these monitors, a sound isolation dome allows students standing under to easily listen and watch BBC World and catch up on the news between periods or during free time. Just leaving his place under a dome, a student exclaimed “BBC World is great!” Under the domes, students look as though they are ready to be “beamed up,” and in a way they are because comments from Tenafly High School students about BBC World have all been positive. They recognize quality commercial free reporting.
In the United States, BBC World is only available 24/7 through Cablevision in the New York metropolitan area, so the Tenafly High School Library decided to take full advantage by acquiring a digital cable box in order to receive the broadcast. BBC World gives Tenafly High School students the chance to see America from a different point of view, more as the world sees us. Cablevision carries the channel 24/7 and it is commercial free. And it has been noticed that BBC World reports regularly on situations in Africa, sometimes tragic, reports that US news organizations seem to shy away from, perhaps as a means of preserving their ratings. BBC’s motto “Putting News First” seems to place emphasis wholly on the news and not on the "stars" delivering the news as is so often observed in the US television news services. As a result of this ethic, Tenafly High School students are learning more through BBC World by having more exposure to world events through a top quality news service.
Tenafly High School is located just
north of the George Washington Bridge and was rated second in the
state by New Jersey Monthly Magazine. It was also chosen by the US
Department of Education No Child Left behind Blue Ribbon School.
David Di Gregorio is their Supervisor of Library Media Services. -END-
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- THS-TV 77 www.LibraryMedia.net September 2006 - |
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The Lalor Library Media Center has received numerous contributions from many individuals, organizations, and companies. These contributions are the life blood of our facility because they enable a continuous improvement and provide interesting and varied experiences for our students. We would like to acknowledge and thank all of those involved with supporting our high school library media center.
The value added to our facility through the support of individuals and the private sector is substantial. The results of the public and private sector working together to benefit our students we hope will continue. Should there be other opportunities for support or if you would like to visit our unique facility, please contact us at 201-816-6617. |
RIGHT CLICK ON BLACK SCREEN AND SELECT PLAY VIDEO. DOUBLE CLICK FOR FULL SCREEN VIDEO LIBRARY MEDIA CENTER NEW LOOK Over the summer, current and former students David Kim (03), Jason Hain (06), Dror Nawrocki (09), Ofir Davidesko (06), Oryan Amano (06), Mark Fagnano (05), Jennifer Hellman (08), Polat Diyarbekirlioglu (09), Justin Schroeder (06), Jennifer Hellman (08) were hired to accomplish a huge task;
move everything out of the library media center to prepare for carpet installation.
Once everything
was out the carpet installers arrived and removed the old carpet,
replacing it with practical neutral color carpet squares.
These improvements will benefit our students for many years to come.
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Pictured above: Su Jee Lee and Seung Yeon Lee work on special signage which will be placed on each shelf in the library and used for indicating where books are located. This project was started by Jenifer Hellman over the summer. It entails cutting, then gluing a brass channels to a wooden plaque. A four inch piece square of plastic with printed information slides in, resulting an a very attractive, useful, and flexible sign system. Students interested in the Community Service Program are advised to stop in to the Principal’s office to pick up the appropriate form. One side is filled out by the student, the other by the parent. There are a number of opportunities, not only in the library. We hope they are taken advantage of!
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THS-TV AWARDS
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SCHOOL, STUDENT, AND STAFF NEWS
Leigh Barker's Team In
Training Page Racing to Save Lives After the Belmar 5 with training
partner John Witterschein, where I placed 12th in my age group! |
LIBRARY MEDIA CENTER NEWS Conference Calls used to Connect and Inform Students Tenafly, NJ - “Conference Calls” are used in the financial world to inform investors, so why not use the same idea in schools to help inform students? This is exactly what is happening between Tenafly High School and Neues Gymnasium Nurnberg, Germany. This week and next week students in Leigh Barker’s US II classes at Tenafly High School are connecting with English Language classes at Neues Gymnasium Nuremberg, Germany. Through an Internet search, Tenafly High School Library Media Specialist, David DiGregorio found a school and eventually got in touch with Dr. Sabine Prechter, an English teacher at the school who was enthusiastic about the idea. She even asked her students to return to the School at 5:30 p.m. German time to accommodate the time difference between countries. Ms. Barker’s class was interested in comparing what is taught in schools in Germany with what is taught here in the United States. Questions were prepared and emailed to Germany in advance and a secure, private, passworded web page, which could be shared on both sides of the Atlantic, was setup with location maps, pictures of individual students, and a discussion forum for students to continue their conversation. At Tenafly High School, the library media center’s Academic Theatre was set up in a U-shaped configuration. At a calling cost of less than two cents per minute, free Internet phone software called “Skype” was employed as a most effective “computer speaker phone”, and the room’s connected amplification system and microphone were controlled by Ms. Barker as she passed the microphone to students from inside the U-shaped table arrangement. At the start of the conference, as an ice breaker, students compared their tastes in music and discussed what kind of music they enjoyed. Many similarities were found. Moving toward the prepared questions, students in Ms. Barker’s class found out that it is a requirement for German students to visit concentration camps to further understand their history. They also heard about some impressions students in Germany have of the United States. Students here learned about the challenges Germany faces in its reunification. Students in Germany were surprised at the makeup of our student population. German students asked if Tenafly was at all like Wisteria Lane. As Ms. Barker’s social studies students found out about Germany, Dr. Prechter’s English students had an opportunity to put their English language skills to practical use. Meanwhile, projected on the screen in the Academic Theatre at Tenafly High School was the common web page as well as “Google Earth”, a free downloadable program that effectively shows locations throughout the world through literally “zooming in” from space. Through this software, satellite imagery actually enabled students to see the rooftop of the school they were in contact with. And zooming out they could see where it was located in relation to other countries in Europe. Throughout the interactive conference call students were very attentive and seemed to very much enjoy “comparing notes”. There was much laughter as well as pondering moments that made for deeper thought. It seems that students on both sides of the Atlantic benefited from this experience. Dr. Prechter’s and Ms. Barker’s classes will have a second conference call on Monday, March 20, at 11:00 a.m. After the first conference Ms. Mihl, Nurnberg Neues Gymnasium’s Vice Principal indicated a desire to continue the relationship between the two schools looking towards a possible student exchange in the future.
Future
conference calls may include connections to schools in America’s South and
perhaps even to various countries in Middle East.
THS-TV
NEWS RELEASE
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