Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Commentary on Physics Team Victory 2013

I appreciate all of the students who responded to my challenge and prodding
with so many wonderful memories!

In the second year that we had seniors who went through the Physics First program as freshmen won, for the first time in school history, the
University of Alabama High School Physics Competition in 2013


Coaches Commentary on the
McGill-Toolen Physics Team Victory in 2013!
[comments made after Ash Wednesday school wide Mass]

          The accomplishment of the McGill-Toolen Catholic High School Physics Team in 2013 is an experience without comparison in more than thirty years of my personally observing, teaching and coaching at the high school level.  This team made me a witness to how God influences, uses and nurtures character and talents of those who are willing to be his servants.  These competitors responded to set backs, prepared for challenge, encouraged each other and risked losing.
          What were the challenges facing the McGill-Toolen Catholic High School Physics Team? McGill-Toolen is placed in the Private school division. Private schools often have resources which allow for greater individual attention during training (with tuition more than 3 times higher than McGill-Toolen) and more time for competition preparation (boarding schools often have multiple evening sessions dedicated to Physics) which explains the consistently high scores. The Large Public Schools (such as Hoover)can have a populations of students 3 times larger than McGill-Toolen with a much larger pool of students with talent and motivation. The Science and Math Magnet Schools draw only students with an interest in science who also have the very highest of standardized scores. Schools from areas of the state (such as Huntsville) with a disproportionate number of students of parents who are scientists and engineers is an additional challenge.
          Most of all, as is the case with most first time accomplishments any team, the competitors had to perform better than any one from McGill-Toolen before them. Allowing yourself to risk effort at becoming the best is one of the greatest challenges in life for anyone.
          The A-Team and the B-Team from McGill-Toolen High School in 2013 won over all schools in all divisions. This was an outcome I considered so unlikely that I wagered away my beard and my hair.  I was wrong (and happy to be corrected!)

         Jacob Jagiello (a juniorand alternate to both A & B Teams led a C-Team which unofficially won 3rd place in the private school division but was not awarded the plaque for technical reasons (duplicate team member roles).
          The B-Team which finished second over all schools was led by senior Silvio Piccini and anchored by Collin Phillips (a junior). Silvio, Collin and Jacob all worked tirelessly and unselfishly with younger Physics Team members through the last two years. These members were destined to help a team this year and included freshman Logan Robinson and Connor Kusch who qualified for the B team by scoring among the top nine out of 51 aspiring team members in early January on a qualifying test.
          Another freshman, Chris McDonald, qualified to be on the A-Team by qualifying and then, under great pressure, maintained the highest performance on a series of Physics assessments.  A key member of the A-Team was senior Jantzen Lee who joined the team this year for the first time and helped put the school over the top with his outstanding team play and with an outstanding individual score.
          I can not do justice in describing the impact of Seniors Kevin Kusch and Allen Davis. They had three years of "coming close" (winning 4th in the freshman year, 7th the sophomore year and 4th again in the junior year). These two showed faithfulness and persistence in remaining with the team but they also demanded more assessments, more drills and more study by team mates in the final days. Kevin and Allen relentlessly pushed team mates to correct errors and redo assessments with any eye for improving mastery. The result was an A-Team that dominated all other schools and teams (except the McGill_Toolen B-Team which was only 1 question behind).
          Kevin Kusch could have decided to focus preparation only on the individual scholarship test but he did not. He encouraged and pushed everyone to improve. Kevin ended up obtaining the highest score on the Physics Test given to all 300 competitors who aspired to win the full four year scholarship. Allen Davis came in 10th among all competitors. Kevin and Allen won "Top Individual Honor" and both qualified for the full four year non-contingent scholarships sought by all those at the competition.
          The "1st Place School" trophy is given to the school that has they highest combination of team scores and average individual scores. There was no doubt, when that trophy was lifted, which school was going to win.   McGill-Toolen Catholic High School started the day in the Holy Spirit chapel in prayer and then posing for a picture in front of a statute of Jesus' baptism..   The team ended the day with applause by those who had come to win but now saw a special group of competitors from a part of the state that rarely wins.
          In a certain sense that trophy belongs to our whole community. It belongs to those in our academic departments who helped hone reading, math and the reasoning skills that lead  arrive at the truth of a solution.  It belongs to our athletic departments whose example and high of expectations lifts our expectations.  It belongs to our community that provides science facilities allowing us to nurture science reasoning skills by DOING science day in and day out.   We also have a faith which birthed the discipline of science.  We recognize that this achievement was, like Physics itself, a gift from God.  Do now we give our creator, the source of light and truth. the glory he deserves.
          Glory be to the father and to the son and to the holy spirit!

(read after the Ash Wednesday Mass on  February 13, 2013)


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In all the material above it is important to remember that the views expressed by me here, on any website or in any publication do not  represent the views of  
McGill-Toolen Catholic High School, 
Archdiocese of Mobile or any  part of the Universal Catholic Church.
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Friday, January 25, 2013

School, Team and Individual Victories in 2013!

I appreciate all of the students who responded to my challenge and prodding
with so many wonderful memories!

In the second year that we had seniors who went through the Physics First program as freshmen won, for the first time in school history, the
University of Alabama High School Physics Competition in 2013!

11:46 AM January 25, 2013 at the University of Alabama Ferguson Center
        at the 2013 UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA HIGH SCHOOL PHYSICS COMPETITION

         McGill-Toolen Catholic High School took part in the 37th annual University of Alabama High School Physics Competition at the Ferguson Center on Friday January 25th, 2013 in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. There were more than 70 teams and 300 of the best senior level physics students from schools in Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee and Georgia. The McGill-Toolen Teams won first and second over teams in all divisions. Two McGill-Toolen students were honored as top individual competitors and one scored the highest on the scholarship competition. McGill-Toolen was also awarded 1st Place among all Schools based on both individual test results and team performance. Five McGill-Toolen competitors had perfect team rounds (the highest ever for McGill-Toolen)
          The day of the competition began with a communion service at Holy Spirit Parish in Tuscaloosa. An hour later grueling individual physics tests were taken and then that was followed by a team cipher that lasted an hour and a half. A physics show and awards ceremony followed that afternoon.
          Kevin Kusch obtained the highest score among all students at the competition on the 75 minute scholarship exam. Kevin Kusch and Allen Davis were given "Top Individual Physics Award" medals (given only to the top 10 individual test scores). This is the second consecutive year that a McGill-Toolen student has earned this award and the first time two McGill-Toolen students have won in the same year! Kevin Kusch and Allen Davis are automatically qualify for full four year scholarships to the University of Alabama as a result of the performance.
         Teams are placed in divisions of small public schools, large public schools, private schools and science-math magnet schools. All divisions do the same problems at the same time and are rated based on correct answer and time of response.
         The McGill-Toolen A Team consisted of seniors Kevin KuschAllen DavisJantzen Lee and freshman Chris McDonald.  This team was awarded first place in the "Private School Division" and won 1st place among all schools in all divisions for the first time in school history.  The B-Team consisted of junior Collin Phillips, senior Silvio PicciniLogan Robinson and Connor Kusch (both freshman).  The B_Team was awarded 2nd place in the "Private School Division" and won 2nd place among all schools in all divisions for the first time in school history.
         Perfect team competition rounds (correctly answering all 4 presented physics problems correctly in 40 seconds or less). Perfect team rounds were posted by Silvio Piccini, Jantzen Lee, Allen Davis, Logan Robinson and Kevin KuschChris McDonald answered all team round questions correctly.
         The final and highest award is the "School Award" (based on a combination of team scores and average individual scores). McGill-Toolen Catholic High School was given the 1st place "School Award" for the first time in School history.  Hoover High School won second place and Ranburne High School won 3rd Place.

         Physics Team moderator Dr. Tim Burgess (McGill-Toolen Science Chair) noted "The leadership on the team this year was extraordinary. Kevin Kusch and Allen Davis pushed team mates to develop better problem solving skills. Collin Phillips and Jacob Jagiello (juniors) spent many hours developing the skills of the younger competitors. This amazing performance is an accomplishment rare for any school from any region. Such a sweep rarely occurs for only the very best teams on a good day with leadership that has prepared the team for success.
         The McGill-Toolen performance is the direct result of the extraordinary talent, capability and work ethic of our very special students. The emphasis of McGill-Toolen in recent years on the synergistic relationship between faith and science has laid the ground work for the accomplishments of our outstanding science students. Success also springs from the support of our community as displayed in the fabulous facilities and resources our students enjoy while doing scientific reasoning day in and day out in the class room. Success, as we had this year, is only possible with community support and we are very grateful!"

COMMENTARY AT SCHOOL WIDE ASSEMBLY
https://drbreminices.blogspot.com/2015/07/commentary-on-2013-physics-team-victory_29.html
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Top Overall Scores

McGill-Toolen A Team:    1st  Overall Teams                   73 points
McGill-Toolen B Team:    2nd Overall Teams                   68 points
Hoover High School:        3rd  Overall Teams                   65 points

Hoover A-Team 1st among large Public Schools              65 pts

Ranburne A-Team: 1st among Regular Public Schools      58 pts

Miss. Math and Science School: 1st
among Science and Math                                                 53 pts
Magnet Schools





Additional Information (and photos) are available from the University of Alabama:
http://uanews.ua.edu/2013/02/high-school-student-winners-announced-in-ua-physics-contest-4/

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Combining my love for competition and interest in science was something I did from early on in my career. 
I also liked to do “action research” to evaluate initiatives in my class and department.

Physics First” was a department wide change in science sequence that I wanted to implement if able to.




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Please note that the views expressed here by me do not  represent the views of McGill-Toolen Catholic High School, Archdiocese of Mobile or any  part of the Universal Catholic Church.