Faculty Highlight: Mrs. Slaff

By Ryan Jackloski ’16

What are five facts about you?
I love to entertain.  I wasn’t supposed to live past the age of two because I had a severe heart condition and had open-heart surgery when I was eighteen.  I’m a great sports spectator but I was never allowed to play.  I’m Southern and have deep Southern roots.  My guilty pleasure is country music when I’m cooking or working.  My mother was a church organist but also a recording artist and arranger for the pipe organ so I appreciate classical and religious music as well, but you can clean a house pretty well to a country song.  I love helping students.  It keeps me young, but I get so much back from trying to help students figure out things or relieve stress.  I love my job.  I really enjoy being a grandmother; I have four grandchildren: twenty, seven, four, and four.
 
How long have you worked at Sem?
Thirty years.
 
What positions have you held while here?
I’ve been a French teacher, Spanish teacher, English teacher, and ESL teacher.  I ran the ESL Summer program for eighteen years.  I served as chair of global language department.  I’ve worked in college guidance for over twenty years and directed it for four.  I’m also a mentor of new faculty, and I sit on a bunch of committees.
 
What is your favorite class you’ve taught?
As far as content, I’ve always loved French Honors.  I’ve always held onto it because you’re introducing literature and history through the target language.  When College Board stopped AP French Literature, I had a few years when I got to develop a capstone course after AP French Language, and we did sub-Saharan and Caribbean literature of negritude, which is black literature.  It was literature that I had never studied, so I was learning it with this small group of students, and that was really cool.
 
This year you oversaw the submission of over 1,100 college applications and just the other day you had nine appointments to attend.  How do you stay so calm and organized?
That’s a lesson I have learned through being a grandmother.  And I don’t know that I stay calm, but I am able to be present.  When I’m in a meeting, I’m just in that meeting, or when I’m talking to a student, I try to really just focus and listen to the student.  I have learned that when you’re with three and four year olds, you have to be in the moment, so I try to remember that lesson and I give my full attention to whatever I’m doing, and then I move onto the next thing.  I plan my day.  I keep a list of what needs to be done, but then I try to focus on just one task at a time.  I do think that sometimes we spend too much time worrying about what has happened that we can’t change and what we still have to get done.  I just start plugging away.  You have to know when to draw the line and just say, “That’s the best I can do right now,” and you move onto something else.  It’s okay to fall short, to accept yourself as not perfect.
 
What college did you go to?
I went to Tulane University in New Orleans.  I went as an informational engineer and math major when computers were a whole big room, and I fell in love with French literature because Tulane required language.  I changed my major, graduated, and went on to do graduate work in medieval French.
 
What would you like to say to the overly eager freshman or sophomore with plans on applying to every Ivy, MIT, and Stanford?
The difference between having a dream and a goal is a plan.  Having a plan is important as long as you understand that plans change.  I think we get so wrapped up in where we go to school that we really don’t focus on how we go to school.  There are so many ways to get a great education and get launched into a career that will make you feel fulfilled and happy.  There are so many jobs that a seventeen year old doesn’t even know exist that could be marvelous careers.  I really hope that high school kids keep an open mind of what’s out there.  You can make so many college experiences great.  I would rather students focus on the how and the why than on the where.
 
A lot of colleges have recently become test optional.  Do you think with time the SAT and ACT will become totally obsolete?
No.  Test optional is really a luxury of small to midsize schools.  Really large institutions oftentimes use computers to at least go through the first round of selecting their classes. They need something to compare apples to apples because the grading scales and curricula at different schools are so varied.  I don’t think standardized tests are going to go away unless we go to some type of national exam for graduation like the Baccalaureate in France.  I think test optional and test flexible admission programs are important because we can’t quantify a student.  They’ve proven that students who do not report their scores to test optional schools perform just as well during college as the students who chose to report their scores.  There’s a lot of data that says those tests do not necessarily provide any sort of measure of success.  I don’t think they’re going to go away because some kids are good at tests so they want to report their scores.  Admission officers just want to know what your skills are entering college.  I hope there will be options for students.
 
A lot of people know you as Snapple Cap because you know a ton of random facts.  Can you give us one?
“Are you worth your salt” is an expression we use.  Some say Roman soldiers were often paid in salt (which is sal in Latin), so your salary is your allotment of salt.  So if you’re worth your salt, you’re worth your salary.

A Night to Remember at This Year’s Talent Show

By Elizabeth Abraham ’17

The annual talent show, which took place on Friday, April 15th, was a huge success this year. A total of 15 acts performed, entertaining the audience with everything from a jazz quartet to a medley of classical ballet pieces. Mr. Green was the oh-so-funny emcee who kept the show going throughout the night with his Rev Carrick impersonation; he also incited a surprise sea shanty performance. Other highlights include Ms. T’s unforgettable dance moves during Victoria Morrison’s rendition of “I Will Survive.”

However, perhaps the most special part of the talent show this year was the fundraiser run by students before, during, and after the show. When students found out a few weeks back that Theresa Mitten lost her home in a devastating fire, many wanted to do something to help. Molly Leahy ‘19 came up with the idea of an art show to raise money for Theresa’s family. Students took this idea and ran with it. There were generous donations of pottery, paintings, greeting cards and more. Also, during the show, students from the AP studio class did caricatures and figure drawings for a small fee. With the profits from the sale and all the donations received, a total of over 1,200 dollars was raised for the Mitten family.

At the end of this successful night, the panel of judges (Mrs. Lew, Mrs. Rickrode, and Mr. Rea) decided on four winners. Paige Allen ‘17 won the award for “Best Non-Musical Performance” with her comical monologues. Richard Kraus ‘18 and James Hughes ‘18 won “Most Entertaining” for their performance of “The Suit Song” from the hit TV series “How I Met Your Mother.” Dominick D’Alessandro ‘17 received the award for “Best Musical Performance” with a piano piece by Chopin, and Ariana Notartomaso ‘16 won “Best Vocal Performance.” All in all, it was a great night for the community: everyone involved deserves another round of applause.

 

Spring Sports Update

By Tyler Maddock ’18

 

Boys Baseball
Record: 3-4

Entering the season, the Blue Knights had mixed expectations, they returned eight starters from last season, but remained a young team. They started off the season with a loss to crosstown rival, Dallas. They bounced back picking up wins against Lake-Lehman and a major upset victory over Hanover. The loss was just Hanover’s second in league play in the last four seasons.  Alexandre Sabourin ‘17 threw a complete game shutout for Sem, striking out four. Johnny Kehl ‘17 has lead the team offensively thus far batting .438, Justin Negron has also been a steady presence at the plate batting .357. They will take on Meyers at home and Holy Redeemer this week. 

 

Boys Lacrosse
Record: 6-2

This year team has proved to be one of, if not the best teams in the area. The have outscored local teams by a staggering total of 73-18 in just five games. They have not been able to find that same ssus file against teams outside of NEPA. Dropping competitive games to regional Powerhouses The Hill School and Lewisburg. Offensively the team has been lead by Duncan Breig ‘17 and George Vavlas ‘17. Breig, a three year starter, has gotten the attention of numerous division 1 programs. Kyle Hall ‘16 ancorose the team’s defence. Freshmen Max Bartron and Chris Brug have made key contributions in their first season as Blue Knights. They take on Moravian Academy Tuesday at home.

 

Boys Tennis
Record: 7-0

It’s a new season for the boy’s tennis team, but somethings haven’t changed- they are still unbeatable. In seven league matches so far this season, they have not lost a game. Eamons Gibbons ‘17, the returning Times Leader WVC player of the year, has yet to lose a match in the first singles spot. Adrian Sung ‘17 has been just as dominate as the number two single, also posting a perfect 7-0 record. . The team will look to continue their dominance, this week on the road against Dallas.

 

Girls Lacrosse
Record: 7-2

Much like the boy’s team, the girls have been dominant among local competition. They are a perfect 6-0 against division opponents. They added a 8-4 victory over Midd-West High school in a non-league game. The team remains a top of the division standings in large part to the contributions of eight seniors, who have won the division title in their previous three seasons at Sem. They are Isabella Cordaro, Louise Cornell, Sarah Denion, Gabby Grossman, Rachel Havrylkoff, Megan Obeid, Katherine Paglia and Taylor Tracy. They will also rely on a few newcomers, most notably Mia Raineri ‘19 who has taken over the job of starting goalie in her first season.

 

Girls Softball
Record: 4-4

This year’s team has found more success in the beginning of the season than it has in years past. The team has posted wins over Lackawanna Trail, G.A.R, Myers and MMI Prep. This new found success is due in large part to the production of newcomers Cassidy Graham ‘18 and Aubrey Mytych ‘19. Sem is looking like early contenders in the division but in order to get to the top, they will have to get by defending state champion Holy Redeemer. They will take on Hanover on the road this Tuesday.