News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon

Articles written by charlie kanzig


Sorted by date  Results 257 - 281 of 923

Page Up

  • Elementary school will continue in-person

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 23, 2020

    Sisters Elementary School will be allowed to remain open for “hybrid” learning under the state’s “Safe Harbor” clause, which was extended following an announcement late December 16 from the Oregon Department of Education and the Oregon Health Authority. The “Safe Harbor” status had been set to expire January 4, 2021. ODE expects to publish updated information in the “Safe Schools, Ready Learners” program, including regarding “Safe Harbor” in the next two weeks. However, superintendent Curt Scholl emphasized that stude... Full story

  • Nominations open for teacher award

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 15, 2020

    In a year that has challenged teachers in ways no one ever imagined, the annual call for nominations for the Oregon Teacher of the Year likely has more meaning than ever before. In a recent press release the Oregon Department of Education, along with the Oregon Lottery, announced that nominations for the Oregon Regional Teacher of the Year are open through January 31, 2021. Recognizing the strength of the teaching staff in the Sisters School District, administrators Curt Scholl, Joe Hosang, Alison Haney, and Joan Warburg all... Full story

  • Sisters schools snapshot — keeping an eye on the ‘red zone’

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 15, 2020

    • Sisters Elementary School Principal Joan Warburg praised school district nurse Trish Roy for her professionalism and hard work during the pandemic in helping the entire district in navigating and managing health protocols, contacting families, and keeping students cared for. She is grateful to have had all of the grades in school the past month. The preschool expects to be up to 12 students by the end of January and has a maximum capacity of 18. Warburg acknowledged the hard work and sacrifice all of her staff have... Full story

  • Coping during the 2020 holidays

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 15, 2020

    The school counselors in the Sisters School District have continued focusing on the social/emotional well-being of students during the pandemic as well as in response to the loss of three local teenagers earlier this year in accidents. The holiday season, while designed to be a time of joy and togetherness, can be particularly challenging during times of unusual stress, such as a global pandemic or following the loss of loved ones. Sisters Middle School counselor Brook Jackson shared an article compiled by staff at the Mayo... Full story

  • High school sports further shortened

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 15, 2020

    In response to the spike in COVID-19 cases around the state over the past month, the Oregon Schools Athletics and Activities Association (OSAA) announced last week that it will further condense the competitive seasons planned for this school year — down to six weeks apiece for all sports and will move winter sports to late spring. The latest changes shuffle the order of the three competitive sports seasons and shorten each season to about six weeks from the nine originally planned. In its press release the OSAA wrote,... Full story

  • SES forges path with in-person instruction

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 9, 2020

    With every other public school in Deschutes County operating under the Comprehensive Distance Learning (CDL) model due to the coronavirus pandemic, Sisters Elementary School stands alone conducting in-person learning — leaving Principal Joan Warburg feeling quite fortunate and pleased for her students. “Our students are happy, our parents are happy and our staff is happy,” she said. “I have seen a deep appreciation in our students for being able to be in school learning. They come to school with smiles on their faces... Full story

  • COVID-19 rates continue to impact schools

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 8, 2020

    In what has become nearly a weekly pattern, Sisters School District superintendent Curtiss Scholl shared a letter with the school community last week regarding what the rising infection rate in Deschutes County means to students and families. With a record number of weekly confirmed COVID-19 cases, Deschutes County has remained in the “red zone” which has both immediate, and potentially future, impacts on when and where students will be able to receive in-person instruction. In his letter Scholl said, “Unfortunately, our c... Full story

  • Teaching under the distance learning model

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 8, 2020

    As front-line workers facing the challenges of working through the COVID-19 pandemic, teachers have been forced to pivot quickly and adapt on the fly, to meet the needs of their students in the months that have forced most schools in Oregon to operate under Comprehensive Distance Learning (CDL). The Nugget checked in with some of the teachers at Sisters Middle School (SMS) and Sisters High School (SHS) who have been conducting their instruction under CDL since March. Fifth-grade teacher Tiffany Tisdel acknowledged the adaptat... Full story

  • Running commentary - 12/2/2020

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 1, 2020

    After a summer focused on biking, my fall season has largely been a time of walking and hiking with a plan to mix more running in over the wintertime. My inner runner felt a definite stirring last week when I paid a visit to the area in which I grew up and took a morning hike down a very familiar trail. Every competitive runner has certain places, sounds, smells and circumstances that elicit a physiological response that says to the brain, “It’s time to run!” Wilderness Trail... Full story

  • GRO welcomes program director

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Dec 1, 2020

    The Graduate Resource Organization (GRO), which facilitates the scholarship program available to Sisters High School graduates, has grown enough in recent years that the all-volunteer GRO board of directors put plans in place last year to hire a part-time program director. The plan came to fruition earlier this month and Laura Kloss is the happy recipient of the position. She will officially begin her duties in mid-December. The board received a healthy number of applicants... Full story

  • COVID-19 uptick likely to delay return to school

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 24, 2020

    The surging COVID-19 caseload has cast a shadow over efforts to get middle school students back into the classroom. In a letter sent to parents Thursday, November 19, Superintendent Curt Scholl addressed the questions and confusion about getting fifth and sixth graders at Sisters Middle School back into the classroom under the “hybrid” model amidst the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Rising numbers of infections in Deschutes County have resulted in a move into the “orange zone... Full story

  • Making the most of limited instruction

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 24, 2020

    The three themes undergirding the work of Sisters School District — Belong, Prepare, Inspire — are harder to accomplish during the battle with COVID-19 and the resultant distance learning. The teachers of Sisters middle and high schools are doing all they can to safely offer person-to-person interaction through what is known as “limited in-person instruction” under the state’s “Ready School, Safe Learners” guidelines. Limited In-Person Instruction, or LIPI, allows... Full story

  • Runners finish mini-season in stellar fashion

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 17, 2020

    In the final competition of their mini-season, members of the Sisters High School team, running unattached, produced outstanding results at a meet held Saturday, November 7, at the Alderbrook Golf Course in Tillamook. The meet featured some of the best high school runners in the state, creating a championship atmosphere. Ella Thorsett, last year’s state 4A champion as a freshman, ran in the elite race where she placed third behind two runners from 6A Jesuit High School of Portland, Chloe Foerster and Molly Grant, who were r... Full story

  • Students find a new way to honor veterans

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 17, 2020

    For over two decades the schools in the Sisters School District have made special efforts to honor veterans during the week of Veterans Day, but with the pandemic closing down the middle and high schools, they had to get creative to keep the tradition alive. The result is a student-leadership-produced video made available last week that includes music, commentary, and educational information related to veterans. The video is available on The Nugget’s Facebook page as well as via a link available at the end of this story. E... Full story

  • SMS “Sisters Strong” donates to nonprofits

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 11, 2020

    Sisters youth donated a total of nearly $1,000, generated through sales of “Sisters Strong” apparel by Sisters Middle School students. Funds went to the Family Access Network (FAN) and the Kiwanis Food Bank. Led by Student Body President Holly Davis and Vice-President Jack Turpen the initiative provided $470 each to the two nonprofits. Turpen, an eighth-grader, created the Sisters Strong logo last year which has been used on T-shirts and stickers, sold by the students. Acc... Full story

  • Sisters School Board snapshot

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 11, 2020

    Here is a snapshot of the Sisters School District Board Meeting held November 3 at Sisters Middle School. Board members in attendance included Chair Jay Wilkins, David Thorsett, Jeff Smith, Edie Jones and Don Hedrick. • Middle School Principal Alison Haney reported that the earliest date for fifth- and/or sixth-graders to potentially return to in-person school will be November 30, which is looking less likely in light of skyrocketing COVID-19 cases in Deschutes County. The middle school is doing final work on their “blue... Full story

  • Reckless drivers become a community concern

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 10, 2020

    For the past seven months, complaints of roaring engines, squealing tires, and speeding on Highway 242, Edgington Road, McKinney Butte Road and in the Sisters High School parking lot, mainly by young drivers, have poured in to the Deschutes County Sheriff’s dispatch center. Along Highway 242, directly in front of Sisters Middle School, dark black tire marks tracking across both lanes bear clear-cut evidence of “burned rubber” on the road’s surface. Two non-injury acciden... Full story

  • Outlaws run locally in relay meet

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 3, 2020

    The Sisters Outlaws took part in a Halloween-themed relay meet Friday, October 30, on a private property near Sisters. The informal event provided the team with a chance to test their racing condition along with other high school runners, competing unattached, from Philomath, Klamath Union, Ridgeview and Crescent Valley. The relay consisted of one 3.1 mile leg, a pair of two-mile legs and .8-mile leg split between either three or four runners. Some runners ran more than one... Full story

  • Schools form partnership for grief, loss, trauma help

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 3, 2020

    Counselors for the Sisters School District have been collaborating with other agencies to better respond to grief and loss, in part following the deaths of two high school seniors and a recent graduate. The community was rocked by the tragic loss of young lives earlier this fall, which underscored the ongoing need for resources to help both students and adults be aware of information, resources and other forms of support in our area. In addition to the recent vehicle accidents, Sisters has experienced a number of other... Full story

  • School grapples with online behavior

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 3, 2020

    The challenge of distance learning took an ugly twist as some seventh- and eighth-graders at Sisters Middle School recently experienced three separate incidents of students using racially and sexually charged language during classes being conducted through Zoom. Families first heard of the incidents through an email letter from principal Alison Haney that was followed later by a second letter that clarified, to some extent, what had taken place. The initial letter focused on the acts being racist in nature and was strongly wo... Full story

  • Sisters students in grades 4-6 may return to school soon

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Nov 3, 2020

    Sisters students in grades 4-6 may be returning to in-person learning as early as November 10, joining grades K-3 which have been in school for five weeks. That possibility arises in the wake of Governor Kate Brown’s October 30 press conference regarding adjustments to health metrics in Oregon. Sisters students would still be considered to be following a “hybrid” model, since students will attend Monday-Thursday and take part in online learning on Fridays. A basic snapshot of the new metrics says that counties that have... Full story

  • Baseball team gets in some games

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Oct 27, 2020

    Sisters High School baseball coach Kramer Croisant didn’t want to have to wait until spring 2021 to get his team back together. They’d already lost the entire 2020 season — which would have been his first at the helm of the Outlaws’ program — to COVID-19 shutdowns. So he took the proactive step to see if some fall baseball could be possible in the Central Oregon region. “I caught wind that Marc Horner, the facilities manager for the Redmond School District, planned to start the Deschutes Baseball Academy, in part... Full story

  • Runners find a way to compete

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Oct 27, 2020

    The high school sports world is still largely shut down due to COVID-19, but Pat Zweifel, cross-country coach at Tillamook High School and owner of a large farm, found a way to offer a meet to a group of runners looking to compete as OSAA’s “fall” season is postponed until February. Zweifel’s family owns the Hydrangea Ranch outside of Tillamook where, amidst the rows of flower bushes, Zweifel has carved out a cross-country race course and built facilities to host camps a... Full story

  • BBR woman marks 100 years

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Oct 27, 2020

    As Ruth Peterson sat in her comfortable Black Butte Ranch home one week before her 100th birthday, her second husband, Jim Gibbons, 92, said that when he met her for the first time she was playing tennis at age 72 and “didn’t look a day over 39.” The couple just celebrated their 10th anniversary. Ruth (Anders) Peterson was born October 30, 1920 in Wisconsin, the second of three children, all still living. Longevity certainly runs in the family. She comes from good genes... Full story

  • Tracksters wrap up ‘mini-season’

    Charlie Kanzig|Updated Oct 13, 2020

    The Sisters Outlaws hosted a three-way meet under blue autumn skies on Tuesday, October 6 to wrap up the spring sports mini season. Tuesday’s meet included a surprise school record in a seldom-run relay event as Will Thorsett (1,200), Brody Anderson (400), Sam May (800) and John Peckham teamed up in the distance medley relay in a time of 11:15.81. The previous record was set in 2009 at 11:22. Two events came down to the wire. The first, in a literal photo finish, took place i... Full story

Page Down

Rendered 01/08/2025 20:08