My Exchange to Australia

Blog_Australian_flagI am very proud to say that I had the opportunity to spend six weeks in Melbourne, Australia. This was a great experience. I was welcomed into a very hospitable family who took very good care of me. During my stay, I had the chance of visiting many tourist attractions such as Australia’s Great Ocean Road, Eureka Towers and Victoria Market.

School
I absolutely loved my six weeks at Carey Baptist Grammar School. Carey is a school with very accommodating students and professors. During my stay, I was able to attend classes that are not even available at LCC.. Carey is a school where students can choose the courses they want to do starting at 8th grade. Courses that are required are: English, math, physical education, ethics and religion, science, history (only mandatory for 1 semester) and health. The students are to choose a language and three other courses of these choices: food, media, technology, fashion, economics, woodwork, metal work, French, Mandarin, Spanish, German, Indonesian, theatre, music, arts etc. … At this school there are four semesters and at the end of each term, students have the choice to change their course selections. I think the idea of​letting students choose their courses is a great idea. Students will be much more motivated to do well because they will choose courses that they like. Another thing I liked about this school, is that as soon as you leave a class, you are in the fresh air of the outdoors.

Eureka Tower
Eureka Tower is the tallest building in Melbourne and the second largest in Australia, measuring 297.3 meters. This building includes 556 apartments and is 52.000 square meters of windows. A total of 92 floor which is divided into 3680 stairs, a basement, a 9-story parking area, 84 floors of apartments (some are on the same floor as the parking lot) and an observation deck. It weighs a total of 200,000 tons. I had the chance to get to the 88th floor where there is an observation area. There are glass windows that gave me a spectacular view of the city of Melbourne. On this level, there is an area that is entirely outdoors in the open. It was fantastic. I even had the courage to enter a glass cube which is a kind of elevator that brought me three feet outside of the building. All this was worth doing for the spectacular view of Melbourne.

AFL Match
The Australian Football League is a crucial part of Australian culture. Every Australian boy or girl has a favorite team in this league. Australian football is the most important sport in the opinion of most Australians. This sport is similar to rugby, though they still have their differences. At every football game, there are about 36,000 people attending. Australian football is played in an oval of 171m by 146 m, including 18 players from each team are on the ground at once. I saw a pre-season game between : The Kangaroos North Melbourne, Hawthorn Hawks and the Richmond Tigers. The Kangaroos defeated the Tigers, Hawks beat the Kangaroos and the Tigers beat the Hawks. Each team finished the evening with a victory, which made my experience very interesting.

Melbourne Aquarium
The Melbourne Aquarium is home to over 10,000 animals. And there are many different creatures in the water such as: sharks, penguins, shrimps and even octopus. I really enjoyed seeing all sorts of creatures that I did not even know existed. One can find sea snakes, sea spiders, crabs and all kinds of fish at the aquarium. One part of it that I loved the most was a water tank of 2.2 million liters which had: sharks, jellyfish, crabs and all kinds of rare fish. This is the largest water tank in an aquarium in the world. I literally saw the creatures swimming around me. It was an unforgettable experience.

Melbourne Zoo
The Melbourne Zoo is where I finally saw a kangaroo, a koala and many other animals. The Melbourne Zoo is one of the finest zoos in Australia. It contains over 320 species and about 5,120 animals from Australia and all around the world. I especially liked my visit to the zoo because everything was very well decorated. The scenery was so realistic that you would thing that you were in the jungle by visiting the animals. When I was younger, I used to watch “Phineas and Ferb.” In the show, Phineas had a pet platypus. When I watched this show, I did not even know that a platypus is a real animal. Some years ago I realized that the platypus existed, so I really enjoyed seeing one for the first time in my life.

Vic Market
The Victoria Market is a major attraction in the city of Melbourne. It is also the largest open market in the southern hemisphere measuring a total of 17 acres. This market is named after Queen Victoria who ordered the British Empire from 1837 to 1901. This market is one of the three major markets of Melbourne which is still in place. The other two, the east market and the west market were open before the Victoria market, but closed in the 1960s. At the Victoria market almost anything can be bought: fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, clothing, jewelry, candy, etc.. I can honestly say that being in this market was one of my favorite moments of my trip. First, the atmosphere was incredible, there were many vendors shouting words such as: $3 watermelon, come buy jewelery, best quality clothing, etc. .. Secondly I really appreciated the fact that you could buy everything and at good prices. For this reason, this is where I bought most of the gifts for my family!

Great Ocean Road
The Great Ocean Road is an Australian national heritage that is 243 km long, in southern Australia between the towns of Torquay and Warnambool. This road was built between 1919 and 1932 by soldiers of WWI. This is the largest memorial of WWI. I had the chance to spend three nights and four days there. During my stay, I surfed, I visited a lighthouse and saw the Erskine falls. I liked surfing the most, of all things I did during my stay. Lorne is known for its excellent surfing conditions and I can tell you first hand that the surfing conditions really are great. The Great Ocean Road is by the Indian Ocean, which is very very cold. Therefore, we had to wear wetsuits. My exchange student and I were able to get up several times on the board. Having finished surfing, we jumped in the car and headed for the Erskine falls. The Erskine falls is a 30 m waterfall, in the woods. The falls and the surrounding landscape was really spectacular. When I learned that it had fresh water, I immediately tasted the water. The water was cold and tasted like bottled water, it was quite refreshing. At the end of the day, we were completely exhausted, but most certainly had fun. –Matthew Kaspy ’14

An Electrifying Outing for Science Students

Blog_science_katrinaOn Friday, March 2, 2012, the grade 10 classes visited the Électrium, Hydro-Québec’s Electricity Interpretation Centre, where we applied what we had been studying in class to the real world.  This experience was not only interesting and thought provoking but entertaining and interactive as well. The visit was very rewarding because it allowed us to take our class work to the next step and visualize the concepts of our studies. –Katrina Borodenko ’13

Duke of Ed Gold Trip 2012: Peru Expedition Update

March 8, 2012

Upon my return to Peru, I did not know what to expect. I would soon find out that, although many landmarks were familiar to me, I was seeing everything in a completely new light. I was wiser and the shantytowns of Lima didn’t shock me. Rather they incited me to want to get to work immediately!

We spent four days in Las Palmas completing our community service project, which included a new set of stairs, a new fence, a fresh coat of paint and a new roof. By the fourth day, every student had mixed feelings about leaving Las Palmas. Although we may have been filled with excitement with the prospects of beginning the hike in Cusco, we would be leaving behind a community to which we had grown very close.– Emily Tiberi ’12

Five days ago, eighteen LCC students who would work on the service project in Las Palmas flew into the desert city, Lima. With last years experience doing the service project and the Salkantay Trek, I didn’t feel nervous. I was rather excited to see how things had changed over a year.

Every morning, when driving to Las Palmas, I noticed that the poverty levels hadn’t changed. The chaotic way of life and the number of shantytowns stacked on the desert was the same. It seemed as if I had not left Peru last March. When working at the community, the locals treated us with the same respect and warmth they had shown us in 2011. I remembered their names and faces and so did they. Under the scorching heat, we worked on the concrete roof until the very last minute. Today, we fly to Cusco. We are anxious about the hike, but at the same time, excited to walk the same path where Incas and adventurers explored.– Kenya Shatani (Pre-U ’12)


Biology: Rat Dissection

On Wednesday, February 29, we dissected a rat in Mr. Shefler’s Grade 10 biology class. At first, we were nervous and didn’t know what to expect. But, once we got going, we realized it was actually pretty cool. It was interesting to see such a complex digestive system in such a small body. Seeing the organs in person, instead of just inside a textbook enhanced our understanding of the bodily systems. We feel very privileged to go to a school that offers such dissections.
–Jacklyn Greenspoon ’13 and Lizzie McInnes ’13

The Value of “Almosts”

2011_2012_hockey_senior_boys2_blogWe almost did it… We got so close… So frustrating!  There were a lot of LCC athletes with that feeling last week. Within 24 hours, four very solid LCC Lion teams of athletes lost four separate nail-biter games; two of them at home and two on the road.  Close. So close.  There’s an old saying that “close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.” Although this presents some interesting imagery, I disagree with the premise of the statement.  We all learn from coming close, from the pile of “almosts” we accumulate in our lives. They are valuable learning moments.

I had the good fortune of seeing both of our home games: Juvenile Boys Hockey vs. Selwyn House and the Juvenile Girls Basketball game the following day against John Rennie.  Both were great games; evidence of lots of solid preparation, with a lot of skill on display, solid teamwork, physical hard work and genuine emotion laid bare on the ice and on the gym floor.  I’m told it was the same for our squads playing playoff games away: Bantam Boys Hockey and Juvenile Girls Hockey.

The Juvenile boys game on our home ice was a classic barnburner.  It took five periods and a 16-man shootout to decide the outcome.  Well before the shootout began, the piles of snow were becoming ridiculously thick since they hadn’t cleaned the ice in so long, and it had become almost impossible for players to handle the puck.

Without a doubt the four final outcomes were frustrating, disappointing and upsetting: but they were also so memorable.  In fact, that is one of the greatest qualities of competitive athletics in school.  We don’t always win. You can’t always win. There are always factors beyond our control, and even when our teams play very well—as they did last week—a roll or a bounce or a fine play by an opponent can make all the difference, but not always in your favour.  I am certain that for all our athletes on those four teams, they would have surely preferred a different outcome. But they will never forget that difficult loss and the experience will help make them better next time…. Not just as an athlete but when they find themselves under pressure, when emotions are high and something important is on the line.

We all like to win and we’d all like to see an “A” on the report card in every subject but despite our efforts to control our fate and destiny, real life has a way of creeping in and reminding us that despite all the hard work and preparation, things can’t always go our way.  That’s a key element of life that we all learn one way or another and, in an odd way, it’s good that our students have such valuable concrete experiences with hurdles and frustration during the high school years.

That said, I congratulate all of our teams who proudly wore the LCC Lion on their chests last week.  They did their best and impressed all of us who were out to support.  They have all progressed a great deal since the start of their respective seasons, and the coaches deserve much of the thanks for that.  We thank them for their dedication, inspiration and helping our students develop the resiliency necessary to pick themselves up and stay positive.

I also saw these same qualities at play at the robotics competition last week at Vanier College—where our team placed among the top 10 teams, including CEGEPS—and in the creative flair presented in the Senior School play, “Departures and Arrivals.”  Great job, LCC Players!

All of these activities outside of the classroom have helped to make each of you stronger, wiser, better teammates, more insightful.–Chris Shannon, Headmaster