DHS Winter Sports Preview

DHS Coyotes Football

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

The gym is a busy place these days at Denair High School. The boys and girls basketball teams plus the wrestling team all have begun their winter schedules with an eye toward preparing themselves to compete for Southern League titles in January and February.

Boys Basketball

Despite a 10-player roster, third-year coach R.J. Henderson is confident the Coyotes have improved enough to contend for one of the league’s three spots in the Sac-Joaquin Section playoffs.

“I’d like to think the last week or two of the season we’ll be playing for something,” said Henderson, whose young team won just seven games a year ago.

This season, the Coyotes will benefit from a sizeable presence in the middle in the form of 6-foot-3, 280-pound senior center Ryan Galhano, who didn’t play last year. Henderson expects Galhano will be one of the most physical players in the Southern League.

Three other seniors – forwards Dominyc Silva and Chase Vann and guard Vince Fuentes – were named tri-captains.

Henderson said Silva has the mentality and savvy of a “35-year-old city league player.” He called Vann “a good glue guy” and rebounder who does many things to help a team. And he said Fuentes is “probably our best pure shooter with the most range.”

Junior guard Isaac Starks, who played on the varsity as a sophomore, rounds out the starting five. Henderson said he’s the team’s best option to create a shot off his dribble.

The small roster means if one player misses practice, an assistant coach has to step in to have a 5-on-5 scrimmage. Denair’s enrollment already makes it the smallest school in the Southern League. Despite that, Henderson thinks his squad will continue to build a new culture of success. Continue reading “DHS Winter Sports Preview” »

DHS Drama Club Presents Christmas Stories: A Radio Play

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Submitted by Denair Unified School District

The Denair High School Drama Club will be performing, Christmas Stories: A Radio Play, on Friday and Saturday, December 5-6, 2014, at 6:00 pm, and a matinee on Sunday, December 7, 2014, at 2:00 pm, in the Denair High School Event Center. Doors open a half-hour before the show. Tickets for the show will be available only at the door, $8.00 for general admission, and $5 for students, seniors and veterans. You can receive a $1 discount by bringing a marked canned good donation.

DPSC Hosts Craft Night at Denair Elementary School

CraftNight

Submitted by Denair Parent Service Club

Denair Elementary School’s annual Craft Night fundraiser will be hosted by Denair Parent Service Club (DPSC) and is set for Thursday, December 11, 2014 from 6:00-8:00 pm in the Elementary School gym. We hope you will join us at this fun filled event! There will be holiday crafts to make and a silent auction to bid on gift baskets. DPSC is accepting donations of items for the silent auction gift baskets. Santa will be at the festivities for photos. Water, soda, pizza and cookies will also be available.

Admission is free! Tickets for the activities and food can be purchased at the door for $1.00 each. Food items and a picture with Santa require 1 ticket each and crafts require 1-2 tickets each.

Money raised from this fundraiser will help pay for class fieldtrips, class supplies and technology.

If you are interested in helping out with craft night such as preparing baskets for the silent auction, selling food or helping with the craft tables, please complete this form and return it to your child’s teacher. Thank you for your support!!

Additionally, the English Learner Advisory Committee (ELAC) is holding their first annual Tamale Sale on the same evening, from 6:00-8:30 pm.  Tamale sales are pre-sale and drive-thru only. Use the ELAC Tamale Order Form to pre-order your delicious tamales!

Inspiration Guides DMS Teacher, David Rodriguez

David Rodriguez

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

David Rodriguez has a short list of people who inspired him.

His father, a farmworker, taught him the value of hard work. An entrepreneurial cousin helped him develop an appreciation for money. A high school coach convinced him to dream big.

But it is the memory of the elementary teacher who didn’t believe a shy, Spanish-speaking boy could learn in her classroom that led him to a career in education and a place on the staff at Denair Middle School.

Rodriguez grew up in Ivanhoe, a poor, gang-plagued community just northeast of Visalia in Tulare County. His father — a former minor-league baseball player in Mexico – worked in the fields. The family only spoke Spanish. Rodriguez had to learn English bit by bit at school, without any special attention.

His third-grade teacher relegated him to the back of her classroom with a pair of headphones. She didn’t think he could understand what she said. One day, while he was standing next to her holding a tray of classroom materials, she called him a “turtle” in front of his fellow students. Ashamed and embarrassed, Rodriguez dropped the tray on her foot. It broke her toe.

The incident led to a conference involving the teacher, school officials and Rodriguez’s parents. Questions were asked … and Rodriguez responded in Spanish and English, shocking the teacher. “She had no idea I spoke English.”

The lesson that stuck with him, Rodriguez says during a quiet break in his sixth-grade Denair classroom, is about supporting and believing in students, especially those from non-traditional backgrounds. Many of his Spanish-speaking peers back then faced the same culture of low expectations. It was a powerful barrier and Rodriguez admits he was a “middle-of-the-road” student.

It was his cross country coach, Juan Garcia, at Golden West High School who finally convinced Rodriguez, by then a budding running star, not to let others define him. Garcia grew up in a similar background and became a role model for Rodriguez, encouraging him to fully develop his intellectual and athletic abilities. Continue reading “Inspiration Guides DMS Teacher, David Rodriguez” »