Denair Student Gives Back to Ag Class

Welding Stand - Marcus Rocha

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Many teens play video games or listen to music to relax. Some join athletic teams or participate in music, speech or drama clubs. Others watch favorite TV shows or hang out with their friends.

Marcus Rocha likes to weld. It’s his unique way to unwind while applying the skills he’s learned from his father, his teachers at Denair High School and his co-workers at a metal fabrication shop in Turlock.

“I just think of it as relaxing and something you can do by yourself,” said Rocha.

Last fall, Rocha recognized a need in Denair High’s welding classroom. Teacher Richard Diaz and his students were using old barrels as welding platforms. They were clunky and not as effective as they might be.

There was much room for improvement.

Diaz, the high school’s first-year ag teacher, mentioned to Rocha that the class needed an upgrade. Rocha, a junior, researched some ideas for basic welding stands. Diaz provided a pencil sketch with his thoughts. Rocha then built a prototype using scrap metal gathered at his part-time job at West Steel & Plastics, Inc.

The stands are about 6½ feet tall, have rounded tables on which to work, space below to position the welding set, and bars above to wind the cord around and to hang welding masks.

Rocha said it took him about 90 minutes to create the first stand and a little less time to make 10 others. Diaz’s stand is “industrial grade” and includes two tables and more space “so students can stand around in a semi-circle and watch me demonstrate,” he said. Continue reading “Denair Student Gives Back to Ag Class” »

DHS Teacher Uses Innovative Approach to Math

RussHess

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Taking over six math classes a month into the school year isn’t the preferred way for a new teacher to join a staff. But Russ Hess didn’t have a choice. He didn’t become aware that Denair High School was looking for a teacher until well after classes began last August 12. And by the time he went through the interview process and was hired, a long-term substitute had been in place for four weeks. Hess may have gotten a late start, but he’s worked hard to make up for it.

“It was difficult because – no fault to the sub – (the classroom environment) was so loose and I’m very strict,” said Hess. “I didn’t have time to prep. I haven’t had time to get my room in shape.”

There was a bigger issue: Hess also didn’t have a California teaching credential, though he had spent the previous five years teaching math and science at Brethren Heritage School, a private campus in Salida. He worked with the Stanislaus County of Office of Education to gain recognition of his proficiency based on his classroom experience and a double math major from Central Washington University.

Despite those initial hurdles, Hess quickly made a positive impression.

“One of his strengths is that Mr. Hess expects mastery,” said Christine Skinner, Denair’s associate director of secondary education. “He gives frequent concept mastery quizzes that students have to pass or retake until they do.”

Hess teaches three periods each of algebra and geometry, classes filled mostly with freshmen and sophomores. He recognizes that making math’s abstract ideas seem relevant to them can be difficult.

“I dream about math sometimes and wake up with ideas,” he admitted.

One of those middle-of-the-night thoughts dealt with “nets,” which are two-dimensional paper diagrams with cuts and folds used to create three-dimensional figures such as cubes, cylinders, cones, prisms and pyramids. Hess came up with a team project for his geometry students that required them to build a three-dimensional town using a variety of shapes. Continue reading “DHS Teacher Uses Innovative Approach to Math” »

Denair High School Hosts Basketball Clinics

Basketball

Submitted by Denair Unified School District

Denair students who want to sharpen their basketball skills are invited to sign up for free clinics in January and February. The sessions will be conducted in the high school gym by Denair High varsity boys coach R.J. Henderson and his staff. Boys and girls are invited to register. All the clinics are on Saturdays and are limited to 60 players. Students in grades 1 through 5 will have clinics January 10, 2015 and February 7, 2015; middle school students will have clinics January 24, 2015 and February 14, 2015. The sessions will cover basic skills, fundamentals and teamwork. Sign-up sheets are available in the elementary and middle school offices. Each student must fill out a waiver and will receive a pass to an upcoming Denair High School basketball game.

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

DHSdrama120514

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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.