Adviser Update Spring 2016 | Page 9

9 Sophomore Elia Warner helps new members of the Down Under staff brainstorm coverage ideas for mods on portrait pages in the Tesserae lab on Wednesday, March 2. Warner and the Tesserae mentors led the veteran Winfield students in a “Yearbook Anatomy” activity earlier in the afternoon to help break the ice and welcome the new members to the staff. Start ’Em Young PARTNERSHIPS BETWEEN YOUNGER STUDENTS AND HIGH SCHOOL JOURNALISTS PROVIDE LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES FOR ALL By Michael Simons MJE I never studied Latin in high school. No philosophy, either. But recently, I came across the phrase Docendo discimus, which likely derives from the work of the Roman philosopher Seneca. It means, ‘by teaching, we learn.’ In June 2014, my 6- and 8-year-old sons brought home a collage-based scrapbook-style yearbook printed by a second-tier publisher. It sold for $12 and was wall-to-wall collage templates, clipart and little else aside from portraits. With our boys attending Winfield Street Elementary School about five minutes from the Corning-Painted Post High School campus, where I advise the 55-student Tesserae yearbook, and my wife serving as an officer on the WSES Parent Teacher Association, we started talking. A kitchen brainstorm over a pile of dirty dishes later that fall led to an idea: what if we had students from our Tesserae staff teach a group of WSES kids how to make a yearbook book themselves?