Lake Oconee Academy Invites The Community to a Black History Month Celebration

Lake Oconee Academy is excited to celebrate Black History Month with a joyful celebration that will highlight Black American’s past, present, and future. This community wide event will be held on Wednesday, February 28, 2024, in the lower school cafeteria and will kick off with some of Greensboro’s most delicious food trucks from local vendors: Jeremy’s Wing Shack, Redd’s BBQ and Catering, Jamaican Backyard Cookout, and CC’s Sweet Treats. Food trucks will have local favorites available for purchase from 4:00PM-7:00PM and will be in the parking lot by the lower school cafeteria.  

 

The program will begin at 5:00PM with a special art showcase displaying various student art pieces that pay tribute to the talents of some of the most noteworthy Black artists. All are welcome to peruse the skilled technique that these students have been working so hard to perfect. Photographs inspired by the styles of Gordan Parks and Kennedi Carter, African American Masks inspired by Kimmy Cantrell, and collage paintings with the flair of Romare Beardon are just a few examples of the beauty and creativity that will be on display. The showcase will include artwork from all LOA’s art departments, elementary through high school.

 

As the art showcase wraps up, spirited performances in dance, music, and poetry will begin at 6:00PM in the lower school cafeteria. Students from 1st through 4th grade will share a beautifully inspiring dance. There will also be a special reading of “Ballad of Birmingham '' by Dudley Randall to be recited by one of LOA’s seniors. The celebration will continue with piano and vocal performances by LOA middle school students, as well as a foot-tapping compilation by Fatz Waller and other composers, performed by LOA’s Jazz band.

 

Lake Oconee Academy is honored to have Mamie Hillman, Director of the Greene County African American Museum, as the event’s guest speaker as she shares her enthusiasm and commitment to Black history and culture with our community.

A Note From Nurse Jessica - February Wellness Update

Happy February LOA Families!!

I hope that this email finds you well!!

We are still in the midst of Flu and Stomach Bug season, as I am sure many of you are aware!!!  Please continue to keep your kids home when they are not feeling well, especially in regards to fever, vomiting, and/or diarrhea.  

February is known for Valentine's Day, but we also need to remember that it's American Heart Month (Congenital Heart Month), Black History Month, and Cancer Prevention Month!!!

Each of these are important and I hope that you take the time to learn about each this month.  

With health being the main focus for my emails, I thought it only right to highlight a little about the American Heart Month!!!

CARE FOR YOUR HEART ♥️

American Heart Month: 

The American Heart Association is celebrating 100 years of lifesaving work.  

Their theme this year is "Bold Hearts."   Remember heart disease does not just affect the elderly, it can affect ANYONE!!  Let's start introducing behaviors that can help our kids foster heart-healthy habits for their future.  

How to better your kids heart health:

  • Eat a Balanced Diet: Eat more fruits and vegetables, try whole grain, mix up your protein, and drink more water.   

  • Get Active: make movement a part of your daily routine.  

  • Healthy Lifestyle: Mental Health/Well-being, Don't Smoke!! 

  • Get Enough Sleep: Most children require 10-11 hours per night, key to have a bedtime and wake-up routine.  

Healthy Kids = Better Learners

Jessica Tolbert, RN

Lake Oconee Academy

School Nurse

Phone: 706-454-1562

Fax: 706-453-1773

Children's Miracle Network & LOA/Lake Oconee Heart Swap

A Message From Teena Garland:

LOA family,

1 in 100 babies are born with Congenital Heart Defects (CHD).  CHD affects not only our community, but our LOA family as well.  I have shared my story of my grandson, Ford, with you before, but there are others here with CHD.  Lacie Groeninger's son, Smith, a 3rd grader here at LOA also has CHD.  Smith had open heart surgery when he was just 4 days old.  I am writing again today on Ford and Smith's behalf, along with the others in our community touched by CHD that I do not know......yet!

Smith Groeninger

Governor Kemp proclaimed February 7 - 14th as this year's Congenital Heart Defect (CHD) Awareness Week.  As part of CHD Awareness Week, the Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA) hosts its annual fundraising event called the "Heart Swap."  This year, the Heart Swap is held from January 17th to February 16th.  The proceeds benefit the Children's Heart Center, providing critical funds to the pediatric cardiac programs of CHOA.  This fundraiser has an online link where you go and pick your "neighborhood."  You can purchase a heart yard sign, a virtual heart, donate, etc. through this link. I actually put one of my heart yard signs on our campus as you come in.  Hopefully, you have seen the pinkish purple heart!  My daughter's mother-in-law, Dana Gilleland, is the Heart Swap representative for Eatonton and Snellville.  So, we have been feverishly delivering signs throughout our Eatonton and Snellville communities.  

 

LOA supports CHOA yearly with its LOA Miracle, which is student led.  LOA Miracle hosts a 5K/Fun Run event, babysitting services, carline canning, and other various events throughout the year.  I thank you for your support of each of these.  I now ask that you help your CHD Lake Oconee representative, Lacie Groeninger, in our area Heart Swap to help merge our efforts with LOA Miracle.  What a beautiful sight it will be to fill our Lake Area with hearts in order to support the ones who struggle so much!

There are several ways to contribute to the Heart Swap:

  • You can follow the link below.  Once on the site, choose "Buy Now."  Then, choose your neighborhood of "Lake Oconee-Reynolds."  Lastly, choose your yard sign or whatever option you prefer.  Lacie will get your sign if that is what you choose.  You can pick it up from her, or she can bring it to me for you to pick up here at LOA.  Just email or text me your name and what you prefer so that we will know your preference.

https://choaholiday.org/

OR

  • You can contact me here at LOA.  Lacie brought over some heart yard signs.  I have them here in my classroom.  You can purchase them from me directly. 

Prices are:

  • Valentine's Heart Yard Sign = $30

  • Valentine's Heart Yard Sign, 4 pack = $100

  • Heart Swap Virtual Donation = $10 - $5,000

  • Neighborhood Sponsorship = $500

  • Valentine's Heart - Virtual = $5

Every single donation does not go unnoticed or unappreciated.  

Blaine Gilleland with Ford

Please find it in your whole heart to help the ones in our community that were born without a whole heart. I have attached pictures of Smith and Ford so that you can see truly what lifesavers the caregivers at CHOA have done.  It's with donations like these that our children can continue to seek medical attention throughout their lives.  They will never outgrow CHD.

If you have any questions, concerns, etc., please reach out to me.  My cell number is 706.473.2386.

Thank you for your time and continued support of our children and community.

Teena Garland

Ann Campbell Vinson Awarded District Spelling Bee Champion

Ann Campbell Vinson, a sixth-grade student at Lake Oconee Academy, clinched the title of District Spelling Bee Winner on January 17, 2024. Expressing her joy, Ann Campbell shared, "I feel really proud that I won and am relieved! I’m so grateful that some of my sweet friends and family came to watch and cheer me on. I’m grateful that I get to keep studying because I know my Mama will help me as much as she can. We have so much fun studying together!"

 

Lake Oconee Academy held the school-wide spelling bee in November of 2023, where 4th-grade student Archer Logan was the elementary Spelling Bee winner, and Ann Campbell was the middle school Spelling Bee winner. Both students advanced to the District Spelling Bee held at the Greene County Board of Education. Competing against 3 other students from Greene County Schools, Ann Campbell advanced to the regional Spelling Bee on February 24, 2024, at Putnam County Middle School.

“I felt really excited and really nervous at the same time. I came in 6th place last year out of about 40 competitors as a 5th grader, and I hope to place even higher this year and advance to the State Bee,” says Ann Campbell in preparing for the next competition.

 

Ann Campbell is a High Honors student who sings, acts, and plays club soccer, basketball, football, sideline cheer, and tennis. She loves to read and participates in the TOME Literacy Society (a book club for students). She is a Citizenship Cornerstone Award recipient, one of LOA’s most prestigious awards. Ann Campbell loves spending time with family, friends, and her two dogs.

 

A lot of preparation goes into participating in the spelling bee for Ann Campbell. She uses multiple practice methods, including transcribing, memorization, language of origin and root word study, and repetition drills to prepare. She studies with her mother and mentor, Hailey Heinen, LOA’s 2023 Valedictorian who also attended the Scripps National Spelling Bee as a high school student. Ann Campbell is an avid reader, noting that her participation in the Club TOME is also great practice. She loves the movie Akeelah and the Bee, an inspirational movie about the spelling bee. Even with her passion for words, Ann Campbell shares that her favorite subject is math. However, her favorite language of origin is Latin, which fits this spelling bee champion.

 

Ann Campbell’s parents, Ben and Ansley Vinson, shared their pride in their daughter: "We are thrilled for Ann Campbell! The courage and composure of all the kids who participate in spelling bees is something truly special. It is a nerve-racking competition that takes a lot of preparation and grit, and we are so proud of the effort Ann Campbell has put forward in her studies. I am grateful we get to keep studying together, which is a special time for us. We both really love words and learning about them,” says Ansley.

 

The Regional Spelling Bee will be held February 24, 2024 at Putnam County Middle School. “I’m so grateful that I have my Mama to help me study and that I have such a wonderful school, Lake Oconee Academy, that participates in the Spelling Bee and supports me,” says Ann Campbell.

LOA Student, Sydney Pattison is Named Page Star Student

Sydney Pattison, a senior at Lake Oconee Academy, has been named the 2024 PAGE STAR Student for LOA. In her role as the STAR Student, Sydney has the privilege of selecting a teacher who significantly influenced her high school journey to be honored as her STAR Teacher. Mrs. Caroline St John, Sydney’s AP Seminar, and current AP Literature teacher is her chosen STAR Teacher.

 

The PAGE Student Teacher Achievement Recognition (STAR) program is sponsored, administered, and promoted by the Professional Association of Georgia Educators (PAGE) and the PAGE Foundation. Since its inception, the STAR program has honored nearly 29,000 students and the teachers they have selected as the most influential in their academic achievement. High school seniors must have the highest score on a single test date on the SAT and be in the top 10 percent or top 10 students of their class based on grade point average to qualify for the STAR nomination.

 

Sydney has been a student at Lake Oconee Academy for thirteen years and has been highly involved in LOA's academic, athletic, and extracurricular activities. She is the Executive Director of LOA Miracle, a fundraising organization for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, the LOA Student Body Vice President, and a member of the National Beta Club. Sydney is Co-Captain of the LOA Cheerleading Team and is a member of the LOA Varsity Golf Team. She also works as a hostess at the Creek Club Restaurant at Reynolds Lake Oconee.

 

Sydney said she chose Mrs. St John because of her relationship with her students, which she said goes far beyond the classroom. “I have had the pleasure of having Mrs. St John as my AP Seminar and current AP Literature teacher and she does a phenomenal job teaching the AP course content; however, she also spends class time teaching us all the important knowledge that we need to know for high school.” Sydney further expressed that Mrs. St John taught her how to apply for college, reviewing her essays before submitting them. “If it weren’t for her SAT and ACT practice tips, I do not know if I would’ve achieved such a high score as I did to receive this recognition.”

 

“As a veteran teacher in the state of Georgia, I am aware of the magnitude of STAR Student and STAR Teacher. This means the world to me,” says Mrs. St John of being chosen as Sydney’s STAR Teacher. St John currently teaches AP English Literature, AP Seminar, and Creative Writing at LOA. She founded LOA’s student-led literacy magazine, The Archetype, and coordinates the Literacy Society, including LOA’s Poetry Slam. She also takes great joy in coaching students through the college essay-writing process. As a graduate of Asbury University with a degree in English Secondary Education, she also holds a master's degree in fine arts in Narrative Nonfiction writing from the Grady School at the University of Georgia.

 

Sydney plans to attend the Georgia Institute of Technology to receive a bachelor’s degree in International Relations and Modern Language. From there, she hopes to pursue a Law Degree for a future career in U.S. Foreign Policy.  She aspires to study abroad throughout college and is excited to see what the future holds. “I am honored to be recognized as the PAGE Star Student for the LOA Class of 2024. It means a lot to me to be appreciated for my accomplishments, and I am pleased that I can use this platform to show my gratitude to all the LOA staff members and my family who helped me achieve my successes.”

 

As Sydney looks forward to the next phase of life, Mrs. St John no doubt believes the path before her is bright: "Sydney is a powerhouse of a student. When she gets a goal, she is an unstoppable force. I am eager to see where the future takes her.”

 

The Professional Association of Georgia Educators (PAGE) is the state’s largest and fastest-growing educator association. Deeply committed to excellence in public education, PAGE provides unparalleled legal coverage, legislative advocacy, and professional learning opportunities to more than 95,000 teachers, administrators, and school personnel. PAGE protects, supports, and empowers members throughout all stages and facets of their career. For more information, visit their website at www.pageinc.org.

ARC Blood Drive Scheduled for January 16 at LOA

The Lake Oconee Academy Beta Club and the American Red Cross are hosting an upcoming blood drive. 

Please join our lifesaving mission and schedule an appointment today!

Drive Details:

Please help us to make an impact by giving blood on January 16th at LOA in the Titan Center. Our drive is scheduled for 9AM - 2PM.  

The need for blood is constant and only volunteer donors can fulfill that need for patients in our community. Nationwide, someone needs a unit of blood every 2 to 3 seconds and most of us will need blood in our lifetime.

If you have any questions, please reach out to  kris.stevens@lakeoconeeacademy.org or at 770.354.2708. 

A Note From Nurse Jessica - January Wellness Update

Welcome Back and Happy New Year!!! 

I hope you all had a wonderful Winter break!  Full of rest and relaxation!!  

Since we are still seeing Flu and Covid on the rise locally I wanted to reiterate key components from my last email.  

Reminder from my previous email : 

Key sickness prevention is started with good health habits like avoiding people who are sick, covering your cough and washing your hands often can help stop the spread of germs and prevent respiratory illnesses like flu. 

The tips and resources below will help you learn about actions you can take to protect yourself and others from flu and help stop the spread of germs.

  1. Avoid close contact.
    Avoid close contact with people who are sick. When you are sick, keep your distance from others to protect them from getting sick too.

    1. Stay home when you are sick.
      If possible, stay home from work, school, and errands when you are sick. This will help prevent spreading your illness to others.

    2. Cover your mouth and nose.
      Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue when coughing or sneezing. It may prevent those around you from getting sick. Flu viruses spread mainly by droplets made when people with flu cough, sneeze or talk.

    3. Clean your hands.
      Washing your hands often will help protect you from germs. If soap and water are not available, use an alcohol-based hand rub.

    4. Avoid touching your eyes, nose or mouth.
      Germs can be spread when a person touches something that is contaminated with germs and then touches his or her eyes, nose, or mouth.

    5. Practice other good health habits.
      Clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces at home, work or school, especially when someone is ill. Get plenty of sleep, be physically active, manage your stress, drink plenty of fluids, and eat nutritious food.

Key Policy Reminders: 

  • Students must be fever (100.4) free for 24 hours without the use of fever reducing medication.

  • Students with any vomiting and/or diarrhea must be out for 24 hours post their last vomiting or diarrhea episode 

We continue to ask that you please keep students home when they are unwell. 

If you have any questions or concerns, please don't hesitate to reach out to me.  Please be sure to let your student's teacher(s) know if your student is out sick, as well.  

Healthy Students = Better Learners

Kind Regards, 

Jessica Tolbert, RN

Lake Oconee Academy

School Nurse

Phone: 706-454-1562

Atlanta Braves Photographer, Kevin Liles, Visits Lake Oconee Academy

9th grade student, Ben Reber, excited to wear the World Series ring while posing for a photo with Kevin Liles.

It was an exciting day for Lake Oconee Academy’s photography class when the Atlanta Braves team photographer, Kevin Liles, visited to share his knowledge and experience as a photographer with the budding photography students.

Mr. Liles began his career as a small-town reporter in South Georgia. After covering local high school sports, Kevin discovered he had a growing interest in photography, especially when it came to sports. He went on to photograph hundreds of assignments for The New York Times, Washington Post, Sports Illustrated, and The Wall Street Journal. In 2018, he found his home as the team photographer for The Atlanta Braves where he continues his work today.

Mr. Liles shared some of the amazing moments he has captured over the years with the photography students. While most of the photographs he shared were epic ones he has taken for The Braves, he also shared some amazing moments he’s been fortunate to capture outside of The Braves organization over the years - from a regal portrait of former President Jimmy Carter to a rare moment with University of Alabama Head Football Coach, Nick Saban. He even shared an unexpected moment he was fortunate to capture of a pastor praying with a police officer that landed on the front of The New York Times Sunday edition. His was the lead photograph of every photographer across the country covering this story. It was an incredible honor.

In addition, Mr. Liles shared great advice with the young photography students as they prepare for their futures in any area of study. Mr. Liles suggested, “It takes about ten years, in my experience, to be really good at anything…” He later stated, “I think a lot of kids come into photography and try to be great very, very quickly. They want to be shooting a Braves game next week and it doesn’t work that way.” His advice was to just put in the time to gain experience, suggesting that in order to grow in photography one needs good critiquing of his or her work to excel in the field.

Mr. Liles enjoyed bantering back and forth with ninth grade student, Ben Reber. He noticed Ben had a superior knowledge of the Braves stats and playfully tested his knowledge throughout. Ben later shared how much he enjoyed seeing Mr. Liles work from games he had attended or viewed on TV, recalling the moments from memory. Prior to this event, Jordynn Chafin, a tenth-grade student, was unsure if photography was a career path she was interested in, “I wanted to do something in the technology field, but I thought photography was kind of boring. Seeing his work made me realize there is more to it and technology can be fun if you make it,” said Jordyn. She emphasized, “He definitely made me give photography a second thought.” 

Being in the presence of such an accomplished photographer was a special experience for these young photography students. Before departing, Mr. Liles gave the students an opportunity to hold his official Braves World Series ring, an experience many of the students will never forget!

Kevin Liles showing a Sports Illustrated cover he collaborated with another photographer on and explaining how the two made the cover come together.

 

About Kevin D. Liles:

Kevin D. Liles is a documentary, commercial, and sports photographer based out of Atlanta, GA. He specializes in creating narrative, layered and powerful images. Kevin has photographed for The New York Times, Washington Post, Sports Illustrated and The Wall Street Journal. Other clients include Turner Studios, The Golfer’s Journal, the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation, ESPN, NBA and The Players’ Tribune. He is the co-founder of ATL Photo Night, a monthly artist talk founded in 2016 aimed at investigating the creative process. He is also past president of the Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar - the longest continuously operating photojournalism conference in the U.S. To learn more about Kevin Liles, please visit: kevindliles.com