Graduation 5
Not the End to Senior Year the Class of 2020 Ever Expected BY CONNOR MCKAIG
We now learn from our computer screens at home, rather than in the classroom surrounded by our friends. We now practice our spring sports alone, instead of on the field with our teammates. And, most painful of all, we may never share the full experience of the senior prom, senior supper, or graduation at the Ryan Center, events that are meant to be cherished and remembered fondly for years to come.
CHS Prepares for a NEASC Visit BY AMANDA MCKECHNIE
CHS will be having an important on-site Decennial Accreditation visit on March 1 through March 4, 2020, by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges or NEASC. This visit is when CHS will be evaluated by a group from NEASC of teachers, administrators, and one associate director of NEASC to determine if CHS can keep its accreditation. Accreditation is what high schools receive and what colleges use as a judging point of the school to evaluate if they want the student and if they are from a good high school. Accreditation is crucial for college acceptance.
What Does it Mean to be a Senior? By Allie Shinskey
In just a few short months, the current juniors will be walking back into CHS as seniors themselves. As a result, many of them are questioning what it will be like to be a senior, and some, like Mariah Rietzel, believe they may have a good idea. “To me, being a senior means maturity and responsibility,” she says. “It’s the year you finally turn eighteen, and it’s all about learning to be an adult.”
Saying Goodbye
Another school year has passed and a new one will soon approach, causing the cycle to start over again. Today, sadness will not dwell in us because we are not saying a farewell or goodbye. For now, we are just stating, see you later!
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Nineteen Days: A Senior Reflection by Riley Clarke
I won’t be the first to say my first two years here at Coventry High School were weird, to say the least. From not stepping foot into school until October in freshman year to being accidentally contact-traced in sophomore year, those first two years barely feel real. It feels more like I’ve been here for two years, rather than four. Which is why this article is so hard to write, how can it be my senior year? I just got here.