Wednesday, April 30, 2014

ChildrenAtRisk announces top schools

The Children At Risk organization and the Education Resource Group partnered to research and rank the top schools in Houston. The public school rankings included 58 school districts plus charter schools around Houston. The results were announced Monday.
Of the top schools, majority of them are magnet or charter type programs. However, unlike WAIS, most screen and are very selective of which students are allowed to attend. We were still able to make the top 10; ranked at #8.

Monday, April 14, 2014



Volume 30 of the Miacis, the 2012/13 edition of Westchester Academy's annual student publication, was recognized by publisher Balfour Yearbooks. Our publication will be listed for Honorable Recognition in Balfour's 30th edition of the Yearbook Yearbook. Only a bit over 15% of publications are recognized in Balfour's Yearbook Yearbook.

Created by WAIS yearbook students, Nicole Son of the class of 2013 served as editors and planned the creative direction and style of this year's book. The books visual theme focused on elements and layouts inspired by modern magazine design. The cover featured a matte designed by Nicole Son. WAIS faculty Shaun Wegscheid served as yearbook advisor.

In the past three years, this is the second edition of the Miacis to be recognized in Balfour's Yearbook Yearbook.

Monday, March 31, 2014

WAIS included in Niche's Top 38 Schools

Houston is home to two of the largest school districts in the state and dozens of top-notch schools - it's one of the factors bringing families to the area.
Education website Niche.com awards grades to K-12 schools and colleges across the nation, and we took a look at which Houston-area public high schools are the best of the best.

WAIS is the 27th school shown in the listing; on slide 28 (the first slide is generalized and does not include a school).

Monday, March 24, 2014

WAIS takes 2nd in Texas Region for Botball Robotics Competition


Westchester Academy for International Studies (WAIS) earns Texas Regional First Place Seeding, Third Place in Autonomous Robotics Competition, and Second Place Overall which includes competition, presentation, and documentation accumulative scores at Botball Texas Regional Tournament on March 22. 

Team captions are Preston Godinich and Kaivon Dixon. Members are Malcolm Eastman, Adam Fazal, Jonatan Rodriguez, Diego Velazquez, Ozzie Prior and Christwide Oscar. Faculty coaches are Cheryl Wegscheid and Shaun Wegscheid. Since Botball robots are always autonomous the team developed strategies using artificial intelligence with embedded systems. Teams learn to program their robots in using C and C++.


FYI- We lost to teams that had several years’ experience with Botball, as well as having much larger teams if 15 -20 students. Not bad for our first adventure into purely autonomous robots with real coding required!



Link to Botball's 2014 Texas Regional Tournament Results

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Annual Blood Drive

Westchester's Med Club works with the Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center to organize and host a blood drive each year. This year's blood drive was postponed from its original dates in January due to school cancelations. Through the Med Club's students and sponsor Dr. Laura Sigworth, the WAIS Blood Drive was rescheduled and successfully hosted on March 10th.

This year's blood drive collected 83 units from 55 eligible donors.

Monday, March 10, 2014

Teacher of the Year: Kristin Thompson

Excerpt:  
“My teaching philosophy is simple, yet passionate. I run an organized classroom, based on how the students wish to learn and inquire. Students of mine understand their importance to me and...

See the full article on SBISD's Celebrating Excellence in Education

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

WAIS included in article about Katy ISD trustees’ rejection of two-way immersion secondary program

Excerpts:
Rodriguez said that while she knew the district only committed to TWI through fifth grade, she believed KISD would expand after observing how other districts have done so once their students reach the secondary level.
Next door Spring Branch ISD offers its own dual language program from elementary to high school. SBISD’s program is stationed at three elementary schools and two middle schools. Spring Branch also utilizes a district charter school, Westchester Academy for International Studies, for dual language education at the secondary level. Westchester allows students to complete the program through 12th grade, and did so well before Spring Branch began offering the program at middle schools. SBISD currently plans to expand their program to a traditional high school as well.
Superintendent Alton Frailey, who at one time worked as an assistant superintendent for SBISD, had a heavy hand in the creation of Westchester, leading the committee of parents and teachers who produced the idea of an international school. Frailey told The Rancher that forming Westchester was a means of accommodating students who “weren’t being well served by the district.” He said that such a campus was a possibility for SBISD because the district was completely built out and contained unused classroom space. Westchester, once a traditional high school, was repurposed after the district shut it down in 1985 due to decreasing enrollment. A charter school like Westchester would be an unlikely project for Katy ISD.
“We don’t have a school that’s not full of children already,” Frailey said. “You would have to replace a repurposed building.” Frailey indicated that regardless of what the board decided to do, Katy ISD would need to invest more resources to the district’s bilingual education department.
“This is a fast-growing population of our district, and we’ve gotten by with a skeletal crew,” Frailey said.
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