Thursday, December 5, 2013

The Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation

Preparing Allied Gardens Children for Tomorrow 

An interview with Karen Miller

AlliedGardens.org: What is the Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation and what
does it mean for our community?

Karen Miller: The Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation is a group of parent, educator, and community member volunteers working together to enhance and expand on the science, technology, engineering, mathematics, and music/arts education in our local schools, specifically at Patrick Henry High School and the elementary and middle schools that feed into it. The Foundation also serves as a hub around which local STEM professionals (and musicians and other artists) can gather to support and encourage these students, in hopes that they will become better prepared academically (and more invested personally) to pursue these subjects after high school and to participate in STEM opportunities offered by regional universities and corporations. 


Students generally are not aware of or fully using these programs--such as the admissions advantage SDSU's School of Engineering grants to the students of Patrick Henry's Engineering Academy--and if we can better educate our community and our students about them, we can bring more of these resources to our neighborhoods.

And speaking in the broadest possible terms, promoting student success in science and technology leads to national success in the global marketplace. We need scientists and technology experts in almost every field--including the arts! It's a shame not to teach students as young as possible about the promise and excitement of these subjects, and we Foundation members want to help their teachers and parents expose Cluster students to them.

AlliedGardens.org: What compelled the Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation
folks to organize? Why now?

Karen Miller: The Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation grew out of the Henry Cluster Council, which was established by the San Diego Unified School District
(there are cluster councils for every high school in the district). The Council is composed of administrators, teachers, and parents from all eleven schools in the cluster (the high school and its feeder schools), who work together to discuss the issues that face the students within this educational community and to develop common goals for the schools. One of those goals was strengthening STEM education. The Henry Cluster Council can agree on STEM programs they would like to see, but they have only their school budgets to work from, and those budgets are quite tight. In November of 2012, parent Scott Bailey, then a member of the Cluster Council, was part of this conversation. He had seen how his children and their friends were not tapping into local STEM resources (through lack of awareness and preparation), and was inspired to create this Foundation to help the council reach these students and develop these programs. We added the second M (Music and the Arts) to reflect our belief that providing and supporting creative outlets for students is important, too. The Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation is a separate entity that can perform fundraising, and can focus all its energy on supporting these programs because it doesn't have to do the work of actually running a school at the same time! The Foundation can also invest in resources that can be shared among the schools of the Cluster, and serve as a conduit between the schools so they can share ideas and information, too.

AlliedGardens.org: You recently announced your first Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation charity event. Tell us about that.

Karen Miller: Our first STEMM Foundation event is not just a fundraiser; it is a community event that gives students the chance to put their STEM skills into action! On Saturday, May 31, 2014 we are creating a miniature golf course of holes designed by teams of students from each of the cluster schools. We'll make a whole day of it and invite the community to come play the course, have some lunch, maybe see some STEM exhibits and hear some student performances, and help us vote on which student-created golf holes should win prizes in a variety of categories. We can't wait to see what the students come up with! I'm sure it'll be a lot of fun for designers and players alike.

AlliedGardens.org: Sounds great! Promise to send us some pictures to post on our site?

Karen Miller: Of course!

AlliedGardens.org: Let's pretend it's now 2023, ten years from today. Describe how Allied Gardens and the Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation will have grown together.

Karen Miller: Well. Ten years from now we'll have current Allied Garden students established in their STEM professions who'll come back and serve as mentors for the kids still in school, because of Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation community events that forged inter-school relationships between the high school, middle schools, and elementary schools. The current crop of kindergarteners and first graders will be applying to colleges well-trained in STEM subjects, and more of them will be interested in STEM careers. Even the ones not interested in science or technology professions will have STEM tools at their disposal to use for all kinds of personal projects, even just for fun. Doesn't that sound nice? 


What I also hope happens is that our Foundation helps the schools in Allied Gardens and the rest of the Cluster community (San Carlos, Del Cerro) really see themselves as a unified population instead of a scattered grouping of kids and teachers. I hope that the teachers and administrators will turn to the Foundation when they need help implementing their ideas. I hope the Foundation becomes a real source of information and inspiration to the teachers and administrators, and can become a networking and collaborative resource as well as a source of funding. 

I think the Foundation can help the Cluster Council clarify their STEM goals and communicate them to the teachers and parents at the schools, and help businesses and professionals channel their interest in this STEM curriculum in ways to benefit all the students in the cluster. All the schools already have parent-teacher organizations working very hard for their own students. What we want to be is a parent-teacher-administrator-community organization that can bring all the students together with larger-scale projects that individual school communities cannot implement on their own.

AlliedGardens.org: What is the best way for someone in our community to become involved with the Henry Cluster STEMM Foundation? Would it require a lot of time?

Karen Miller: The absolute easiest way to become involved with the Foundation would be to "Like" our Facebook page or subscribe to email notifications from our website or follow us on Twitter, and then just talk to people you know about what we've got going on. If you wanted to be involved more directly, you could come to our monthly meetings (usually the fourth Tuesday of the month, but check the calendar on our website) or volunteer to help on one of our committees (like the miniature golf committee!). Depending on how much time you've got to give, you could spend more than one day a month helping us, but really it is something you decide. 


If you were interested more in partnering than planning, we need local professionals to serve as guest speakers, or mentors and project advisers (maybe you'd volunteer to make a presentation to student minigolf teams about designing an engineering project), and we appreciate donations of resources and services to help with student work or with Foundation business. Also, just talking to students about the fun parts of their STEM education and nurturing their interest in it helps us, too!

AlliedGardens.org: Anything else we should know?

Karen Miller: Our website is www.hcstemm.org. Our Facebook page is www.facebook.com/hcstemm. Our Twitter account is @hcstemm. We even have a LinkedIn company page! We think we are very lucky to be talking to AlliedGardens.org, and we are excited to grow with this community. We appreciate your interest! Thank you very much.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Allied Gardens Community Council November 2013 Available for Download

The AGCC November newsletter is available for download! We are making it available in both Microsoft Word and Adobe PDF format:

Inside you'll find columns from AGCC President Anthony Wagner, San Diego City Councilmember Scott Sherman, and others!

Please join us for our next meeting:

November 26th at Ascension Lutheran Church (5106 Zion Avenue, San Diego CA 92120)

The featured topic that evening will be:

Permit Parking Forum - How to protect our streets from unwanted parking

Monday, November 11, 2013

Archstone Apartments at Mission Gorge Road and Greenbrier



Construction will soon begin on the 444 apartment complex on Mission Gorge Road at Greenbrier.  These documents were the original presentation of what was approved by the City in 2008.  We don't know if any changes have been made.



Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Speaker Announced for Allied Gardens Town Hall Meeting on Sept 24

Image courtesy JS
What: Allied Gardens Town Hall
Where: Ascension Lutheran Church 5106 Zion Avenue, San Diego CA 92120
When: September 24, 2013 at 7pm

Please join Executive Director Elyse Lowe of Move San Diego for a Transportation Conversation on 9/24. 

Move San Diego is a nonprofit organization focused on improving transportation in San Diego County, California.

What’s going on in transportation in San Diego? How can the community reduce traffic while accommodating growth and development? What transportation changes are envisioned by the community, by the region and by the state in the next decade, and what are the steps to making them happen? Format will be a brief presentation lead by Move SD, and then an open conversational format. Please come with ideas and solutions for an engaging conversation!

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Allied Gardens and Grantville are a Microcosm of San Diego



Allied Gardens and Grantville are a microcosm of San Diego.  All are at a crossroad with common challenges ahead.  
We can either move forward in the “same old, same old” ways or as Steve Jobs would suggest,
“Think Different.”
Our communities and San Diego are on inherently firm ground to achieve greatness. To accomplish this we must find a way to reward and celebrate capable experienced leadership, implementable grand vision, unencumbered creativity and a steadfast investment in innovation and technology.  
It’s been awhile since San Diego has been accused of being bold or engaged in a civic accomplishment that beckoned national acclaim.  While we celebrate the city as a hub of science and technological prosperity, the party fizzles the farther south you travel in San Diego.  
An investment in innovation should not be limited to one region or economic sector.  We must tap the well of innovation to attract the innovator to an ideology that home is right here.
A huge challenge -- at all levels of civic engagement --  is that we’re conditioned to find “passing muster” acceptable.  We grab at immediate gratification over the harder to achieve grand or superb outcomes.  We long for inspiration and excitement in all things San Diego but settle for “next time.”
***
An argument could be made that we have our own uncelebrated and historical national treasure in our own front yard.  Spanish explorers exploited the natural resources of the San Diego River a full 78 years before the pilgrims ate their first piece of turkey.  Moreover, our river, 52 miles in length, is already esteemed with the title of California’s First River.
Most San Diegans essentially understand our community’s connection to and roots in the San Diego Mission de Alcala.  Lesser known is the Mission’s symbiotic relationship to the San Diego River and the Padre Dam -- the region’s first water dam, which is located 6 miles to the east in present day Mission Trails Regional Park.
A civic masterpiece is woven within the storied history of the river, Mission and dam.   Countless attempts as far back as 1774 were made to harness life from the river and provide a reliable source of water for people, crops and livestock around the Mission.  More than 200 years ago -- in 1813 -- the Padre Dam was constructed to divert water from the San Diego River through a flume system.  The water channel was an engineering marvel and the feat marked a moment in time, anchoring the region as a place to settle.  The aqueduct ran through present day Grantville and Allied Gardens.  It was constructed so well some sections are still standing.
It’s not a stretch to celebrate our community as the birthplace of innovation and advancement in the West.  It’s an opportunity to seize.
***
How do we move forward with smart, creative development, honor our rich heritage, and exceed our environmental expectations?
Like an economic light switch, development will come faster than expected.  Rather than react project by project -- seeing each as unique and separate, we must plan for the whole.
San Diego Association of Governments (SANDAG), the regional agency that forecasts growth, is projecting some pretty lofty numbers for our communities.
Because of our centralized location within the county, job rich land-use zones, existing transportation corridors and proximity to railed transit, and available developable land, we’re set to take on more growth than other communities.  
According to SANDAG, condo and apartment development will climb 417 percent and our population will almost double by 2050 according to their published 2050 Regional Growth Forecast.  At the same time, job growth in our communities is projected to outpace the rest of the region.
Some long-term planning relief may be on the horizon.   The City of San Diego Development Services and Civic San Diego (the city’s former Redevelopment Agency) seem poised to reinvest themselves in a Grantville Master Plan.  It’s been well over a year since the Grantville Stakeholders have convened a meeting, but rumor has it that the next meeting is imminent.
Should boldness, innovation, leadership, vision, and creativity all pull in unison, even OUR neighborhood could be highlighted on a national map.
Next month, I’ll explore how we can boldly step forward.  2050.  It’s closer than you may expect.
Think different.  What’s your grand vision for our community?
I’m Anthony Wagner, President, Allied Gardens Community Council.  We represent the community interests of Allied Gardens & Grantville.  Check out our new website at AlliedGardens.org.  Feel free to call me at 619-253-4989 or write me a note at AnthonyJohnWagner@gmail.com or tweet @AnthonyWagnerSD.



Monday, August 12, 2013

Vacancy on the Navajo Community Planners, Inc for an Allied Gardens Representative


Mission Trails. Image courtesy nachernerd

One position for an Allied Gardens representative on NCPI has become open. To fill this vacancy, NCPI is holding a special election on Sept. 16, 2013

In order to be a candidate for this open seat, an eligible member of the Allied Gardens community must have attended two (2) meetings of the NCPl during the last 10 months (prior to the September Special Election Date) which can be documented. A completed application must be fill out and submitted by Friday, Sept. 6 by 6 pm in order for the applicant’s name to be placed on the ballot. Applications can be found on the NCPI website at navajoplanners.org and can be submitted by the due date to navajoplanners@cox.net. Time: 7:00pm @ Zion Avenue Community Church, 4880 Zion Avenue (Upstairs in the Community Room) 

The Navajo Community Planners, Inc. was formed and recognized by the City Council to make recommendations to the City Council, Planning Commission, City staff, and other governmental agencies on land use matters, specifically concerning the preparation of, adoption of, implementation of, or amendment to, the General Plan or a land use plan when a plan relates to the Navajo community boundaries (Allied Gardens, Del Cerro, Grantville and San Carlos).

For the application form contact: anthonyjohnwagner@gmail.com 

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Nighttime Asphalt Work at Mission Gorge Rd. and Princess View Dr. Scheduled for August 5-8

image courtesy Aldenjewell
Heads up! There will be new asphalt work done at night from August 5-8. Here's the statement from the company performing the work...

Superior Ready Mix (At Mission Gorge Rd. and Princess View Dr.) has a job for the City of San Diego supplying asphalt for some City streets. The City is requiring for public safety reasons that this work be done at night. The work will be for four nights - Monday night, August 5 through Thursday night, August 8.

We have taken all steps possible to reduce the sound: the trucks will be routed in the plant so that they do not need to back up; the plant will be pre-loaded so that as much asphalt as possible is made before night, and as previously noted we have installed a new type of back up alarm which makes a sort of hissing noise and is very directional and dissipates with distance. We have also made some improvements to the plant which will reduce any sound from the plant.

The CUP allows night operations when necessary for reasons of safety and public health. If you hear of any complaints please let me know. If you can help spread the word about this, it would be helpful. Thanks again for your courtesy and assistance with this necessary work.

Arnold Veldkamp
Superior Ready Mix Concrete L.P.
1508 W. Mission Road
Escondido, CA 92029
(760) 690-5749 (direct)
aveldkamp@superiorrm.com
Here's a map of that intersection in case you're not familiar with it:

View Larger Map

Allied Gardens Proud of Our Little League All Stars!



image courtesy theseanster93
Allied Gardens 10-11 year-old All-Stars had a tremendous run this season, coming in second place for 2013 Southern California title! The Union Tribune has the full story here.

Fall Baseball begins in August and includes free admission to Big Al Jamboree.
The Fall season will kick off with the Big Al Jamboree; a three hour instructional clinic by Al and Scott Price designed for coaches and players. The Big Al program is endorsed by Little League International. They have trained over 160,000 coaches and 50,000 players worldwide.
Register for Allied Gardens Little League today.


Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Join SD Canyonlands for a Clean Up of Navajo Canyon on Saturday



San Diego Canyonlands will be will be planting, removing non-native plants and mulching native plants this on Saturday from 1:30pm to 4:30pm. 

This volunteer effort will meet outside the Canyon Rim Children's Center (map). 

Tools and gloves are provided. Please wear closed toes shoes and protection from the sun (a hat, sunscreen, etc). Bring water and snacks if needed. Volunteers must be physically able to hike on uneven terrain down into canyon during some volunteer events and perform varrying degrees of manual labor. Tasks vary and can be accommodated to fit volunteer's abilities. Events are rain or shine!
More information is available on the events calendar of San Diego Canyonlands.