Sudbury Catholic District School Board

St. Benedict Student Awarded $5,000 Toyota Earth Day Scholarship

The Toyota Earth Day Scholarship Program has recognized Dayna Corelli, a Grade 12 student at St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School as one of this year’s fifteen $5,000 scholarship winners. The award recognizes her outstanding achievements in environmental community service, academics and extracurricular participation. Dayna is among an elite group of students from across Canada chosen from a pool of more than 400 applicants.

“These students are involved in an array of inspiring projects that are having significant impact on their communities,” said Jed Goldberg, President of Earth Day Canada. “They are truly stepping forward as the environmental leaders of tomorrow.”

Dayna led her school’s Envirothon team to first place in a 2007 competition where she had the opportunity to make recommendations to the City of Greater Sudbury regarding water and energy conservation. She is active in other environmental initiatives in her community and also helped her Ontario team win a gold medal at a national soccer championship.

At school, Dayna keeps environmental considerations clearly in focus as the president of her student council.She is also a senior member of the Environmental Club, a role in which she coordinates the school’s recycling program and promotes energy efficiency and water conservation projects. Despite her busy schedule Dayna manages to find time to volunteer with the community’s nonprofit organizations. She was instrumental in helping a local youth centre win funding through the Young Philanthropist Challenge and spends time campaigning for Efficient Sudbury, an organization promoting home energy efficiency.

Dayna was presented with a $5,000 ceremonial cheque at St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School on Tuesday, April 22, (Earth Day) by Mike Charbonneau, Area Parts and Service Manager for Toyota’s Northern Ontario Division. “On behalf of Toyota Canada it gives me great pleasure to present Dayna Corelli with the Toyota Earth Day Scholarship award for her commitment to environmental stewardship and her unending desire to improve the environment,” stated Charbonneau. “This scholarship will help to further her education and help her develop into one of Canada’s future environmental leaders.”

Dayna will now move on as a finalist for the Toyota Earth Day Scholarship National Award. The student chosen from among the 15 finalists will be presented with a Panasonic notebook computer at a ceremony on May 22, 2008

Free Evening Conferences on “The Catholic Church” at Villa Loyola Retreat Centre

If you have questions about the Church, here is an excellent opportunity to discuss those questions and learn more about the Church. This information sheet is a promotion of three evening seminars entitled “The Catholic Church.” The evening discussions will be facilitated by Fr Davie Louch, a priest at Holy Redeemer Parish. IT IS FREE! For more information and registration contact Villa Loyola at 522-3502 ext. 0. Enjoy!

2008 SCDSB Chess Tournament Winners Announced

The following are the results of the SCDSB Chess Tournament held at St. Francis School on Saturday April 12, 2008. Each team consists of six places and they compete againstt other schools in order to detemine who the winning team is in each division.

Junior Division
First Place – St. Francis
Second Place – St. Paul
Third Place – St. Thersa

Intermediate Division
First Place – St. Francis
Second Place – St. Charles
Third Place – Marymount

Congratulations!

Sudbury Catholic Schools CPCO Spelling Bee Semi-final Winners Announced

The Sudbury Catholic Schools, Catholic Principals Council of Ontario (C.P.C.O.) once again hosted its annual Spelling Bee competition. The semifinal competition for the Junior Division was held at St. Francis Catholic School on April 16.

The Spelling Bee finals will be held on April 23, 2008 at 6:30 p.m. at St. Francis Catholic School. Students will be competing in both the Junior and Intermediate Divisions.

The winners are:

Sarah MacRury – St. Anne
Alex Wilson – St. Charles
Erin McLelland – St. Christopher
Vanessa Bulfon – St. Francis
Cindy Coleman – St. James
Samantha Udeschini – St. Michael
Katherine Kettle – St. Theresa

Sudbury Catholic Schools Students Advance to Regional Science Fair, Winners Announced

George Middleton, Board Chair (right) and Catherine McCullough, (left), Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board recently joined Trustees, Senior Administration, parents and guests in wishing twenty-two of the Board’s students the best of luck in the Regional Science Fair held at Laurentian University on April 12 and 13, 2008. The students along with their projects were selected from more than one hundred entries at the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s Science Fair held at St. Francis Catholic School before the March break. The students were presented with Awards of Recognition as well as a token of appreciation during the Board meeting.

Nine students walked away with a combined total of 14 awards at the Regional event this past weekend. Congratulations! See full list of Sudbury Catholic Schools winners.

Bishop Alexander Carter CSS to Host Fashion Show

Bishop Alexander Carter welcomes the community to it’s “Can You Imagine” Spring Fashion Show. Students and staff will be modelling beautiful fashions from vendors all over the Sudbury region. If you are unsure as to what’s in style this spring and summer, this is the show for you. The event will take place at Bishop Alexander Carter Catholic Secondary School April 10th at 7:00 p.m The doors will open slightly earlier. Bring your mom, your dad and all your friends. This is a wonderful opportunity for both genders. You don’t want to miss this show, you are sure to have a great time.

The cost of admission to the Fashion Show is $5.00

Easter Message from the Director of Education, Catherine McCullough

Easter is a time for hope, renewal of spirit, rekindling of faith and rejoicing in the triumph of the Lord. It is also the time to reach out to our loved ones and come together in prayer and celebrations and glorying in the miracle of Easter.

During this Easter Break, I encourage you to take time to rest, visit with friends and family and rejoice in the glory of the Lord’s Resurrection.

For God so loved the world,
That He gave his only begotten Son,
that whosoever believeth in Him,
should not perish,
but have everlasting life.

John 3:16

Wishing everyone a Blessed and Happy Easter!

Catherine McCullough
Director of Education
Sudbury Catholic Schools

Sudbury Catholic Schools Prepare for the Triduum

Over the next three weeks Sudbury Catholic Schools students along with their parents/guardians families, teachers and Board staff will be preparing to celebrate the Triduum.

The greatest mysteries of the redemption are celebrated yearly by the Church beginning with the evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday and ending with Vespers of Easter Sunday. This time is called “the triduum of the crucified, buried and risen;” it is also called the “Easter Triduum” because during it is celebrated the paschal mystery, that is, the passing of the Lord from this world to his Father. The Church, by the celebration of this mystery through liturgical signs and sacramentals, is united to Christ, her spouse, in intimate communion.

The Easter fast is sacred on the first two days of the Triduum, in which, according to ancient tradition, the Church fasts “because the Spouse has been taken away.” Good Friday is a day of fasting and abstinence; it is also recommended that Holy Saturday be so observed, so that the Church, with uplifted and welcoming heart, be ready to celebrate the joys of the Sunday of the Resurrection.

The Easter Triduum is prepared for by Lent and it is prolonged for fifty days of the Easter Season. The Lenten Season has two purposes: a) to prepare catechumens to celebrate the paschal mystery through the sacraments of initiation; b) to prepare the faithful to celebrate the paschal mystery by penance for the renewal of their baptismal promises.

After centuries of neglect, Pope Pius XII restored the Triduum to its rightful place as the culmination of the liturgical year. The only way to really understand the Triduum is to savour it by active participation. In song, through ritual and sensory experience, the single, three day long liturgy plunges us into the Paschal Mystery. Our participation in the liturgical act is, then, the opportunity for us to enter into the mystery of Christ’s dying and rising. The life of the Christian is to be lived in union with Christ who “dying destroyed our death, rising restored our life.” It is the mystery of dying and rising with Christ that is at the heart of the Easter mystery.

St. Benedict Students Passionate About the Environment

St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School is located in the south end of the City of Greater Sudbury. Like many other high schools in the region it has great sports teams, high academic standings, terrific school spirit and a deep and caring concern for the planet. However, it is level, breadth and intensity of this concern for the environment that makes it unique. Through a core group of passionate and enthusiastic students coupled with supportive teachers and the integration of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s comprehensive Dearness Conservation (DC) program, St. Benedict has developed a reputation for being a dedicated steward of the earth.

In Spring 2006, DC approached St. Benedict CSS students to campaign in their neighbourhoods to promote the Interactive Home Audit. The Interactive Home Audit was an online survey that homeowners would complete to determine their energy consumption. The audit then offered suggestions on how energy and money could be saved by implementing simple, efficient changes.

Groups of two to three students canvassed their neighbourhoods distributing pamphlets and florescent light bulbs to residents who agreed to complete the Home Audit. The students were overwhelmed with the results of the campaign as they felt that they had reached a great number of homeowners in the Sudbury area with their targeted message. Upon the completion of the Home Audit program, Efficient Sudbury deemed the St. Benedict groups as the most efficient representatives based on the feedback from residents who were targeted by the campaign.

In November 2007, Dearness Conservation held a school wide presentation to give students and staff an update on climate change. The students were enthralled by a dynamic, comprehensive presentation highlighting the effects of climate change and individual choices that can be made to reduce the impacts on our planet. Following the presentation, interactive workshops were held with grade ten science classes which peaked the interest of many younger environmentalists.

The Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s DC Conservation Challenge was launched to encourage each school to reduce their waste, water, and energy usage with the incentive of winning $500 for re-greening initiatives. St. Benedict has also established itself as an environmental icon purely through the initiatives of its students. Each year the St. Benedict Environmental club competes in the Ontario Annual Envirothon and have won the Oral Presentation Award for the most practical solution for pressing environmental issues for the past two years. Students must employ their extensive knowledge of environmental topics, as well as their originality and creativity. Students are also in charge of many environmental services within the school. Weekly recycling is coordinated by students as well the collection of cell phones and used batteries for proper disposal. The Environment team is adamant about ensuring that all recyclables are placed in the proper bins and that students and staff are being environmentally conscious with energy and water consumption.

St. Benedict is a remarkable school that takes environmentalism to heart. With the culmination of the DC initiatives and resources, supportive teachers, and passionate students, St. Benedict Catholic Secondary School is a school with an environmental conscience.

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