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2025

  • June

    A Salute to Strength and Sacrifice

    Following the completion of their AP Art projects, 19 Shawnigan students jumped straight into an ambitious and meaningful endeavour, designing and painting murals for the nearby Malahat Branch 134 of the Royal Canadian Legion. The project began on May 2 and became a month-long collaborative journey that pushed the participating students creatively, physically, and emotionally.
     
    The students formed small teams, each responsible for different aspects of the project, from lead designers and painters to brush washers, a liaison officer to ensure things were accurate, and even doughnut suppliers. This collaborative structure allowed every student to play a vital role. Many evenings saw students working sometimes until 9 p.m., committed to completing the murals with care and excellence.
     
    The two murals now adorn the outside of the Legion hall, along with two others painted by students from Frances Kelsey Secondary School. One of the Shawnigan murals features a Canadian Army soldier with a bomb detector, while the other is of an RCMP officer with a service dog set against a Canadian backdrop.
     
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  • Arts Roundup

    The arts have taken centre stage in the final weeks of the school year at Shawnigan.
     
    From theatre performances to the annual 360 fair, students in various arts and activities – both curricular and co-curricular – have had several opportunities recently to share their work with their peers.
     
    Last Wednesday, the 360 Fair took place in front of the Bruce-Lockhart Centre for Creativity, the same day that 360 awards and colours were handed out. Organized by the 360 instructors, 360 Prefect Daniel S. and the 360 Council, the event featured displays of visual art and other things the 360 programs have been working on.
     
    “Our focus this year was to make it interactive,” Daniel explained. “The Council and I went to all of the 360 instructors and asked them to come up with one interactive activity that students could participate in.”
     
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  • The Sorting Hat Speaks

    All Grade 8 students start their Shawnigan Journeys with a year in Samuel House, but after that nurturing introduction to the School, they move on to join one of the “big” Houses for the next four years.
     
    This year’s Grade 8s – the first cohort to spend their entire Grade 8 year in Samuel House, which opened midway through the 2023-24 school year – found out last Saturday which House will be their home on campus for the rest of their time at Shawnigan during the highly anticipated annual Sorting Hat Ceremony.
     
    Boarding houses are a fundamental aspect of the Shawnigan experience, and special homes away from home for our students. The peers they live with and the House staff become family for them during their time at the School. For each student, their House automatically becomes “the best House on campus.”
     
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  • The Versatility of Cedar

    The cedar tree holds a significant place in the culture of the Coast Salish First Nations, including the Cowichan and Malahat people whose traditional territories are the location of Shawnigan Lake School. In recent weeks, students in Environmental Science 11 and the First Nations Language and Knowledge Sharing 360 program have been learning first-hand about cedar trees and their meaning to the local First Nations.
     
    Environmental Science 11 students learned about the Indigenous practice of harvesting cedar bark (also known as cedar stripping) from Coast Salish artist Beau Wagner. Mr. Wagner, who has been carving for more than 30 years, used trees on the Shawnigan campus to demonstrate how local First Nations use centuries of wisdom to remove strips of bark from cedar trees for use in a range of items, while doing minimal damage to the trees. Culturally modified trees typically go on to live normal lives; the oldest living documented culturally modified tree in British Columbia dates to the 12th century.
     
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  • From the Hatchery to Nature

    After raising them from eggs, Shawnigan students headed to the creeks that cross our campus last week to release tiny coho salmon fry into the wild.
     
    While it marks the beginning of a journey for the little fish, it also marks the end of several months of care the Shawnigan students in Science 9 and Environmental Science 11 and 12 have put into raising them in the Mark Hobson Hatchery.
     
    That began last fall, when salmon from Hartl Creek were used as broodstock: eggs were harvested from the females and fertilized with semen from the males. Those eggs hatched into alevin, then grew into fry in March, at which point they were transferred into larger tanks of water and cared for until they were ready for release into Hartl and Shawnigan creeks.
     
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  • This I Believe

    Every year, the “This I Believe” evening of speeches by graduating students showcases a wide range of topics and emotions as Shawnigan students bare their souls by reading aloud pieces they have written about topics close to their hearts.
     
    For Head of English Mrs. Sarah Bevel, in her first year at the School, it was an opportunity to see how close of a community Shawnigan is that the students are comfortable being so vulnerable in front of their peers.
     
    “It made me feel like the students really do feel like they are part of a family,” Mrs. Bevel said.
     
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  • May

    BC Film Fest Inspires

    Expect big things from Shawnigan’s film programs in the future after an inspiring trip to the BC Student Film Festival in Vancouver last weekend. Although the students were nominated for four awards, they didn’t bring home any hardware, but they did find a lot of motivation and enthusiasm for next year.
     
    “The cool thing was that, on the ferry back, the juniors were buzzing,” film instructor Mr. Aren Goodman said. “They saw a variety of films over there, and they were revved up and ready to go for next year.”
     
    The BC Student Film Festival is hosted annually by the Vancouver Film School and SFU School for the Contemporary Arts. The 10 students from Shawnigan who attended were a mix of curricular and 360 (arts and activities) students, some of whom have been in film for several years, and some of whom are brand new this year. The group was made up of two boys and eight girls, which Mr. Goodman said was a refreshing change for a program that has been largely male-dominated in the recent past.
     
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  • Theoretical Becomes Tangible

    Math and Mud? Calculus and Clay?
     
    AP Calculus students took over the Clayworks lab this week to turn mathematical functions into clay models and bridge the gap between the theoretical and the tangible.
     
    Students began in the classroom by choosing a function, then used integration to calculate the volume of revolution – the three-dimensional space that would be taken up if the calculus graph were turned into a plane and rotated on an axis. Moving to the Clayworks lab, the students then tried to create a vessel with a volume that matches the function they chose.
     
    “This way, they understand it; they don’t just learn it,” said Clayworks instructor Ms. Carol Harvey, who collaborated with math teacher Mr. Max Sterelyukhin on the project.
     
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  • "Dearest World" – Poetry Competition Success

    Kenzie G. is continuing to cement herself as one of Vancouver Island’s best young poets.
     
    The Grade 12 student at Shawnigan Lake School was named a finalist in the MC Youth Visual Poetry & Spoken Word Competition for the second time in the last three years. She previously placed third in the 2023 contest.

    Kenzie admitted she wasn’t expecting much when she sent in her submission, titled “Dearest World.” With the deadline looming, she ended up writing the poem while suffering from a concussion. She then had to record herself reading it aloud and turn it into a video in a short time span.
     
    “I went from writing it to producing the film in two and a half hours,” Kenzie explained.
     
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  • A New High Mark for Shawnigan Grad

    Not only was it Shawnigan’s largest graduating class ever, but it is also being called the best grad weekend ever.
     
    The grad weekend at the Fairmont Chateau Whistler on May 15 and 16 was simply outstanding, with the students, their families and guests, and a multitude of staff members heading into the mountains north of Vancouver to celebrate the end of 151 students’ Shawnigan Journeys.
     
    The special events began on Thursday with the Parent Gathering on the hotel rooftop, where family members mingled with staff for conversation and interaction. Nametags featured the colours of the Boarding Houses, allowing staff members to easily spot the parents from far-flung parts of the world whom they may not have seen regularly over the years.
     
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  • Regatta Takes Over the Lake

    One of the largest events on the School calendar, with nearly every student and staff member involved in one way or another, the 64th annual Shawnigan Regatta roiled the waters of our namesake lake on May 9-11, with excellent showings from our own rowers and lots of promise for the future.
     
    “We had a great regatta,” Head of Rowing Mrs. Jennifer Parfitt said. “We are excited about the results we had and the conduct of our athletes in challenging conditions. There were lessons learned throughout which no doubt will help aid us in our journey to the Canadian nationals at the end of this month. Furthermore, the performance of our U17 novice crews and U15 crews were very promising for future years and the upcoming local regatta in Nanaimo on May 24.”
     
    It was a bittersweet moment for Grade 12 rower Shelby H., who will continue her rowing career at the University of Portland next year.
     
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  • Wellness at Crunch Time

    May is an extremely busy time for our students, especially senior students, with Grade 12s preparing for Grad and both Grade 11 and 12 students writing AP exams (some Grade 10s write AP exams as well). Shawnigan has 212 students registered in the AP program this year, writing a combined total of 405 exams between May 5 and 23.
     
    The School takes great care to make sure students are set up for success in their AP exams, both on academic and mental health fronts. In the month leading up to the actual exams, students were given mock exams that helped condition them for the rigours of the tests.
     
    “The students have been preparing in their classes by teachers giving them mock exams where they get to measure their level of preparation coming into the exam,” explained Mr. Max Sterelyukhin, Academic Dean (AP and Extension). “We have also asked for some flexibility for those who are taking more than four AP exams, and everyone has been very accommodating with such requests. I know that many teachers go above and beyond to offer extra tutorials before the exams and some even made T-shirts to commemorate the day of exam completion.”
     
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  • STAR Fest and Night of Dance

    A delegation of talented students from Shawnigan’s Theatre Company and Musical Theatre Company programs attended STAR Fest West at Douglas College in Vancouver, coming away with a host of honours, including three perfect scores and the Perfect Score Ribbon for Ivana W.
     
    “Our students had the opportunity to perform both musical numbers and dramatic scenes, and to be adjudicated by a panel of professionals and instructors from Vancouver,” theatre teacher Mr. Sal Interlandi explained. “These experiences not only challenged and stretched our students artistically but also allowed them to connect with a broader community of performers and creators.”
     
    STAR Fest gives performing arts students a chance to perform in front of their peers, test their skills against an adjudication board with the opportunity to receive recognition, take part in workshops, and interact with their peers from across Western Canada.
     
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  • Taking Stock of Our Lake

    Shawnigan’s long-running study of Shawnigan Lake’s fish species and the surrounding ecosystem continued recently with new additions that benefitted the fish being studied as they were captured and other animals after the study was complete.
     
    Science teacher Ms. Alexandra Ballantyne, who organized the study for Environmental Science 11 classes, invited a registered professional biologist to supervise the going-in and ensure the ethics and handling of lethal capture. Once the fish had been captured, killed, identified and dissected, their carcasses were donated to be used as food at  The Raptors, a birds of prey rehabilitation and education facility near Duncan, which the students will visit at the end of the year.
     
    By and large, the study followed the same methods that it has since 1997. Students placed gillnets in the water in two locations: one net close to the shore near the campus and another floating net farther out. The nets were left in the water for 24 hours, and the fish captured were identified by species, weighed, measured, and dissected, with the results carefully documented, as they have been for three decades, to be shared with the BC Ministry of Environment and Parks and the local Shawnigan Lake community.
     
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  • Inter-House Art Gets a Reboot

    A reimagined inter-House art event last Friday got the entire student body involved – and earned rave reviews from the participants.
     
    Under the previous format, Houses submitted artwork by students for judging by a panel of esteemed staff members who determined the winners. This year featured a complete overhaul, with three parts to the event, all completed in the course of a single evening.
     
    “The old format had its heyday,” Head of Fine Art Mr. Aren Goodman commented. “It was time for a reboot, to make it feel like a real Shawnigan inter-House event.”
     
    It started with the idea for a paint night, and grew from there.
     
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  • May Sports Update

    Spring sports are in full swing at Shawnigan, and teams are in full gear this month, with their sights set on qualifying for Island and provincial tournament berths, or in some cases, reaching the podium at national championships. Our campus has been especially busy preparing for the Stadium Series rugby event on May 2 and the Shawnigan Lake School Regatta on May 9-11.
     
    Rugby
     
    All of Shawnigan’s rugby teams have been busy over the last few weeks, leading up to the Stadium Series games at the School this Friday, and playoffs and provincials later this month.
     
    Both Colts teams played against St. George’s last Saturday (April 26). The A team lost a physical match 35-21, but showed a lot of good things, especially their refusal to quit, as they scored the last two tries to keep things close. The “Killer B’s” won their own high-energy game. The A’s responded by calling a team meeting on Monday – the players’ idea – followed by a short late-night practice. They went on to defeat Claremont 35-21 on Tuesday. Earlier in the month, the Colts attended the Tropical Sevens tournament in Tampa, Florida.

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  • April

    A Visit from the Past

     Being a Grade 8 student at Shawnigan includes learning about the School’s history, now at 109 years and counting. A big part of that is the annual trip to the School museum. This week, the current crop of Grade 8s heard directly from a Shawnigan alumnus about what it was like to attend the School in the 1960s.
     
    Don Manning (Copeman’s) graduated from Shawnigan in 1964, having started in Grade 7. He returned to the School this week to share some stories and context from his six years as a student. A lot of things have changed in the 60-plus years since he left.
     
    “When you drive in through the gates, it has the feel of the School, but it’s not the same School,” he said.
     
    The School was “harsh” and “not a caring environment” when Mr. Manning attended, and the student-to-faculty ratio was much higher than it is now. The senior boys – it was an all-boys’ school at the time – had more influence and control over the juniors, who often had to act as their personal servants. As things changed gradually, Shawnigan was a “marvellous place to be” in his later years at the School.
     
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  • Going Back Beyond the Gates

    With the end of their time at Shawnigan now in sight, a group of Grade 12s took some time recently to revisit one of the highlights of their Grade 9 year.
     
    Twelve of the original 13 students in Shawnigan’s Beyond the Gates program reunited for an overnight camping trip on April 5 and 6 – an opportunity to get together and reminisce about a special and unique year in their lives. (The 13th student is still at Shawnigan, but was unable to fit the trip into their busy schedule.)
     
    “It was just a really cool experience,” said Marin D. “Grade 9 feels really far away, but we still felt a connection to Beyond the Gates. It was a cool opportunity for us to jump back into the past and relive the fun we had.”
     
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  • Down the Rabbit Hole

    “Take some more tea,” the March Hare said to Alice, very earnestly.
    “I’ve had nothing yet,” Alice replied in an offended tone: “so I can’t take more.”
    “You mean you can’t take less,” said the Hatter: “It’s very easy to take more than nothing.”
     
    The discourse was certainly more civil than it was at the Mad Hatter’s tea party, but the ambience was no less wonderful at the Alice in Wonderland-themed Down the Rabbit Hole fundraising dinner last Saturday evening.
     
    Following in the tradition of 2023’s Secret Garden dinner and 2024’s Great Gatsby dinner, the latest event took inspiration from another classic book that provided a wide range of ideas to work with.
     
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  • Meet the Press - 10 Minutes at a Time

    For 10 minutes at a time, Comparative Government students at Shawnigan got to see what it’s like to be a world leader, a press secretary, or a member of the press corps covering national and international issues.
     
    During the last week before Spring Break, Mr. Paul Klassen and Mr. Remi Anctil’s Comp Gov classes held 10-minute press conferences in Mitchell Hall. Students were selected to represent either executive leaders, press secretaries, or members of the media from six different countries: Russia, Iran, the UK, Nigeria, Mexico and China.
     
    Each of the 10-minute conferences was opened with a two-minute statement from the press secretary, followed by eight minutes of questions from the reporters to the leader. Media members prepared specific questions for the leader from their assigned country, then afterward wrote newspaper headlines or a political cartoon based on the press conferences
     
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  • Pulling Together: Shawnigan and Rowing Canada

    Shawnigan’s long-standing relationship with Rowing Canada Aviron is paying dividends for both organizations on and off the water.
     
    National team rowers regularly train out of the Shawnigan boathouse, where our student athletes get to work and learn alongside the best rowers in Canada. Those national team rowers can often be seen in Duke’s Café after their morning sessions, sipping coffee alongside Shawnigan students. Rowers also take part in workout sessions in the mezzanine, where they get exposure to high-end physical training.
     
    While students were away last November Break, Shawnigan and Rowing Canada furnished part of the Sportsplex with equipment for national team members and School athletes. The room gives all Shawnigan athletes access to the fitness equipment, which includes high-end gear for rowing training, such as rowing ergs and specialized bikes. The equipment is owned by Rowing Canada, and the space is owned by Shawnigan, and athletes from both organizations have access. During academic hours, Rowing Canada has priority, but after academic hours, or on weekends and holidays, it’s Shawnigan’s to use, with proper supervision.

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  • Samuel House Shows Appreciation

    Grade 8 students in Samuel House showed their gratitude to the Grade 11 mentors who have been living in the House with them, and to other students and staff members, with a special evening of appreciation on Tuesday.
     
    A select group of Grade 11 students is given the opportunity to live in Samuel House with the Grade 8s, providing guidance and helping them get used to the School. The Grade 11s rotate through Samuel House, spending a few weeks there before returning to their regular Houses.

    Although the annual celebration goes back many years, this was just the second one held in Samuel House since its opening last February. Last year’s appreciation night was held less than two months after Samuel House opened.
     
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  • Cowichan Valley Art Show Success

    Shawnigan took the Cowichan Valley visual arts community by storm in March.
     
    Six students took part in the Cowichan Valley Art Council’s Youth Arts Showcase last month, titled “Unfiltered: Unleash Your Authenticity,” with three of those students getting special recognition for their work.
     
    Luona Y. (Grade 11) received an Award of Excellence for “The Highchair,” and Scarlett S. (Grade 12) received a Juror’s Choice Award for “I Said Stop.” Sharon X. (Grade 11) was given an honourable mention. Both Luona and Scarlett took home gift certificates for their achievements, and Scarlett also received a small glass sculpture. Olive S., Yumi L. and Vivi M. also submitted pieces to the show, which featured a total of 89 entries from 77 young artists across the Cowichan Valley.
     
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  • Spring Break Trips and Tours

    Our students fanned out all over the globe over Spring Break, many returning home for time with their families, but others taking advantage of School trips and tours to expand their horizons academically and athletically as well as seeing new parts of the world.
     
    Harvard Model Congress Europe in Belgium
     
    Ten Model UN students travelled to Belgium with teachers Mr. Paul Klassen and Mrs. Andrea Carballo as Shawnigan’s first-ever delegation to the Harvard Model Congress Europe in Brussels. Founded in 1987, HMC Europe is an annual event that looks at institutions of international governance.
     
    Shawnigan’s first foray to HMC Europe was exceptional, with six students receiving awards. Ugo W. and Steven D. received the Presidential Cabinet Award, while honourable mentions went to Alan A. (NATO Committee), Shannon C. (Senate Judiciary Committee), Valentina H. (Senate Foreign Relations Committee), Markellan K. (Historical Committee – Cuban Missile Crisis).
     
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  • March

    Roboteers Rewarded at Regionals

    Shawnigan’s robotics program narrowly missed qualifying a team for the VEX World Championships, but still collected some impressive awards at the Regional Championships hosted by Brentwood College School last weekend. The School sent two teams to the event, and both posted what robotics instructor Dr. Ed Taylor called “amazing results” and brought home trophies.
     
    The team of Kaho H., Eric H., Zoe C., Christian W., and John P. won a Judges Award, which recognizes attributes judges feel are deserving of special recognition. The judges commented that the team members were "very organized with their time management and had a clear understanding of the Engineering Design Process." The team made it to the quarter finals of the main competition.
     
    The team of Tony Z., Justin T., Bella Z., and Aaron N. won the Create Award, which recognizes “a creative engineering design solution to one or more of the challenges of the competition." The team made it to the semifinals of the main competition. 
     
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  • Shawnigan Celebrates Holi

    Shawnigan students enjoyed a joyous and colourful sendoff before Spring Break with a celebration of the Holi festival on Wednesday evening.
     
    Celebrated throughout India and around the world by members of the Indian diaspora, Holi has multiple meanings within the Hindu culture, including rejuvenation and the arrival of spring. Part of the celebration includes the tossing of coloured powder, and this was central to the event at Shawnigan on Wednesday, as hundreds of students gathered in the Quad to throw coloured powder at each other, creating a chaotic and exuberant rainbow.
     
    That was followed by a delectable Spirit Meal in Marion Hall, as the kitchen team treated students to an Indian feast including butter chicken, palak paneer curry, naan, papadum, rice, onion pakora, lentil daal, roasted cauliflower and green beans, and gujiya for dessert.

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  • Lessons from Moccasins

    Students learned valuable lessons and skills and came away with hand-crafted footwear following a weeks-long moccasin-making workshop run by Outdoor Education Instructor and Teacher Mr. Devin Ryan.
     
    Mr. Ryan has received direct instruction in leatherwork from an accomplished Annishnaabe artisan, and wanted to share those skills, and the appreciation that comes from learning them, with Shawnigan students.
     
    While Mr. Ryan was studying Outdoor Recreation, Parks and Tourism at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario, the university’s Indigenous student centre had an open-door policy and offered moccasin-making workshops with Helen Pelletier of the nearby Fort William First Nation. Through those workshops, Mr. Ryan learned leatherwork and how to bead, and most importantly, patience.
     
    “There are lots of lessons to be learned from perseverance,” he said.
     
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  • Spanish 12 Fiesta

    Spanish 12 students capped off a chapter about recipes by preparing several food items from Spain and Latin America in a special event hosted by Señora Andrea Carballo last Friday.
     
    After studying several recipes from Spanish-speaking countries, the students chose four to make, then used their lunch break and Spanish class period to travel to Señora Carballo’s home off campus to create the foods.
     
    The selections included pupusas, a Salvadoran tortilla filled with beans and cheese (and meat, for the non-vegetarians); guacamole, a popular avocado-based dip that originated in Mexico; and tortillas españolas, a Spanish omelette made with eggs and potatoes. For dessert, the students made plátanos en tentación – plantains caramelized with cinnamon and sugar.
     
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  • February

    A Rewarding Deans' Dinner

    A longstanding tradition at Shawnigan, Deans' Dinner returned to the School on Tuesday, celebrating some of our top students with a special evening in the Hyde-Lay Pavilion.
     
    Historically, Deans' Dinner has been held after each assessment period to recognize students who received the top scores in terms of effort. Over the years, so many students became eligible for the criteria that the event became less extraordinary. The last time it was held, two years ago, more students attended the dinner than didn’t. Mrs. Kirsi Lupton, Academic Dean (Junior Years) noted that the dinner “fizzled out.”
     
    Recalling how special Deans' Dinner has been in the past, students pushed for its return. Earlier this year, Academic Prefect Olivia C. and the Academic Captains came forward with a proposal to bring back the event.
     
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  • Courtroom Drama: Law 12 Mock Trials

    Students in Law 12 went to court this week in a series of mock trials designed to give them something close to first-hand experience of the legal system.
     
    Four different classes all tried the same made-up case involving multiple faculty members: the attempted murder of Mr. Galen Loiselle by Mr. Tom Lupton, with several other teachers (played by students) called as witnesses. The real Mr. Loiselle teaches the Law 12 course and has been using the same case for a few years, providing a unique way for the students to engage with the course work.
     
    “It’s fun for the students to play as their teachers,” noted Celeste C., who served on the jury for one of the mock trials.
     
    Although the case was entirely fictional and the students took some dramatic liberties in the portrayals of faculty members, the mock trial was taken seriously and served as an excellent learning opportunity.
     
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  • "Chicago" Dazzles!

    An outstanding cast and crew, and support from some excellent staff members, helped make a dream come true for Mr. Sal Interlandi with the staging of this year’s School musical: Chicago (Teen Edition) with a three-night and one-afternoon run at Victoria’s McPherson Playhouse.
     
    “It’s such a great show,” said Mr. Interlandi, theatre teacher and director of the musical. “When I interviewed for the job here and they asked me what shows I wanted to do, I said it was one of my favourite shows. It’s always been a show I wanted to do.”
     
    Written in 1975, Chicago was based on a stage play from 1926. It has become a staple on Broadway and is the longest running current show there. It also became a movie in 2002 that won Best Picture at the 2003 Academy Awards.
     
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  • Ski Week Reaches New Heights

    Shawnigan’s 52nd Ski Week was the biggest ever, and featured the return of one of the most exciting traditions – after a year’s absence – in the annual excursion.
     
    The 515 students who made the trip to Manning Park were 35 more than the previous record, Student Life Coordinator Ms. Katrina Cholack noted. Some students who may have opted out in the past – like Grade 12s with academic or university application responsibilities, or injured students who wouldn’t be able to fully participate – still chose to join the festivities this year.
     
    “Everyone wanted to come,” she said. “When you have buy-in from everyone, the feeling is different.”
     
    It didn’t hurt that the weather was perfect; skies were blue all week, and although it was cold, no one suffered from it.
     
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  • February Sports Update

    From Shawnigan Lake to Vancouver, Ottawa and Portland, Shawnigan’s athletes have been storming across the continent in recent months, with great results to report, while also preparing for some big upcoming championships.
     
    ICE HOCKEY
     
    For a long time this season, Shawnigan’s U18 Prep girls’ ice hockey team was hanging around the middle of the CSSHL standings. For the most part, though, that was because the team had played significantly fewer games than most of their rivals. After a busy January, Shawnigan has caught up to the rest of the league, and now sits third in the standings with a strong record of 16 wins and nine losses.
     
    In early January, Shawnigan attended the University of Ottawa Gee-Gees Showcase Tournament, where they faced off against top U22 teams from across Canada. The team went 3-0 in pool play before bowing out in the playoffs.
     
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  • Frankenstein on Trial: AP Literature 12 Brings the Courtroom to Life

    Mitchell Hall was transformed into a courtroom last week as Ms. Jennifer Manuel’s AP Literature 12 class held a landmark mock trial for one of literature’s most famous and controversial figures: Dr. Victor Frankenstein. But justice was not satisfied with just one case – his infamous Creature also stood trial in what became a riveting legal showdown filled with moral debate, philosophical wrestling, and dramatic oratory worthy of any real-world court.
     
    The Frankenstein Trial was the culmination of weeks of preparation. Over the Christmas holidays, students read Frankenstein knowing in advance which legal team they would join – either prosecution or defence – for one of two trials:
     
    • 1. The Trial of Dr. Victor Frankenstein – Was he legally responsible for the deaths caused by his creation?
    • 2. The Trial of the Creature – Was the Creature guilty of murder, or was he merely the tragic victim of abandonment?
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  • January

    Holocaust Remembrance Day

    Shawnigan observed International Holocaust Remembrance Day with a Chapel service last Saturday, centred around a moving message from the daughter of two members of the Dutch Resistance during the Second World War.
     
    International Holocaust Remembrance Day is marked each year on January 27, the date of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp, where more than 1.1 million people were murdered by the Nazis, including approximately 960,000 Jews. Around 6 million Jews were killed in the Holocaust, along with several million other victims. This year’s International Holocaust Remembrance Day marked 80 years since Auschwitz was liberated in January 1945.
     
    “The Holocaust was a time when millions of Jews, and other groups, were murdered just because of who they were,” Shawnigan Chaplain Rev. Ruth Dantzer told the students. “The Nazis tried to eliminate those they deemed as ‘inferior.’
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  • Kapow! Introducing Shawmics!

    The age-old question – DC or Marvel? – has been answered, and there’s a surprise winner.
     
    Introducing Shawmics, Shawnigan’s entry into the culture of comic books, and the brainchild of JEDI Prefect Ivana W. Ivana was trying to come up with ways to make the graphics the School uses for cultural and education purposes more creative and relevant to the Shawnigan experience.
     
    “We wanted to make something funny and educational that also promotes issues and diversity while showcasing student artists,” Ivana explained.
     
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  • Awards and a Provincials Berth for Roboteers

    Two teams from Shawnigan’s robotics program have qualified for the provincial championships this March with a chance to earn berths at the 2025 world championships in May.
     
    The teams earned their provincials berths in different fashions last weekend at an event hosted by Claremont Secondary School in Victoria. The team of Tony Z., Justin T., Bella Z. and Aaron N. qualified by winning the skills championship, while the team of Kaho H., Zoe C., Eric H., John P. and Christian W. qualified by making the tournament final, although they ultimately lost and finished as runners-up.
     
    In the skills championship, robots work alone for two separate two-minute slots: the first is autonomous and the second is driver-controlled. The team of Tony, Justin, Bella and Aaron had the highest combined score over their two slots. That team also won the “Amaze” award presented by the judges for their innovative design and engineering process. The team of Kaho, Zoe, Eric, John and Christian also had an impressive showing in skills, placing third overall.
     
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  • Taking a Shot at Biathlon

    The Beyond the Gates program is designed to take students out of the classroom and beyond campus to experience places they have never been before and activities they have never tried before. This past Monday, the Grade 9s in the program travelled north to Mount Washington to try biathlon – a combination of cross-country skiing and rifle shooting – and for the vast majority of students, it fit the bill ideally.
     
    According to Shawnigan intern Ms. Kelsey McGaw, who led the trip, some of the students didn’t even know biathlon existed and were thrilled to discover a new sport. Virtually everyone had cross-country skied previously – many at Ski Week when they were in Grade 8 – but few had tried the skate-skiing style they employed at Mount Washington, instead being more familiar with the classic style.
     
    Although Maya B. had tried biathlon while growing up in the Yukon, she had never attempted skate skiing until Monday. “I really enjoyed the experience, and it was nice to talk to people I hadn’t gotten the chance to interact with before. I think it was very successful. Everyone had a lot of fun, and even though we weren’t the best at every aspect of it, everyone did their best.”
     
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  • Inside the Tour Guide Experience

    Campus tours are a highlight of the admissions process at Shawnigan; not just for the prospective students and families who take part, but for the current students who conduct the tours and cherish the opportunity to share their love of the School with visitors.
     
    Hazel P. has been part of the tour guide program for three years, and calls it “one of the most rewarding and fulfilling experiences of my time here.”
     
    “The campus tours program has given me the opportunity to connect with prospective students and their families, share my love for the School, and give them a glimpse into what makes Shawnigan such a special place to be,” she said.
     
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  • Lights! Camera! Innovation!

    Improvements over the last two years to the Hugh Wilkinson Theatre funded by C.A.S.E. (Communications, Arts, Sciences and Entrepreneurship) and the Bradley Family Foundation are helping Shawnigan take this year’s school musical – Chicago (Teen Edition) – to the McPherson Playhouse stage.
     
    Two years ago, C.A.S.E. funded the purchase of 16 state-of-the-art wireless microphone sets, the same model used by the professionals at the McPherson Playhouse. The mics, which were also used during last year’s musical, Grease, allow the students to sing at the same levels they will be singing in the final production.
     
    Last summer, C.A.S.E. provided funding for a renovation of the production booth at the back of the Wilkinson Theatre. Until last summer, all the equipment was in one end of the booth, and the students working there were virtually on top of one another. Now they can work in a more professional environment, similar to that of the McPherson Playhouse.
     
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  • Art Monsters!

    What happens when you combine the wild imaginations of kindergarten and Grade 1 students with the nascent sculpting skills of Grade 11 art students?
     
    The answer: a bunch of little monsters.
     
    In fall 2024, right around Halloween, Ms. Annilee Guy’s Grade 11 art students collaborated with the kindergarten/Grade 1 class at nearby École Cobble Hill Elementary – which includes Ms. Guy’s son, Callum – on a fun project. The elementary students all drew monsters, then passed their drawings on to the Shawnigan students, who re-created those monsters in clay and painted them, then gave the final products back to the kids who drew them.
     
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  • Bruce-Lockhart Fellowship Update

    The Bruce-Lockhart Fellowship for Academic Excellence was launched in 2021 with the intention of shedding light on aspects of academics that Shawnigan may not have previously explored, creating opportunities for students, teachers, and the rest of the Shawnigan community.
     
    The current Bruce-Lockhart fellow, Mr. Mark Henry, is focusing his efforts on increasing awareness and incorporation of the Harkness learning method first in the social studies department and then in Shawnigan’s broader academic structure as a way to adapt to the rise of artificial intelligence.
     
    Related to the Socratic method – which has stood the test of time for nearly 2,500 years – the Harkness method is discussion-based, and encourages critical thinking, empathy and collaboration. It has been adopted by many private schools, where its effectiveness is increased by smaller class sizes. In the age of AI, says Mr. Henry, it helps preserve a “truly human education, which aligns with the goals of the School and the social studies department.”
     
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We acknowledge with respect the Coast Salish Peoples on whose traditional lands and waterways we live, learn and play. We are grateful for the opportunity to share in this beautiful region, and we aspire to healthy and respectful relationships with those who have lived on and cared for these lands for millennia.