Massachusetts
Medford teen wins, South Coast fares well in Miss Massachusetts’ Outstanding Teen 2022 in Westport
WESTPORT — Jenna McLaughlin of Medford, a 17-year-old junior at The Cambridge Matignon Institution, was called Miss Massachusetts’ Superior Teenager 2022. The 22nd yearly competitors was held Sunday April 10th at White’s of Westport. 10 prospects from throughout the Republic contended for the title and also over $6,700 was granted to the prospects in scholarships. Tess O’Riordan of Canton, the outward bound titleholder, crowned her follower prior to a target market of 250 guests.
McLaughlin, that contended as Miss Boston’s Superior Teenager, will certainly contend at the Beauty queen’s Superior Teenager competitors in August. As Miss Massachusetts’ Superior Teenager, she will certainly get $3,000 in scholarships and also different honors and also presents from competitors enrollers. At the nationwide competitors, she will certainly have the chance to contend for hundreds of bucks a lot more. McLaughlin will certainly devote her year of solution to her individual Social Influence Campaign, “With Each Other We Stand: Motivating Generosity and also Willpower in the Future Generation of Leaders”. Jenna is a released writer of guide “Roxanne Decides” which is a youngsters’s publication regarding intimidation, team effort, and also empowerment. “Utilizing my publication “Roxanne Decides”, I will certainly proceed spreading my message of compassion, compassion, and also empowerment with trainees throughout the Republic.” Along with the $3000 scholarship for positioning initially, she got an extra $100 scholarship for winning the Total Ability Honor. She will certainly additionally advertise the Beauty queen’s Superior Teenager’s nationwide system, The Beauty queen Structure which increases scholarship cash for girls ages 13-26 that join neighborhood, state, and also nationwide competitors. At the state competitors, the 10 prospects jointly elevated almost $2,000 for The Beauty Queen Structure.
At The Cambridge Matignon Institution, Jenna belongs to the National Honor, the Headmaster’s Checklist, is two-time recipient of the Spanish Quality Honor, and also the Academic Scholarship Advantage Honor for all 3 years of senior high school. She preserves a 4.0 grade point average and also is registered in a number of honors degree courses. She is the creator of the Ladies’ Empowerment Program, offers on the college’s simulated test group and also is the head scientist of the Cambridge Matignon Yard Club. An established pianist, vocalist, and also songwriter, she has additionally had a lead duty in a local commercial, acted together with Chris Evans in the television collection Safeguarding Jacob, and also has actually carried out in several music theater manufacturings in the Greater Boston location. Her future strategies are to go to university and also regulation college and also end up being a criminal regulation lawyer. She is the little girl of John and also Janice McLaughlin of Medford. For the ability part of the competitors, she executed a singing to “The golden state Dreamin”.
The Miss Massachusetts’ Superior Teenager competitors consists of young adults from ages 13 to 18. Various other champions got scholarship honors and also a plaque. They consisted of:
Initial runner-up was Na’Shajia Monteiro, 15, of New Bedford. A student at Old Rochester Regional Senior high school she contended as Miss Lakeville’s Superior Teenager. She got a scholarship of $1000 and also was the recipient of the $100 Eveningwear/On-Stage Concern honor. Na’Shajia was additionally the victor of the Contest Earth’s Online Individuals’s Option Honor. She got fifty percent of the cash she elevated for an overall of $309. For the month leading up to the competitors, citizens might select their favored prospect and also elect her online to be qualified for this scholarship honor.
2nd runner-up and also the recipient of a $750 scholarship was Hannah Lima, 17, of Dartmouth, a junior at Dartmouth Senior high school and also a twin registration trainee at Bristol Neighborhood University. She was the recipient of the Millie Perry Social Work Honor in the quantity of $250. This honor was evaluated by an outdoors panel and also was called in honor of the late mom of the State Teenager Supervisor Donna Perry Klamkin. It was moneyed by a number of previous Miss Massachusetts’ Superior Teenager State titleholders. She additionally got a $250 scholarship as the victor of the Scholastic Honor. She contended as Miss New Bedford’s Superior Teenager.
The 3rd runner-up was Miss Worcester Area’s Superior Teenager Emma Gibney that got a $500 scholarship. She is a 16-year-old junior at New Bedford Secondary School and also was additionally elected by her peers as the victor of the Spirit of MMAOTeen.
4th runner-up was Laila Hosnander, a 14-year-old 8th quality trainee Wilbraham Intermediate school. She stays in Hampden and also was granted a $250 scholarship. Laila was additionally the victor of a $100 scholarship as the Leading Charity Event for the Beauty Queen Structure. She elevated an overall of $720 for this scholarship structure. She contended as Miss Western Massachusetts’ Superior Teenager.
An added honor recipient was:
Mia Mitchell, 17, of Kingston is a junior at Silver Lake Regional Secondary School and also was the Marketing Honor victor and also got a $100 scholarship. She is the present Miss Bristol Area’s Superior Teenager.
The various other prospects consisted of:
Erica Parks, 15, of North Andover, is a student at North Andover Secondary School. She contended an At Big Prospect.
Summertime Raimondo, 15, of Chicopee, is a student at Stoneleigh-Burnham Institution. She contended as an At Big Prospect.
Summertime Skye Ramos, 16, of Fairhaven, is a junior at Fairhaven Senior high school. She contended as an At Big Prospect.
Jaime St. Onge, 16, of Acushnet, is a student at Fairhaven Senior high school. She contended as Miss Freetown’s Superior Teenager.
Massachusetts
Residents displaced after fire at a group home for people with disabilities
Residents were displaced after a fire at a group home for individuals with disabilities in Groveland, Massachusetts on Saturday afternoon.
Groveland Fire responded to a fire alarm activation on 8 View Hill Road at around 12:15 p.m.
Authorities say they found smoke and fire coming from the basement when they arrived.
Residents and staff had evacuated the building when the fire department arrived, according to authorities.
There were no injuries reported.
The cause of the fire remains under investigation but it appears to be accidental.
Massachusetts
Massachusetts Catholic school expands with classic-inspired building
CNA Staff, Dec 28, 2024 / 06:00 am
A group of home schooling moms in Massachusetts banded together more than a decade ago with a vision: a classical Catholic school for their children centered on Christ.
St. Benedict Classical Academy, which began in 2013 with 25 students, has since grown to more than 300 and until recently was operating out of a humble schoolhouse in Natick, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston.
But on Dec. 2, St. Benedict Classical Academy (SBCA) opened its new campus — a $20 million classical-inspired structure that the headmaster, Jay Boren, said is designed to “lift the hearts and minds of all who enter it to the contemplation of God.”
“Architecture is the first teacher of the student, so it was very important to our community that the new schoolhouse ‘teach’ the student the importance of what they do each day,” Boren told CNA.
The headmaster sees classical architecture as “the best-suited design to articulate the truths of God.”
The building was designed by architect Nic Charbonneau, director of the Sacred Architecture Studio, a group that for the last quarter-century has aimed to promote a return to the sacred in architecture by learning from the richness of ecclesiastical history.
“As our architect, Nic Charbonneau says, ‘Classicism is a form of human art which is most deeply in touch with divinity and uncreated truths, through the lens of the human mind, as it seeks understanding of creation,’” Boren said.
“Beauty and truth are inseparable — they are two sides of the same face,” Boren explained. “As the students seek to know the truth in their studies it is only fitting that they do it in a building whose beauty turns their minds to God.”
Growing through community
It’s no small effort to build a school that lifts the hearts of students and teachers to the contemplation of God.
But St. Benedict’s passionate community of families, alumni parents, and supporters around the world all came together to fund the undertaking.
“Both current community members as well as friends of SBCA spanning the globe have stepped up financially in truly humbling, awe-inspiring ways,” Boren said, noting that nearly 100% of parents have given to St. Benedict’s annual fund.
Families don’t just give their treasure to ensure their children attend St. Benedict’s — they also put in time, support, and gas money.
Families commute from more than 40 towns to attend St. Benedict’s, sometimes coming across state lines.
When asked what contributed to the school’s growth over the years, Boren cited the enthusiasm of parents as well as the success of students and graduates.
(Story continues below)
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“It is very clear that the parents of MetroWest Boston are looking for a school focused on faith, intellect, and character and given how consistently SBCA has delivered on all those fronts for 12 years, we only see the interest continuing to rise,” he said.
But it’s not only the mission — it’s also the people.
“From the moment it was conceived of, SBCA has been a school made up of people who see this place and the work it takes to bring it to fruition as the Lord’s work,” Boren said. “This means that there is little our community will not do to ensure its success — and with great joy to boot!”
Boren credits the hard work of parents early on in the school’s founding — a close involvement that continues today.
“In the early days, parents did herculean work to ensure SBCA’s success — authoring our very mission statement, recruiting board members and faculty and even filling in staffing gaps,” he continued. “They went so far as to support student supervision during lunch and recess to ensure faculty got the breaks and planning time they needed in the first three years we were open.”
Boren said that this “SBCA tradition” of strong support for faculty still continues today.
“No detail is too small,” he said, noting that on the first Friday of every month, families “bring in a parade of treats and snacks, our cherished ‘first Friday treats,’ just to give the whole team a little boost.”
But that’s not the only SBCA tradition. Families also jump in to support teachers and staff when their families grow.
“Another beloved tradition is that each time a faculty member has a new baby, they are showered with meals for weeks,” Boren said.
Teachers and staff also go above and beyond.
“On their end of things, faculty reciprocate freely, going above and beyond to attend to their own students as well as frequently volunteering to coach, lead enrichment activities after school or just offering a helping hand to [a] student or parent that needs some extra encouragement,” Boren said.
Building saints for heaven
At St. Benedict’s, the goal is to make saints and citizens.
When asked how Catholic identity is central to St. Benedict’s, Boren responded: “In short, we are here to build scholars for our republic and saints for heaven.”
“Our most important, core goal, is to help each student advance on their journey to heaven while they are with us,” he continued. “All else flows from our joy in this work, all else is inspired by our total commitment to reaching this high bar, each day.”
SBCA keeps Christ at the center through a variety of practical ways, from weekly Mass to monthly adoration and confession, as well as daily theology classes. For younger students, SBCA offers Catechesis of the Good Shepherd — a Montessori-inspired theology program — for its early learning, pre-kindergarten program.
“Our primary identity as an institution is our Catholicism,” Boren explained. “It is with immense joy that we embrace and do not take for granted the freedom our educators and school leaders have to place Christ at the center and the teachings of his holy Church at the forefront of all teaching and learning at SBCA.”
This involves “a rhythm of prayer, work, play in the daily life of the school,” the headmaster said.
St. Benedict’s brings together academic rigor with its “primary identity” as a Catholic institution. As a classical K–8, it follows the grammar and logic phases of a classical education.
“If we always begin with prayer, then invite full focus on calm, orderly work, and afterwards provide open-ended time for true play — not facilitated activities but true playtime outdoors, in nature, supervised but not micromanaged — we find that our broad array of students are able to reach for the high bar we set,” Boren said.
St. Benedict’s also prioritizes creating “a culture of vocations” through inviting religious and priests to visit and speak with students, Boren explained.
But every day, mission-oriented teachers “provide a living witness” of prayer and faith to students at St. Benedict’s.
“Children notice the attitude and behaviors of the adults around them, and we have a team who are all aligned in striving ardently to be as close to God as possible,” Boren said.
Teachers and staff “constantly weave the teachings of Our Lord and his Church into our approach to forming our students’ characters and intellects,” Boren noted.
“In every academic subject, especially art and music, we are free to explore Christ’s role and influence on any given age, and incorporate the truth about God’s role in inspiring so many great thinkers, makers, and doers in every age,” Boren continued.
“This stocks our students’ memories and imaginations with living, breathing examples of the great adventure it is to seek and follow Christ!” Boren said.
Even as the curriculum, teachers, and staff are centered on Christ, the building itself is designed to influence students’ imaginations and raise them to Christ.
“We wanted a beautiful classical school that would articulate to the world through its beauty the important work going on in the classrooms,” Boren said.
“It stands as a testament to all who pass that we can still build beautiful things and the human search for the good, true, and beautiful never ends.”
Massachusetts
Homelessness climbs more than 50% in Massachusetts as businesses leave Brockton for safety concerns
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