Monday, December 16, 2013

South Scholar Athlete of the Week: Mary Glenn Waldrop, MBHS



al.com named MBHS senior Mary Glenn Waldrop the South Scholar Athlete of the Week. Mary Glenn has a 3.88 GPA and scored a 32 on the ACT. She is a member of National Honor Society, Spanish Honor Society, a third year member of Key Club and member and officer in Venture Crew 2010. She has completed the “Triple Crown” of high adventure scouting achievement. She is a fourth year member of the MBHS Youth Legislature Delegation and attended the 2012 Leadership for Birmingham Civil Rights Institute “Teen Summit.”
Athletic highlights: Mary Glenn has competed in 6A All-State javelin the last two years (2012 & 2013), she placed second in 6A state of Alabama Outdoor Track & Field Championship in 2013, the MBHS Girls won runner-Up 2013 Outdoor State Championship. In javelin, she also placed third in 6A state of Alabama Outdoor Track & Field Championship 2012. The MBHS Girls won second place in 2012 Outdoor State Championship. In shot put, she placed sixth in 6A State of Alabama Indoor Track Championship in 2013 and was the top scorer for the girls 6A Area. The MBHS Girls Indoor Track Team also won 2013 State Championship.
for the full article click here.
from an al.com article by By Leah Ingram Eagle 
on December 16, 2013 10:01 a.m.


Thursday, November 14, 2013

Easing the Transition (from Over the Mountain Journal online at www.otmj.com)


Easing the Transition
 November 12, 2013  

By Taylor Burgess
Over the Mountain Journal intern

For Skip Taylor, a job coach in the Turning Points transition program, finding daily motivation is far from difficult.

“Each morning, it takes me about two seconds to get over myself,” Taylor said. “I work with people who I’ve never heard complain, and never will.”

The people with whom Taylor works are eight students with disabilities—four from Mountain Brook City Schools and four from Homewood City Schools—who have completed high school and received graduation certificates but can remain in the school system until they are 21 years old. Turning Points, a program created by Mountain Brook Schools in collaboration with Samford University, works to ease their transition into the workforce or higher education.

While in the program, students spend much of their time at Samford University, where they attend classes to learn money management and other practical skills as well as work at jobs under the supervision of Taylor and other Turning Points staff members.

Taylor, who grew up in Homewood on Saulter Road, adjacent to the Samford campus, said he sees Samford as the ideal location for the program.

“Students on campus have been very open and welcoming to us,” Taylor said. “When students notice us and engage and embrace us, there’s synergy created.”

Three days a week, Turning Points students gather in the morning at Samford’s Orlean Bullard Beeson School of Education.

“We started at two days a week, but we’re trying to get to five,” Taylor said. “Samford is extremely committed to what we’re doing.”

The students meet briefly in the classroom before going to their jobs.

Before leaving the classroom, the students are joined by Wendy Betsch, the program’s transition coordinator, who usually enters the room to enthusiastic greetings from students.

“She’s like a rock star to these kids when she walks in,” Taylor said.

From the education building, the students walk to two on-campus job sites, one in the cafeteria and the other in the university bookstore.

“The challenge is that even though they’ve all graduated, they’re at different skill levels. How do you meet all the needs?” Betsch said. “We match students’ skill sets with different job sites so they can do work that will best benefit them.”

In the past, Turning Points students have also worked in the university mailroom and stadium field house, Betsch said.

The students are diligent in their work and know what is expected of them, staff members said.

Student Kathryn Henckell, on entering the bookstore, walks directly to the manager’s office to receive her assignment—placing barcode stickers on water bottles.

Betsch said she believes the students, like Henckell, should be responsible.

“We want them to look at it as a real job,” she said. “They should come in, find the manager and check in, like they would anywhere else.”

Betsch also stresses the importance of job sites with management that supports Turning Points and is willing to work with the students at their skill levels.

In the cafeteria, students work other jobs. Betts Colquitt wipes dust from windowsills, while Darryl Stephens sweeps the floor of food and trash from the cafeteria’s most recent meal.

Colquitt has held other food service jobs outside of the program and so is already familiar with many of her cafeteria duties.

Betsch said she believes jobs like these are crucial for the students’ transition process because they use skills that help them develop.

“When they sweep or clean the windowsills, they’re focused and can pay attention to detail,” she said. “Also, repetitive teaching is good for students with disabilities.”

Taylor, supervising the cafeteria students, does repetitive work of his own, filling out detailed progress reports that carefully track each student’s morning progress at his or her work site. However, he works with as much verve as the students around him while explaining how he discovered his passion for the program.

“I’ve been working with special ability kids for over 10 years. I had been looking for a career change and ended up working with UCP (United Cerebral Palsy),” he said..

Then he got a call this summer asking him to join Turning Points.

“I thought, ‘This is the coolest thing I’ve ever heard of,’” he said.

Taylor said he had never seen an equivalent program in other school systems, much less one also working in partnership with a university.

Betsch said she, too, thinks the program is unique and regrets that other school systems can’t offer support to disabled students who have graduated.

“How do they assimilate into a family situation when they graduate? Without skills and assistance, many of these students will just end up back at home,” Betsch said.

To prevent this, students not only work campus jobs but in the afternoon also meet with speech therapists, train in other social skills, such as appropriate work dress, and exercise.

To further aid the students’ transition, Betsch and Taylor said they hope to see Turning Points expand.

“For the future, maybe, we’d like to give the students a dorm room to live in to prepare them for living in real life,” Betsch said. “The problem is that when students age out of the school system, they have nothing to support them anymore, and it’s rare for employers to grab them.”

Betsch said she hopes that continuing to train students in necessary skills through expanding programs will give students a better chance.

Taylor said he remains confident that these skills are benefiting Turning Points students in tangible ways.

“Some businessmen bring clients into California Pizza Kitchen, where Betts [Colquitt] works, just for her alone,” he said.

Taylor said programs for disabled students have come a long way since he was a student himself.

“When I was a junior in high school, a girl who was a quadriplegic, sat in the front of my class,” he said. “Nobody helped her, and I wish someone had. Now, there are peer helpers for students in Mountain Brook and Homewood schools.”

While sweeping, Stephens finds a bright red toothpick. He stops working for a moment and brings it to Taylor, who takes the find with a smile and places it on the table next to the progress reports.

“People who were on the outside before because of their disabilities feel good because they have a job,” Taylor said. “With our students, there is no black or white, or cool or uncool—they never complain, and they always show up.”

For more information about Turning Points, contact Wendy Betsch at betschw@mtnbrook.k12.al.us.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Girls cross country takes 11th consecutive state championship


November 12, 2013 Courtesy of Village Living (villagelivingonline.com)

1113 Cross Country MBHS State Championship
Mountain Brook girls cross country took the 6A state title for the 11th consecutive year at the state meet on Nov. 9.
Jessica Molloy placed second individually at 18:11, and Frances Patrick placed eighth at 18:52.60.
The Spartan boys placed fourth in the state meet, missing third by only one point. 
The teams are coached by Greg Echols, Michael McGovern, Randy Stephens and Mike Abercrombie.
Girls state championship team members are: Mary Allison Anderson, Anna Balzli, Emily Bedell, Parker Cobbs, Ann Chapman Haynes, Anna Littleton, Ana McArdle, Jessica Molloy, Anna Grace Morgan, Frances Patrick, Bailey Peacock and Brantley Sanders.
Boys team members are: Michael Clark, David Creel, William Dodson, Russell Galloway, Stewart Hawk, Spencer Hinson, Davis Kelly, Duncan Manley, Griffin Riley, Alex Schultz, Marshall Smith and Drew Williams.


Monday, November 11, 2013

AL.COM: Will Brewster is South Scholar of the Week


al.com named Mountain Brook High School's Will Brewster the South Scholar of the Week on November 11, 2013.

See full story here.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Cross Country: Mountain Brook girls win Class 6A championships

In girls’  cross country, Mountain Brook, as expected, successfully defended its’ 6A girls title, scoring 44 points to defeat Hoover 44-95. Vestavia Hills was third with 118.  
See al.com story here.

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

MBHS volleyball advances to to state semifinals game
by MADOLINE MARKHAM October 29, 2013



The Mountain Brook High School volleyball team will play in the state Semi Finals game against Huntsville tonight at 5 p.m.

Mountain Brook, the No. 1 seed from the North, defeated the  No. 4 seed from the South, Baker High from Mobile, Wednesday morning in the Quarterfinals game.

The Elite 8 State Finals will take place at the Crossplex in Birmingham at the old State Fairgrounds located west of downtown.

The State Championship match is set for 10:30 a.m. Thursday morning.

Nine busloads, or about 490 students, from the high school have paid to attend Wednesday morning's game, and another 377 from the Junior High plan to attend, according to parent Kathy Webber.

Mountain Brook Sporting Goods printed 1,000 pink Spartan T-shirts for student fans to wear at the game.

Last week, the team qualified for Elite 8 State Finals for the first time since 1997 and then went on to win the North Super Regional for the first time.

The girls defeated Sparkman on Saturday in Huntsville to qualify for the State Finals. Later that day the team defeated Huntsville in the North Semis and then Bob Jones in the North Finals.


Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Mountain Brook HS, Vestavia Hills HS set to receive national awards
Posted: Thursday, October 17, 2013 4:49 PM EST Updated: Thursday, October 17, 2013 4:49 PM EST
By Shannon Delcambre -
BIRMINGHAM, AL -
Two rival football teams will meet soon on the football field, and both will get national recognition for their efforts in the fight against cancer.
Mountain Brook High School faces off against Vestavia Hills High School on the gridiron October 25, 2013, and both schools will be recognized during halftime for their successful Relay For Life fundraising events held earlier in 2013.
The Mountain Brook and Vestavia Hills Relay For Life events were both named top 5 youth events in the USA.
Both events raised $468,000 for the American Cancer Society.
Mountain Brook ranked #2 out of more than 150 high schools nationwide holding Relay For Life events.
Vestavia Hills was #4 nationally.

American Cancer Society executives will be at the upcoming game to present student leaders, advisors, principals of each school with awards for their service and dedication in the fight against cancer.

copyright 2013 by NBC 13, Birmingham, AL

Monday, October 21, 2013

Cross Country: Mountain Brook boys, girls win Husky Challenge meet

By Grant Shingleton | AL.com
 
 
Mountain Brook placed three runners in the top five in the boys race and had an individual winner in Jessica Molloy in the girls race as the Spartans won both events at the 22nd Annual Husky Challenge cross country meet, hosted by Hewitt-Trussville High School.
Mountain Brook won the boys race with a team score of 32, followed by Hoover (43), Hewitt-Trussville (74), John Carroll Catholic (92) and Oak Mountain (189).
Hewitt-Trussville's Austin Norwood was the boys individual winner in the 3,540-meter race, coming in with a time of 10:35.62. Justin Holt of John Carroll Catholic finished second at 10:35.97, followed by a trio of Mountain Brook runners, Davis Kelly (10:51.54), Marshall Smith (11:03.07) and Stewart Hawk (11:04.54).
Mountain Brook, which entered two squads in the girls race, won the event with a team score of 37 for the "Pink" team, which was led by Molloy, who finished with a time of 12:11.84. Mountain Brook Pink was followed by Hewitt-Trussville (65), Hoover (82), Mountain Brook (86) and John Carroll Catholic (98).
Hewitt-Trussville's Veronica Lyle finished second (12:26.12), followed by teammate Alexandra Pidcock (12:46.95) and Parker Cobbs of Mountain Brook Pink (12:52.45). Bella Restrepo (12:55.63) of John Carroll was fifth.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Hewitt-Trussville hoops one of 16 in inaugural Steel City Invitational

By Gary Lloyd
Mountain Brook High School is the host team for the inaugural Birmingham Tip Off Club’s Steel City Invitational, scheduled for Dec. 19-21 at Samford University’s Pete Hanna Center.
Being billed as the state’s premier high school basketball tournament, Hewitt-Trussville is one of the 16 teams that will be showcased. The schools included in the tournament have won eight state championships in the past four years. An estimated 20 future Division I student-athletes will participate.
Besides Hewitt-Trussville, participating teams include Mountain Brook, Wenonah, Gadsden City, Bob Jones, Hazel Green, Carver-Birmingham, St. Jude, Woodlawn, Madison Academy, Hueytown, Homewood, Ramsay, Sparkman, Leeds and Hoover.
Mountain Brook is the defending Class 6A champion. Wenonah has won three straight Class 5A state championships.
Birmingham Tip Off Club’s Chris Nix and Mountain Brook assistant coach Christian Schweers organized the event.

Hewitt-Trussville senior guard Jarvis Calhoun is committed to UAB.
file photo by Anna Malone
“With the most recent success of several Birmingham area schools, we saw a need for a premier basketball tournament to be hosted in our city,” Nix said. “I’m convinced this tournament will help grow the sport of basketball in Alabama and promote the basketball talent our state has to offer. We are very excited about the future of this tournament and the future of basketball in the state of Alabama.”
The Birmingham Tip Off Club has hired a professional sports management company, Knight Eady Sports Group, to coordinate the logistics involved in making the event a success.
“Having a professional sports management company involved will help us legitimize this event and separate ourselves from other high school basketball tournaments in the state,” Nix said.
Participating teams will play a minimum of three games and as many as four games in three days.
“A big part of the mission of the Birmingham Tip Off Club is to promote high school basketball in Alabama,” Nix said. “The Steel City Invitational will give us a unique opportunity to showcase the incredible basketball talent our state has to offer.”
For more information, email michael@steelcityhoops.com or visit www.steelcityhoops.com.
Contact Gary Lloyd at news@trussvilletribune.com and follow him on Twitter @GaryALloyd.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

High-energy Carr drives Mountain Brook

By Rubin E. Grant | preps@AL.com
on October 15, 2013 2:20 p.m.                   
 
 
 
Mountain Brook sophomore Sara Carr talks to Coach Haven O'Quinn during a game earlier this season. (Dennis Victory/preps@AL.com)
 
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- Apparently, no one told Sara Carr about the “middle child syndrome.”
According to an article on the EverydayFamily web site, “middle children often feel left out and invisible, a contrast from their older and younger siblings.”
“While older children get the benefits of all of the ‘firsts’ a child accomplishes, younger children benefit from the emotional impact of being the baby of the family, often being spoiled and coddled. Middle children, however, often feel as though they have nothing special that is just ‘theirs,’’’ the article states.
With two older brothers and two younger sisters, Carr falls smack dab in the middle of her siblings. But she’s anything but invisible. In fact, she’s a budding star on the Mountain Brook volleyball team — and she’s just a sophomore.
Listen to how Mountain Brook volleyball coach Haven O’Quinn gushingly describes Carr.
“My gosh, I could go on and on about her,” O’Quinn said. “She’s a natural born athlete. She’s got all the physical attributes and work ethic. She’s got a great vertical jump and a great reach. She’s just special. She’s our go-to player.”
A 5-foot-11 outside hitter, Carr was honorable mention All-State as a freshman. This season she leads the Spartans in kills with 379 while sporting a 33.2 hitting percentage. She also leads the team with 83 aces and is second on the team with 243 digs. She has 15 blocks.
Carr comes from an athletic family. Her dad, Dr. Gregg Carr, was a star linebacker in high school at Woodlawn and in college at Auburn, and played four seasons in the NFL with the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2008.
Her older brothers Evans (football and wrestling) and Jordan (lacrosse) played sports in high school. They had more to do with her becoming an athlete than her dad.
“My parents wanted us do some physical activity and when my brothers were outside playing, I’d go out there and play with them,” Sara Carr said. “Both of them inspired me to become an athlete.
“I started playing volleyball in the fifth grade, as early as I could.”
Her dad might not have been the primary influence on Carr becoming at athlete, but he assists with her mental approach.
“He’s always talking to me about things he’s observed and some of things his coaches used to say, and about being a leader,” Carr said.
Carr also plays basketball for Mountain Brook and can’t decide which sport she likes best. “It depends on the season,” she said.
Her future most likely is in volleyball and Carr knows it.
“I really want to play volleyball in college at Auburn, but it depends on if I get a scholarship,” Carr said.
O’Quinn has no doubts Carr will play volleyball in college somewhere, especially since Carr continues to make marked improvements every time she steps on the court.
“I was talking to (Mountain Brook athletic director) Terry Cooper and he said, ‘It’s amazing to me that you see her every couple of weeks and she’s gotten better,’” O’Quinn said. “She’s a smarter player than she was last year and she has more tools on the front line.”
Carr traces her improvement to summer workouts. O’Quinn challenged her players to get into better physical condition and become stronger. Carr took the challenge to heart.
“I’m pleased with how she pushed me,” Carr said. “I’ve improved my conditioning and that’s helped me play better.”
O’Quinn didn’t expect anything less from Carr, given how driven she is. When O’Quinn gives the team the weekend off, Carr drags her older brother out to the driveway to hit the ball with her.
“She’s a great competitor,” O’Quinn said. “When the whistle blows, she’s out there to kick butt. She likes to win and she likes to have fun. She’s our spark. Our team feeds off her energy.”
Mountain Brook entered this week with a 30-11 record and was ranked No. 5 in Class 6A. The Spartans will play in the Blaylock Tournament Friday and Saturday at Homewood.
Carr believes the Spartans can make a deep run in the state playoffs. The team has only one senior, Claire Gorman, but has a strong junior class, led by libero Julia Smith and middle blocker Abby Garrett.
“I’ve never been on a team with so much chemistry,” Carr said. “Everybody on the team is so close.
“From the beginning of the season, our goal has been to get to the state tournament. We all know we have the talent to get there, it’s just a matter of if we’re on at the time.”

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

SOUTH SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE WEEK: Mary Martha Grizzle, Mountain Brook High School

By Leah Ingram Eagle | leagle@al.com
on October 14, 2013 12:07 p.m.

Mary Martha Grizzle, Mountain Brook High School (Special to The News)
Year: Senior Sport: Tennis
Academic highlights: Mary Martha has a 3.5 GPA and scored a 30 on the ACT. She is a member of Key Club, FBLA and Outreach Club.
Athletic highlights: Mary Martha is a three year letterman for the Spartans varsity tennis team. They were 6A State Champions 2011 and 2012; 6A State Champion Runner Up 2013; she was #3 in singles (2013); #3 in State Champion-Doubles (2013); #6 in State Champion singles (2012) and #3 in Doubles (2012).
Where do you see your academic future? I am undecided of my college of choice, but I would like to study economics or business.
Where do you see your athletic future? If I do not play tennis for my college, I would love to be a part of an intramural team or club team.
Favorite subject: English, because I really enjoy reading and writing. I have had some great English teachers who have taught me the importance of effective writing.
What’s on your iPod? I like all different kinds of music from alternative to pop to rap and R&B. My music choice mainly depends on my mood at the moment.

Monday, October 14, 2013

Congratulations to the National Merit Commended Students at Mountain Brook High School



 
 
Front Row, (L-R):  Abbie Rodgers, Emily Bedell, Lottice Taylor

Second Row (L-R): Alan Dunn, Elizabeth Hymer, Caroline Leak, Herron Taylor, Will Jackson, Frank Phillips

Third Row (L-R): Cole Peck, Austin Garrett, John North, Matthew Weissman, Max Black

Not Pictured: Savanna Bryant, Madelyn Beatty

Thursday, October 10, 2013


Double amputee is a star on the football field

Posted: Oct 07, 2013 10:32 PM CDTUpdated: Oct 08, 2013 1:58 PM CDT


 
 
Ward Webb plays football for the Mountain Brook Junior Varsity team. An accident when he was young left him a double amputee. Source: WBRC video


MOUNTAIN BROOK, AL (WBRC) -
At first glance, number 55 on the Mountain Brook Junior Varsity football team may seem like a typical linebacker on the field. But after a closer look, anyone can see there's something very unique about Ward Webb.
"He's a double amputee and he's playing football," explained Webb's mother and number one fan, Marion Webb. She says her son has come a long way since he lost his legs.
Webb was just four years old when he was in an electrical accident and doctors amputated the bottom portion of both his legs. From a young age, Webb had to learn to use prosthetic legs and growing up it was a struggle.
"He would come and say 'Mom, I can't do this, I can't do this!' And I would say 'Yes you can! Let's just find a different way to do this.' And he did every time," Marion Webb added.
Webb says with his love for football matched by the support of his family, nothing was going to slow him down.
"All my life they've been helping me when I've been upset," said Webb.
Mountain Brook High School football coach Chris Yeager remembers the day Ward asked him to play.
"I was little bit apprehensive, but that was before I got to know him," Yeager said.
Yeager said it didn't take long for Ward to prove he could hold his own on the field.
"We tried to adapt things for him and he would always say, 'Coach, I can do this! I can do this!' And so we got used to that and he was like any other player," Yeager added.
Monday night, Webb took to the field with his teammates. He says he's grateful to be on the field. His coaches say they're lucky to have him on the team.
"He comes out here and he does what he does and he does it well. He is just such an inspiration to our whole team, our community, coaches, everybody," Coach Yeager said.
Webb says the prosthetic legs do break on him on occasion. He says he's working with a specialist who is developing a prosthetic leg that can withstand what Webb does on the field.
Copyright 2013 WBRC. All rights reserved

Monday, October 7, 2013

Football: Carroll leads Mountain Brook in 35-7 win over Carver

By Ben Cook | AL.com
on October 04, 2013 11:35 p.m.
 
Mountain Brook (3-3, 2-2) scored in every quarter and took a Class 6A, Region 6 victory over Carver (1-5, 0-4).

Jacob Carroll led the Spartans with 201 passing yards with two touchdowns and an interception, completing 15 of 23 passes, and rushed for 77 yards and two touchdowns on six carries. Gene Bromberg led Mountain Brook in rushing with 95 yards on 23 carries.  Buddy Pell led the Spartans defense with 10 tackles, while Carter Dukes and Austin Chapman each had an interception.
Montego Morris led Carver in rushing with 91 yards on 17 carries. Dacorian Bivens completed 9-of-20 passes for 100 yards but he was intercepted twice. Kelly Marsh had four catches for 53 yards.
Joshua Rice led the Carver defense with 12 tackles. Kevin McDaniels scored Carver's lone touchdown on a 70-yard interception return.

Carroll opened the scoring with an eight yard touchdown run with six minutes left in the first quarter, but Carver's McDaniels evened the score with his interception return for a score with a minute remaining in the first.   It was all Mountain Brook after that, with Pell scoring on a 4-yard run, and with twenty six seconds left in the half, Carroll connected on a 5-yard touchdown pass to Hunter Branch. Carroll rambled in for a score from 56 yards out in the third quarter, and tossed a 15-yard touchdown pass to Drew Odum in the final quarter.

Monday, September 23, 2013

Cross Country: Mountain Brook sweeps TCBY Invitational Class 4A-6A divisions

By Dennis Tymkiw | AL.com
on September 21, 2013 6:07 p.m.
 
 
 
TUSCALOOSA, Alabama - Davis Kelly and Jessica Molloy finished first in their respective races to lead the Mountain Brook boys and girls to wins in the TCBY Invitational at Munny Sokol Park in Tuscaloosa.
Kelly won the boys race with a time of 16:37.74, while Molloy took the girls race with a time of 19:33.23.
Mountain Brook placed five boys in the top nine finishers and had five girls finish in the top 11 places to easily take the wins.
The Spartans won the boys event with 28 points, followed by John Carroll Catholic with 57 and Hewitt-Trussville with 86. In the girls event, the Spartans finished with 26 points, followed by John Carroll with 68 and McGill-Toolen with 71.
TCBY INVITATIONAL
At Munny Sokol Park
BOYS
Team Standings: 1. Mountain Brook, 28; 2. John Carroll, 57; 3. Hewitt-Trussville, 86; 4. McGill-Toolen, 98; 5. Spain Park, 101; 6. Northridge, 193; 7. Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa, 196; 8. Paul Bryant, 233.
Individual Standings: 1. Davis Kelly, Mountain Brook, 16:37.74; 2. Justin Holt, John Carroll, 16:42.59; 3. Nick Simmons, Spain Park, 16:47.51; 4. Stewart Hawk, Mountain Brook, 16:56.96; 5. Rome Fiore, Spain Park, 16:59.50; 6. Marshall Smith, Mountain Brook, 17:02.43; 7. Austin Norwood, Hewitt-Trussville, 17:12.77; 8. Michael Clark, Mountain Brook, 17:15.43; 9. Drew Williams, Mountain Brook, 17:22.88; 10. Sami Harb, John Carroll, 17:26.23; 11. Russell Galloway, Mountain Brook, 17:31.82; 12. Will Nichols, John Carroll, 17:34.50; 13. Benjamin Knox, Hewitt-Trussville, 17:37.58; 14. Grainger Rathle, McGill-Toolen, 17:42.62; 15. Eric Johnson, John Carroll, 17:52.90.
Girls
Team Standings: 1. Mountain Brook, 26; 2. John Carroll, 68; 3. McGill-Toolen, 71; 4. Spain Park, 82; 5. Hewitt-Trussville, 111; 6. Tuscaloosa County, 193; 7. Hillcrest-Tuscaloosa, 209.
Individual Standings: 1. Jessica Molloy, Mountain Brook, 19:33.23; 2. Parker Cobbs, Mountain Brook, 19:45.70; 3. Bella Restrepo, John Carroll, 19:53.21; 4. Ebie Douglas, McGill-Toolen, 19:57.76; 5. Lauren Granier, John Carroll, 19:59.08; 6. Sailor Miles, St. James, 20:10.69; 7. Emily Bedell, Mountain Brook, 20:18.41; 8. Anna Grace Morgan, Mountain Brook, 20:22.20; 9. Grace Jensen, McGill-Toolen, 20:26.11; 10. Madeline Held, Spain Park, 20:36.11; 11. Helen Camp, Mountain Brook, 20:49.97; 12. Lauren Smith, Hewitt-Trussville, 20:50.23; 13. Ann Chapman Haynes, Mountain Brook, 20:51.30; 14. Grace Galvin, John Carroll, 21:03.59; 15. Allison Halperin, Spain Park, 21:07.04.

Friday, September 20, 2013


Mountain Brook High School
National Merit Semi-Finalists
 
 
 

Bottom Row, (L-R): Ben Garcia, Murray Manley, Anna Smith, Catherine Kinney, Chamblee Shufflebarger, Anne Peyton Baker, Maggie Selesky, Jessica Azrin
Second Row (L-R): Adelaide Cochran, Sarah Cain, Everette Dawkins, John Blum, Mary Nix Roberson, Daniel Bolus
Third Row: Olivia Burton, Makenzie Grant, Sam Cochran, Kary Reynolds, Eddy Yu
Fourth Row: Ben Jackson, Claire Gorman, Caroline Goolsby, Dani Diehl
 


Thursday, September 19, 2013

Mountain Brook residents strut their stuff during 'Fashions for the Foundation' runway show

 
 
 
fashion2.jpgMountain Brook Superintendent Dicky Barlow models during the Fashions for the Foundations runway show on September 10, 2013. (Ana Rodriguez/arodriguez@al.com)
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- Mountain Brook students, parents, teachers, principals and city leaders took to the stage on September 10th during the Schaeffer Eye Center Fashions for the Foundation runway show and lunch reception held at The Club. A total of 14 different Mountain Brook apparel merchants helped dress some of the area’s most recognizable figures, all to help benefit the Mountain Brook City Schools Foundation.

Tickets prices ranged from $50 per person to $800 for a table of eight.
The packed ballroom erupted with applause when Anne Womack, executive director of the Mountain Brook Schools Foundation; State Rep. Paul DeMarco, also a member of the Mountain Brook Chamber of Commerce; and Mountain Brook Superintendent Dicky Barlow strutted down the runway.

fashion3.jpgMountain Brook Superintendent Dicky Barlow poses with Mountain Brook High School Spartan Mascot during the Fashions for the Foundations runway show on September 10, 2013. (Ana Rodriguez/arodriguez@al.com)
Other notable participants — who modeled clothing from the apparel shops listed— included:
  • Crestline Elementary School Principal Laurie King—Pink Tulip
  • Mountain Brook High School Principal Amanda Hood—Town and Country
  • Brookwood Forest Elementary School Principal Nathan Pitner—Mountain High Outfitters
  • Mountain Brook City Councilman Bill Pritchard—Mobley and Sons
  • Cherokee Bend Elementary School Principal Betsy Bell—Macy’s Brookwood Village
Other participating merchants included:
  • Monkee’s of Mountain Brook in English Village
  • Snap Kids in Crestline Village
  • Mountain Brook Sporting Goods in Crestline Village
  • Pants Store in Crestline Village
  • Lingerie Shop in Mountain Brook Village
  • Laura Kathryn in Crestline Village
  • Village Sportswear in Mountain Brook Village
  • Marella in Mountain Brook Village
  • Harrisons in Mountain Brook Village
fashion1.jpgMountain Brook City Councilman Billy Pritchard models during the Fashions for the Foundations runway show on September 10, 2013. (Ana Rodriguez/arodriguez@al.com)
Since 1995, when the Mountain Brook City Schools Foundation first began, donors have helped commit nearly $5 million in grants to benefit all Mountain Brook City Schools.  The Foundation has helped ensure Mountain Brook schools remain at the forefront of technology-based learning, are up-to-date with books and magazines and excel in math studies through the funding of two math coaches to serve the city’s four elementary schools.

The show was produced by Haute Pink, presented by Schaeffer Eye Center and sponsored by the Mountain Brook Chamber of Commerce. NBC 13 “Daytime Alabama’’ co-host Wendy Garner served as the fashion show’s MC.

Mountain Brook Board of Ed. appoints Donald Clayton principal of Junior High





2012 Clayton.JPGDonald Clayton will now serve as principal of Mountain Brook Junior High School. (Mountain Brook Schools)
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- The Mountain Brook Board of Education this morning appointed Donald Clayton principal of Mountain Brook Junior High School.

Most recently, Clayton served as assistant principal of the school under the direction of Principal Amanda Hood. In July, the board appointed Hood principal of Mountain Brook High School.
Clayton will fill Hood’s previous role prepared with experience from several other roles including that of a teacher, coach, athletic director and assistant principal at Oak Mountain High School throughout a 10-year career.

According to a news release, Clayton worked with all academic-related, professional development, Professional Learning Communities and strategic planning matters during his time as assistant principal of MBJH.

“His commitment to quality and emphasis on relationships became apparent to all of us,” read the release.

In an email, Mountain Brook Superintendent Dicky Barlow said he is “confident” Clayton “will be able to lead Mountain Brook Junior High as it continues on its course to become an even better school.”

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

New Mountain Brook High Principal Has Ties to System

By Keysha Drexel
Journal editor



Amanda Hood isn’t wasting any time diving into her duties as the new principal at Mountain Brook High School.  Just eight days after the Mountain Brook Board of Education approved Superintendent Dickey Barlow’s recommendation to appoint Hood as the new principal at Mountain Brook High School in July, the 36-year-old was having lunch with the school’s custodial staff and gearing up for a new school year at a familiar place.

Hood replaces Vic Wilson, who took a job in early July as Hartselle city schools superintendent.
Hood served as principal at Mountain Brook Junior High during the 2012-2013 school year, but her connections to the school community run deeper than that.

Hood worked at the high school as the assistant of curriculum and instruction during the 2011-2012 school year and said being back on campus is a bit of a homecoming for her.

“That’s what I love about this school and this school system–there’s a sense of connectedness there, and it really is like a family,” she said.

And getting reacquainted with the school family is Hood’s top priority as she gets ready for the new school year, which starts on Aug. 19.

“Right now, it’s about reconnecting with the faculty and staff and parents and students,” she said. “Building those relationships is a huge priority for me.”

Hood said it’s important that everyone in the school community thinks of themselves as a team as education continues to change.

“It takes a village to make it work,” she said. “It takes our teachers, parents, our secretaries and custodians and lunchroom staff and everyone to build a place where anyone can come in and feel like they can grow every day.”

That teamwork is even more important now, Hood said, because the approach to educating students is changing.

“It used to be that education was more corporate–you had a teacher standing in front of the class lecturing. That’s shifting now.” she said.

The approach to education is moving to one that is more focused on individual learning styles, Hood said.  “We’re learning that what’s right for one child might not be right for the next student. We’re transitioning to a learning environment that looks at the needs of different people,” she said.
That shift means educators have to be vested in really knowing and understanding their students.
“As educators, it is so important that we understand our students and know what their goals are and what they need to reach those goals,” she said.

As principal, Hood said her main job is the same as that of everyone at the school.  “Our job is to do everything we can to build programs that give our students access to the tools they will need to be successful,” she said.

A native of Selma, Hood graduated from Hillcrest High School in Tuscaloosa and earned a bachelor’s degree from Troy State University.

“I always knew I wanted to be a teacher. I used to play school all the time growing up, and I never really considered doing anything else,” she said.  Her first teaching job was at Oak Mountain High School, where she taught math. After earning a master’s degree at the University of Montevallo, Hood worked as the assistant principal of curriculum and instruction at Spain Park High School in Hoover.

“While I was at Spain Park, I went back to Montevallo and got my educational specialist degree and then started working at Mountain Brook High School,” she said.

Hood said she feels blessed to work in the Mountain Brook school system.
“You can’t isolate just one thing that makes this a great school system,” she said. “We have great leadership, and they challenge themselves to stay on the cutting edge of education. We have unbelievable parent and community support, and our teachers are on the frontlines of all the good things happening in our schools.”

Hood said she hopes to continue to work with everyone in the school community to look forward and to make sure students are prepared for the future.  “We all have to dream big because we can’t predict what the world is going to look like in 10 years. We have to make sure our students are ready for what’s next,” she said.

Hood and her husband, Jerry, have four children ranging in age from 8 to 14. The family lives in Inverness.

Friday, July 19, 2013

Amanda Hood named MBHS principal

July 18, 2013

 

Amanda Hood has been named principal of Mountain Brook High School.
 
Amanda Hood has been named principal of Mountain Brook High School.
 
The Mountain Brook Board of Education has appointed Amanda Hood principal of Mountain Brook High School. Former Principal Vic Wilson was recently named superintendent of Hartselle City Schools.
The Board appointed Donald Clayton interim principal of Mountain Brook Junior High. Clayton served this past academic year as an assistant principal at Mountain Brook Junior High School.
Amanda Hood served as principal of Mountain Brook Junior High for the 2012-2013 school year. She previously served as an assistant principal at Mountain Brook High School.
Born and raised in Selma, Hood graduated from Hillcrest High School after her family relocated to Tuscaloosa. She attended Troy State University and received her Ed.S. in educational leadership at the University of Montevallo.

She taught math at Oak Mountain High School, where she coached cheerleading and established the Ambassador program. Hood served as assistant principal for curriculum and instruction at Spain Park High School before joining Mountain Brook Schools.

"We completed a thorough search, including interviewing a number of qualified candidates," said Mountain Brook superintendent Dicky Barlow. "We are confident Amanda is the right person for this job. Her experience and skills, along with her vision for education, will allow her to effectively lead the faculty and staff of our terrific high school."

Thursday, May 16, 2013


Hendrix and McCain Scholarship
Winners Announced
The Hendrix Scholarship Committee met yesterday and determined the winners of the Hendrix and McClain Scholarships for 2013-2014! These scholarships help defray the costs of tuition, out of state conferences and personal professional development opportunities.
The following people have won a Hendrix Scholarship up to $225.00!    CONGRATULATIONS!
Brookwood Forest: Carla Dudley, Caroline Peek, Debbie Rakes, Taajah Witherspoon
Cherokee Bend: Marsha Alexander, Ann Marie Corgill, Lee Ann Davidson
Crestline: Laura Butler, Jayne Euwer, Lauren Fowler, Amanda McClung, Janet Nelson
Mountain Brook Elementary: Shari Dorsett, Jennifer Harris, Jennifer Jinnette, Mandi Lybrand, Paige Slaughter
Mountain Brook Junior High: Suzan Brandt, Gary Mark Foster, Philip Holley, Micheal Holmes, Adam Johnson, Sara Anne Nelson, John Pledger, Geri Shadeed, Chad Sorrells, Susan Zana
Mountain Brook High: Martha Burns, Leah Kilfoyle, Megan O’Neill, Weslie Smith, Lauren Sullivan, Casey Truesdale
 
The following people were also selected for additional money through the Jan McCain Scholarships! Congratulations!
  1. Ann Marie Corgill – Cherokee Bend Elementary, $314.00
  2. Jennifer Harris – Mountain Brook Elementary, $235.00


 

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Mountain Brook secures third straight Class 6A girls state golf title

, May 14, 2013 6:11 p.m.
 
Mountain Brook's Meg McCalley helped the Spartans win the team title. (Todd Thompson/AL.com)
 
 
MUSCLE SHOALS, Alabama -- Coach Jackie Clayton said Mountain Brook’s third consecutive Class 6A girls golf title was the sweetest.  Unlike most coaches, who don’t like to compare teams and titles, Clayton had no problem explaining why the third championship is the most memorable.

“Because we had seniors this time,” Clayton said after watching Mountain Brook roll to a 14-shot victory over Auburn.

Mountain Brook shot 237 in the final round to finish with a 36-hole score of 461 on the Schoolmaster course at the Robert Trent Jones Golf Trail at the Shoals. Auburn shot 243 in the final round to finish at 475, while Fairhope used Virginia Green’s 68 to finish third at 479.

“It’s not hard to get them when they are hungry,” Clayton said. “They want to practice. As they get older, they get pulled in so many directions. It’s legitimate stuff. It’s hard to get them to practice sometimes. It’s things like, ‘Coach, we have two AP tests this week.’ It’s tough, but it’s a tribute them that they find a way to balance it.”

Tatum Jackson led a balanced Mountain Brook team, shooting 76 in the second round to finish tied for second with Prattville's Lee Ann Cahoon at 149. Carolyn McCalley (79) finished at 154, while Lane Proctor (82) was at 158. Meg McCalley shot 83 in the final round and finished at 168.
Proctor and Carolyn McCalley are the team’s seniors.

“It’s a great feeling,” Jackson said. “It’s especially cool because we have two seniors, and we have had the same team for the past three years. I’d say there was more pressure this year to win because we had some seniors.”

Friday, May 10, 2013

Mountain Brook Superintendent says 'what's right with our schools' is more than statistic-deep

  By Ana Rodriguez | arodriguez@al.com
on May 09, 2013 at 4:04 PM

CLIPS_BROOKWOOD_BARLOW_6126779.JPGDicky Barlow, superintendent of Mountain Brook Schools, talks to students in Heather Hutto's kindergarten class at Brookwood Forest Elementary School in 2009. (Birmingham News file)
 
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- Today, it was about more than just numbers and statistics.
“We try to look after the whole child,” said Dicky Barlow, Superintendent of Mountain Brook Schools during his speech at the quarterly luncheon of the Mountain Brook Chamber of Commerce this afternoon.
Barlow was on hand today at Park Lane to address the crowd about “What’s Right with Our Schools.”
Sharing that information, he said, would be like “sipping water from a fire hydrant,” because of the wealth of positive things he could share about Mountain Brook schools. The success, he added, the national-recognition the schools receive, all start with a shared mentality.
“We don’t say ‘I,”’ explained Barlow about everyone involved in the school system—from the Board of Education to principals, teachers, the PTO, and of course parents and students. “We say ‘we.”’
It’s a practice that has been at the heart of the school system for as long as he can remember, said Barlow, who’s been involved with city’s schools since 1996.
The group’s goals, said Barlow, have evolved over time—though success is always its driving force.
In 2007, while Barlow served as the principal of Mountain Brook High, administrators began to talk about their “ultimate goal” as a school system. Back then, their motto was to become a “world class school system.” Upon further discussion, however, the group agreed that it was about more than reaching a lofty ideal—it was about making every day a success. Every day, agreed those involved, should be: effective, challenging and engaging.
“We realized that if we did that every day,” said Barlow, “we would eventually become a world-class school system.”
State and national statistics—though Barlow views them as ineffective measures of success on their own, and should just be part of the picture—prove that through the everyday, they have succeeded.
Today, he shared the following numbers:
  • 96 percent of students (grades K-3) meet or exceed state early literacy standards
  • 97 to 100 percent of students (grades 3-8) meet or exceed state standards in reading and math
  • 99 percent of students (grades 5-7) meet or exceed state standards in science
The city’s high school students continue the trend
  • Currently, said Barlow, the high school offers more than 20 Advance Placement courses to students.
  • This past year, 986 students took AP tests
  • 89 percent of students earned a high enough scores to receive college credit for the course, compared to the national average of 58 percent
  • 29 National Merit Scholars this year helped the school tie a previous school record Students scored an average of 26.7 on the ACT, compared to the national average of 21.1
  • Students scored an average of 1864 on the SAT, compared to the national average of 1498
  • 98 percent of mountain brook high graduates go on to attend 4-year schools
What the numbers don't show, said Barlow, is the work that goes into earning those recognitions. They don't show the countless hours of community involvement, volunteer work and outreach the students are involved in; they don't show the hundreds of thousands of dollars the community raises each year to support their students; and they don't show the every day objectives of each institution valuing not only math and science, but the arts as well in creating a complete student.
But it's all part of the mix.
At the end of the day, said Barlow, every day is about making each and every student a success.
“What every parent wants first,” he said, “is that we care for their child.”