Thursday, December 13, 2012


State Autism Coordinator Visits Mountain Brook Schools' Turning Points Program
 
 
 
In photo from left to right: Anna McConnell, Mountain Brook Special Education Coordinator Shannon Mundy, Patricia Bryant (program SLP), and Cynthia Mayo (program coordinator/teacher).


 
 
Anna McConnell, MPH, MSW, Alabama Autism Coordinator visited Mountain Brook Schools' Turning Points Program, a program conducted by Mountain Brook Schools and Samford University to provide higher education and vocation opportunities to students transitioning from Mountain Brook Special Education Program to adulthood.  Turning Points is a model program for transition in Alabama.  

 

Friday, December 7, 2012

Mountain Brook students receive perfect scores on the SAT, ACT

Ana Rodriguez | arodriguez@al.com By Ana Rodriguez | arodriguez@al.com
on December 06, 2012 at 1:29 PM, updated December 06, 2012 at 1:30 PM
 
 
 
 
 
students2.png(Top left) Irene Zhang, (Bottom left) Miller Sisson, (Right) Sarah Grace Tucker. (Photos courtesy of Irene Zhang, Miller Sisson and Sarah Grace Tucker)
 
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- Mountain Brook City Schools have a reputation for repeatedly producing quality students. The latest testaments to that fact are three Mountain Brook High School seniors who went above and beyond on their college entrance exams receiving both perfect and near-perfect scores on both the SAT and the ACT.

Here's a bit more about each of them:
Miller Sisson
Sisson, a 17-year-old senior, scored a perfect score of 36 on the ACT and a near-perfect score of 2370 on the SAT, the highest being a 2400. According to the official ACT website, typically, only one percent of high school students across the country earn a perfect score on the test.
Sisson said he really didn't prepare much for the SAT, but did enroll in an ACT class before taking the test. He attributes most of his success, however, to the education he received at Mountain Brook High.
"I felt really prepared," said Sisson. "Our teachers and administrators prepare us so well for tests but also, for life in general ."
Of course, Sisson does recognize his own inherent talents.
"I feel really blessed to have been given the mind I have," he said.
Still, he understands that without the support he received from school and his parents, his mind wouldn't have gotten very far.
"My school work has always been a priority," he said. "It's just the way I was raised: take care of school first and let the fun come after that. My parents always preached working hard and doing the best you can no matter what."
As his senior year comes to a close, Sisson said he enjoyed his final season on the football team and looks forward to baseball season. In the fall, he hopes to enroll at an engineering program at one of his top three schools: Virginia, Vanderbilt or Auburn.
Sarah Grace Tucker
Tucker, also a 17-year-old senior at Mountain Brook High, earned a perfect score on both the SAT and the ACT.
Her practice time in preparation for the tests, however, was more of a refresher course she said. Tucker attributes her success on the tests to the preparation she said she received at school.
"I think the quality of our classes is what helped," said Tucker.
She prepared for each of the tests by using a practice book she borrowed from friends--the weekend before each test.
"I'm really glad that I did so well on the tests," said Tucker. "I'm glad that I had such great teachers to prepare me and I'm also grateful that my parents continued to encourage me to do my best in school and in everything else that I do. "
Along with her academic successes, Tucker is also highly involved with the Relay for Life program at school where she serves as the publicity chair.
As her senior year wraps up, Tucker said she looks forward to enjoying these last few months with all of her friends and eventually walking across the stage with them at graduation.
In the fall, she hopes to enroll at an engineering school at Princeton, Georgia Tech, Duke, Vanderbilt or Alabama.
Irene Zhang
17-year-old Zhang scored a perfect score on the ACT.
"Of course, I'm very happy with my score," she said.
In preparation for the test, Zhang said she took a few practice tests, where she learned what questions to expect and how to properly time herself. Reading, however, is what she believes helped her the most.
"I'm an avid reader and I feel like the books and magazines I've read over the years really helped with reading comprehension."
Reading comprehension is a large portion of the test, as students are asked to reach passages, interpret their meaning and answer questions based on what they read.
In the fall, Zhang said she plans to major in physics in college. Eventually, she said, she might consider continuing her education to receive a PhD.

Monday, November 26, 2012

Boys Basketball: Mountain Brook 69, Pelham 66

, November 21, 2012 9:11 p.m.
 
Patrick Keim hit both ends of a one-and-one with three seconds left in the game to seal the win for Mountain Brook (5-0) in the championship game of the North Shelby Tip-Off Classic at Briarwood Christian.
Jeremy Berman hit six of seven 3-pointers and finished with 24 points and six rebounds for Mountain Brook. Malek Grant had 17 points for the Spartans and Keim ended with six points. Justin Brooks had 26 points, including six 3-pointers, for Pelham and Dakota Clark had 11 points.

Monday, October 29, 2012

MBHS Election 2012 Prognostication Project

  • Who:  Senior students at Mountain Brook High School
 
  • What :  2012 Election Prognostication

Mountain Brook High School Seniors have participated in a Prognostication Project for Election 2012 that will culminate Tuesday, November 6th.  Students were divided into groups and assigned states early in the semester and have spent months researching the demographics, analyzing past elections and following election issues with regards to their assigned state.  Each period, students will present their prognosis state by state and fill in a large electoral map for the entire school to see.  An announcement will be made at the end of the day identifying the winner of the 270 needed electoral votes.  The seniors at MBHS have accurately predicted every presidential election since 1972.


  • When:  November 6, 2012

  • Where:  Mountain Brook High School, Social Studies wing.

  • Contact Leah Kilfoyle, Social Studies Department Chair, for additional information.  She can be reached at kilfoylel@mtnbrook.k12.al.us or 414-3800 ext. 7734.

Monday, October 15, 2012

Mountain Brook 24, Hewitt-Trussville 0
 
, October 12, 2012 10:36 p.m.
 
Mountain Brook quarterback Will Brewster (14) gets ready to throw a pass against Hewitt-Trussville during the Spartans' victory Friday night. (Frank Couch/fcouch@al.com)
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- Sixth-ranked Mountain Brook used a suffocating defense and the long ball to remain unbeaten with a 24-0 victory over Hewitt-Trussville in Class 6A, Region 6 action.
But the win could have been a costly one as junior quarterback Will Brewster went out in the second quarter with a thumb injury and didn’t return. Brewster completed 12-of-15 passes for 222 yards and threw touchdown passes of 53 and 69 yards to stake the Spartans (7-0, 4-0) to a 14-0 halftime advantage.
“He kind of dinged his thumb,” said Spartans coach Chris Yeager. “We had a 14-0 lead at the time so it was kind of a precautionary thing. We did send him to get it x-rayed so we’ll have to wait and see.”
The Mountain Brook defense did the rest.
Hewitt Trussville managed only three first downs (two by penalty) and 55 total yards in the first half, with 22 of those coming on the first play on a 22-yard pass from Sam Miller to DeMarcus Kelly.
Adam Harvey had three sacks and two other tackles behind the line and Hunter Holcomb also had a pair of sacks.
“The defense was dominant,” Yeager said. “They were like crazed dogs out there. They gave second, third and fourth effort all night.”
The Huskies (3-4, 2-3) finished with only 45 yards rushing on 29 attempts and 174 total yards.
“It was a lot of fun out there,” Harvey said. “The key for us was every single player was doing his job out there. We don’t have the one great athlete, but we have everybody out there playing to the best of their ability on every single snap.”
Brewster threw a 53-yard touchdown to Reagan Alexander with 2:30 left in the first quarter and a 69-yard touchdown to Patrick Sullivan with 3:58 left in the half.
Sullivan finished with nine catches for 151 yards while Alexander had five catches for 115 yards.
Running back Gene Bromberg added 115 yards of his game-high 145 yards in the second half, including a seven-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter.

Wednesday, October 10, 2012


MBHS National Merit Commended Students

 
 
 
First row: Zijie Yin, Virginia Wright, Carlyle Brown, Sloan Tandet, Margaret Greene
 Second row: Jessica Fraley, Tate Sieber, Carolyn McCalley, Emily Pearlstein, Julia Lott
 Third row: Ben Kraft, Mack Barnes, Will Adkison, J.B. Lanier, Joel Michelson

Not pictured: Ben Carter, Patrick Hereford, Kendall Reed, and Daniel Rich

 

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Mountain Brook's Will Brewster stays cool under pressure

, October 08, 2012 noon
Mountain Brook quarterback Will Brewster (center) celebrates a touchdown against Gardendale earlier this season. (Linda Stelter | The Birmingham News)
 
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama -- Will Brewster doesn't shy away from pressure. Ask Mountain Brook football coach Chris Yeager, and he'll tell you that the Spartans' junior quarterback embraces it.
"In tough situations, he plays better and better," Yeager said. "The guys seem to follow him. He's a leader in every sense of the word."
Brewster demonstrated his cool-headedness in his first varsity start in the Spartans' opener this season.
"We were playing Tuscaloosa County and we were down 7-3 late in the game," Yeager recalled. "We were on our own 40 and we had a 20-play, 60-yard drive. I didn't think you could have a 20-play, 60-yard drive. "We converted four fourth downs and three of them were with Will carrying the ball. That's how he is. He wants the ball in that situation."
Brewster capped the drive with a 4-yard touchdown pass to senior wide receiver Patrick Sullivan, lifting Mountain Brook to a 10-7 victory.
The unflappable Brewster said there's no secret to why he rarely gets rattled at crunch time.
"The biggest thing is always staying calm," he said. "All the work we've gone through and because we've had so much preparation it allows me to just do what I'm supposed to do. I just want to do my job to help the team the best I can."
Brewster has been a revelation for the Spartans (6-0 overall, 4-0 in Class 6A, Region 6) this season, helping rise to the No. 6 ranking in 6A by the Alabama Sports Writers Association.
He hasn't felt any pressure replacing highly successful two-year starting quarterback Edward Aldag, who guided Mountain Brook to an undefeated regular season and a 12-1 record in 2011.
"The coaches didn't put any pressure on me," Brewster said. "They told me not to compare myself to him, to just go out and play your game."
Yeager figured Brewster's game would feature more running than Aldag, who was a highly efficient passer. Before the season Yeager said, "He doesn't throw as well as Edward, but he runs pretty good. We'll probably run him more than we did Edward."
Now, as Mountain Brook prepares to play host to Hewitt-Trussville (3-3, 2-2) in a region game at 7 p.m. Friday, Yeager raves about Brewster throwing the ball.
"He has surprised us with his passing ability," Yeager said. "When we finished spring, we knew he had the arm and over the summer if he kept working and cleaned up his decision-making, he would progress. He did that and now he's an excellent passer.
He's completed seven passes over 50 yards or better. Where he's best is when he's being pressured he's good at placing the ball in one-on-one situations. He's very, very accurate and he has a sense of awareness of coverages. We like to see it when linebackers and safeties creep up because he'll change the play and something good is going to happen."
Brewster is completing 68.7 percent of his passes (46 of 67) for 651 yards and six touchdowns with one interception. He also is the Spartans' second-leading rusher with 265 yards on 36 attempts and also has five rushing touchdowns.
"We had all those workouts in June and July and we played in some 7-on-7 games and I started getting more comfortable being in the pocket and trusting my arm," Brewster said. "I have done well, but there's always room for improvement. I just want to be able to manage the games and give the team the best of my ability."
Few expected Brewster or the Spartans to do as well as they have this season with the loss of 18 starters off their 2011 squad. But Brewster said he and his teammates didn't have any doubts about surpassing expectations.
"We all had faith in ourselves that if we could come together we could have a good year," he said. "We're focused on getting better and better each and every week and come playoff time we want to be the best team we can be."

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Mountain Brook High ties school record with 29 National Merit semi-finalists this year

Published: Monday, September 17, 2012, 4:52 PM Updated: Monday, September 17, 2012, 5:24 PM
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- Mountain Brook High School has 29 seniors who have qualified as National Merit Scholar semi-finalists this year, tying a school record set in 2008, Principal Vic Wilson said.
The school reports an average of 15 semifinalists each year. Last year, there were 17.
Wilson said a variety of factors contribute to the high number of semi-finalists who qualify at Mountain Brook High. Part of the reason, said Wilson, is an early sense of familiarity with the test.
National Merit Scholars are determined by test scores on the Preliminary SAT, typically given to students in their junior year. Mountain Brook High, however, also distributes the test to sophomores, said Wilson. The goal is to help students familiarize themselves with the test before their junior year. That way, said Wilson, they have an idea about what to expect.
After the scores come back each year, Wilson said he sifts through the sophomores scores, looking for all students who scored in the 95th percentile or higher.
"I call them in and talk to them," said Wilson, "I'll let them know what kind of opportunity they have if they continue to work hard."
Only the highest scorers in the nation move on to become semi-finalists. Nationwide, semifinalists represent less than 1 percent of U.S. high school seniors. In 2011, the National Merit Scholarship Corporation reported 14,338 National Merit student entrants in the state of Alabama alone. A total of 208 went on to become semi-finalists.
Wilson said that preparation for the PSAT is not only a matter of distributing a practice test a year early--it begins years before that.
"We have a K-12 curriculum that is very rigorous and affords students these types of possibilities," said Wilson.
"We are thrilled every year when we learn about our finalists. These kids do very well in academics," Wilson said, "but they also do very well in extracurricular activities. You name it, they do it. I think that says a lot about them as well."
That level of success comes from a combination of support, said Wilson, who considers himself fortunate to work with teachers, parents and students at Mountain Brook High.
"We work hard to provide balance for our students," said Wilson. "It's the perfect relationship between good teaching, good parenting and good students. It's great to be around."
This year's National Merit Scholar Semi-Finalists at Mountain Brook High School are:
Sarah Bowron, Emily (Kate) Causey, Robert (Chase) Crumbaugh, Patricia (Maggie) Dodson, Colin Dorsten, Benjamin (Ben) Echols, Annabelle Friedman, Julia (Sloan) Geiss, James (Michael) Harp, Isabella Keating, James (Jay) King, Donaldson (Cameron) Lee, Matthew Leeds, Alexander (Alex) McCullumsmith, Jeremiah Mitchell, William (Wyatt) Moorer, Alexander (Alex) Oser, Ann (Kate) Perry, Margaret Pritchard, Lane Proctor, Laura Rice, Jeffrey (Jeff) Rogers, Hunter Ross, Thomas (Miller) Sisson, Philippa Straus, Paul Styslinger, Sarah-Grace Tucker, Katherine (Katie) Windle and Irene Zhang.

Mountain Brook High School Marching Band performs "Blood Sweat & Tears" on Sept 21, 2012

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WS85kRaO9ow&safe=active

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Cross Country: Mountain Brook wins Pond Run

, September 22, 2012 6:31 p.m.
 
ODENVILLE, Ala. -- Twin sisters Annie and Maddie Sheffield finished 1-2 to lead the Mountain Brook girls cross country team to an easy victory in the Bullfrog Pond Run Saturday.
Annie Sheffield ran a time of 21:24.19 to finish first in the 5K race while her sister Maddie came in second with a time of 21:38.06. Teammate Elizabeth Haberstroh was third with a time of 21:54.09.
Mountain Brook claimed eight of the top nine spots for a total of 17 team points, well ahead of second-place Shades Valley's 53 points. The Mounties' top finisher was Ryan Spahn in fourth place with a time of 21:56.46.
In the boys race, Prattville's Lucas Culpepper took the individual title with a time of 17:48.25, edging Pell City's Armando Arellano, who had a time of 17:51.01.
Culpepper's teammate Mike Bulger was third with a time of 17:51.01 as the Lions captured the team title. Prattville had 24 points, finishing comfortably ahead of second-place Mountain Brook with 58 points.
The Spartans' top finisher was Alex Schultz in fourth place with a time of 18:09.51.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Football: Mountain Brook 35, Gardendale 14

, September 14, 2012 10:34 p.m.
Mountain Brook quarterback Will Brewster (center) celebrates a touchdown in second half with teammates. (The Birmingham News/Linda Stelter)
 
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama – Mountain Brook stormed back from a 14-point deficit to down Gardendale 35-14 in Class 6A, Region 6 action.
The Spartans (3-0, 2-0) used a dominate defense and power running game to overcome Gardendale’s 14-0 lead early in the second quarter.
"It was the best team win we have had since I have been here," said Spartans coach Chris Yeager.
The Mountain Brook duo of Tawarren Grant and Gene Bromberg rolled up 176 yards on the night.
The Spartans defense gave up 154 yards in the first quarter, but only 97 the rest of the way. Mountain Brook didn't surrender a first down in either the second or third quarter, allowing only 22 yards during the two-quarter span.
"They came out and hit us right in the nose, but we stood up and didn't fold." Yeager said.
Gardendale (1-2, 0-2) blasted to the 14-0 lead behind two touchdowns from running back Jordan Howard. The senior scored on a 6-yard run in the first quarter and added a 3-yard run on the first play of the second period. Jordan finished with 103 yards on 18 carries.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Cross Country: Mountain Brook wins boys and girls Chickasaw titles


, September 08, 2012 9:10 p.m.
 
Mountain Brook swept the boys and girls Class 5A-6A titles at Saturday’s Chickasaw Trails Invitational cross country meet at Oakville Indian Mounds.
The Spartans girls were led by Jessica Molloy whose 18:03.73 broke the meet record. In addition to Malloy, four other Spartans finished in the top 10. Ann Sisson ran to second place while Emily Bedell was third, Mary Catherine Ellard was fifth and Kendall Reed was 10th.
Peyton Ballard won the boys event followed by Nick Halbach in second while Davis Kelly was 10th.
Boys
Class 5A-6A
Team results
1-Mountain Brook (MB) 48
2-Bearden (BN) 68
3-Hoover (HV) 88
4-Scottsboro (SC) 137
5-Homewood (HW) 152
6-Independence (IN) 159
7-Oak Mountain (OM) 191
8-John Carroll (JC) 210
9-Huntsville (HU) 229
10-Cullman (CU) 234
Girls
Class 5A-6A
Team results
1-Mountain Brook (MB) 21
2-Scottsboro (SC) 63
3-Lawrence County (LC) 121
4-Huntsville (HU) 158
5-Macon County (MC) 168
6-Homewood (HW) 189
7-Hoover (HV) 191
8-Cullman (CU) 240
9-John Carroll (JC) 265
10-Oak Mountain (OM) 268

Wednesday, September 5, 2012


Spartans sweep Jaguars

Published 12:05am Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Shelby County Reporter

By CLAYTON HURDLE / Staff Writer

NORTH SHELBY – It took a quick three sets for defending Class 6A, Area 12 champion Mountain Brook to dispose of the Spain Park Jaguars in a home volleyball match Tuesday evening.

The Spartans outlasted visiting Spain Park 25-16, 25-18, 25-12 to reach 10-1 on the season.

The Jaguars struggled to get many rallies going throughout the match; starting the first game with a 3-0 lead, the longest points streak came for Spain Park as they stalled game point in the second set six straight times.

“We had a lot of points from behind the service line,” Mountain Brook coach Haven O’Quinn said. “We kept [Spain Park] out of their system of offense because of our serving.”

The two teams fought a back-and-forth battle to begin the match, coming to a 9-9 tie before the Spartans dashed out to a 15-10 lead.

Spain Park remained competitive in the first set until, leading 20-16, the Spartans took a 5-0 run to end the set. Greer Cunningham led the way for Mountain Brook, serving the team’s last five points.

In the second game the Jaguars held a 9-8 lead before Jordan Hughes led a seven-point rally for the Spartans.

After extending the lead to 18-12, a six-point streak put Mountain Brook at set point. Jordan Nakayama led a six-point rally for the Jaguars to keep their chances alive in the set but it wasn’t enough to completely overcome the Spartans.

“There were a few rallies that we played as a team,” Spain Park coach Paula Dill said. “But we did not perform our game plan like we talked about and worked on.”

Facing a sweep, the Jaguars scored the first two points of the third set with a pair of Nakayama service aces.

The Spartans took the next four points and had a 10-7 lead after another four-point run. From there, Mountain Brook took control of the game, outscoring Spain Park 15-5 to finish the match.

Cunningham led all players offensively with 16 kills for the Spartans. “Greer stood out on the outside with some nice big swings,” O’Quinn said.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Mountain Brook 10, Tuscaloosa County 7

, August 31, 2012 10:57 p.m.
Tuscaloosa County defenders wrap up Mountain Brook wide receiver Patrick Sullivan after he hauled in a long pass. (The Birmingham News/Joe Songer)
Will Brewster found Patrick Sullivan from 4 yards out with three minutes left for what proved to be the game winner.
Mountain Brook, which coughed up a fumble on their first offensive play of the contest, had previously been shut out of the end zone on four consecutive tries from inside the Wildcats 5 on their last possession of the second half.
“We knew it was going to be a battle until the end and they had a great defense, but we kept fighting that last drive and went back to the fundamentals,” Brewster said.
Mountain Brook mustered just a 36 yard Tre Smith through three quarters, as the offense struggled to find pay dirt for much of the night. The offense went to their ground attack on the final drive, led by Gene Bromberg, who had 23 carries for 66 yards on the game, and Brewster. as they rushed thirteen times and attempted only two pass attempts on the final drive, with one being the game-winner.
Brewster finished the evening completing 8 of 12 pass attempts for 69 yards and a touchdown, while receiver Patrick Sullivan hauled in five catches for 34 yards and a touchdown.
For the visitors, the loss overshadowed a consistent effort from the Wildcats defense, which opened the scoring when Marshall Eads scooped up a Mountain Brook fumble on their first defensive play of the game and raced in from 14 yards out.
“Our guys over there work hard and that’s what we hang our hat on (playing good defense), we let them down tonight and had some opportunities we should have taken advantage of, but just couldn’t,” Tuscaloosa County coach Lee Gibson stated.
Mountain Brook had a superb defensive effort as well, limiting the Wildcats offense to just six first downs and 106 total yards.
The Wildcats were led offensively by senior running back Cornelius Prewitt, who finished with 45 rushing yards on just seven attempts.

Monday, August 27, 2012

School system chosen for national program
by Aziza Jackson, Daily Home
08.24.12 - 12:22 am
TALLADEGA COUNTY — The Talladega County School System is one of two districts in the state chosen to join “Teaming for Transformation: leading digital conversion for student learning,” with the Consortium for School Networking.
The system is now part of a network of 19 school districts around the country aimed at improving student-centered learning through the use of epic-ed, an online community focused on digital conversion for infusing digital resources and tools into the teaching and learning process.
The system was chosen along with Mountain Brook Schools by CoSN to participate in the network.
“Mountain Brook is a very affluent city school district and we’re a rural district,” [Talladega County Schools Superintendent Suzanne] Lacey said. “We feel that everyone will bring different insight to the table.”
Continue reading...
http://www.dailyhome.com/view/full_story/19913077/article-School-system-chosen-for-national-program?instance=home_right_bot

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Mountain Brook senior Greer Cunningham one of Metro area's best

, August 23, 2012 8:54 a.m.
Mountain Brook’s Greer Cunningham is one of the best players in the area. (Dennis Victory)
Five Mountain Brook volleyball players started together in the seventh grade.
The persistence of toil and sweat produced varying levels of success through the years, but there’s a destination no Mountain Brook team has reached since 1997. That’s the last time the Spartans earned a spot in the season-ending Elite Eight Championship Tournament.
“I really hope and think we have a shot this year,” said senior Greer Cunningham, who’s one of the metro’s best players. “We’ve been playing together for a long time and I think we have the ability to make it far this year.”
Mountain Brooks hosts Clay-Chalkville tonight at 6 as volleyball season begins. The Spartans advanced to the substate round of playoffs last year before falling to Bob Jones.
Cunningham is one of seven returning starters for the Spartans, who finished 30-14 last season. She earned a spot on three of The Birmingham News’ lists of best metro players.
In addition to Cunningham, Mountain Brook’s Claire Gorman, Alice Brown, Julia Smith and Sara Carr were also named among the metro’s best, selected by the News’ prep sports staff with nominations from coaches. The Spartans’ five selections led the list.
This year’s seniors are Cunningham, Brown, Mary Claire Carr, Jordan Hughes and Laura Keel.
First-year Mountain Brook coach Haven O’Quinn – she spent the previous two years at Pelham where she compiled a 68-43 record – likes what she sees from the Spartans.
“I’m so excited about this year,” O’Quinn said. “All 13 on the roster could easily be on the court. There are no big gaps in skill level in these girls and that’s great because they’ll be pushing each other all year.”
The Spartans also play in this weekend’s 30th annual Juanita Boddie Tournament, starting Friday at the Birmingham Crossplex with 27 of the best teams in the state.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Mountain Brook twins score 35 and perfect 36 on ACT

Published: Saturday, August 11, 2012, 6:45 AM
sisson twins act.JPG
Miller Sisson scored a perfect 36 on the ACT, while his sister Ann scored 35. The twins will soon begin their senior year at Mountain Brook High. (The Birmingham News/Joe Songer)


MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- When Miller Sisson and his twin sister Ann got back their ACT test scores, they were a little surprised.

"I thought I did well, but I didn't think I'd done that well," Miller said.
Miller scored a perfect 36 on the ACT, while his sister Ann scored 35. The twins turned 17 this month and will soon begin their senior year at Mountain Brook High.
The ACT is a college admissions examination that is given six times a year and accepted by virtually every college in the nation. The test has 215 multiple-choice questions and takes about 3 hours and 30 minutes to complete, according to the ACT website.
The ACT has four parts -- English, reading, math and science. The highest a student can make on each part is 36, and the scores of the four parts are averaged into a composite. The average student scores a 21. Students scoring a 34, 35 or 36 on the test are among the top 1 percent in the country.
It wasn't their first attempt at the test. In December, they took it for the first time, with Miller scoring 32 and Ann earning a 31. But neither score was good enough for them, their mother Leigh Ann said.
"They took it cold the first time," she said. "They didn't do any preparation. We were certainly fine with their first scores. They felt like they could increase them. They both set goals for themselves. I was proud because it was something they wanted to do for themselves."
To prepare for their second attempt, the Sissons took a course with All Pencils Down, a test-preparation class in Hoover. They devoted about four hours each night to preparation, she said.
"I felt like they really helped my science and English," Miller said. "They helped me learn the nuances of the test. They showed how there are common types of questions on the test. Timing was also a big thing we worked on."
Ann said what also helped was the preparation they received in school.
"We're both fortunate to grow up in a great academic community," Ann said. "Our schools really got us ready. The background and education we've had up to this point was the difference. My friends did really well on the test too."
Neither Miller nor Ann know where they will attending college after graduation, but both feel their opportunities are much better with their scores.
"I don't know exactly where I want to go," Miller said. "But I hope this means I can go wherever I want."

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Crestline Elementary Has New Playground

Crestline Elementary playground
Crestline Elementary School’s new playground will be the first handicap accessible one in Mountain Brook.
Crestline Elementary students will start the school year with a brand new playground. The facility is the first handicap-accessible playground in Mountain Brook.
Funding came from the school’s annual PTO fundraiser, Boosterthon, and other sources. Boosterthon gave students the opportunity to participate in the fundraising efforts for their new play equipment. Students found supporters to sponsor them as they ran laps around the field.
The Crestline PTO, through Boosterthon, was the single largest contributor to the project.
Since the Crestline playground is for the community as well as the school, many local groups donated money, including the Mountain Brook City Council, Mountain Brook Athletics, One Stop Environmental, Crestline Cub Scouts and Boy Scouts and NBC bank.
Rep. Paul de Marco, Sen. Jabo Waggoner and Sen. Slade Blackwell also donated to the cause.

Continue reading...
http://www.otmj.com/2012/08/crestline-elementary-has-new-playground/

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Mountain Brook child wins recipe contest, to attend White House state dinner

Published: Tuesday, July 24, 2012, 1:54 PM    
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama --- Nine-year-old Falcon Wiles of Mountain Brook has been recognized as one of the state winners in First Lady Michelle Obama's nationwide recipe challenge to promote healthy lunches.

Wiles was named today along with 53 other winners, aged 8 to 12, representing all the U.S. states, three territories and the District of Columbia. Wiles' recipe was "Alabama's Yummy Summer Soup," which will be available later at the recipe challenge website.

The contest, part of Obama's "Let's Move!" program to fight childhood obesity, garnered more than 1,200 recipe entries. It was sponsored by Epicurious, the Department of Education and the Department of Agriculture.

Wiles will be invited along with the other winners to a White House state dinner Aug. 20, hosted by Mrs. Obama. Winners will also get a tour of the White House kitchen garden.

To enter the contest, children were asked to look over the nutritional guidelines of the USDA site to make sure their dishes were healthy.

Great Debater: Mountain Brook Senior Won’t Rest on Last Year’s Laurels

Wyatt Moorer
Mountain Brook High’s Wyatt Moorer wants to top his debate records, which includes being named best Lincoln-Douglass debater in the state, during his senior year.
By Laura McAlister
Journal Editor, Over the Mountain Journal

Being named the state’s top Lincoln-Douglas debater was quite an honor for Wyatt Moore. But he’s still got one more year of high school, and his plans are to top that.
Last school year, Wyatt’s debating skills earned him the state’s top spot in Lincoln-Douglas debate and received the Most Outstanding State Competitor award. The Mountain Brook High School student hopes to keep those titles and add more during his senior year.
“I’d like to defend my title as Alabama State Champion in Lincoln-Douglas debate, ” he said. “Hopefully, I’ll qualify for Nationals like I did my sophomore year or the Tournament of Champions. That would be a first. That would be a very big deal.”

Continue Reading...
http://www.otmj.com/2012/07/great-debater-mountain-brook-senior-wont-rest-on-last-years-laurels/

Monday, July 9, 2012

Four state titles help Mountain Brook win 2011-12 Metro All-Sports Championship

, July 08, 2012 9:45 a.m.
Tatum Jackson of Mountain Brook watches her drive during the AHSAA Girls 6A Sectional Golf Tournament at Highland Park in April. (The Birmingham News/Joe Songer)
Jackie Clayton started coaching at Mountain Brook High School in 1969. Three years later, he left to become the offensive coordinator at Homewood High, a new school at the time.

From there, he went on to stints at Oak Grove, Shades Valley and Vincent. He has coached baseball, basketball, football, golf and wrestling.

In 1996, he returned to Mountain Brook. Since then, he has coached hundreds of Spartans student-athletes, some of them the children of former proteges.

“I don’t know that I’ve coached the grandkids yet,” Clayton said, laughing.

The way things have gone the past four decades, those grandkids will probably be raising multiple state trophies in, say, the 2040s.

With another four state titles, Mountain Brook earned the Metro All-Sports Championship in The News’ rankings for the 2011-12 school year. After claiming the same distinction last year, the Spartans have successfully defended their crown as the metro-area’s top athletics program.

Mountain Brook’s all-time state trophy count: “140 and counting,” Athletics Director Terry Cooper said.
Continue reading...
http://highschoolsports.al.com/news/article/4169841129837355425/four-state-titles-help-mountain-brook-win-2011-12-metro-all-sports-championship/

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Mountain Brook High drummer chosen for Grammys summer camp

Published: Wednesday, July 04, 2012, 10:34 AM Updated: Wednesday, July 04, 2012, 11:52 AM
Harrison Jones drumming 062712.JPG
 
Harrison Jones, a 16-year-old drummer from Mountain Brook, is one of 136 high school students across the country selected to attend a Grammy Camp this summer. The camp he will attend in Los Angeles is intended to teach the basics of the music industry. (The Birmingham News/Beverly Taylor)
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama -- A Mountain Brook drummer is one of 136 high school students from around the nation selected to take part in the eighth annual Grammy Camp, where teens get a crash course in the basics of being a professional in the music industry.
Harrison Jones, 16, will travel to the University of Southern California's Thornton School of Music July 14-23 for the camp. Other participants selected will travel to similar camps in Nashville and New York.
The camp is supported by the Grammy Foundation, Best Buy, Black River Entertainment, Converse and Guitar Center. Jones was the only Alabama resident chosen to attend at any of the camps.
Jones, 16, a junior at Mountain Brook High School, said he has been playing drums for seven years and was inspired by his grandfather, who played drums in several bands. Harrison is drummer for Dry Honor, a band inspired by White Stripes that plays rock, some jazz and rhythm and blues. "This is a huge deal," he said of the camp. "It's not just about learning about your instrument, but learning about the whole industry. And it's a real honor to represent my state."
At Jones' camp, participants will get training in recording, engineering, concert production, music production, music journalism, songwriting and recording. While Harrison owns some recording equipment, he has never professionally recorded music, which is one of the reasons the camp appealed to him.
Jones' mother, Jennifer, said it was the professional immersion the camp promised, as well as its connection to the Grammys, the music industry's signature award, that inspired Harrison to apply.
"It just sounds like the chance of a lifetime," she said.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Metro Boys Tennis Player Of The Year: Mountain Brook’s Trey Carter

, June 14, 2012 10:18 a.m.
 
Mountain Brook’s Trey Carter put together a 41-3 singles record in his four years of varsity play. (Dennis Victory)
Until this year, Trey Carter had dropped only one set playing singles on the biggest stage of Alabama high school tennis. He was a freshman at the time.

Three years later, he finally lost another set, falling behind in the quarterfinal round at April’s state tournament.

That uh-oh moment was soon forgotten. Carter recovered and won a three-setter. He did the same in the semifinals, conceding the first set before winning the next two.

Then, in the Class 6A final, the Mountain Brook senior resumed his dominance with a 6-1, 6-1 statement victory that netted him his first No. 1 singles title.

Evidently, an unfamiliar dose of adversity wasn’t enough to faze the Birmingham News Metro Boys Tennis Player of the Year.

“His mental game is what sets him apart,” Spartans coach Susan Farlow said. “He has never lost a match that really mattered, at state or anywhere else.”

The numbers and results back that up. Over four years on Mountain Brook’s varsity, Carter amassed a 41-3 singles record, going undefeated in state tournaments. He won state singles titles at No. 5 as a freshman, No. 4 as a sophomore, No. 2 as a junior and No. 1 this season.

Carter also teamed with Patrick Lucas, The News’ 2011 Metro Player of the Year, to claim No. 1 doubles titles in 2010 and 2011, giving Carter six state titles overall.

During Carter’s time at Mountain Brook, the boys team captured two state championships and finished as the runner-up twice, including this year, when Vestavia Hills won the team crown.

“When I got into those tough situations where there was a lot of pressure, I just felt like my team needed me and I needed to be a leader and prove my skills and position,” said Carter, who collected a perfect 10-0 record in singles this season despite a late switch from glasses to contact lenses. “I had a lot of experience going into those bigger matches. I had been there before, and it just helped me relax.”

Carter’s big-match mastery might have sprouted when he lost that first set at state as a freshman. His eventual three-set victory over an opponent he had never beaten before honed a confidence that accompanied his steady rise from the No. 5 singles position.

“If it’s down to the last match and the outcome relies on one court, Trey is the guy I would want,” Farlow said. “He just knows how to bring it on when it counts.”

Carter suffered a rare defeat this season when he and doubles partner Eric Buchalter fell in three sets to Vestavia’s Jeffrey Holcombe and Leo Richard at the state tournament.

Despite the disappointment of that loss — Carter and Buchalter had defeated the Vestavia duo three times in the regular season — Farlow called Carter “the best I’ve ever seen” in doubles play.

“He’s got the most unbelievable hands of any player I’ve coached,” Farlow said.

Carter credits his success to the instruction of Farlow and Jimmy Weinaker, a teaching pro at Pinetree Country Club whose son Jacob recently finished his sophomore season at Mountain Brook.

This fall, Carter will follow in the footsteps of Jacob’s older brother, Jay, in playing tennis for North Carolina State.

Amanda Hood chosen as Mountain Brook Junior High principal

Published: Thursday, June 14, 2012, 4:51 PM    
Amanda Hood.JPGAmanda Hood, Mountain Brook Junior High School's new principal.
 
MOUNTAIN BROOK, Alabama --- Working in Mountain Brook Schools has changed Amanda Hood's life, she said.
"The collaborative culture here and the support that everyone receives is what makes it different," Hood said. "It's very unique. You don't find it often. There's a level of professional commitment that is quite remarkable."
Last year, Hood began working in the system as an assistant principal at the high school. The Mountain Brook Board of Education this week chose her to become the new principal at Mountain Brook Junior High.
Hood's husband Jerry is a teacher and the head football coach at Clay-Chalkville High School.
Hood said she hopes to spend the first year getting to know the school's strengths and weaknesses.
"I want to take the next year and celebrate the things we do well, and seek out the things we'd like to improve," she said. "It's a continual collaboration and reflection cycle, and it's something we shouldn't do every once in awhile."
Prior to working in Mountain Brook, Hood taught at Oak Mountain High School and was an assistant principal at Spain Park High.
Hood is also mother to four adopted children from the Ukraine -- Olivia, 13, Christian, 12, Daniel, 8 and Vica, 7. That wasn't her original plan, though. When she and her husband traveled to the country in 2008, they intended to adopt two children.
"We went in and they laid out four photographs," she said. "We thought it was some mistake. Then I wondered how I was going to choose two and they said, 'No, they go together.'" The couple had 15 minutes to decide whether they would adopt the quartet.
None of the children spoke English, and the Hoods had spent a few months learning not Russian, but Ukrainian.
"It forced Jerry and I to be very creative about the way we were able to meet their needs, and to meet basic needs," she said. "He and I both being teachers, we had a little bit of an advantage. For about two or three months, we were all speaking a language that was all our own. We got a lot of funny stares in restaurants."

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Congratulations to the following people on their retirement from Mountain Brook Schools!  We appreciate your years of service! 

Andrea Chapura – BWF

Shara Kernan - BWF

Beverly Laughlin - BWF

JoAnn Webster- BWF

Julia Kent – CB

Laurie Placey – CB

Linda Bass – CR

Anita Ferguson – CR

Anthony Howard – CR

Joy Knight – CR

Zoee’ Saltsman – CR

Joan Graham – MBE

Dianna Hardesty – JH

Nancy Flemming – JH

Alicia Wingard – JH

Karen Wyatt - JH

Cissy Isbell – HS

Elizabeth Johnson –HS

Neal Lambert – HS

Dianna Plosser – HS

John Rangeley – HS

Frank Brakefield – CO

Jan Payne – CO

Don Rickard - CO

Scholar-Athlete Of The Week: Walker Byrd, Mountain Brook High School

, June 06, 2012 8:38 a.m.
Year: senior
Sports: baseball and football

Academic highlights:
Walker has a 3.92 GPA and scored a 32 on the ACT. He is a member of National Honor Society, Mu Alpha Theta, and Key Club and is a Student Government representative.

Athletic highlights:
Walker is a three-year starter at center on the Spartans varsity football team. He is also a two-year starter and plays catcher on the baseball team. He was named all-metro and allstate in football.

Where do you see your academic future?
I plan to major in pre-med at Auburn. I want to be an orthopedic surgeon.

Where do you see your athletic future?
I plan to play intramural sports in college, unless a baseball opportunity presents itself this spring.

Favorite subject:
My favorite subject is AP calculus with Ms. Burns because I enjoy the challenge of it.

What’s on your iPod?
Dave Matthews Band, Needtobreathe, Zac Brown Band and Gavin G.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Mountain Brook girls win golf state title
, May 16, 2012 11:53 a.m.
(Carolyn McCalley of Mountain Brook, shown during the 2011 AHSAA golf championships, helped the Spartans to the 2012 title. (Press-Register/Mike Kittrell))
OPELIKA — Fried pickles. Long green socks.

Mountain Brook’s girls pulled out all the stops at Tuesday’s Class 6A state golf tournament. Afterward, they celebrated their second team title in as many years.

Before they raised another blue trophy, they practiced their “lucky ritual,” as Spartans captain Carolyn McCalley called it. Then they went out and posted an overall round of 29-over par, winning the two-day tournament by 10 strokes.

“We just really like fried pickles,” McCalley said. “We have fried pickles before our big tournaments, just for the really big ones, the ones we need to have.”

The Spartans needed this one, this being the biggest tournament, after all. Maybe they needed those fried pickles just as badly. They’d neglected their favorite finger food on Sunday night and left Grand National Golf Course on Monday in a tie for first with Auburn.

“Before we played the first day of the tournament, they were kidding that we needed to get the pickles,” Mountain Brook coach Jackie Clayton said. On Monday night “one of them says, ‘I told you we should’ve had those pickles!’ So they all said, ‘OK, let’s get the pickles.’ ”

The four girls carpooled to a nearby Zaxby’s for a second dinner. Their lucky ritual complete, they revealed another quirk Tuesday morning, donning long green socks and drawing chuckles from a surprised Clayton.

“We’re a real laid-back group,” Clayton said. “We cut up like this all the time.”

The Spartans carded a 36-hole score of 491 with Tatum Jackson’s 153 — good for third — leading the way. Auburn was second at 501. 

Monday, April 23, 2012

Mountain Brook Schools program offers taste of college life

Published: Saturday, April 21, 2012, 11:00 AM

TURNING POINTS
Samford student Anna Sharp (left) assists Mountain Brook students Bailey Jones and John Donley as they work with a phone and computer at Samford University in Homewood, Ala., Wednesday, April 11, 2012. Graduated Mountain Brook special education students participate in the Turning Points program at Samford University to experience college life. They interact with Samford students, attend some classes, get training in social skills and work on campus. (The Birmingham News/Mark Almond)
For Judy Jones, Mountain Brook Schools' Turning Points initiative is appropriately named. 

"Everybody needs to feel like they are contributing," Jones said. "Everybody likes to feel fulfilled and doing things that make them feel like part of society."
Judy's daughter Bailey is one of the first participants in Turning Points, a program that gives special education students a taste of college life at Samford University when they might not normally get the chance to experience it.







http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2012/04/mountain_brook_schools_program.html


Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Boys Tennis: Mountain Brook 9, Homewood 0

, April 09, 2012 7:39 p.m.
Mountain Brook (9-1) won seven matches at love and dropped only three games in the match to overwhlem Homewood.
S1:  Trey Carter (MB) d. Charlie Carter 10-0; S2:  ERic Buchalter (MB) d. David Cox  10-0; S3:  Nelson Jetmundsen (MB) d. J.R. Carter 10-0; S4:  Jacob Weinaker (MB) d. Drew Jones 10-0; S5:  Ben Shearer (MB) d. Aaron Ragsdale  10-0; S6:  Sam Lidikay (MB) d. Alex Vice 10-1; D1:  Carter/Buchalter (MB) d. Carter/Carter 10-0; D2:  Shearer/Weinaker (MB) d. Ragsdale/Jones 10-0; D3:  Jetmundsen/Lidikay (MB) d. Cox/Vice 10-2.

Congratulations, team!