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Fine Arts Festival | Protocol | Spring Concert | Christmas Concert |
Junior/Senior Class Trip | TOCS 5K

Tall Oaks Fine Arts Festival Winners - March 12, 2010


This winter Tall Oaks continued a cherished tradition in the life of our school, the Fine Arts Competition and Festival. Tall Oaks believes that this event fulfills many goals of classical education.

In learning meaningful works of poetry and prose, the students gain appreciation for the beauty and goodness of the written word and for those God has gifted to write it. There are many truths and lessons conveyed through these works. When memorized, the lessons stick and the poems become like old friends. The students are coached to recite their pieces well with qualities such as clear diction, expression and vocal pitch. This training teaches the pupils to hone their public speaking and presentation skills.

Poetry memorization and recitation is another “lost tool of learning” that classical education tries to recapture. It has been done regularly in past generations but not as much today.

It has been a joy to revive this tradition at Tall Oaks! The students made us smile, laugh, sigh and cry as they regaled us with their pieces this year. We appreciate the hard work of the students, teachers and volunteers who made the events possible.


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TALL OAKS CLASSICAL SCHOOL
Fine Arts Festival 2010
March 12, 2010

Welcome and Prayer Don Post

Grade Five
Kana Turley, Excerpt from The Prayer of St. Patrick

Badia Weeks, Excerpt from“The Negro Mother,” Langston Hughes

Aaron Weber, “The Charge of the Light Brigade,” Alfred Lord Tennyson

Sixth Grade
Honorable Mention:
Grace Baumann, “Address in Independence Hall,” Abraham Lincoln

Lily Willis, “Eurydice,” Hilda Doolittle

First Place:
Alexander Hinckley, “The Gettysburg Address,” Abraham Lincoln

Michaela Kelly, “Gus, The Theater Cat,” T.S. Eliot

Piano and vocal solo - Jeffrey Loux, “Free,” Jeffrey Loux

Seventh Grade
Honorable Mention:
Jonathan Stover, Excerpt from “The Death of Glaurung,” from The Unfinished Tales, J.R.R. Tolkien

First Place:
Anna Claire Schmiedel, Proverb 31 and “The Splendour Falls on Castle Walls,” Alfred Lord Tennyson

Eighth Grade
Honorable Mention:
Sabrina Myoda, Excerpts from The Merchant of Venice, William Shakespeare

First Place:
Sarah Chaffee, “The Episode of Nisus and Euryalus,” from The Aeneid by Vergil

Irish Dance - Shea Crowe and AnnaClaire Schmiedel

Ninth Grade
Honorable Mention:
Josh Brunson, “The Bells,” Edgar Allan Poe

First Place:
Nathaniel Foggy, Excerpt from Sir Gawain & the Green Knight, The Pearl Poet

Tenth Grade
Honorable Mention:
Lydia Stinson, “Maud Muller,” John Greenleaf Whittier

First Place:
Phillip Chaffee, Where the Wild Things Are, Maurice Sendak; “The Gift,” Marni Fults, adapted by Phillip Chaffee

“Nine Hundred Miles,” Traditional American Folk Song, Arranged by Philip E. Silvey
Cynthia Biron, Sarah Chaffee, Sabrina Myoda, Megan Palmer, Katie Palmer, Anna Claire Schmiedel, Lydia Stinson, Mary Ellen Stover

Eleventh Grade
Honorable Mention:
Kelly Weber, Selection from The Song of Hiawatha, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

First Place:
Emery Baumann, “The Little Boy and the Old Man,” and The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein

Twelth Grade
Honorable Mention:
Jeff Loux, Two Monologues from Henry V, William Shakespeare

Chad Wilkinson, A Selection of Burma-Shave Ads

First Place:
Katie Palmer, Oh, The Places You’ll Go, Dr. Seuss

A special thanks to all of the parents, students and teachers for their hard work.



Protocol


Protocol at Tall Oaks is a unique event, a product of a desire that our students not only excel academically through our classical and Christian curriculum, but that they also are able to conduct themselves appropriately and confidently in all social situations. We believe that respect, deference, modesty and propriety Protocol 2010should be a way of life for every godly young man or woman.

All rhetoric students attend classes taught by Mrs. Kathi Lewis, a member of P.E.O., an organization which raises money for the education of women. They learn how and why to use etiquette and then put their skills into practice during this special Protocol evening.

This year’s event included a reception and dinner at the Rockwood Museum Carriage House in Wilmington, Delaware, followed by a stirring presentation of “The Lion King” at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia.

Reception guests included Mrs. Karen Y. Browne, Global Manager of Leadership Communications, DuPont; Mr. Robert E. Giblin, DuPont Vice-President of Finance, and Board member of A Door of Hope and Wilmington Prayer Breakfast; Mr. Timothy J. Houseal, Esq., Partner with Young, Conaway, Stargatt, Taylor; Rev. Thomas Laymon, CEO of the Sunday Breakfast Mission; Ms. Michele E. Martin, Legal Personnel Partner at General Electric; Mr. Harold Naylor, Jr., Director of Stewardship, TOCS; Mr. R. Judson Scaggs, Jr., Esq., Partner with Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell; Mr. David K. Williams, Jr., President of the Williams Family Auto Mall and Chairman of the Tall Oaks Board of Directors, and his wife Tracey.




Junior/Senior Class Trip


How would we describe the junior / senior class trip to Scotland? “Absolutely awesome!” The Lord blessed us every minute—fifteen students and three chaperones on quite an adventure together. The experience truly was a gift from Him to all of us.

When we landed at Edinburgh Airport, we were warmly greeted by Beth Bogue and Jimmy Fisher from Reformation Tours, a ministry of the Airdrie Reformed Presbyterian Church. We immediately began our exciting tour which focused on the history of the Scottish Covenanters and their sufferings for Christ. Our first stop was the site of the Battle of Bannockburn—where Robert the Bruce defeated the English in 1314 and secured Scottish independence. We continued on to Stirling Castle and the windy Wallace Monument. That evening we settled in at a youth hostel in New Lanark where our hostess, Fiona, welcomed and fed us. We were ready to retire after being awake for the previous forty hours (give or take a few)!

In the morning, blessed with breakfast and packed lunches from Fiona, we rode through the beautiful countryside to the amazing town of St. Andrews, Scotland’s religious capital. Jimmy taught us about the tragic martyrdoms of Patrick Hamilton and George Wishart and the ministries of Samuel Rutherford and John Knox. We visited St. Andrews Cathedral, St. Andrews Castle, the University of St. Andrews (founded in 1413) and other famous sites. Then we dined at a restaurant which overlooked the Chariots of Fire beach!

The Lord’s Day was spent worshipping with the Airdrie congregation. We began our morning in prayer, sang Psalms a cappella and were encouraged by sound, Biblical preaching. We had a delicious lunch in the fellowship hall, walked around the gorgeous Dalzell Estate for a few hours and returned for evening worship and supper. The youth of the church joined us for the day, served us selflessly and gave us insight into Scottish life. It was truly a delight. Scotland Photo

Monday took us to Edinburgh, the heart of Scottish Reformation and Covenanting history. We visited sites where key events took place such as St. Giles’ Cathedral, Greyfriars Kirkyard and the Grassmarket gallows. There was so much to see and so little time; from the National Museum to Edinburgh Castle, to shopping and dinner at Howies, a very fun time was had by all!

Tuesday we embarked on a journey through Ayrshire with a stop at Bothwell Bridge, where the Covenanters were defeated by the Royalists in 1679. We traveled over hill and dale to Aird’s Moss, where Richard Cameron lost his life in a skirmish with the dragoons in 1680. We walked through a field of sheep to see another Covenanter monument located truly off the beaten path. The cool, damp spring air added to our appreciation of what those courageous people went through to worship God outdoors in all types of weather while attempting to escape persecution in the towns. Our next stop was the adorable hamlet of Sorn to view a marker in honor of the last martyr of the “killing times”, George Wood, a 16-year old shot for carrying a Bible across a field. Then we returned to New Lanark, a World Heritage site built in 1785 as a cotton mill and village for its workers, mostly children, many of them orphans. Our final trip was a visit to the Highlands led by Graham Russell, another member of the Airdrie Church. We drove to Loch Lomond and the quaint village of Luss, then on to Inverary, past Loch Awe to the waterfalls in Glen Coe. On the way we explored two gorgeous buildings, St. Conan’s Kirk and the Luss Parish Church where we saw an 11th-century Viking gravestone. We were sad that this was our last evening together in this beautiful land abundant with history, though tragic at times.

We were grateful to have explored a tiny bit of this place so different from our own home. We thank the Lord for His amazing grace felt every moment of this memorable experience.
(Taken from an except by Mrs. Ranelle Groth in the Spring 2010 Quarterly Newsletter)





Christmas Concert


Coming Soon


Tall Oaks 5K Race & Kid's One Mile Fun Run was held on May 2nd, 2009 to benefit the Tall Oaks Annual and Scholarship Funds.



Spring Concert


Coming Soon