Wednesday, February 26, 2014

St. Bernard Prep partners with Peoples Bank of Alabama


St. Bernard Prep has been selected as one of 50 high schools to add  the  financial literacy education program , EverFi  to the economics curriculum at the school.  Peoples Bank of Alabama has underwritten the cost of EverFi – Financial Literacy platform which  provides an interactive, web-based financial management program to St. Bernard Prep at no cost to the school.

EverFi is an award-winning, web-based course that uses video, animations, 3-D gaming, avatars and social networking to bring financial concepts to life for today’s digital generation.  The course curriculum aligns with both state and national financial literacy standards and Common Core State Math Standards.

Instructor, Bill Nuss said he looks forward to his class being part of Teen Moola U and  involved with the EverFi curriculum,  where students will spend at least 8 hours covering:  savings, banking, credit cards and interest rates; credit score, Financing higher education; renting vs. owning; taxes and insurance; consumer fraud; and investing.  

“Many times students lack an understanding of personal finances and look to their parents for that information.  With this program our goal is to educate them on financial topics associated with day to day living,”Nuss said.

The ten-module course will work alongside the existing curriculum.  Each student will register and have their own self-paced interactive experience tailored to their needs. 

Surveys and assessments provide visibility into student knowledge gains and changes attitudes and behaviors.  Nuss will then be able to track student progress and differentiate instruction based on student outcomes. 
Peoples Bank of Alabama is committed to promoting financial literacy that teaches adults to better understand money management principles.  MOOLA U BASICS is an interactive financial education class that one can take anytime, anywhere –online and at their own pace at www.Moola-U.com


 

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

St. Bernard students attend March for Life


St. Bernard students joined with the Diocese of Birmingham and 400,000 other pro-life supporters in Washington DC for the annual March for Life during the last week of January, capturing the attention of media mongrel CNN.
Sixty-one students and thirteen chaperones enjoyed one day in Washington visiting Arlington National Cemetery and various monuments and museums on the National Mall. 
Together with the other groups from the Diocese, a special Mass was celebrated in the Crypt Church of the Basilica of National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception with Bishop Robert Baker.
St. Bernard Chaplain, Fr. Bede Marcy, who organized the St. Bernard portion of the trip, said a large snow and ice storm rolled into DC a day before the March forcing the monuments and museums to close early.
Fr. Bede said even with the freezing temperatures  as low as 8 degrees Fahrenheit and a wind-chill as low as minus fifteen at times, his  students made the most of the day playing in the snow and enjoying the freezing temperature, while also playing cards and games with other pilgrims.
Despite bitter cold temperatures, students bundled up to celebrate life with more than 400,000 people at the nation’s capital.  St. Bernard Senior Landon Skinner describes the feeling as surreal.
“This was my third trip to the March, and it really meant a lot more since I was looking at it from the perspective this could be the last time I march through the streets supporting my high school and the city I’m from,” Skinner said.  “It wasn’t just about marching to stop something immoral.  It went from a “March for Life” to a “March because of life,” Skinner said.
Students reported the awesome feeling having marched up Capitol Hill to look back and witness hundreds of thousands of other supporters chanting, singing, and holding banners all for the same cause. 
In the words of Skinner, “We were marching for those who had been murdered, but we were there because we were alive.  We were marching because we had been given a chance to do something with our time given.  We were there with our time for those who had had that chance stripped from them.”
Seniors of the ethics and morality class at the school reported the trip gave them a new outlook on what they were marching for, and they plan to continue to support and participate in the March until the overall goal is reached.
The students at St. Bernard represented the largest group from the Diocese.  “We are passionate about proclaiming the truth and about giving joyful witness and support to those who have suffered the effects of abortion.  Every life is precious, every person is wanted, and every person matters,” Fr.  Bede said.