Senior Tigers Update: October 20, 2022

Varsity Field Hockey Qualify for AA BC Championships
This week, our Varsity Field Hockey Team defeated Notre Dame 9-0 and then defeated North Shore #2 Windsor 4-2 to earn a spot in the Vancouver Sea to Sky Zone Championship semi-finals vs Little Flower Academy on Friday, October 21. Those victories propel the Tigers to the 2022 AA BC Championships which are held November 2-3-4 in Victoria, BC.

YHS is the defending AA BC Champions but after graduating seven players from the Varsity roster, this young Tigers team is thrilled to be returning to the BCs.

Varsity Field Hockey
Varsity Field Hockey

Senior Field Hockey Keeps Winning
Our Senior Tigers just keep on winning as they compete in our LMISSAA Senior Division league. This past week, YHS defeated LFA Senior Team 4-2. October 21-22, the Senior Tigers will travel to Shawnigan Lake School to Compete at the ISA Tournament. Good Luck!

Senior Field Hockey
Senior Field Hockey

Swim Team Repeat as ISA Champions
Our Tigers swimmers compete at the ISA Championship meet on Thursday, October 13 at Watermania. Excellent performances all around by our swimmers and YHS took home the ISA Swim Championship yet again.

Swim Team: ISA Champs
Swim Team: ISA Champs

Tigers Volleyball Win Silver at Westerns
During one of the busiest sporting weeks in recent memory at YHS, the Senior Volleyball Team played host to the WCISVC for the first time since 2008. The tournament was a huge success on and off the court as the Tigers took home silver medals losing a tough final match to LFA in a packed gym at YHS. 

This event is about more than just volleyball and the experiences from this past week will last much longer than the final placings. A huge thank you to so many people who helped run this event.

 

 

The Ongoing Journey of Reconciliation Work at York House School

On Wednesday, September 28, in advance of National Truth & Reconciliation Day on September 30th, the Senior school participated in a set of cross-grade Reconciliation experiences, hosted by guests, students, and faculty. The goal of each experience was to define and commit to at least one act of decolonizing ourselves, and to generate a shared understanding of what decolonization is, and is not, in our school. 

We are undertaking this work with clear objectives in mind. In our work about Reconciliation, we are guided by six criteria for success:  

  • prioritize Indigenous voices in person, and in text, audio or video resources 
  • interrogate if well-intentioned acts have any oppressive impact 
  • expose assumptions  
  • connect to classroom learning, now and in the future  
  • prevent tokenism or commodification 
  • be action-oriented, and not performative 

We welcomed Musqueam Elder Kelly White and Shona Sparrow from the Syilx Nation, to facilitate the KAIROS Blanket Exercise for a small group. 

Squamish weaver Cheximiya Allison Burns taught another small group to weave in our STEAM lab, and shared numerous examples of her own weaving. 

The Grade 10 class, as a group, took the entire day to journey to the Squamish Lil’wat Cultural Centre in Whistler village.  

A small group visited  Xʷc̓ic̓əsəm Garden, the Indigenous gardens at UBC Farm, and met with Dr. Eduardo Jovel, and Dr. Will Valley, to learn about this Indigenous Health Research and Education Garden. 

Our student and faculty leaders led these sessions: 

  • How can we, as individuals, honour old forest trees and their Indigenous significance?
  • A beach and Vancouver Mural Festival excursion was guided by the question: How did Musqueam support the 368 passengers on the Komagata Maru in 1914?    
  • A Walk Outside: Listening to and Viewing Indigenous Poetry
  • Poets’ Space:  How can poetry help us process grief and trauma?  
  • What happened when Pope Francis came in July? 
  • The Art and Activism of Robert Davidson
  • Listening to Braiding Sweetgrass 
  • The Social Costs of Resource Extraction 
  • Learning from the YHS House Names change process 
  • My Culture is NOT a Costume:  Cultural appreciation vs. Cultural appropriation
  • Blanketing the City Mural tour and discussion 

As part of this journey, two weeks later in our Senior School assembly, our Community Service Captains, Ruby Harris and Jaclyn Boxer, extended our collective thinking on these same goals, with Mr. Cropley, as they asked the school to investigate the history of Thanksgiving, its traditions, and ties to the Columbian Exchange and colonization.  

This work is ongoing, and a journey, but at this moment in time, the following images capture some of our collective learning: