Cross Country at the Junior School

Jr. School Cross Country
Click for more photos from Jr. School Cross-Country

Have you noticed YHS Junior girls running at nearby parks or around Shaughnessy School? They are members of the YHS Junior Cross-Country team hard at work training for the upcoming ISEA Championship.

The cross-country season is off to a great start at YHS. This year we have 43 girls (Grade 3-7) on the team and a record number of staff coaches from a wide spectrum of our school staff: Kimberley Ryerson, Lisa Tomlinson, and Kiera Pearkes from the Little School, Danielle Neer, Sandra Richardson, Madeleine Abbott, Monica Regan, 

Celine Foucher, Sheilagh Martin, Lela Ling, and Jason Camp from the Junior School, Alison Waterhouse from the Senior School and Karm K. from the Media & Technology Department.

We are also fortunate to have a group of fantastic parent helpers who play an active role in coaching and supervision (Kathyrn Palumbo, Gail Ooi, Jonathan Aitken and Gavin Forsyth).

The girls are well into their training program and are making great progress as they prepare for the ISEA Cross-Country Championship, October 30th at Quilchena Park. At the ISEAs, athletes from each grade will try to achieve a personal best, but also compete together on individual grade teams and as a whole school team. The ISEA championship is a wonderful day for young athletes to feel rewarded for their hard work and dedication throughout the season and to unite together as a school team.

The cross-country running program is the first YHS team sport Grade 3 students are eligible to join and they are very enthusiastic Tigers! Some of our Grade 7 team members have been on the team since Grade 3! The Grade 7 team members are fantastic role models and athletes who inspire our younger members.

As part of the preparation for the ISEAs, cross-country team members have been competing in several races held throughout the Lower Mainland. At this point, the YHS Tigers have competed in the Pinetree Classic at Mundy Park in Coquitlam on a beautiful fall Saturday (September 21st), and most recently in the South Fraser Cross-Country Race at Bear Creek Park in Surrey, on a very wet September 28th. These were very competitive races and the YHS girls competed with true Tiger spirit not only on the racecourse, but also on the sidelines as they cheered for their fellow team members.

Click here for more photos taken from the last two Saturday races. Many thanks to the coaches, parent helpers and families for supporting the YHS Junior Cross-Country Team.

Go Tigers!

Lela Ling
Head Coach

Science Students Visit D-Wave

Science Students Visit D-Wave
Guide Colin Enderud speaks to Silvia, Anjali and Manpreet about quantum superposition at D-Wave systems in Burnaby

On Tuesday, September 24, Mr. Riendl and YHS students Silvia, Manpreet, and Anjali, boarded the YHS van and drove over to D-Wave Systems headquarters in Burnaby.

D-Wave is a pioneer in quantum computing and research, with clients that range from Google to Nasa! D-Wave is also ranked 4th worldwide (behind IBM, Hewlett Packard, and Fujitsu) in terms of its computer patent potential. This is an incredible feat considering D-Wave is a small company based out of Burnaby, BC.

The company was having an open house of the facility. Along with the awesome mexican food we were served, we also were able to tour the facility and take a look at the quantum computers from our tour guide Colin!

We got to hear speeches from Geordie Rose, Founder of D-wave, and Vern Brownell, CEO (bios here). They told us all about the capabilities of quantum computers and quantum physics (they even discussed the possibility of a parallel universe…hmm) and how these technologies are far superior than technology that’s commonly used today. This is because quantum computers are able to process complex algorithms and problems in less steps than regular computers. Quantum computers can do this because a quantum computer has qubits instead of just bits, which are found in regular computers. Bits can only be ‘1’ or ‘0’ at any given time, but a quantum qubit can be ‘1’ and ‘0’ at the same time! This is what give quantum computers their special properties. That’s a super-duper simplified explanation of how it works, but that’s about the extent that people without a degree in physics understand this strange phenomenon. Even the famous scientist and Nobel Laureate Richard Feynman said “if you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don’t understand quantum mechanics”.

We had an amazing experience at D-Wave and we’d like to thank Colin for answering all our questions and giving us a tour. We’d also like to especially thank Mr. Riendl for making the entire experience possible! For a series of photos from our tour, check out this link.

From: Silvia, Manpreet, and Anjali