Thursday, July 1, 2021
Congratulations to our Class of '66!
Tuesday, June 8, 2021
Bette Andersen Loutzenheiser's Obituary
Here is the link to see Bette's obituary which appeared in the Arizona Star this week:
Monday, May 24, 2021
The Class of 1966's first grant
Monday, May 17, 2021
First awards from the Class of '66
Dear Classmates,
We can all be very proud of the recipients who were chosen to receive the first awards from the Class of 66:
Briannda Pena, a graduating senior from AHS was given the Elizabeth (Bette) Andersen award for Contribution to the Community. An excellent student, leader, and athlete with the life goals of “being there for people, and helping to make a difference in the world,”plans to study in the medical field at the UofA this Fall. Our Amphi Foundation Director, Leah Noreng described her meeting with Briannda and her mother: “I spoke about Liz/Bette--her love of service, passion for supporting Amphi students, and that she was "the glue" that has kept your class connected over the years--and after the ceremony her mom said to me, in tears, "...that's Briannda too...
Karen Rosson, a resource (special education) math teacher, new to AHS this year, was given our grant to Enhance AHS Educational Programs. Karen facilitated a flipped classroom model to her students at mid-year with great success. This model involves watching teacher lectures via video outside classroom time and experiencing interactive, hands on time with the teacher in individual and group activities within the classroom. According to Leah Noreng comments about Karen Rosen’s creative work, “This classroom grant will help to further her classroom opportunities by putting new, innovative and engaging resources and materials in the hands of kids.”
We invite you to check the Amphi Blog from time to time, to see more photos being posted: http://amphihs66.blogspot.
In gratitude to our Class of 66,
The Memorial Fund Committee, Susan Scott, Erica Richter, Dave Nix
Attachment: On the left, AHS senior Briannda Pena, our first Elizabeth Andersen Scholarship winner, and on the right Leah Noreng, Amphi Foundation Director.
Friday, May 7, 2021
From Bette’s son to the Class of 66
"We recently had a family gathering to celebrate all the birthdays we missed in 2020. We lit a candle for my Mom and it was very emotional. Seeing emails like these just mean the world to me, to us: (from Susanne Wilkinson Lasseter: And thanks to all of our classmates who have donated to insure that Bette’s wonderful legacy will continue. The world needs more Bettes. Maybe this will inspire a few.)
Sunday, May 2, 2021
It's All About That Hair!
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Friday, April 23, 2021
Update on our Memorial Fund
Dear Classmates,
Congratulations to the Class of 66!
Our total raised last week grew to $12,639 for our Memorial Fund, which more than met our match of $10,000 giving us $22,639. We are so close to reaching our overall goal of $25,000. We hope those of you who are still planning to send a gift will put us over the top.
As we have said the earnings from investing the fund will serve two purposes: granting a yearly $500 scholarship in Liz/Bette’s name to a deserving Amphi student; and, if we receive enough money, annual grants to Amphi to strengthen educational programs at the high school. We think we can do both this year. One of our classmates has stepped forward to fund this year’s $500 Elizabeth Andersen Scholarship for a deserving student. Knowing we can count on all of you to reach our $25,000 goal, we have asked the administration to identify a current high school program in need of funds that we could support with a $500 grant this year.
In giving to our fund, in addition to considering a gift to honor Liz/Bette, you can also make a gift in memory or in honor of any of our 1966 classmates or teachers. You would simply note on your check or in the memo line at the Amphi Foundation site who you are honoring with your gift. At the end of the funding cycle we will share a list of all those people who were remembered or honored by the fund.
If you have any questions about how to make your donation, please reach out to Leah Noreng at the Amphi Foundation. She is more than happy to answer questions or explain the online donation process. 520-822-6439
You may donate through www.amphifoundation.
org or by sending your gift to Amphi Foundation, 701 W. Wetmore Road, Tucson, AZ 85705. Please add notation, “Class of 1966 Memorial Fund” on your gift and if honoring a specific individual, include their name as well. Your Class Memorial Fund Representatives, Dave Nix, Susan Scott, Erica Richter.
Details About Our 56th Reunion
April 23, 2022
Good Times!
"Dinner and drinks in honor of Bette/Liz at Tohono Chul with Nancy Woods French, David Loutzenheiser, Mary Clark Berdell, and Sandy King Ruhl, April 16, 2021
Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Starting a Memorial Fund
Starting a Memorial Fund
We want to explain the steps your classmates took to set up the
Amphitheater High School Class of 1966 Memorial Fund. We hope to make our first
awards this year.
Susan
Scott reached out to all of you once the suggestion of a Memorial Fund was
made. We wanted to include all of you in the decision and your support and
enthusiasm for the fund was inspiring and heartwarming to everyone.
Dave
Nix conferred with Dave Loutzenheizer to understand his thoughts about the fund
and what he felt would have been important to Liz as a way to determine how to
honor Elizabeth Andersen.
Erica
Richter reached out to Leah Noreng, Executive Director of the AHS Foundation to
discuss the possibility of setting up a fund like this. We are the first high
school class to ask for help with this process, but she is very excited about
our fund and the opportunity to invite other AHS classes to participate in
setting up funds of their own.
Dave
Nix, Erica Richter and Leah Noreng met with a Senior Gift officer from the
Community Foundation of Southern Arizona. Mary Louise Luna helped us determine
the best way to set up our fund. Our goal was to create an Endowed fund which
offered a solid investment return at the lowest administrative expense.
Leah
Noreng agreed to oversee and administer our fund grants with no additional
fees. As a parent of three children in the school district, she also meets
regularly with the administration and understands the schools needs from a student
and parent perspective. All valuable tools when we decide what our grant should
support. Leah has an Advisory Board made up of alumni, administrators and
current parents to support her efforts and decision-making. She confirmed they
would be willing to help oversee our fund as well.
AJ
Malis and Glenda Arrfa have agreed to work with the teachers and students to
identify those high school candidates who should receive Elizabeth Andersen
Award for Contribution to Community and the Class 1966 Memorial Fund grant each
year.
*The AHS Foundation
We
are very lucky to have Leah Noreng, AHS Foundation Executive Director as our
voice with the administration and students at AHS and the Community Foundation
of Southern Arizona. Our Memorial Fund is in good hands! For over 30 years, the Amphi Foundation’s mission has been to
promote academic excellence through the expansion of resources to benefit the
education, development and well-being of the students of the Amphitheater
Public School District.
The Foundation’s programs are grounded in 3 focus areas:
1) Student Preparedness (which includes the program that Liz
became so passionate about in recent years, the Clothing Bank)
2) Innovative Learning Opportunities for Students and Educator
Support
3) Opportunities for Students
to become College, Career and Community Ready. Over the past five years, the
Amphi Foundation has invested over $1,000,000 directly into classrooms and for
the benefit of all Amphi students thanks to continued and generous support from
our community
Meeting with the Principal and Vice Principal of AHS-AJ Malis and Glenda Arrfa
Principal and Vice Principal of AHS-AJ Malis and Glenda Arrfa
2021: Projected 2020-21 AHS enrollment was 1350 students.
Reopening of school in person at the end of March 2021 resulted in 1000
students returning.
Although in person school has reopened, the high school still
offers students who want to study remotely, the opportunity to do that through
Zoom classes.
Amphi Academy is a third program that runs in parallel with the
in-person school and online program. The content is provided by a company
called Engenuity. This program is for students who have trouble working during
regular school hours either because of behavioral issues or job challenges. It
is self-paced and monitored so both the students and the instructors know how
well they are achieving their goals. Students do their work anytime in a 24
hour period.
A new program called RISE-with funding from the recently passed
Covid relief bill is offering catch up programs for students in the morning, evenings
and on the weekend.
Challenges: Communication, family engagement and family
stability are the biggest challenges facing families and school administrators
at AHS today.
There are between 26 and 32 spoken languages on campus at any
given time. Transportation to school events is a challenge and the cultural
expectation for parent involvement is not a model parents from these different
cultures know or understand. In most cases they can’t support their students in
their desire to attend college as they have no experience themselves. There are
a large number of first generation college students coming from the Amphi
population.
Economic challenges are a huge issue for the parents who are
‘living in the now’ often moving their families from apartment to apartment to
take advantage of ‘free first month rent’ offers. Family stability is a big
challenge with students moving between different family members and living
arrangements. The well know Tucson nonprofit-Youth on Their Own-originated at
AHS to help provide for students without a stable home base.
We were assured in our meeting that any and all grants to the
school would make a big difference to AHS students. For example, a student with
a first year scholarship to Pima Community College would need to live at home
and might require transportation to the college. A grant to cover
transportation to college could make all the difference to that student. A
$1000 grant would allow that student to ride the bus everyday to classes for a
year.
Amphitheater High School is a school we can all be proud we
attended. Current students who overcome challenges and complete their high
school years at AHS are a group of young people to be admired and one the Class
of 1966 can proudly support with our Memorial grant program as they take their
next steps beyond high school.
Amphi High School-Yesterday and Today
Amphi High School-Yesterday and Today
Amphitheater
High School opened in 1939. As the second high school established in Tucson, it
has a long history and has produced many graduates well-known in the local
community as well as many that have gone on to national prominence.
For much of the twentieth
century, the Amphitheater area was home to middle class families, and the
prosperous Catalina Foothills area also fed into Amphitheater High School. The opening of Catalina Foothills High School
in 1992 led to many college-bound, middle class students leaving
Amphitheater High School. As Tucson has
grown rapidly in the past twenty-five years, many middle class families have
moved out of the city limits to unincorporated suburbs or to higher-income
areas like Oro Valley. Today the
Amphitheater neighborhood is a low-income, high-mobility area. Amphitheater High School is surrounded by
mobile home parks, apartment buildings, and small bungalows. Once-thriving stores and service businesses
have been replaced by convenience and liquor stores, high-interest lenders, and
other small businesses mixed in with vacant store fronts. A former mom-and-pop doughnut shop near Amphi
is now a drive-through Checkmate offering payday loans.
Within this transformed
neighborhood, Amphitheater High School continues to be a haven for students in
the community. The school grounds
include large grassy sports fields, a performing arts center, a thriving
library, and a sparkling pool. School
buildings are organized around a courtyard where students mingle on outdoor tables
and benches. In the past eight years,
Amphitheater High School has transformed and created a strong career and
college-ready focus for the students in the community.
The Amphitheater High
School community is rich in cultural diversity.
This is a strength that allows students to be exposed to other life
experiences, perspectives, ideas, and learning methods. With its demographic profile and large
immigrant population, Amphitheater High School is one of the most diverse high
schools in Tucson, with the feel of a global neighborhood school.
Race/Ethnic
Distribution - 2019-2020 |
|||||
Asian |
Black |
Hispanic |
Native Am. |
White |
Multi-racial |
4.7% |
10.9% |
63.3% |
3.4% |
16.1% |
1.6% |
Despite the recent
successes in campus environment and programmatic changes, Amphitheater High
School is a place of great need. Even
before the covid-19 shutdown, the average mobility rate of families in the
Amphitheater High School boundaries for the past 5 years is 39%. This means more than a third of enrolled
students have transferred in or out campus in a given school year. The pandemic has only aggravated this
instability – Projected enrollment for 2020-2021 was 1,350 students – when
in-person classes resumed in the last week of March, only 1,000 students
returned. While some of the shortfall is
students who are streaming their classes at home or have shifted to the online “Amphi Academy”, others are simply no longer in
school – perhaps permanently. This
constant turnstile of students in and out of classes creates a unique challenge
for academic success for students on the move and a disruption to the learning
process for students that remain.
The Amphi area has
become a center of refugee resettlement – the student body draws from 26 or
more different home languages at a given time.
This creates barriers to communication between school, student, and
family.
Families in our
community continue to struggle financially.
Over the past 5 years, 81% of students qualify for the federal Free and
Reduced Lunch program. Living at such
low-income levels lead families to focus on daily necessary provisions rather
than academics. Even transportation to
school, and to school-related events, is a challenge for many.
Disruptions include
losing utility service at home, parents having to work extra jobs, buying
inexpensive, unhealthy food, and often times not being able to subscribe to
internet services that have proven to be a necessity in education in the past
year.
The cumulative effect
of these challenges is reflected in the fact that Amphitheater continues to
have lower performance on standardized assessments than Arizona and national
norms.
However the school has worked hard and achieved some notable
progress in the last 5 years. AHS has achieved:
•
a three-year increase in AzMERIT
algebra I and algebra II proficiency scores.
•
a three-year increase in the average
composite ACT scores for seniors.
•
an increase in the number of students
enrolling in the REACH Gifted and Talented Program
•
a 33% increase in the number of
students enrolling in at least one College Board Advanced Placement course
(SY18-19 to SY19-20).