Author: Juliet Schohn

  • ICE impacts Ventura

    ICE impacts Ventura

    Introduction In early 2025, federal immigration enforcement actions intensified across California. In Ventura County, a series of federal immigration raids targeted agricultural workers, leading to over 200 detentions. The raids are a result of President Donald Trump’s objective of reaching 3,000 undocumented immigrant arrests per day, according to the American Immigration Council. Trump’s deportation…

  • CVUSD TK programs expand enrollment for students

    CVUSD TK programs expand enrollment for students

    Transitional Kindergarten [TK] programs in the Conejo Valley Unified School District [CVUSD] are welcoming record numbers of students due to its recent expansions of age range eligibility to all 4-year-olds. Across the CVUSD, over 700 students are now enrolled in TK in 16 schools, which includes every elementary school except EARThS Magnet. TK is…

  • CVUSD faces criticism over sexual assault and harassment

    CVUSD faces criticism over sexual assault and harassment

    Over 50 percent of women and almost one in three men experience sexual violence involving physical contact during their lifetime, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC]. More than four in five female rape survivors reported that they were first raped before 25-years-old, and almost half were first raped as…

  • Scandinavian Festival celebrates 51 years of culture

    Scandinavian Festival celebrates 51 years of culture

    Children singing and dancing, rows of booths, each filled with unique trinkets and artwork, the smell of pancakes filling the space like a cloud, and hundreds of people were all brought together by the culture of Scandinavia. The two-day Scandinavian Festival, held at California Lutheran University [CLU] on April 5 and 6, brought European…

  • CVUSD community protects book accessibility

    CVUSD community protects book accessibility

    Introduction In our country, there have always been controversies surrounding the banning and censoring of books. Though it often feels far removed from NPHS, with our curriculum consisting heavily of banned literature, there have been debates within the CVUSD. Local parents, teachers, students and admin continue to debate this topic, while several states are…

  • The novels read in the first three years of high school

    The novels read in the first three years of high school

    Required reading can easily feel like a chore, especially when there are dozens of assignments and essays to do along the way. While we compiled a list of 10 novels students read in their first three years of high school, they are limited to the curriculums of English 9 and 10 Honors and both…

  • Campus incidents force NPHS community to examine safety policies

    Campus incidents force NPHS community to examine safety policies

    Introduction: Every day, Newbury Park High School provides a second home for thousands of students. Students who partake in classes before school, along with after school activities, often find themselves spending more time on school grounds than at home. Therefore, many have concluded that campus safety should be a top priority. However, recent events…

  • NPHS Mystery Dinner Theater steals the show Dinner steals the show

    NPHS Mystery Dinner Theater steals the show Dinner steals the show

    Mystery Dinner is an annual theater event that took place on Feb. 7-8, staged in the NPHS cafeteria and heavily featured improvisation and audience interaction. Unique from main stage productions, the cast contained just seven characters, whose interactions shaped the plot of a murder mystery. The event included a silent auction, the proceeds of…

  • Numerous fires demolish LA County communities

    Numerous fires demolish LA County communities

    Los Angeles has long been an arid place, full of dry brush, making it particularly prone to wildfires. Each year, wildfires engulf open space and threaten structures, and each year they are worse than the last. On Jan. 7, the Palisades fire and the Eaton fire broke out within a few hours of each…

  • EARThS science lab fosters engaged learning

    From the jumping spider to the rainbow trout fry, EARThS Magnet Elementary School’s life science lab is crawling with creatures with which students have the opportunity to interact. Taking the bearded dragon on walks is just one of many responsibilities that Juliette Gibson and Stephanie Cipriano-Ceringa took on as life science teachers post-lockdown. “I…