Category Archives: Events

Winter Walk & Roll Week celebration

Make your plan now for the Winter Walk & Roll Week celebration from February 8th – 12th. Walk or roll around your neighborhood or house, or to school or a park.

  • Download the activity booklet at www.NewtonSafeRoutes.org to play Bingo and I Spy.
  • Print or draw a winter boot, decorate it, and hang it in your window.
  • Look for other boots on your walks.
  • Learn to walk like a penguin. And bundle up!

Brought to you by Newton Safe Routes to School.

Newton South Stage Presents BREATHE

A global pandemic, a civil rights crisis, and a divided country. We’re trapped in quarantine, isolated from our friends. So many of us feel like we’re gasping for air.

Blending live theater with recorded performances, Breathe is a series of original monologues, musical pieces, scenes, dances, and spoken word poems that explore our experiences of the past year. From the chaotic beginning of the pandemic, to the social justice outcries of the summer, right up to the inauguration, Breathe captures the darkness and the light, dwelling in our desire to connect, to transform, and, ultimately, to heal.

In the spirit of helping our community heal through performance, they will donate ALL of the proceeds from the performance to Bridge Over Troubled Waters, an organization that supports runaway, homeless, and at-risk youth.

Ticket $10.00 for a Single Viewer or $25.00 for Family (three or more). Tickets available at SouthStage.org

February 5th, 7:30 pm via livestream

Newton Inspires: Broadway Babies!

Newton Inspires: Broadway Babies! The Newton Schools Foundation invites you to join in a free, virtual event featuring Newton Public School alumni Zachary Baer, producer, live and digital entertainment; Skylar Fox, director, playwright and theatrical designer; Ryan Vona, actor and singer-songwriter, and Tess Primack, actress and founder of Broadway from Home in a live and engaging conversation about life in the theater.

For more details and to register visit https://newtonschoolsfoundation.org/nsf_news/our-next-newton-inspires-speakers-tuesday-feb-9/

Special guest Adam Brown, director of Theatre Ink at NNHS, will moderate. This event is part of NSF’s Newton Inspires speaker series—notable Newtonians sharing their passions with the community.

February 9th at 7:00 pm

Student Project: planting trees to honor lost lives

The 4C Tree Project aims to honor the memory of lives lost to COVID-19 by celebrating life through the planting of trees, and they need your help to make it a success. Spearheaded by Green Newton’s Environmental Youth Leadership Program, the Capture Carbon Commemorate COVID-19 Tree Project (4C Tree) hopes to demonstrate the resilience of our City through difficult times and its commitment to a healthy ecosystem. Your gift will help plant trees in public spaces throughout Newton as memorials to loved ones lost and as reminders of the importance of caring for our world.

Learn more about the project at GreenNewton.org.
Sponsor a 4C Tree HERE.

Next Newton School Committee Meeting

Meeting Agenda

  • Superintendent’s Update
  • Public Comment
  • Spring and Fall Planning Update
  • Ventilation Final Update and Report
  • Testing Working Group Update
  • Elementary Survey Results Addendum
  • MOA with NTA
  • FY22 School Calendar Review: FY22 Calendar
  • Vote: Draft Minutes: September 2, 2020 Draft Minutes

Meeting Login https://zoom.us/j/390017072
Meeting ID: 390 017 072
Dial in:+1 646 558 8656 US Meeting ID: 390 017 072
Meetings are also accessible at https://newtv.org/school-committee-meetings

January 25, 7:00 pm
Via Zoom

Public Speak Instructions: To participate in public comment, please submit your NAME and ADDRESS by email with the subject line “Public Comment for [DATE]” to schoolcommittee@newton.k12.ma.us PRIOR to 7:00 pm, the official start time of the meeting. In order to ensure the committee hears comments on as many issues as possible, please briefly indicate what issue you are speaking to.

You will need to join the Virtual Meeting by computer or phone to participate. During the Public Comment portion of the meeting, the Chair will call your name and the meeting monitor will unmute your microphone. State your name and address for the minutes and you will have up to three minutes to comment.

Building Resilience Across the Charles River Watershed

Adapting to the impacts of climate change is a daunting task but many local cities and towns are facing this challenge head-on. Having the best possible information on the impacts of climate change within your community can help guide effective local investment and appropriate regulatory changes.

The fifteen communities that are part of the Charles River Climate Compact (CRCC) have teamed up to develop a Charles River watershed flood model. Join a webinar to hear about the development of this important planning tool and how you can be involved.

RSVP: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_yGNNGHrZRpyDa-UYX2EKwg

January 28,  7:00 – 8:15 pm

Kamala’s Way: An American Life – Author event

Kamala’s Way: An American Life is the compelling new biography of Kamala Harris, America’s new Vice President. Join author Dan Morain for The Remarkable Rise Of Vice President Kamala Harris.

During his time as a reporter with the Los Angeles Times and editorial editor with the Sacramento Bee, Morain covered Kamala Harris’s professional ascent beginning when she was Deputy District Attorney in Alameda County. He followed her career as she went on to become District Attorney to California Attorney General, then to U.S. Senator, and now, she’s the first Black, South Asian and female Vice President in our country’s history.

Learn how the daughter of two immigrants of color in segregated California became one of America’s most effective and dynamic power players. Morain will be joined in conversation by Liz Goodwin, Deputy Bureau Chief for The Boston Globe in Washington, DC.

Register HERE for the virtual event.
February 2nd,  7:00 pm

This program is made possible in partnership with the Tewksbury Public Library.

Heating and Cooling Older Homes for Comfort and Energy Efficiency

A free webinar for owners of older homes that need heating and cooling upgrades, or want to add central air conditioning. Speakers from Newton’s HeatSmart Program will explain how electric heat pump technology works, and how we can retrofit it into different types of homes.

A builder/renovator will also provide information about adding insulation to homes with an understanding of the embodied carbon impact of insulation choices. Presenters: Phil Hanser, Craig Forman and Rachel White. Co-sponsored by Green Newton and Historic Newton.

February 4th, 7:00 pm
Via Zoom

Registration Link https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Oc738JEXRXGMdjax04odgw

Looking for something to do Martin Luther King Day weekend and the following weekend?

Consider Belmont World Film’s Family Festival
View the festival trailer at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzi8KRjhQfY

Belmont World Film’s Family Festival goes completely virtual this year, expanding from its typical four days to ten to allow audience members to view film at their leisure (although once you start a film, you’ll have 48 hours to watch it).

The Festival provides children age 3-12 and their families the opportunity to see some of the world’s most remarkable current films for children—films that provide a window into the lives of kids in other cultures, races, and ethnicities—plus the chance to participate in several exciting workshops, including:

  • Junior Film Critics Workshop with Joyce Kulhawik and Boston Globe film critic Ty Burr on January 16th and 17th
  • Learn to Model Gromit or Shaun the Sheep with Aardman Animation’s Senior Model Maker on January 23rd (three sessions available)

SHORT FILM PROGRAMS FOR AGE 3-8

  • Animal Magnetism: Mostly wordless, short, animated films about animals from Magnet Films, a distributor of award-winning shorts, including many Oscar winners!
  • Celebrating 100 Years of Scholastic Books: The newest, never before seen films, as well as some of our favorite classics from Weston Woods Studios, Scholastic’s filmmaking arm that turns some of the best loved children’s picture books into high quality films.
    (Staff pick!)
  • Hungry Bear Tales: Stories for young children and their parents, full of sidesplitting humor and delicious food! Cuddly bears Ned and Mishka, characters based on the books by Zbyněk Černík, are best friends who share a cosy house in the forest.
  • LOL with Mo Willems Films: This program includes some of our favorites films based on the books by children’s author Mo Willems, who can make children and adults laugh out loud like no one else! He not only writes and illustrates his own books, but also narrates the animated films that are created by Scholastic/Weston Woods Studios.
  • Zog/Zog and the Flying Doctors: Zog and the Flying Doctors is the follow up to last year’s Zog, in which a keen but accident-prone dragon learns how to fly, roar, breathe fire, and save a princess during his first year at Dragon School. In this sequel, Zog, Pearl and Gadabout are now a flying doctor trio caring for creatures, including a mermaid, a unicorn, and a sneezy lion. Features the voices of comedians Tracy Ullman, Sir Lenny Henry, and Rob Brydon, plus Game of Thrones’ Kit Harrington and Fleabag’s Hugh Skinner.

SHORT FILM PROGRAMS FOR AGE 5-10

  • Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: The ideals and people connected to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as interpreted by Scholastic/Weston Woods Studios.
  • Made in Portugal: Short Animated Films by and for Kids: A collection of award-winning, short animated films created and narrated by 8-10 year old students at the ANILUPA Animation Centre, an educational and cultural center created by Associação de Ludotecas do Porto (ALP), a professional animation studio in Porto. The films tell stories about Portuguese culture, daily life, and traditions.

FEATURE LENGTH FILMS FOR AGE 8+

  • Angel: An 11 year-old girl named Angel finds a gold watch that makes her wishes become reality.
  • Fahim, the Little Chess Prince: Based on the true story of Fahim Mohammad, who fled from Bangladesh to Paris when he was only 8 and initially refused asylum, only to be crowned France’s Under-12 Chess Champion in 2012.
  • Forward: A moving documentary for kids and about kids making a difference in the world no matter what their age. The film focuses on José Adolfo, who founded a ground-breaking eco-bank for poor children and young people in his native Peru when he was just 8 years old. (Staff Pick!)
  • Jackie & Oopjen: While wandering around after hours at Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum where her mom is a curator, 12 year-old Jackie discovers that Oopjen, one of the subjects of Rembrandt’s famous paintings, has suddenly come to life, looking for her long lost sister who was painted by an unknown painter.
  • Kusasa: A youth soccer team journeys from their home in Groendal in South Africa to compete in finals of the Gothia Cup – the world’s largest international soccer tournament for youths held each year in Sweden.
  • Microplastic Madness: Fifth graders from P.S. 15 in Red Hook, Brooklyn took action on plastic pollution by collecting local data, leading community outreach, and informing policy by testifying and rallying at City Hall. Then they took action in their cafeteria to eliminate all single-use plastic!
  • The Bears Famous Invasion of Sicily: Based on Dino Buzzati’s classic book of the same name about how a group of bears came to live with one another for a short time, written in 1945 toward the end of World War II.

January 15th – 24th
Link to virtual festival https://watch.eventive.org/bwffamilyfest

Free Webinar on Environmental Justice

Join a virtual session in which Dr. Daniel Faber will speak about climate change and the ecological crisis, as well as issues of environmental and climate injustice.

Environmental Injustice and the Crisis of Environmentalism
January 12th, 7:00 pm Register HERE.

This free program is co-sponsored by Green Newton and the Newton Free Library, and is a part of the Green Newton Library Series.