Friday, December 18, 2015

January/February Book Share!

Please note a change in our book share schedule: Due to Winter Break we will read a Historical Fiction book, but share it in February. This gives students time to return from break, choose a book, read it, and create a imaginative and fun book share. Please follow the project guidelines below!

Historical Fiction

Find a historical fiction book.  Have it OK’d by Mr. Mike.
Read and enjoy your book!
This month’s project will be as easy at ABC!  You will receive 27 cards with which to make an alphabet book about your historical fiction book (one card for each letter of the alphabet and one for the front cover).

After you finish your book, make a list of words – one for each letter of the alphabet.  The words you choose can describe...
  • what life was like at the time your story takes place;
  • they can describe characters or settings;
  • they can be new words from your story;
  • any other words from your story,
  • or any other words which tie in with your book.

On each card you will write the letter of the alphabet, or cut a large one out from a magazine or newspaper.  You will then write the word that starts with that letter.  Under those, write a sentence correctly using the word (you may take sentences out of the book).  If you really try hard and can’t find any words for Q, X, Y, OR Z, you may skip over them. 

One the day of your presentation, you will need to tell us the name of your book, the author, and its historical setting (where and when it takes place).  Then you are to share your five favorite words.

Be sure you know which words you are going to share and that you have practiced several times before the day of the presentation.  Also, make sure you know the correct pronunciation of the words you choose to share.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Cooperative play

Students will be able to identify and perform important aspects of physical education through a variety of partner, small group and whole class activities.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Volume 18: December 14, 2015

We can describe area using words, numbers, pictures, and real-life examples!
A lot of singing, a lot of dancing, a lot of perimeter, and a bunch more area! Esperanza Rising continues to expose us of the challenges of forced migration. We are wrapping up book clubs with discussion questions and writing reviews of the books. Reviews include a summary with important events and a schema paragraph - one in which the writer shares 2-3 different connections they made while reading the story. We wrapped up our study of area and perimeter by creating a shape and a grid inside it. We did different activities, like color it, walk on it, and sleep on it to show and describe our understanding of area and perimeter. We shared our personal family histories and what we were surprised by. Some of us found that we have a lot more in common than we could ever know. We also started to dive into personal migration stories through our UOI books. Eventually, each student will create a PuppetPals retelling of a migration story of his/her choice. December book shares are very cool and we can tell students have practiced them at home. January's book share will still be Historical Fiction, but we will share in February (not January). This way students can enjoy the winter break, come back, and have time to prepare their presentation. I will post the guidelines for January's presentation soon! Remember our winter concert is next Tuesday and our field trip to the US Embassy will be next week. It is an opportunity for students to learn first-hand the myriad of ways people can migrate. Lastly, this year's Elementary production was unbelievable. It was wonderful to see the collaboration and hard work of everyone come together with such fluidity and power. Thanks for a fantastic experience! Enjoy the week.

Homework: Accompanied by 20 minutes of reading that amazing book you're in, please complete the following...
Monday:
Tuesday:
Wednesday: IXL Grade 4 Math P.20 Create figures with a given area & P.24 compare area and perimeter of two figures
Thursday:
Friday: Enjoy Winter Break. See you next year, Monday, January 11, 2015!
 Book share!


 Can you pick out our little ones?
 Book share!

 Area... it's all around us! We can prove it!
 Book share!





Can you balance and walk
the distance around
a closed figure? We can!
It's the perimeter!

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Volume 17: December 7, 2015

Perimeter... it's there. Can you see it?
If learning is like a roller coaster, then we are on the fastest, loopiest, twistiest, swirliest coaster in the world! Yes, I think I just made up a word:)

Odil had a desperate need to know what the word "schema" meant and how it is connects to reading, so that is what we focused on this week. We listened to the song, "You've got a friend in me" by Randy Newman (you may know the song from the animated film, Toy Story) and made three types of connections. We found out that our schema is the sum total of our prior thoughts, feelings, ideas, and experiences - so basically our hearts are the center of our schema. Everything we have experienced helps us make connections between the text and things that happened in our own lives (text-self), things that we have read in other stories (text-text), and larger themes or BIG ideas that are happening in the world at large (text-world). Students made some impressive and deep connections to the song, particularly, relating it to our unit of inquiry on migration. Feel free to listen to the song at home and see what connections you can make!

Students worked on a skill called Close Reading. It helps students read with a purpose connect challenging topics together using different strategies, like underlining important words and circling unknown words. Then students re-read the text to find context clues to help them discover the meaning of those circled words. In the end, we wrote a gist, or a statement describing what each article was mostly about. Through this process, students found vocabulary words that related to the theme of migration. They recorded and created a personalized list of vocabulary words at their reading level. Then, we discussed these words and we found commonalities among them and shared the meaning of the words. All student generated, all student lead, all student learning. It was pretty cool! Ask you child about a few words they are learning and what they mean to them.

In math, we have dived head first into what exactly is perimeter and area. Simply put, it has been a blast seeing the closed polygons (figures/shapes) that students created. They then traded their creations with a partner and each calculated the area and perimeter. After which, they traded again and shared their thinking about how they solved them. We created area and perimeter posters and put them using everyone's work and ideas about how to describe/explain both concepts using words, numbers, pictures, and real-life examples. After all, if we can't connect our learning to the real-world, then why are we learning it in the first place? Am I right? Ask your child about what is perimeter and area: What does it mean to you? Why would we use it in the real-world?

Our new read aloud is Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan and it begins with a tragic event. It is about how a young girl is forced to change, grow up a little, and face the realities of life that she has been protected from her entire life. It is a story of love and perseverance, full of metaphors and life lessons that reach deep into the soul, heart, and mind of any reader. Feel free to check it out, or maybe even download it to your Kindle or Nook? Maybe you could read it and discuss the story with your child at home as we read it in school? If you do, please don't read ahead and spoil it for us though:)

As we enter the final weeks of the calendar year and before Winter Break, please stay keep that structure and consistency you have at home. Excitement and joviality permeates everything this time of year - which is a great thing! At the same time, we are still keeping the high expectations and intensity of fun going here at school. Let's keep working together and reminding our children to continue reading 20 minutes each night. Enjoy the week!

Homework: Reading 20 minutes and preparing for December's book share!
Monday: Enjoy Constitution day & read!
Tuesday: No School
Wednesday: IXL Math Grade 4 Geometry P.20 and P.21
Thursday: Please go over and sign your Math Test:)
Friday: Read, Relax
 Cara, Heads up, 7-up!
 Thanks for the mystery, Anna.
 Best friends... I think so!
 Sharing our thinking about perimeter.




 Can you create a perimeter with different parts of your body? Well, we can!
 Sofia rocked it and hooked us with her first question!



Learning about area requires, square tiles, smiles, markers, grid paper, and a lot of fun!

Friday, November 27, 2015

Volume 16: November 30, 2015

Things got real this week.
Snapshot:
  • completed our Arrays and Shares math assessment
  • changed base groups
  • dedicated the Elementary Building
  • launched new unit of inquiry based on the theme: Where We are in Time and Place with a focus on migration; Central Idea: Human Migration is a Response to challenges, risks, and opportunities.
  • completed four activities to guide students to look from different perspectives about migration by altering the structure and routines of their day (I am sure you heard about this!)
  • focusing on inferences and summary writing in book clubs
  • started a new read aloud, Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan about a young girl who is forced to migrate
  • dissected a fetal pig
  • tackled division word problems and used multiple strategies to solve them: visualize the problem, inverse operation (i.e. multiplication) to check reasonableness of quotients, and others
  • Book shares rocked and are getting better. Riccardo shared a very personal and memorable scene from his November book, Names in a Jar.
Enjoy the weather. It is warm and cold at the same time:)

Homework: Please read 20 minutes daily and talk with your child about what they read. Ask them what new word the might have learned!
Monday:  Map Skills: Grids and Compass Rose 
Tuesday:  Map skills:  My Neighborhood
Wednesday:  IXL Math Grade 3 Geometry V.8 Perimeter & Grade 4 Geometry P.19 Perimeter
Thursday: Family Interview:  Your experiences with Migration



 Sometimes you just have to "hold on".






 Book clubs in action. Using context clues to make inferences.

 We are weird. Enough said.


 Book shares.
 Elementary Building dedication.




 Before the migration launch.


















After the launch. Yes, there are "sad" faces. We learned some hard lessons.