Monday, January 20, 2020

January 21-February 7


Language Arts


Our spelling and vocabulary words for Lesson 8 come from our Social Emotional Learning (S.E.L.) curriculum. We will not begin this set of words until the week of January 27th. The students will be assessed on Friday, February 7th. Below is the list of words and definitions.

Word List:Lesson 8 SEL (Social Emotional Learning)
_______________________________
Lesson #8
Test Date : February 7, 2020

Vocabulary Definition

empathy(n) the ability to feel or understand what someone else is feeling
respect(v) to act in a way that shows you care about other people’s feelings

perspective(n) the way you look or see something, point of view

assertive(adj) to have the ability to communicate what you need want in a respectful way          

passive(adj)      the inability to communicate what you need, inactive
aggressive(adj) demanding and not thinking about others’ perspective

complex(adj) not easy to understand or explain
compassion(n) when you do something to show you have empathy

conclusion(n)  final decision reached by reasoning

responsibility(n) showing ownership of your actions and behavior

Book Talks


Historical Fiction book talks are due on January 31st.  The one area that continues to be a challenge for some students is making eye contact with the audience. Many students only read their notes, not engaging with the audience. Please help your child in practicing their Book Talk and timing them. Don't forget about the RAH calendar. To earn the points the following must be present: correct total of at least 100 minutes weekly, a parent signature and brought back on time.  Finally, as you listen to your child's book talk, ask yourself if the story makes sense! Do you have enough information to make sense of the book? If you have questions in your mind, please help your child to add and explain more details. Thanks for your help! Also, don't forget that for this Book Talk, students needed to choose an item/object that relates to the specific time in history that is represented in the book. Then they share 3 facts about that time period. Here is the graphic organizer students were given.  This rubric will be used to assess the students as they give the book talks. 

Six Flags Read to Succeed: There's been some issues with the Read to Succeed website lately. I have been in contact with someone from the program and we are not the only ones having problems. They needed to change the code for entering your child into my homeroom's database. Please try code: vbydb  You can still use the reading log to record your child's reading time or just use the RAH sheet.

Writing:

Our writing progress is coming along!  So far, we have covered a variety of writing skills: brainstorming realistic fiction topic ideas, creating believable characters, developing a story arc to show rising action, conflict and falling action, and "showing, not telling." We will move into character's emotions and thoughts, hooking the reading into the story, and finally, having a balance of actions, thoughts/dialogue and setting descriptions. We've noticed that at this stage in a young writer's development, students focus on character's actions (i.e. Jack went to the baseball game. Jack bought some popcorn. Jack watched the game and then went home). We are trying to encourage students to have dramatic scenes that leave the reader wanting to know more!  Students will work through a checklist to guide their writing.


Math

We are currently on Unit 4 (Multi-digit multiplication). Last year, students were exposed to multi-digit multiplication, but did not master the skill. This year, they will need to be proficient in the skill using partial products. Many love the lattice method, but they are encouraged to solve the problems using other ways. Without the automaticity of multiplication facts, students may fall behind as we get into harder concepts. Please help your child learn his/her single digit multiplication facts. Reflex Math is a great tool for this. Students that have gotten 100% fact fluency on Reflex Math have moved on to Prodigy/Khan Academy

We are also working on converting metric units(e.g.- milliliters to liters, kilograms to grams). This unit is also heavy on multi-step word problems. This provides the students with context in which to better engage them in their learning of arithmetic. We are extending our knowledge of area and perimeter by finding both for rectilinear figures with missing sides. 


Here is the link to Unit 4:


Social Studies:

We have now finished studying the New England Colonies. To allow students the opportunity to teach the class a specific topic about the Middle and Southern Colonies, we put the students in small expert groups. Each group will be responsible for learning about their assigned topic, creating a presentation, and finally sharing their knowledge about their content with the class. Students will be graded using a rubric under the categories of 1) public speaking skills 2) reporting information 3) use of visual aid 4) note taking and 5) vocabulary words.  The students have enjoyed this project so far!

Colonial Day:

A letter went home before break outlining this very fun and educational event that fourth graders truly enjoy! Please refer to this letter again for your convenience.  Colonial Day will be on January 27th in the morning.  We highly encourage all students to dress the part!  Please note all students need to bring in at least one clean, long, athletic sock for a colonial craft activity. Your child should come to school dressed in his or her Colonial attire. They can bring regular clothes to change into after lunch. Thank you!

Social Skills:

We have crossed into the Emotion Management portion of the program. Students are learning how to manage their strong emotions to avoid escalations and problems both in school and out of school. The steps that we are learning to manage our emotions: Stop, name your feeling, calm down. We refer to this a lot!  Coming up next: Calming down helps us handle put-downs and avoid making conflicts escalate.

Important Dates:

  • Friday, January 24: 
    • Mid-Trimester Reports Sent Home
    • PTO Movie Night, 6:00-8:30 PM
  • Monday, January 27th: 
      • Colonial Day
  • Friday, January 31st:
    • Historical Book Talks & RAH Due
  • February 5: Global Play Day (more info to follow on this)
  • Thursday, February 6: 
    • House Meeting
    • PTO Meeting, 7:00 PM
  • Tuesday, February 11: 100th Day of School!
  • Monday, February 17: NO SCHOOL, Presidents Day Celebrated
  • Friday, February 28: PTO Bingo Night, 6:00-9:00 PM

Saturday, January 4, 2020

January 6- January 17

Happy New Year!  I hope you had a wonderful break, filled with family, friends, fun, and relaxation!
Here is an update on the next couple weeks of 2020!


Language Arts:
Our new list of spelling/vocab words are from our next unit in Math:
Please remind your child to complete at least 4 Spellingcity activities and the meaningful sentences activity on Google Classroom. For your reference, I don't post these assignments until the words are introduced. 
The new reading focus skill is fact and opinion. A fact is something that can be proven true and an opinion is someone's own thoughts, feeling, or beliefs. Students have been doing remarkably well with our focus skill assessments. These short assessments show
me if the student has mastered the skill or still needs more guidance. During stations, students rotate among
5 stations, with the focus being on differentiated instruction per small group during the meet with the teacher.  
We have spent much time on writing!  Students are well into their ideas for their realistic fiction stories. 
We will spend some time on the topic called: Show, Don't Tell. Show, Don't Tell is a writing technique in
which the story and characters are related through sensory details and actions rather than exposition.
It fosters a writing that's more immersive for readers, allowing them to visualize the story and understand
the characters better. Here's an example:

Showing: As his mother switched off the light and left the room, Michael tensed. He huddled under the covers, gripped the sheets, and held his breath as the wind brushed past the curtain.
Telling: Michael was terribly afraid of the dark.
Historical fiction Book Talks are due on January 31st! The one area that continues to be a challenge for some students is making eye contact with the audience. Some students just read their notes, not engaging with the audience.  Please help your child in practicing their book talk and timing them. Also you will notice on the graphic organizer that the oral reading part is no longer optional. Students are to pick a part from their book (could be a long paragraph, a few paragraphs, or a short page) to read to the class. They should also explain why they decided to read that page. For example, it shows Bob's character trait of how they were brave. Or this paragraph shows the main conflict of the book when Rob and Kate are lost in the woods. Since this is a historical fiction, there is also a different requirement for the object. Students are asked to bring in a creative object from the historical time period in the book. In addition, give three facts about this time period. These can be facts they learned in the book or facts they learn from a non-fiction book about their time period. Finally, as you listen to your child's Book Talk, ask yourself if the story makes sense! Do you have enough information to make sense of the book? If you have questions in your mind, help your child to add and explain more. Students have two months to complete this Book Talk so I can't wait to see the results. Below you will see the link for the rubric and graphic organizer.
Don't forget about the RAH calendar. To earn the points the following must be present: correct total of at least 100 minutes weekly, a parent signature and brought back on time.
Social Studies:
Before break, we kicked off our Colonial America unit by studying the three early English settlements. We
are moving on to studying the three Colonial regions (New England, Middle and Southern). Within each
region study, students will be comparing and contrasting these characteristics: reasons for settlement,
geography, natural resources, economy and way of life. Our first region we will study is the New England region.
After we study the New England, Middle, and Southern region, our culminating activity is called
Colonial Day. Before break you got a letter that described what this day is all about. Colonial Day
is on January 27. This means we will veer from our normal schedule and participate in colonial activities
throughout the morning and lunchtime. We are all excited to simulate what life would have been like
in colonial times. Please remember to bring in one clean athletic sock for the craft that day.
Also don't forget to get your colonial attire ready too!
*We will resume science after Colonial America. 


Math:  
We are currently on Unit 4 (Multidigit multiplication). Last year, students were exposed to multidigit multiplication
but did not master the skill. This year, they will need to be proficient in the skill using partial products.  Without
the automaticity of multiplication facts, students may fall behind as we get into harder concepts. Please help
your child learn his/her single digit multiplication facts.  Reflex Math is a great tool for this. Students that have
gotten 100% fact fluency on Reflex Math have moved on to Prodigy, which is another math game online that is
application of facts.
Coming up in math is the 4th open response!  A major goal for students is to learn how to EXPLAIN and model
both in words and pictures how a problem was solved.  We've come a long way but will continue practicing this
with every unit. 
Here is the link to Unit 4:
I get asked a lot how to print home links if a student should happen to forget them at school. Please
bookmark the above link as it gives you access to all the homelinks!  You just have to know what lesson we
are on! :) 



Social Skills:
Our last skill we covered was about joining in a group. Students learned that when joining a group it’s nice to stand nearby and watch and listen. Then give a compliment, ask a question, or offer to help. Lastly assertively ask to join in.

Our next focus skills is compassion. We will discuss what compassion looks like and doesn’t look like, role play real life situations, and watch some short video clips from our Second Steps Social Skills Program.
Important Dates:
Monday, 1/6:  Classes resume
Monday, 1/6: Discovery Science in pm
Tuesday, 1/14: House meeting
Monday, 1/20: No School, MLK Jr. Day 
Friday, 1/17: Spelling/vocab assessments
Monday, 1/27: Colonial Day
Friday, 1/31: Historical Fiction Book Talk due