We celebrated our hard work this week with a series of presentations ranging from practicing skateboarding to creating a recipe book, from a research project on deep sea creatures to creating a fashion magazine. It was a wonderful exploration into our communities interests.
Friday, December 18, 2015
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
Spanish Field Trip
Message from Melanie Clark
Dear Parents of Fourth Graders,
On December 10th I did a Powerpoint presentation for 5th grade parents regarding talking with your child about puberty changes. I thought you might be interested in previewing this, as your child may already be experiencing some of these changes.
The presentation, and handouts (which include questions about puberty asked by fifth grade students last year), as well as the puberty videos we used with 5th grade students last January have been posted. (I am hoping to find a more updated video to use in January with our current 5th graders.)
You can access all of these resources two ways:
1. Enter the Parent Portal and click the top right corner link called "Counselor's Parent Resources."
2. Follow this link:
As always, please feel free to contact me with questions or concerns. I look forward to seeing you at the parent coffee in January, where I will be sharing information with 3rd-5th grade parents about navigating the roller coaster of emotional changes during the tween years. I hope you have an enjoyable Winter Break.
Sincerely,
Melanie Clark
Melanie Clark, M.S.
Lower School Counselor
Oregon Episcopal School
6300 SW Nicol Road
Portland, OR 97223
(503) 416-9248 Telephone
Tuesday, December 15, 2015
Monday, December 14, 2015
Passion Project Presentation Schedule
Passion Project Presentations are a chance to share what independent project you have been working on for the last two months. The presentation should be more than 2 min but less than 5!
We are all excited to see and hear everyone's hard work over the course of the week.
Tuesday: Solomon, Owen, Porter, Ria, Sophia, Lahna
Wednesday: Gregory, Kaan, Lou, Ari
Thursday: Alex, Julian, Arthur, Linnea
Friday: Tatum, Renee, Anna, Willa
We are all excited to see and hear everyone's hard work over the course of the week.
Tuesday: Solomon, Owen, Porter, Ria, Sophia, Lahna
Wednesday: Gregory, Kaan, Lou, Ari
Thursday: Alex, Julian, Arthur, Linnea
Friday: Tatum, Renee, Anna, Willa
Homework 14-18
Homework
December 14-18
Everynight
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Students should read for 20 minutes each night.
--write at least 2 notes and 2 thick questions about their reading
--record time and pages read in their reading log.
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due Tuesday
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Science Lab tomorrow….are you ready?
Answer these 3 questions about Long Walk to Water.
1. How do you think Nya and Salva’s stories are connected?
2. Salva and Nya have sad stories, why did the author write such a sad book?
3. What are Nya AND Salva’s connections to the title?
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due Wednesday
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Calculate your family's water footprint. Talk with your parents about your water use. http://environment.nationalgeographic.com/environment/freshwater/change-the-course/water-footprint-calculator/
Share this video, about the Colorado.
(These links are also on the class website for easier access)
Write a paragraph, typed, about: what surprised you, what interests you, or what your family decided after watching and talking.
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due Thursday
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Share the MLK quote you choose on Tuesday and the plan you started. Finish your MLK poster plan.
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due Friday
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Honoring Our Rivers Poem is due Friday.
Share the poem you started on Tuesday, review and edit your work.
Illustrations can also be added to your poems, if you choose.
Finish the paperwork to accompany your poem, name and parent signature.
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Sunday, December 13, 2015
Update: December 13
December Dates:
December 16: Spanish Field trip in morning to Woodburn Family Center
December 18: 12-1 Class Holiday Party
December 18: 1:30-2:30 St. Nick Chapel
December 19-January 3: Winter Break
A Look Ahead into January:
January 8: Spelling Bee in our classroom.
Week of January 11: Geography Bee
January 15: 4th Grade presents the MLK Assembly
No School: January 18, 22, 29
Dear Parents,
It is a busy time of year and the classroom is no different. We have many fun and exciting events happening this week. We are trying to keep a regular schedule as much as possible but many curricular timelines are slowing down as we prepare for Winter Break.
Reading:
We continue to review Reading Logs and Notes. We are sharing book recommendations and personal strategies for reading deeply. This upcoming week, we will talk more about the kinds of notes we take, why we take notes and how notes differ in different genres.
Writing:
We finished our essay on Dams in our rivers. We will publish those to our blog this week as well as start a poem on a river for a publication put out by an organization called Honoring our Rivers. Find out more here.
Math:
In Math, we started talking about place value past the decimal point. We reviewed concepts of place value. We will continue to look at the concept of a whole, parts, and units.
Water Inquiry:
Students have been exploring the concept of water footprints this fall ever since we started talking about water consumption and use. This week, we hope to finish our water bill and uniform project as well as explore how you calculate your water footprint.
December 16: Spanish Field trip in morning to Woodburn Family Center
December 18: 12-1 Class Holiday Party
December 18: 1:30-2:30 St. Nick Chapel
December 19-January 3: Winter Break
A Look Ahead into January:
January 8: Spelling Bee in our classroom.
Week of January 11: Geography Bee
January 15: 4th Grade presents the MLK Assembly
No School: January 18, 22, 29
Dear Parents,
It is a busy time of year and the classroom is no different. We have many fun and exciting events happening this week. We are trying to keep a regular schedule as much as possible but many curricular timelines are slowing down as we prepare for Winter Break.
Reading:
We continue to review Reading Logs and Notes. We are sharing book recommendations and personal strategies for reading deeply. This upcoming week, we will talk more about the kinds of notes we take, why we take notes and how notes differ in different genres.
Writing:
We finished our essay on Dams in our rivers. We will publish those to our blog this week as well as start a poem on a river for a publication put out by an organization called Honoring our Rivers. Find out more here.
Math:
In Math, we started talking about place value past the decimal point. We reviewed concepts of place value. We will continue to look at the concept of a whole, parts, and units.
Water Inquiry:
Students have been exploring the concept of water footprints this fall ever since we started talking about water consumption and use. This week, we hope to finish our water bill and uniform project as well as explore how you calculate your water footprint.
Friday, December 11, 2015
Secret Santa
Inspired by Giving Chapel today, the class decided to give each other gifts. Rather than make gifts for everyone in the class, I suggested a Secret Santa exchange.
The group raised the stakes again and wanted to do something everyday. We compromised with a gift Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Here is our schedule:
Monday: a handmade card or note
Wednesday: a homemade gift
Friday: a homemade gift or a small less than $5 gift
Our goal is not to be extravagant but to spend time and attention on a classmate in this season of light and giving. A change to be thoughtful for our class community. Please email Ms. Chris if you have any questions.
The group raised the stakes again and wanted to do something everyday. We compromised with a gift Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
Here is our schedule:
Monday: a handmade card or note
Wednesday: a homemade gift
Friday: a homemade gift or a small less than $5 gift
Our goal is not to be extravagant but to spend time and attention on a classmate in this season of light and giving. A change to be thoughtful for our class community. Please email Ms. Chris if you have any questions.
Tuesday, December 8, 2015
Persuasive Essay Support
As we are finishing up our persuasive essay on dams this week, we have been using these sentence starters more.
Here is the essay structure to help us remember the 5 paragraph essay format.
Introduction: Hook the reader, state your thesis with your three big ideas. Really get your reader interested in your message.
Paragraph 2,3,4: Big Idea Paragraphs. State your Point, then provide Evidence, Explain what it means and how it is connected to your point, and finally Link these ideas all together or link to your next Big Idea.
Conclusion: Restate your thesis and Big ideas in a new and interesting way. BIG PUSH to convince people that your opinion is important and they should listen to you.
Sunday, December 6, 2015
Update: December 4
Coming Up:
December 11: Giving Chapel at 8:10am
December 11: Art Field trip from 10:45-2pm
December 16: Spanish Field trip from 8-11
December 18: St Nick Assembly
December 19-January 3: Winter Break
Reading
This last week, we finished our OBOB book club projects, self assessed, and presented our posters. I was impressed by the excitement the class generated over the OBOB books and the creativity in the presentations. The class as a whole dug deeper into their texts when reading with a partner and worked together well over the last 3 weeks.
We also reviewed the reading log we had been using for the last month. On this reading log, we were supposed to collect data on the amount of time and number of pages we have read each day at school and at home. We used this data to compile a graph that showed the number of pages read so we could compare school and home reading habits and make plans/goals moving forward. However, we found that in the months time, from November 2-December 2, many students had less than a dozen entries. Reading logs are a data tool, used to provide evidence of reading, and a point of data to observe reading habits. The focus of these reading logs will shift as student's goals shift away from stamina and may focus on title of books competed or abandoned, or focus on note taking goals, or may focus on reading a wide variety of genres. Students voice will be more present as they learn the habit of recording their reading. Please ask your child about their reading log and remind them to always record the home reading!
Next week, we will begin to dive into nonfiction text reading strategies and skills. Out nonfiction reading will continue to focus on water usage, rivers, and water footprints. Our Non-fiction unit focused on these skills:
- I can explain what informational text teaches me by referring to details and examples from the text.
- I can draw inferences from informational texts by referring to details and examples from the text.
- I can figure out the main idea in informational texts.
- I can explain how the main idea in informational texts is supported by the details in the text.
- I can use my own words to summarize informational texts I have read.
Writing
We have started our 5 paragraph essay about dams. Students have worked hard this week to create thesis statements that go beyond "dams are good" or "dams are bad" and become powerful statements like "I believe dams provide a helpful service to America" and "I believe we need to remove some dams for the good of the environment." Then students found 3 strong reasons to support this statement. Currently, students are finding facts to support these reasons. We will merge all of these pieces into a strong 5 paragraph essay next week. We hope to finish the essay by Friday. Our essay is focusing on these skills:
- Write opinion pieces on topics, supporting a point of view with reasons and information.
- Introduce a topic clearly, state an opinion, and create an organizational structure in which related ideas are grouped to support the writer's purpose.
- Provide reasons that are supported by facts and details.
- Link opinion and reasons using words and phrases (e.g., for instance, in order to, in addition).
- Provide a concluding statement or section related to the opinion presented.
Math
We took our Unit 3 Math Assessment Friday. They will be returned to students Monday with their homework. Please review the test with your child, sign the front page and then return it for my files. We will begin Unit 4 next week. Unit 4 focuses on Decimals and will address these skills:
- Compare two decimals to hundredths by reasoning about their size.
- Use decimal notation for fractions with denominators 10 or 100. For example, rewrite 0.62 as 62/100
- Express a fraction with denominator 10 as an equivalent fraction with denominator 100. For example, express 3/10 as 30/100.
Inquiry
We finished our dam projects this week and presented them on Friday. We had a wealth of creativity and invention, everything from a Minecraft replica of Bonneville Dam shared through a screen video, to a hand-built diorama of a flood zone, to a poster outlining the benefits of hydropower, to a stop motion video showing the relocation of local peoples. These projects were a lot of fun and helped us create our focused thesis statement by providing us some time to play around with different ideas about dams and the pros and cons of daming our rivers.
Next week, we will continue a discussion about the Colorado River and examine other water usage demands upon our waterways. Throughout this we will be reviewing our own water footprints.
Passion Project
Our first session of Passion Projects is wrapping up. We hope to share our projects the last week before Winter Break. Students should be prepared to present their work over the last couple months. This will also be part of our homework next week.
Wednesday, December 2, 2015
Spelling Bee and GeoBee Update
Many details are still to come but I wanted to update you all about the Spelling and GeoBee that will be starting in January.
Spelling
It looks like we will be doing the spelling bee the week we return from break. There will be a classroom competition, date to be determined. One person from each class with quality for school competitions, all runners up from each class will compete with me in a tie-breaker round to create a fourth spot (four classes in MS which is why 4 from each grade).
Final round will be sometime late January. TBD
Geo Bee
It looks like will do this after the first week in January, date to be determined. The final will be the first week in February or last week in January.
Resources
Spelling
It looks like we will be doing the spelling bee the week we return from break. There will be a classroom competition, date to be determined. One person from each class with quality for school competitions, all runners up from each class will compete with me in a tie-breaker round to create a fourth spot (four classes in MS which is why 4 from each grade).
Final round will be sometime late January. TBD
Geo Bee
It looks like will do this after the first week in January, date to be determined. The final will be the first week in February or last week in January.
Resources
Scripps Spelling Words...all 450 words. (Students should focus on the 100 4th grade words first. A handout is available from Ms. Chris. When the 100 4th grade words are mastered, students can move on to the school wide 450 words)
Mr. Ari recommend's the book, Top Dog: The Science of Winning and Losing by Po Bronson & Ashley Merryman (I have a copy if you would like to borrow). At it’s core, this book explores the difference between Maladaptive and Adaptive Competition. Maldaptive: “I have to win, every time!” If the mindset is it’s a forgone conclusion then I can be dismissive of opponents and of the rules – “If you just understood my greatness you would just give me the award” (not respecting the competition itself). Adaptive: I understand that it takes a long time to be good at something, “I may win today, lose tomorrow, but I can't take the win for granted, I will push myself harder, be inspired by others.”
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