Tuesday, March 27, 2012

I feel appreciated!

What a tremendous day! I entered school eager to catch the first glimpse of my decorated door. What a treat. Lindsey's and Aliyah's moms created the most spectacular display, complete with wacky photos of the students, an uncomfortably large picture of me and a life-size lemonade stand. And get this--a lemonade stand from which they actually served lemonade this morning! I also have three mammoth bouquets of flowers and a supply of sugary treats to last for months. Best yet, of course, were the verbal thank yous and generous hugs. I have an amazing job, and I am lucky. Thanks to all of you who contributed.

While the day was amazing, it was for me bittersweet. I know there has been some speculation about my plans for next year, and I am eager to share with you all what is happening. My family and I are about to embark on a new adventure! This week I accepted the position as Assistant Head of the Lower School at Isidore Newman in New Orleans. For sure, the decision to leave the classroom was weighty. I value relationships with students tremendously and will miss working so closely with students in a classroom. While I am excited about my new adventure, I continue to dwell in the realm of Lemonheads, and am so happy to be there! I will enjoy the next two months with your children and look forward to all that we still have to do and learn together. These next two months promise a thrilling fourth-grade ride. We have so much left to do!


Today, I began talking with the students about our second large project we will be doing in social studies. Later this week, I will post and send home with the students a detailed project description, expectations and rubrics. Ultimately, students are charged to study any topic related to Colonial America they wish in order to learn more about how life in Colonial America was similar to and different from their lives in America today. Today we began generating and categorizing potential topics in order to help students identify subjects they would like to investigate. By next Monday, I expect that students will have chosen topics and we will begin making individual plans for conducting research. This project should be complete by the end of April or beginning of May. (Yes, I just said it--MAY.)

I hope you will join us for our fictional narrative author celebration on April 19th. The students have been working hard on numerous pieces over the course of the past two months and are eager to share a sample of their work with their biggest fans! Other projects and learning have stretched out our work in writing workshop, but the work on fictional narratives is always a favorite. We hope to see you in class that morning!

On April 10, the fourth grade take their annual trip to the Ringling Museum in Sarasota. I am looking for one parent volunteer to accompany us. Please let me know if you are interested. 

Upcoming important events:
March 30: Relay for Life
April 3 and 4: WrAP testing
April 10: Ringling field trip
April 16 - 20: Celebrate the Arts
April 19: Author Celebration
May 2 - 6: ERB testing

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Colony Project Voice Threads!

New Jersey



Massachutsetts



Pennsylvania



Delaware



New Hampshire



Maryland


Virginia


South Carolina


Georgia



Connecticut



New York


Rhode Island


North Carolina

Monday, March 19, 2012

Welcome back!

I imagine and hope that your spring breaks were filled with adventure and productivity! Coach D., Jack, Elijah and I road tripped to North Carolina on our own sort of adventure. I was thrilled to see forsythia, daffodils, Bradford pear trees, red buds and lots of star magnolias. And the grass! Grass on which you can run barefoot. What a luxury one would never realize until grass stabs your feet. All in all, you can't top our beaches, though. Florida is a beautiful place for sure, and we were happy to be home after a lot of driving. I look forward to hearing more of the students' tales about their spring breaks--and got a taste of their adventures today--whether they were lucky enough to hang at home or lucky enough to travel.

During the week before break, the fourth graders were privileged to be taught about the planets in our solar system from Mrs. Owen's first graders. The teachers conducted research in partnerships about a particular planet. Then, they created visuals to support their presentations. The students practiced presenting to their peers prior to our visit. Without a doubt, the first graders were well prepared for our visit!

The fourth graders circulated to each of the seven first-grade presentations within a 40 minute period. During this time, the first graders delivered their presentation seven times! They were troopers. The fourth graders were charged with considering what was most effective and impactful about each presentation, as well as recording as least one new fact they learned about each planet. Fourth graders were, of course, encouraged to ask lots of questions, which they did with enthusiasm. I was so proud of their eager and supportive participation. All of their written responses were focused on what the first graders have been learning about presentations, and the responses were then shared with the first graders.


From the participating first grader who happens to live with me: "That was so fun! I loved being a teacher to bigger kids. They listened to us, and I knew a lot!" Enough said.

 A highlight of the year so far has most definitely been the owl pellet investigation we did the week prior to break. After students became so interested in the owls that have nested in a Lower Division tree, we decided to learn more about owls. Owls ingest their food whole, and then eject the undigestible portions (feathers, fur, bones) as a pellet, a compacted mass of material. Dissecting owl pellets is a supremely active and interesting way to learn about what owls eat. Students have been finding pellets on campus, but they are not good for student investigation because of the chance they might carry disease. To be safe, we ordered sanitized pellets from a science supply company; these pellets are completely safe and their smell is much less offensive (although Will and Sammy might disagree on this point!).

Many students were hesitant about the process at first--the idea of undigested bones and fur is not particularly appealing! However, once they saw the pellets and realized how innocuous they really are, they dived right into their investigation. The promise of excavating something interesting motivated them as well, and every student--no mater her/his hesitation--participated. Yay! Students uncovered hundreds of of bones in our ten owl pellets, including skulls, jawbones, hipbones, vertebrae and shin bones. Using both paper charts and an iPhone application (yes--there exists an owl pellet iPhone application), students were able to identify many of the bones they found. The pellets we studied were from the northeast region of the United States, and the diets of the owls from which these pellets came consisted of a great many. . .  rats! Then, students then used the information at hand to help them reconstruct the pieces of rodent skeletons and attach them to paper. Fun, fun, fun! The other fourth grade classes will dissect pellets this week, and thanks to our work, they will all have iPads to use, complete with the super cool owl pellet app that we used on my phone. We will be crashing their investigations, for sure.

We are collecting donations of change for the upcoming Relay for Life event. We decided as a class today that the minimum donation should be 25 cents. Students may, if they choose, bring a quarter or more a day to donate and build our class paper chain. The collection will end next Friday, March 30th.

Upcoming important events:
March 21: Ident-a-kid photo ids (for those who have signed up)
March 26 - 30: Students may wear purple all week!
March 30: Relay for Life
April 2 and 3: WrAP testing

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Highlights

Mixing up an oil spill.

Identifying the mess oil makes when mixed with feathers.

Simulating a tornado with water.

Reinforcing a building with structural supports.

Renata and Kyra as they first open their owl pellet!

Asher and Samuel carefully excavate bones from their pellet.

Lindsay and Will create model of a rodent skeleton on paper.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

And the celebration continues. . . .

Last Friday, we were lucky to have two visitors from USGS to talk with us about hurricanes. The scientists arrived with a huge water table filled with a model of coastal land--complete with homes. After sharing a great deal of information about how hurricanes form, the uncertainty of their paths and the effect they can have on coastal land, they used their model, and a giant fan!, to simulate a hurricane. They students were able to observe the model up close in small groups and witness the effects on the land described by the scientists in their presentations. Students found that spits formed off of the edge of the island, and that the sandy land facing the hurricane eroded with the high winds. One house on stilts even tipped over after the land beneath it began to erode away. The model provided a tremendous, up-close example of the effects high hurricane winds and water can have on coastal land.

This week is jam packed with activity as well. On Tuesday, Dr. C., a pediatric cardiologist and mom to Asher, shared with us how she uses MRIs to identify heart problems in children. After a lesson on the features of the human heart and how it works, Dr. C. showed xrays, ultrasounds and MRIs of the heart. The students were able to easily see how much clearer the MRIs were, especially the movies. The students were fascinated with the images and the information, and responded with endless and interesting questions for Dr. C. What a treat.

Tomorrow we will engage in three hands on activities planned by our parent volunteers, learning about earthquakes, oil spills and tornadoes. And then on Thursday, we will enjoy a science lesson taught by the first graders in Mrs. Owen's class. Stay tuned for pictures!

In math we are wrapping up our study of area and perimeter. Today, a number of students created games that aim to teach players about area, perimeter as well as adding and subtracting fractions. Tomorrow we will spend some time being taught the new games to help secure our skills in these areas. Our unit assessment is scheduled for Thursday, and we will begin our next unit when we return from spring break.

As we read together Tuck Everlasting, students are learning how an author can use setting in many ways other than simply creating a story backdrop. In Tuck, the setting is used as foreshadowing, for helping paint a picture of characters, and to create very important mood in the story. Students are spending time really considering the characters in Tuck, identifying small details that help them understand the characters better. We continue to write long about our ideas we are having about the book, and students' writing is clearly becoming more organized, clear and thoughtful. Our next goal is two-fold: to better support our ideas with evidence from the text and really consider if our main opinion truly matters. We should finish reading the book during the week we return from spring break--and it may be minor torture making them wait to hear what happens over such a long break!

On Thursday all four fourth grade classes will meet for a final time to finalize their group Colony Projects in VoiceThread. Students are using a rubric to determine whether or not their projects meet established expectations. On Friday I should be able to publish a link to the VoiceThreads. When we return from spring break, students will learn about the colonies studied by their peers, conducting another layer of research. As students complete this last round of research, we will continue as a class reading and learning about the main events leading up to to the Revolutionary War.

Click here to link to the glogs the students created during our last round in technology that reveal research about famous American jazz musicians. Students worked with partners to research a musician and then compile that information in a glog. The process included time spent on glog design as well.

Don't forget to help your child remember to wear her/his appropriate Field Day colors on Friday. And keep your fingers crossed for a lovely day. I hope you have an enjoyable and relaxing spring break!

Upcoming important events:
March 9: Field Day
March 12 - 16: spring break