Tuesday, February 18, 2014

February Newsletter


 February News

Math:
Parts of a Whole Can be Modeled and Represented in Different Ways

Our class is just beginning to develop an understanding of fractions as numbers. Thanks to the help of Mrs. Fleet’s 5th grade class, we began our exploration using egg fractions as a hands-on manipulative representing 12 parts that together equal one whole. Students used string to block off different parts and try to name different fractions. This led to a basic understanding that fractions can have many names, and it’s always important to think about each fraction as being part of a whole. As we continue our unit, we will solve problems, describe fractions as numbers on a number line, and explain equivalence of fractions. Through all activities, our class is using critical thinking to make sense of problems and persevere in solving. This requires them to interpret, evaluate, summarize and synthesize every day!


Literacy:

Reading- Determining Importance

Although we have already spent a few weeks focusing on this strategy, we are nowhere near done! We want to make sure we understand deeply how to recognize and clearly communicate what is important versus what is interesting and unimportant, and then show that understanding through summarizing and written explanation. We will continue to make meaning strategically by learning how to find the main idea of the texts we read and the events or ideas that are truly significant to what we are reading.

The students have learned how to use the structure of Name It, Verb It, Big Idea to help write a strong topic sentence. They have also learned that “Jot Dots” are great ways to capture big ideas and ensure that our summaries are written in our own words. Additionally, they are making sure to add transitions so their thoughts are organized and well written. We will continue working on this strategy for the next few weeks learning more about how to use information from illustrations (maps, photographs) and the words in a text to create deeper understanding, as well as looking at pieces of texts and considering author’s bias and point of view.

Writing- Informational Writing

What makes writing worth reading?

Each day we think about what we could include in our writing to make it worth reading. Our class is always trying to create meaning strategically with structure and craft. Through the study of mentor texts, we continually jot down inspirational words or phrases and are trying to figure out how to add our own unique craft to our informational pieces. Our class has almost made it through Bend II of lessons from our new Lucy Calkins curriculum. The second bend was all about elaboration, understanding how to include more than just facts, and how to make writing even better by continuing to add various structures, text features and paragraphs that link ideas together to make sense.  We’re making sure to use our checklists every day to see what specific areas we need to focus on, and what weekly goals we can set to improve in those areas. The students know that strong writing does not happen overnight, and it’s important to continue to analyze different parts of our writing (leads, transitions, spelling, etc.) to improve along the way.


Science:
Earth Systems

The third graders are finishing up their study of rocks and minerals. They have spent lots of time utilizing a variety of media sources to collect and analyze data around Earth’s materials and the processes by which they are formed. Our class will be coming back to this later in the year with a project that allows them to take an active role putting their science thinking to the test. Our final project will focus on the Pikes Peak highway and will help students gain a broader understanding of systems thinking by allowing them to analyze the interaction within and between systems, evaluate the relationship between cause and effect, and finally evaluate the relationship between decisions and the impact on available resources in the community.





Wednesday, January 15, 2014


January Newsletter

MATH:
Throughout the month of January the third graders will be investigating the make-up of two-dimensional shapes. They will learn to describe and classify these shapes based on their many features sich as: sides, angels, and vertices. They will study squares, rectangles, and triangles in depth and learn words such as congruent and symmetrical. As a class we will work to understand how knowing all of this can relate to the real world around us, and help us in our study of three-dimensional shapes down the road.

Student Handbook: 118-124


LITERACY:
The third graders will soon be beginning their new thinking strategy: Determining Importance. We will learn how to the find the main idea of the texts we read and the events or ideas that are truly significant to what we are reading. The students will learn what it means to summarize and how determining importance is key to writing a summary about something we have read or watched. We will discuss the difference between events that are significant and events that are just something we happened to enjoy the most in the story.

The study of Determining Importance comes at the perfect time as we begin to really dive deeper into Informative Writing. We are learning the features and structures of a non-fiction piece of writing, and how to write an organized paragraph. The third graders have already chosen a topic to write about...something they feel they are true experts on. We focused on thinking through our main, important ideas and creating a table of contents for our informative books. The students will now learn to support their main ideas and write using details, facts, definitions, quotes, and more.


SCIENCE:
The third graders will continue their study of rocks and minerals, and how the landscape of our Earth is in a state of constant change. The third graders will be able to truly see the important role a geologist plays in the real world, and will even see how some of our civilized structures would not exist today if not for rocks.