Sunday, October 28, 2012

Week of Oct 29.12



Hello! I hope everyone had a terrific weekend and is ready for Sandy! Looks like a terrible system and I know we all pray for our friends up north and along the coast as they weather the storm.  As many of you know, I was supposed to be in New York over the weekend. However, I got that nasty bug that was going around on Thursday, left school early and, with the storm coming and feeling like I’d been run over by a semi, decided to postpone my trip. I was very disappointed, but think it was best. The last thing I wanted was to be stranded in Washington, DC Sunday afternoon, where I was scheduled for a 2 hour layover, sick and in the middle of a major storm system!
Report cards went home on Friday, please make sure you ask your student for theirs and discuss the progress they are making.  If they are doing well, and I consider an “A” and a “B” doing well, praise them. The Common Core curriculum has added a layer of difficulty for students this year. Grades should be tied, at least in part, to EOG test scores. This is Neuse Charter School policy. If your child struggled with end of grade testing last year, they will need extra support this year. I am following closely the new curriculum in an effort to stave off any surprises and make sure students will emerge successful, but this is uncharted water; the curriculum is much more challenging and the tests are new.  So far, I have been very impressed by how hard students in 4th grade work (for the most partJ) and how much progress has been made.  Bravo! (Awards ceremony Friday at 10:00 a.m.)
Halloween in Wednesday and we have our chip reward celebration in the cafeteria! Students may wear costumes (remember, no gore or masks) Sadly, I pulled the short straw this time and will miss the party! Students who failed to earn the requisite number of chips will come to my room and work and I will supervise them.  Congrats to all who earned the party and for those who didn’t, you’ll earn it next time!
We will finish up Harriet the Spy this week and begin a new unit about animals next week. Unit 2: Animals as Characters. There is a voluminous amount of writing for young readers focusing on animals as characters. We will examine how animals are portrayed in writing. Why are wolves big and bad? Why are dogs always in sad stories? What does our portrayal of animals say about us? We will focus on personification, character development, elements of a narrative, and comparing and contrasting. We will work in Literature Circles reading a variety of fiction and non-fiction books. The guiding question for this unit is: “How do we portray animals in writing?” This unit will last about 4 weeks.  The unit test for Harriet the Spy will be on Thursday.
Vocabulary will take a new turn this week. We will begin Greek and Latin roots and affixes. This week we will focus on the Latin roots: sens or sent: meaning to feel, to think, and grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk. Also this week we will learn about the suffixes: tion and sion meaning: act of, state of or result of.  
 
Vocabulary Week of Oct. 28
4A
 This week we will focus on the Latin roots: sens or sent: meaning to feel, to think, and grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk. Also this week we will learn about the suffixes: tion and sion meaning: act of, state of or result of.  Students must know the Latin or suffix meanings in addition to definitions. Students will write 14 compound sentences that indicate they understand the word’s definition.
sens, sent: meaning to feel, to think
sentiment
consent
sensory
resent
sensible
grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk
gradual
graduate
progress
tion: meaning: act of, state of or result of
limitation
formation
reflection
separation
sion: meaning: act of, state of or result of
suspension
expression
discussion
decision
conclusion
Vocabulary Week of Oct. 28
4B
 This week we will focus on the Latin roots: sens or sent: meaning to feel, to think, and grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk. Also this week we will learn about the suffixes: tion and sion meaning: act of, state of or result of.  Students must know the Latin or suffix meanings in addition to definitions. Students will write 15 compound sentences that indicate they understand the word’s definition.
sens, sent: meaning to feel, to think
sentiment
consent
sensory
resent
sensible
grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk
gradual
graduated
progress
tion: meaning: act of, state of or result of
limitation
formation
reflection
separation
sion: meaning: act of, state of or result of
suspension
expression
discussion
decision
conclusion
Vocabulary Week of Oct. 28
4C
 This week we will focus on the Latin roots: sens or sent: meaning to feel, to think, and grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk. Also this week we will learn about the suffixes: tion and sion meaning: act of, state of or result of.  Students must know the Latin or suffix meanings in addition to definitions. Students will write compound sentences that indicate they understand the word’s definition. All words
sens, sent: meaning to feel, to think
sensational
dissension
consent
sensory
resent
grad, gress: meaning steps, to go or to walk
gradual
graduated
progress
egress
tion: meaning: act of, state of or result of
limitation
formation
reflection
separation
sion: meaning: act of, state of or result of
suspension
expression
discussion
decision

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Oct. 24, 2012

Quick update: Chip Celebration had to be changed to Oct. 31st, as most of you know, because we couldn't get the cafeteria on the 26th. Students who have not earned enough chips to attend will be in my room, working. Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Adams will coordinate the celebration, with parents helping to decorate the hour preceding the soiree. Please contact them to help!

Classes will finish Harriet the Spy this week and have a unit test next Tuesday or Wednesday. We will begin the 2nd unit, the literature of animals, next week. Students will read in Lit Circles, work on centers and learn about animals in literature, music and art. Vocab starts up again next week, watch for new words on Sunday.

New policy: I am experiencing some disruptive behavior that is becoming bothersome. I have instituted a new policy: When a student disrupts class 3 times by calling out, talking to his or her friends or any other disturbance, I will write that student up and her or she will explain what they are doing to Mr. Gahagan. It costs 10 chips each time a student is written up.


Sunday, October 14, 2012

Week of Oct. 15

I really enjoyed the presentations last week! A lot of effort went into many of them and I was very impressed. Thanks to all my wonderful students and their families and friends for taking the time to create such terrific productions! The next book and project is "student choice", make sure your student chooses his or her own book. I have many ideas for projects on the blog.

The chip reward celebration this time will be a "Fall Festival" on Oct. 26, in the afternoon. We will have music, games and dancing. The date just happens to correspond to the day students may wear costumes (for $1) to school. Parents are asked to supply snacks and drinks. The 4th grade team will get a sign-up list out this week. In order to participate, students must have at least 80 chips per teacher (having not lost more than 20 in any class) and no suspensions or excessive office referrals. This is a reward for behavior, not grades. Let's Monster Mash!

Last week, I sent home a blind reading comprehension assessment. Many of you are concerned about your child's grade on this. Please do not be. If I am concerned, I will speak to you and we'll work out an intervention program. Comprehension is the most difficult skill to master in Language Arts and it is the most difficult skill to measure. Scores for this will usually be lower than other assessments, but it is important for me to see where a student falls in an unannounced, unpracticed assessment. After all, students will not have the questions in advance to the EOG. In fact, because this year it is completely new, none of us have an idea of what the reading EOG will look like. I am working diligently to prepare students for this more rigorous test.

This week in class; we continue with Harriet The Spy. The goal is to complete the book next week and begin the Unit 2, which is focused on animals in writing and reading. This book is really heating up this week and I imagine you will hear quite a bit about the next series of events in our young spy's life.

We will also learn to write dialog  this week. I have observed that this is a skill no-one in 4th grade has mastered, so we will practice this all week.

We will also, in lieu of a vocabulary test this week ( do I hear shouts of joy, again?), students will begin to learn about Greek and Latin Root words. We will also learn some new words from Harriet the Spy. Reading homework continues Mon-Thurs. Please make sure your student reads for the entire 30 minute period. Independent reading is extremely important to student success this year.

From poetry recommended by the 4th grade Common Core:

 They Were My People                                                 by Grace Nichols

 They were those who cut cane
 to the rhythm of the sunbeat

 They were those who carried cane
 to the rhythm of the sunbeat

 They were those who crushed cane
 to the rhythm of the sunbeat

 They were women weeding, carrying babies
 to the rhythm of the sunbeat

They were my people, working so hard
 to the rhythm of the sunbeat - - long ago
 to the rhythm of the sunbeat.





Sunday, October 7, 2012

Week of 10. 8.12

I hope everyone had a great weekend. I am still fighting off this silly cold. I did manage to get a little caught up with grading though, so lying around hasn't been a total waste! I have also gotten a renewed sense of how important it is to be healthy. I know I just take it for granted that I will have energy and enjoy life. Feeling bad is no fun, and good health is a major blessing.

This week: Look at your child's agenda this week! I will list any missing assignments. The grading period will end soon and I don't want anyone to have incomplete work. I will give each child a list of what, if anything, they are missing. I will expect all makeup work to be done this week, including any spelling/vocab tests that need to be made up. I will try and get an updated homework grade sent home this week too.

No vocab again this week! Actually, we will have words, but there won't be a test. Students will focus on using words in class and we will begin looking more at Greek and Latin roots, prefixes and suffixes and basic word patterns. I plan to give the Words Their Way assessment that I have long been neglecting:)

We will focus on presenting our many (and from what I have seen, fabulous) puppet shows, movies, Powerpoints and skits this week and delving deeper into Harriet the Spy. Students seem to be enjoying the book and all the preliminary work we did on vocab has helped greatly with understanding it.

Last week, we read some fables in class in the form of  plays. Many of your students have a future on the stage! I asked the students if they would be interested in performing them for the younger classes. The answer was a resounding "Yes!". We will work on that project this week, as well. I will cast the plays based on who I think would be reliable and do a good job. Please keep in mind, if your student doesn't get the part they want, I have two more books of plays and there will be many more opportunities to shine. It is important to be a team player and support our friends, even if they have the role we want.

Reminder: Homework is to read 30 minutes a night, and write a summary about the reading, including the title of the book, and pages the student reads. The next book report will be on a book and project of choice. I have ideas on my blog for projects, but please allow your student to pick a book they are interested in reading. Self-selecting books is a very important skill. ( The only rule: it must be on or slightly above grade level)

Words we will work with this week are:


vacant
squirmed
expression
realism
allotted
barrage
intercept
wilted
dreary
flustered
petulant
disgruntled
pandemonium
frantically
din
radiant
evidently



Looking forward to a terrific week!