Friday, August 26, 2011

Newsletter for August 26, 2011

What We Learned This Week

I'm very fortunate to be working with the same wonderful team I had last year. Our classroom interpreters are Mrs. Piunno and Mrs. Westlake. Our classroom assistant is Mrs. Green.

 Mrs. Piunno
 Mrs. Westlake
Mrs. Green

I've introduced a fair amount of sign language this week (yes, no, good morning, friends, good afternoon, good night, restroom, drink, help). We will add to this as the year progresses. I incorporate as much sign language as I can. We have a wonderful partnership with Education Service Center of Central Ohio which provides services for our deaf students (as well as signing classes for our hearing students). Most of our students know some sign and many enjoy learning a new language. Introducing sign also enables hearing and deaf students to interact and develop meaningful friendships. See what signs your student can teach you. I've found many signs are easily incorporated throughout our day and allow for quick communication without interrupting small group and one-on-one conferences.

The class is learning routines and expectations quickly, which will enable us to maximize our time learning together. Homework is a jump for some students, especially as they are still coming off of summer vacation and are building stamina. I will continue to use the same type of homework to support routines and good study/time management strategies for home. I will discuss homework in more detail at next week's Parent Information Night (see below).

"20th Century Skills" is a term we use to encompass a broad range of complex thinking and problem solving skills in Upper Arlington. I introduced collaboration, a key 21st Century skill, today through the use of Keva Planks (aka City Blocks), uniform blocks, for team construction challenges where students discuss successful team strategies and skills and then practice them. They are given the opportunity to reflect on their experience and apply what they've learned in new collaborative challenges.




Word Study: We focused on patterns. I conducted a high frequency (commonly used) spelling assessment this week to learn which patterns students are strong in and where they will need support and strategies. I will emphasize patterns throughout the year. I will begin spelling after this week's Parent Information Night so I can share homework strategies and my approach to word study, which will include much more than just spelling.

Reading: We discussed reasons for reading (enjoyment, to learn, to "go places we can't really get to," etc.). We toured the classroom library focusing on "just right books" (books we can read and understand, books we can read fluently enough that our decoding doesn't interfere with our comprehension), and genres. To support genres, students received Reading Passports. As students read different genres throughout the grading period, they will conference with Mrs. Green or me to check for comprehension and contrast genre elements. We also compared the strategies of sounding words out and substituting using context clues (although I have not introduced the term context yet). Most students enter third grade with a well developed ability to decode words. The brain uses peripheral vision to scan ahead as we read, detecting "chunks" or patterns of words, and makes rapid fire predictions about what is coming next. For some, this is still developing and has to be practiced. If students with strong decoding skills come to an unfamiliar word, it is often a word they have not heard before (e.g., proper nouns, multi syllabic vocabulary words, etc.) and must rely on context clues to support their understanding. Substituting is often more efficient as it supports comprehension more than single word decoding does. We also began our read aloud, The Secret of Zoom, by Lynne Jonell. I am reading this on a nook to demonstrate different text formats.


Writing: We attempted a single paragraph. My approach to writing workshop is to start with a brief mini-lesson, focusing on a single idea, giving students a silent, uninterrupted ten minute period of writing while I circulate and check for understanding. We then regroup to share ideas and take our writing from "good to great." I then like to provide opportunities for students to share their writing via the "author's chair." As students read they begin to "fix" their writing, editing and revising on the fly, recognizing errors as they go. We discussed and looked at examples of paragraphs as single ideas. We also analyzed individual sentences, the building blocks of paragraphs, identifying the "who" and "what" of each sentence.

Math: I began math by introducing specific addition strategies, which you have seen on the back of the nightly math homework. We have covered zero more, one more and I introduced two more today. We also looked at strategies for determining possible combinations. For example: Ahmed has a blue shirt, a green shirt and a white shirt. He has black shorts and red shorts. How many clothes combinations does he have? While my emphasis will be on learning, I conduct a number of baseline assessments to see where students are and to measure growth. I administered a single operation assessment of 25 questions with a time limit of one minute and fifteen seconds (three seconds per fact) for both addition and subtraction. I sent these home today. The district standard for third grade fact fluency follows:
25 correct answers equals Extending
23 to 24 correct answers equals Achieving
21 to 22 correct answers equals Progressing Achieving
20 correct answers equals Progressing
19 correct answers equals Beginning Progressing
18 correct answers and less equals Beginning
I've found it is helpful to share your student's fluency scores in terms of Progress Report indicators, rather than a raw score or percentage. Interestingly, nearly the entire class performed better on subtraction than addition. I will continue to focus on single fact strategies that will support fluency. I'll share more on fact fluency strategies and how you can support your student during Parent Information Night.

Special Areas: We attended physical education, art and music this week. If you have not already sent an art smock, please do. Our special areas schedule can be found in earlier posts. We have library next Monday.

Class pet: Hobbes, our blotched tiger salamander, graduated from an aquarium tank to a terrarium and has started feeding on small crickets and mealworms. We'll observe his growth and changes as the year progresses.


Your student is bringing home an optional homework assignment. I encouraged the entire class to participate in next week's Student Council elections. I have asked them to prepare a short speech (paragraph or bullet points) that illustrates why they would make a great student council representative. I have stressed that we should vote for the best two candidates, not necessarily our best friends. Losing this vote can be hard on third graders so I will take great pains on Monday to stress that this is not a popularity contest before we listen to speeches and vote. Again, this is an optional assignment, but I strongly encourage everyone to consider participating.

Important Dates and Reminders

September 1st: Parent Information Night from 7:00-7:40
September 5th: No School, Labor Day
September 7th: School Pictures (information went home this week)
September 14th: Early Dismissal, students depart at 1:15

The school newsletter, "The Hawk Herald," is published monthly and the September edition is now posted on the Windermere web page (http://www.uaschools.org/indes.aspx?NID=763). Hard copies are available in the office. Please take a moment and follow the directions below to subscribe to our e-mail notification system so you will know when a new newsletter is posted.
• Go to  http://www.uaschools.org/list.aspx
• Enter your e-mail address and click sign in
• Scroll down the list and subscribe to Windermere Hawk Herald (Newsletter)
• A small box ‘ Thanks for subscribing’ will pop up and click OK.
• Go back to the top and click the blue sign-out hot link to the right.
• Check your e-mail later to confirm your subscription to the Windermere Hawk Herald.

Have a great weekend!

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Great First Day

What  a wonderful group of students. I thoroughly enjoyed myself today. I'm looking forward to a wonderful year!

I sent home two pages of homework tonight. I would like your student to try it on their own, but feel free to help if you need to. I realize that this may be easy for some students and very difficult for others. Please take a few days to see how they do and we'll communicate during Parent Information Night to see what is best for your individual student. 
 

 
Reading homework consists of the five W questions (who, what, where, when, why), "reading for detail," which is the purpose for most students' academic reading. It is important that your student number and underline their evidence in the reading passage. I modeled this in class tonight. For some students this homework will take longer than any of us would like, but I have found that by sticking at it, most are very successful and will develop a great reading for detail strategy they can use throughout their academics.

The math homework consists of a math facts page that focuses on a single strategy and a backside of review (for most) questions that cover the spectrum of math content.

If your student spends more than 40 minutes on their homework with sincere effort, I recommend calling it a night. Try again the next night and look for improvement. It's important to me that we begin working hard immediately, but I am also sensitive to not overwhelming students. Learning is not a sprint and doing too much, too soon can shut some students down.

I'm looking forward to seeing you at Parent Information Night, next Thursday from 7:00 to 7:40. I hope you can all attend this important opportunity to learn about our year and share your questions and insights as well. 

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Special Areas and ABCDE Schedule

I've inserted a copy of the ABCDE Schedule for the 2011-2012 school year. You can find a hard copy in the Parent Handbook. Our specials are as follows:

A Days - Library 9:00-9:30
B Days - Ukulele Orchestra 11:05-11:20
                Physical Education 12:10-12:45 & Music 12:45-1:20
C Days - Physical Education 12:10-12:45 & Music 12:45-1:20
D Days - Ukulele Orchestra 11:05-11:20
                Art 12:10-1:20
E Days - No Specials

Please send gym shoes on B and C days and an art smock for D days.

Feel free to send your student to school with a water bottle from home. We'll be very busy in 3rd grade and I find this helps us to make the most of our time.


Monday, August 1, 2011

2011-2012 School Supply Sale

Please visit the Windermere PTO website http://www.windermerepto.org/ for this year's school supply ordering information.

Senior Windermere Ukulele Orchestra

The Senior Windermere Ukulele Orchestra will be hosted again this year by Mr. Hudson. We will begin meeting this October (after the Ohio Reading Achievement Assessment), once each week during afternoon recess.

I’m very excited to work with this talented group of young musicians and have two great songs ready to work on for our spring performance.

Students who sign up will be expected to continue through the year. Due to the challenging nature of this year’s songs, I will expect students to attend every practice and to come prepared with their instrument and music. Unexcused absences and/or failure to bring their instrument and music may result in your child’s exclusion from Senior Ukulele Orchestra.

If your student is ready for an instrument upgrade, I’m happy to help you find the right instrument. Just send me an email with a price range and your student’s current ukulele make and model (usually on the label inside the sound hole) and I’ll be happy offer some tried and tested suggestions.

Permission slips, available from Mr. Hudson, are due September 9, 2011.

Windermere Ukulele Orchestra

The Windermere Ukulele Orchestra will be sponsored again this year by Mr. Hudson and Mrs. Delcamp. We will begin meeting this October (after the Ohio Reading Achievement Assessment), twice each week during lunch recess. Students who sign up will be expected to continue through the year.

Inspired by the Portuguese cuatro (four stringed guitar), the ukulele is a real instrument with limitless possibilities, but it has a short learning curve for young musicians. This fun and versatile instrument is making a worldwide comeback and our performance based activity has been a great success.

To ensure all students have a quality instrument, please feel free to contact me prior to ordering an instrument. I strongly recommend the Makala Dolphin Soprano ukulele. This affordable student ukulele does not sacrifice playability  and it comes in many different colors. I also recommend getting an ID tag (e.g. luggage tag) to attach to your student’s gig bag (typically comes with the Makala Dolphin ukulele) to easily identify your student’s ukulele. You can order the Makala Dolphin model through many online retailers, including Amazon. You may also want to purchase a set of Aquila Premium Soprano strings, also available through Amazon.

Please order your student’s ukulele in time for it to arrive prior to October 1st. Again, I am happy to help you find a ukulele that is right for your student.

Permission slips, available from Mr. Hudson, are due September 9, 2011.