Three Weeks Until Break?? Wow, Time Has Flown! November 28th

Hello Everyone!

Fourteen more days until holiday break! Wow, the time has truly flown!

  • Tonight, please look for bottle caps for our projects. I look forward to our many art and building mini projects that will fill our classroom tree!
  • Please finish your structures research. Your Power Point presentation is due end of day Friday. Power Points should be done in class only.
  • We will continue French Dialogues tomorrow. 
  • Thank you for your work on chemistry science stations related to solutions, density, and states of matter today!
  • The unit is ending before the break, so our quiz will be at the end of next week.
  • Ms. D has been busy preparing marks for first-term report cards, which will be given out Dec. 14th.

As we come up to report cards, there are some things we should remember:

It is important all marked work has been shown to Mom and Dad, so there are no surprises when the report card comes! Thank you to parents for signing the work and going over it at home. Make sure all work returns to your portfolio binder.

Remember marked work is summative. I don’t give out marks on every piece of work, because the marks come from end-of-unit work, when the student is showing what they know after the learning is over. The remainder of our work is formative, meaning it is about checking in with the student during the units. These daily assignments are also important, but they are marked with checks, as they are more about completion and receiving feedback than getting everything “right.” 

Report card marks come from more than one place. The marks in each subject are the result of marked work, completion and submission of daily assignments, the student’s participation in learning activities that don’t have a “markable” worksheet to go with them, as well as use of the learner profile (being a good communicator, risk-taker, principled, etc.). When thinking about marks, please go back to the Overall Participation Rubric 2016

Try to focus less on marks and more on growth! Some students get very nervous about marks. It is one of the reasons I try to have less, daily emphasis on them. We also have some perfectionists in our group who, even though they do well, focus only on the one question they missed, rather than celebrating what they do know. Please try to have conversations around reports that involve reading the comments as opposed to looking at the letter marks, because I think that is more helpful. Look for ways to grow, such as making sure work is organized, adding more detail to assignments, reading criteria, and ensuring everything gets turned in. Instead of saying, “I’m no good at that,” try to say, “I have room to grow in that area, and here is how I will try to grow.”

Letter Marks: Remember in grade three, you didn’t have letter marks, you had words. It can help to translate this way: exceeding expectations (A level), fully meeting (B level), meeting (C+ level) and not yet meeting (C/C-). Ask yourself, if you looked at your grade three report cards, would you have had straight A’s if you did this translation? A “C+” is still meeting expectations, and it is not a bad mark. When you see your marks, you may want to make goals to do better, and that is okay, but it is not okay to beat yourself up, because getting an “A” or a “B” is not meant to always be easy. Remember also that these marks are only for grade four and five — they are practice marks for the future!

We will talk about this in class again, and I hope these notes help for having some conversations at home, too. I will be talking to each student one-on-one about what will be coming on reports, so they feel more comfortable when the actual document goes home, too.

Have a great evening!

Ms. D

Unit Videos to Watch! November 23rd

Hello Everyone,

French dialogues are now due on Monday, but please work on them at home. Everyone was working well, and we needed more time to finish them. Be ready to go for Monday.

LIBRARY TOMORROW! Math Quiz, too!

Here are the videos we looked at today as part of science and social studies discussions around our unit:

City Services of Burnaby

History of Vancouver 

Nikon Universcale

For French Beginners — If you want a fun way to practice pronunciation and to remember basic phrases in French, here are the songs we were playing in class, along with some others you can watch and repeat to get a sense of the language:

Comment tu t’appelles Video for French Help

Bonjour Video Song for French Help

Au Revoir Song for French Help

French Greetings Song for Children

French Months

Thank you,

Ms. D

Update November 22nd, Tuesday

Hello Everyone,

I will keep this short, as I am working on report cards this week!

Soon I hope to post some great photos of our structure destruction which began today. We have a few more to go, as some groups still need some more time to build. I hope everyone found it fun to see how much weight their towers could hold!

Everyone is working well on their structure research, using a variety of resources. I helped many people today find additional websites and/or books in the classroom about their topics. If you need help, please ask. We are hoping that by Thursday, some people will have enough research to begin their Power Points.

French Dialogues are coming along, and we will present them on Thursday (change in day.) We went over the criteria for the dialogue together, and tomorrow I will give you a copy of the rubric. Thank you for your creativity today while working in these! Also, remember to avoid Google Translate.

Math Packet # 3 Quiz is Thursday. I am handing back #2 quiz tomorrow along with your packets. Let me know if you have questions as we prepare for the quiz.

Looking for X-Mas Ornament Ideas! If you have any fun, easy ideas of things we can make, let Ms. D know. Also, I am looking for bottle caps and corks. If you have any at home, please bring them in!

Thank you again to the parents who helped us with the Science World field trip!

Have a great night! Stay dry!

Ms. D

Reminders for Thursday, November 17th – Field Trip Tomorrow!

Hi Everyone!

Reminders for tonight:

  • Field Trip Tomorrow: You might want to read some of the nano articles found under the articles of interest under Structures, such as the Nanooze Magazine from Cornell University. Please do not bring valuables. Bring a lunch, water, and a snack. Bring a light jacket and very little else! No, sorry, there won’t be time to get White Spot, so please bring a lunch. We leave promptly at 9AM. Thank you to Michael’s Mom, Vaughn’s Mom, and Patricia’s Dad for accompanying us this time.
  • French for French Immersion Students: Continue to brainstorm your dialogue, in which you are pretending to arrive at a country that is not France for a two week vacation, and you meet a friend on the plane. You may need to do some research on your country and city so you have real things to talk about! Thank you for your great work today in partner groups. Due Wednesday for presentation. 
  • French for Beginners: Review Je French 3. Next Wednesday you will get a quick quiz with the nouns from that lesson listed, and you have to fill in the articles “a” or “the” — so you need to know the difference between the masculine (m) and the feminine (f) forms. You do not need to memorize the nouns. On Monday, you will get more time to work with your partner on your very brief dialogue that reviews what we have done so far. You can find additional words to say at BBC Primary Languages. Pronunciation is key, so practice phrases aloud.
  • Research: We will be getting class time for research, but you may want to look for book and internet resources on your own. The project description is found here. We will be working on this most of next week. If you want to use World Book Online at home, remember you just need the password. If you missed writing it down today, make sure you do that tomorrow.
  • Math Packet 2 Quiz Monday
  • Holiday Party: The student holiday party committee made a notice to send out to everyone today. Please return as soon as you can. When they are talking about donations, they mean only $2, which we talked about in class. Don’t donate if you are bringing something else to the party from the list. Thank you to the students for independently organizing this notice and the party, which is great leadership!

Thank you, everyone!

Researching STRUCTURE

We will be working on a mini research project about structure. Each of you has chosen a specific area to research, approved by Ms. D in class.

Step One:

Find out information about your topic related to FORM follows FUNCTION and the things we have been talking about in class. Use some of the research sites on the Articles of Interest page to get started.

Please record your resource. Use EasyBib if needed to help! 

You will need to use one encyclopaedia, 2 books, and at least 2 online sources.

Answer these questions, and make sure you record your notes to turn in!:

  • What is the form of your structure? (You will need specific details, a labeled diagram with all of the parts labeled.)
  • What is the purpose of your structure? 
  • Who is the structure for? Who does it benefit or who was it designed for?
  • How does it work? How is it built? How do the parts work together?
  • What works well with its design? What does not?
  • What would need to be changed to make the structure even better?
  • Is there anything else that is interesting about the topic you have chosen?
  • ONE QUESTION OF YOUR OWN: Make up a question and try to answer it.

Step Two:

Create a PowerPoint, Google Slides, or Prezi presentation with your research. You may not start on it until you show Ms. D your notes. If you have not done PowerPoint much before, then you should choose that one, as it is the easiest to work on.

Avoid putting too many colours. Choose a theme to work with so all slides look similar. Do not put too many words. Use visuals instead. Do not use pictures with any copyright symbols. Do not just use clip art. You will be presenting, so what you will say can be recorded on another sheet of paper as your script.

As you work on your presentation, make sure you save as you go. Name your file in this way without punctuation:

FIRST NAME     STRUCTURE Presentation    TOPIC    DATE (month, day, year – two digits)

For example:  Andrea Structure Presentation Skyscrapers 111516

Make a minimum of 10 slides, using this as your outline to share information from your notes. 

Slide 1:     Interesting Title of Presentation, Your Full Name, Date, Picture filling page
Slide 2:     Introduce the structure and where you would find it.
Slide 3:     Explain what the structure is for. Who uses it? What is its purpose?
Slide 4-6:  Explain how the structure works and how form follows function.
Slide 7:     Explain how the structure works well and how it does not work well.
Slide 8:     Explain how the structure could be improved or other design facts.
Slide 9:     Sum up all of your other slides, like a concluding sentence but in a slide!
Slide 10:   Thank your sources and list the Bibliography

Step Three:

Write a script for what you will say for each slide. Have a peer edit it. Then practice it so you can present it in front of the class. The whole presentation should not be more than 5 minutes long.

Continued Work on Structure! Update Nov. 16th

Hello Everyone!

Thank you to Emily’s Dad Mark, who came in today to share his expertise with students about civil engineering and bridges! We learned about the forces and loads involved in creating bridges, and we toured some bridge pictures from around the Lower Mainland and British Columbia. Thank you for sharing with us!

Today, we learned how to access Google Drive using our user IDs and passwords. Please remember as you use this valuable tool:

  • Protect your user ID and password; do not share it.
  • Do not use the sharing options in Google apps or chat rooms to talk with other students.
  • Remember that your Google Account is a School District account. Don’t put anything in it that is inappropriate, that you wouldn’t want seen by Ms. D,  your parents, or the principal.
  • If you change the icon for your name in Google’s settings, please do not use your own picture for privacy reasons.
  • When submitting documents to Ms. D, use her school google account which I gave you today. Wait to submit until I give you a link to do so in Google Forms.
  • Be responsible with the tool. It is a privilege, not a right.

In LA, we finished our “20 interesting sentences,” but if you did not finish and turn it in, please get it in tomorrow morning. I also checked who had completed our Skeleton parts worksheet, and if you did not have yours done today, please finish. A number of people are missing their Personal Space activity, which was due yesterday.

In Math, we finished marking packet 3, and I worked in small groups with some students for independent math. Our quiz on Applied Math packet 2 has been moved to Monday due to other events tomorrow.

We worked on understanding Skeleton function, how bones heal, and the structure and function of the eye, using two resources. Please take some time to read them at home.  How Bones Heal and Kids Health: BonesThe Kids Health website is a great, kid-appropriate place to visit for any personal body questions that you have, as well.

Our Science Games team has been chosen for the March Science Games. This was done by lottery, per the organization running the event. All other teams have been put on the wait list. Students who were chosen have received communication about next steps.

Tomorrow is LIBRARY, STACKING CUPS, MUSIC, and our CARIBOU TEST. What a busy day!

Have a good evening,

Ms. D

Carbon and Hydrogen Marshmallow Fun-November 15th, Tuesday!

Hello Everyone!

We have been continuing our discussions about STRUCTURE by looking at building shapes, the design process (form follows function), the skeletal system and how it works for the human body, and chemical structures.

As we discuss each example of structure, I have asked students to think about what type of structure they are interested in the most. They will be doing more in-depth research on that area and producing a PowerPoint or Prezi presentation to share their expertise with us. I asked everyone to look for PowerPoint or Prezi tutorials online and to spend 15 minutes reviewing one this evening. Try to find one that suits your level of expertise. Challenge yourself to do something unique — step outside of your comfort zone and try something new! Here are only a few I found:

Prezi Tutorial: My First Prezi

Student Prezi Tutorial

Prezi Tutorial 2015 — More Complicated

How to Create a PowerPoint Presentation

PowerPoint Spice — Not all features are available on our version, but interesting tips!

And if anyone wants to try Google Slides, try a tutorial for that, as well. Each student will receive a google drive account to use. Any of the three presentation tools will do. Ms. D will show everyone how to access this tomorrow.

In Language Arts today, we discussed making more interesting sentences and how to take better notes. Ms. D gave some feedback from our first project, and we practiced taking some notes as a whole group. I encourage everyone to ensure their notes are neater, more detailed, and in proper format for this next project.

During Class Meeting, we formed a committee for our holiday party the week before winter break, discussed MACCadia (our cardboard arcade project, for those interested), and our plans for White Elephant. More information on our holiday plans soon!

Finally, during Science, we reviewed information about the skeleton, as yesterday we watched a movie from Eyewitness all about skeletons and their functions in the human and animal world. Then, we began talking about chemistry, focusing on the structure of the periodic table and discussing atoms and elements, the building blocks or structure found at the microscopic level. Everyone has a reading on the periodic table in their binders that was completed in class.

We watched two movies to further our understandings: How Can You See An Atom?  and Atomic StructureAfterwards, we focused in on Hydrogen and Carbon, looking at how the two atoms combine and share electrons to form more complex molecules. We used red gummies for Carbon and marshmallows for Hydrogen, then combined them into structures using toothpicks. Everyone checked their structures in the book Molecules by Theodore Gray, with Ms. D’s help, to see if they had made a more complex molecule such as methane, propane, or ethane. I think everyone was having a good time with this project, as no one wanted to stop and clean up!

For Math we will spend some time tomorrow reviewing for our Applied Math quiz on Thursday, so if you have any questions from packet two, come and ask. We will also finish marking the last packet, if you haven’t done that yet. When we do Independent Math, just a reminder that here are the steps for each unit you are doing:

  • Read the lesson pages and ask me questions if you don’t understand.
  • Do the homework practice problems, starting with number 4 (1-3 you can just read.)
  • If any problem requires counters, please use something on your own or skip the counting part of the question. You can also draw pictures to represent the equations instead.
  • If you need graph paper, please come see me, as I have the one used by the textbook.
  • When all lesson homework is done, do the “Show What You Know” section, all questions.
  • We will mark the homework and Show What You Know using the marks book.
  • Review your material.
  • I will give you the test for the unit. If it is not available the day you finish, you can continue with the next unit temporarily while waiting.

More tomorrow on Bunraku, chemistry, and maps! Science World on Friday!!

Have a good night!

Ms. D

General Update November 10th

Hello Everyone,

This week we have been focusing on:

Finishing our Poppy Art for the Remembrance Day Assembly on Thursday at 10:45 AM. Thank you to Jay who will do a quick presentation at the assembly tomorrow to introduce our art pieces. We also made a Remembrance Day wreath out of red origami cranes, as a symbol of peace.

We worked with our grade 1/2 buddies in Division 9 to create Postcards for Peace, which are postcards (art and a letter) to veterans in Canada. We will present the pictures from this work during the assembly Thursday, and Ms. Guzzo, Division 9’s teacher, will be sending off the postcards to a list of veterans provided from the Postcards for Peace organization. Thank you to Sophia who will do a quick introduction of this project and our postcards during the assembly tomorrow.

We are working on STRUCTURE by doing a tower building challenge, making a tower out of 150 coffee stir sticks and limited hot glue supplies. More time to build up your 30 cm minimum height tower tomorrow! How much weight will it be able to hold?

We are almost done working on our Applied Math on Jet Fighters. During our work, Ms. D can see we need some more practice using protractors, measuring angles, and doing division. Some of our independent math work will help address this, and we will also do more practice in the future as a class. Please work on packet #3 for 15 minutes at home tonight, as we hope to finish up and mark it soon. Math quizzes have been passed back and need to be signed.

We were able to finally test our solar cookers yesterday with the warmer weather! Everyone had a chance to record their results. Today, Ms. D took a picture of each cooker and building team, and then asked students to take the solar cookers home and store them for warmer days. Please don’t throw them away! 

For socials, we talked about structure of maps and communities, which will be our focus for the next while. Please bring in any fold-up maps you can spare from home so we can look at them in class.

We will continue with Bunraku tomorrow! Our puppetry expert did not show up on Tuesday, unfortunately, but Ms. D was able to do the workshop with students as she had participated in the workshop before. We have made our paper puppets, and our teams of three puppeteers will get an opportunity to make a short skit with their puppets using drama, movement, and teamwork!

Science Games names have been submitted to the lottery. We won’t find out until November 15th if any of our teams had luck in the lottery. If we don’t receive a spot from the lottery, we may not be able to go this year, as it is a very popular event. Stay tuned for more information when Ms. D receives it!

Remember: No school ON FRIDAY! Pink notice went home today with important dates. Field trip to Science World is next Friday the 18th.

Thank you,

Ms. D

General Update, Friday November 4th

Hello Everyone,

Reminders for the weekend:

  • Research strong shapes and ideas for towers made out of popsicle sticks in preparation for building activities next week 
  • Read about Bunraku for our workshop next week
  • Math quiz on Applied Math FLIGHT, Packet 1 only, on Monday
  • Did you return your signed overall participation rubric? You were supposed to go over it with parents and return it Friday.
  • Did you return your signed, marked speeches?

What’s Going On!

  • Students are reading about STRUCTURE through some textbook reading I gave them in binders this week. 
  • We are focusing on how FORM of something follows its FUNCTION. For example, we looked at different balls in the PE equipment room, described them, and then talked about how certain ones are designed for certain sports. If you are designing a chair, how does the purpose behind the chair impact its form?
  • STRUCTURE is made up of SMALLER PARTS. So, we used the human body as an example. What is the smallest part of us? What words describe those parts? (Atoms, molecules, cells, tissue, organs, organ systems, organisms)
  • What are the strongest shapes to build with? What do you have to take into mind when designing something? Students were given a batch of uncooked spaghetti, tape, and marshmallows to build a strong tower in a limited amount of time. When we finished, we reflected on not only our building technique, but also on our collaboration skills. See this TED video by Tom Wujec on Build a Tower, Build a Team, which we watched in class to discuss who is the most successful during challenges like these.
  • How does studying bees help us understand structure? We watched a video from TED on bee hive construction, then another from the BBC on the math behind bee hives, and then we constructed honeycomb structures of our own out of paper! Through this, we learned about the strength of the hexagon, the circle, and equilateral triangles. And, we talked about compression, tension, cylinders, and redistribution of weight.
  • Structure is an important part of communication and order. We are working on making strong paragraphs and sentences. For some, this means adding details, and for other students, it translates to using conjunctions and transition words effectively so sentences are more complex. We will also continue to work on the structure of a speech, as well as our public speaking skills.
  • We are working on building our classroom community. Everyone is working on two key words from our Learner Profile: CARING and PRINCIPLED. To be caring means being more aware of your surroundings, being proactive when you see something needs to be done, and thinking about how what you say and do makes a huge difference in our classroom community. To be principled means you know right from wrong in your heart, and you do what is right even when someone who is in charge of you isn’t looking. We agreed that many of the people we admire in our lives are BOTH principled and caring. Without people who are like this, the world would be a much different place. With more people like this, the world can be an even better place. 

Thank you for a great week and a fun Halloween Party! So many great costumes! Thank you again to parents for supporting the kids with treats and decorations.

We are making some great art for the Remembrance Day assembly on November 10th at 10:45 AM. I look forward to our Bunraku workshops next week, and thank you to the PAC for funding it! 

Have a great weekend!

Ms. D

Bunraku Puppetry on Monday & Wednesday! Read some info!

On Monday and Wednesday afternoons next week, thanks to our PAC who provided funding to us for in-class workshops, we are having a workshop on Bunraku Puppetry! Maggie Winston from the Lost and Found Puppet Company will be joining us to teach us about this Japanese art.

The puppetry requires three people in groups to make the puppets come to life. Given there is a specific structure to how this is done, it fits well with our thinking for our second unit. Plus, it is a great exercise in collaboration!

Please read and watch materials from some of the links below so you have some background on Bunraku before our workshop. Thank you!

Encyclopaedia Britannica What is Bunraku?

A very cool Bunraku Cat Puppet

Look at the way the puppets work: Japanese Bunraku Technique

History of Japanese Bunraku Theatre

Kids Web Explore Japan

PBS Learning Matter Bunraku Japanese Culture

Japan Zone Japanese Culture: Bunraku

More complex World of Theatre Bunraku

 

1 2