Family Nature Challenge April 9 – June 21, 2021

Want to win a game to play with your family or friends this summer? Please join in our nature challenge!

During the months of April, May and June, please visit the many parks and natural spaces found in our local area. If you need maps of where these are, you can find them online or in our classroom, and I have provided some links to some great sites below.

Take pictures of yourself in the natural environment. Make a Google Slideshow of your pictures. The person with the most locations by the end of May wins!

Here are the rules:

  • Pictures must be taken at some time between April 9 and June 21
  • Pictures need to include some identifying nature feature or a sign behind you. If you don’t want to be in the picture, then your hand or a personal sign with your name (“Joe was here”) needs to be in the picture as proof you were there.
  • One picture per location.
  • Same point value regardless of location.
  • Stay local as much as possible. Be aware of distancing and masks if needed in public areas.
  • Local parks, other school playgrounds, green belts, beaches, pond areas, pathways, hike trails, lakes, rivers, soccer fields, courtyards, green belts near your building, or any place you can play outside, etc. all count!
  • Create a slideshow on PowerPoint or another slideshow application to share the pictures with me. Label the locations if there are not signs.
  • You do not have to spend a specific amount of time at the location — all you need is a picture!
  • Make this a family challenge — it is way more fun, and a healthy activity to do together during this time of COVID isolation!

Local Location Ideas:

Main prize to be awarded to only one person. However, smaller prizes for everyone who participates and provides me with a slideshow. I hope you all spend a lot of time outdoors over the next three months!

Ms. D

 

The Nature Connection – New Unit April – Early June

Hello Everyone!

Time is flying, as we are already into our second week after Spring Break! We are finishing up our last unit, as students prepare their newspaper articles and broadcast news reports. We hope to finish and present these within the next week, as soon as students are ready. Rubrics have been sent home for the commercials students completed before break, and I am gradually going through all of the e-port entries on science experiments, so look for those soon.

We have also jumped right in to some of our next unit, exploring our connection to nature. We will be doing this unit from now until June, while simultaneously giving more time for independent projects. Here are some details!

Unit Title:  The Nature Connection

Unit Focus Statement:

Human beings impact and rely upon the balance of nature’s interdependent systems.

Concepts:

Connection (main focus), as well as Systems and Patterns.

An inquiry into:

  • Our relationship with nature (mental health, survival, needs, recreation)
  • Biomes, biodiversity, and interdependence within ecosystems
  • How human interaction with the environment can affect the balance of systems
  • Earth’s water supply
  • How the moon, sun, weather, and tides affect our lives
  • The role of questioning, exploration, close observation, and documentation in science
  • The definition of science and the role of indigenous knowledge
  • How we express our connection to nature through poetry and art
  • Geometry and patterns in nature
  • French basic vocabulary and nature/weather expressions

Activities and learning to look forward to:

  • Virtual field trips —
    • Lower Seymour Watershed
    • OWL Sanctuary
    • Stanley Park Ecology Society River Otters Workshop
    • GREEN Workshops on Water and Recycling
    • Bamfield Marine Science Centre Seaweed Sensations & Oceanography
    • Burnaby Art Gallery Coastal Waters Art Workshop.
  • Daily participation in The 30-Day Walking Curriculum Challenge (from SFU Professor Gillian Judson and her book called The Walking Curriculum) for April/May, honing critical thinking, observation, documentation, and questioning skills.
  • Daily participation in The Walk 30 Burnaby/New West Walking Challenge starting May 13th, recording our minutes daily in a community contest.
  • Discussions around geometric shapes and patterns found in nature, symmetry, and Fibonacci.
  • Continued practice of grade-level math curriculum through nature-inspired, real-life math problems in the books Planet Earth, Animal Kingdom, and Ocean Math, among other resources. Students will work independently and at their own pace on these using the book resource in EPIC, while also coming to me for small-group or individual instruction as needed.
  • Research on a specific organism in our local environment, understanding its name and classification, whether it is endangered and why, what it is used for, what local Indigenous cultures know about it, and how it is connected to our own lives, then producing artwork to represent findings.
  • Walking to Everett Crowley Park to look at native BC plants used by indigenous peoples for healing and food.
  • Growing our own plants in class through hydroponics.
  • Mapping our local environment of plants and creating plant samples like a botanist using pressing techniques and art.
  • Discussions about the water cycle, water health, the harm plastics are doing to our waters, ocean acidification, using a variety of games, an ocean pH lab, and interactive challenges.
  • Class reading and analysis of the book The Skeleton Tree, which will connect to discussions of survival techniques in nature, such as how to use a compass, how to find edible food, etc.
  • Discussions of figurative language and poetry, which will lead to us creating our own mini poetry journal and an oral presentation of a poetry monologue about nature.
  • Creating models of our ideal outdoor play space for ADST.

And much more! Please continue to watch the blog and Twitter for more information on what our class is doing. More information to come!

Ms. D

New Unit February – March 2021: “Communication is the Key!”

Hello Everyone!

This week we have started a new unit which will run from February –  March 2021.

Unit Title:
Communication is the KEY!

Concept:  POWER

Core Competency Focus:  Critical Thinking / Communication

Unit Focus Statement:
Being an educated citizen requires reflection and critical thinking about how we communication and receive information.

Areas of Inquiry:

  • The power of an educated citizen
  • Questioning and research skills
  • Forms of media and how they work (media literacy)
  • Fake news and social media safety (digital literacy)
  • Science Labs and communication results (primary vs secondary research)
  • Numbers in the News
  • Effective use of communication skills (presentations, writing, team activities, drama, visual arts)
  • The power of storytelling through oral traditions and visual arts
  • The power of walking and mindfulness
  • Communication with others using basic French

Curricular Activities:

  • Using Media Smarts BC online program for examining role of media in our lives.
  • Understanding how media resources are organized; analyzing news broadcasts.
  • Talking with a current CBC Journalist via Zoom on February 22nd
  • Creating our own broadcast news reports or newspaper articles.
  • Doing a variety of science experiments to practice the scientific method and primary research documentation.
  • Looking at wordless books and using visual imagery to create oral stories.
  • Exploring Indigenous oral storytelling traditions, and how stories are used to communicate important messages or to pass knowledge from one generation to the next.
  • Continuing our independent project research
  • Creating watercolour pictures of the ABCs of Life and wire sculptures
  • Continuing work on proportionate reasoning, including ordering of fractions and decimals.
  • Looking at how math is used in the news and in advertisements.
  • Documenting our Independent Project Research

Students will be investigating media, communications, and other topics above through some at-home explorations or questions in their planners.

Please support them with discussion about these questions, as well as encouragement to set aside time at home to do these explorations.

***As students work on independent project, they really do need to set aside time at home to be doing research, and not just relying on time at school.

Some students have recently said they don’t have any time to do any work at home, even when it is a simple thinking activity in their journals, because of their activities load.

As students get older and go into upper grades, they need to have dedicated time at home to catch up on work as needed. If a student is in a lot of extra-curricular activities, this may be something to talk about at home so students do not start to feel overwhelmed or come to class unprepared for inquiry discussions.

Thank you for your support!

Ms. D

Overview Term 1 & 2, September – February 2020-21

MACC Suncrest Division 5 Overview, September – February

In anticipation of our Optional Learning Conferences and Report Card Reflections, here is an overview of what we studied during the last five months! Please see each student’s e-portfolio for more specific information on their projects and learning.


Division 5 began the year building the foundation for a great working community!
 

Throughout many fun activities together we discussed and applied elements of the personal awareness core competency, and we made individual goals to improve our approach to learning. We made essential agreements for working together, and we did brainstorms about our interests for a new school year.


We created beautiful Life Islands to communicate our strengths and passions to one another; and we enjoyed playing games during Free Choice Fridays, which was a great opportunity to bond together as a class. We also learned how to run our own class meetings to plan events such as our Halloween party and the Winter Wonderland during December.

We also enjoyed doing psychology surveys from the book Who do you think you are?, which opened discussions about how everyone learns and experiences the world in different ways. In this way we could not only add to our own personal awareness, but also better understand our classmates and their needs.

 

 

Then we jumped right in to our conceptual units!

To tie the BIG IDEAS, content, and curricular competencies from our curriculum together into a larger, enduring understanding, we studied all subjects through the lens of universal, conceptual themes. See below to learn more about our two units from September – January!


First, we focused on the concept of STRUCTURE
in our unit “It’s All in the Design”

Unit Focus Statement:

The structure of something is designed to serve the needs of the user.


Form Follows Function! – Building and Experimenting – Science

Through a variety of fun building activities, we discussed the scientific principles behind STRUCTURE. Many of our conversations revolved around the phrase “form follows function.” For example, we talked about how different sports balls have a specific design to serve a specific sport, and how our chairs were designed taking our ergonomic and daily work needs in mind.

Using critical and creative thinking, personal awareness and responsibility, and communication skills, we collaboratively designed and built marble roller coasters, popsicle stick towers, Lego creations, and paper honeycomb structures based off of bee hive explorations to learn how certain shapes provide the greatest strength, and how understanding the science of our materials can help with design.

     

Through lab experiments, students learned about physical and chemical properties, atoms, forces, energy transfer, potential and kinetic energy, homogenous and heterogenous mixtures, and states of matter to better understand the structure of our world and how designers use this information to make new things!

   

We also had discussions about how the human body has a certain form to serve specific functions related to our survival. We looked at the human skeleton, the eye, and cells, to better understand all of their structure. Then, we compared our skeleton to those of other animals to see how they are different. Our inquiry led us to looking at how different animals have structural adaptations that allow them to survive in specific habitats.


Each of us did research on an animal of our choice, to learn about their adaptations, and then presented the information in an online Book Creator e-book or an oral presentation in front of the class. We were also fortunate to have the Bamfield Marine Science Centre do a virtual field trip to talk about invertebrates in our local oceans and their adaptations.

 

Rumble Bots and Coding – Applied Design


We used a lot of thinking, communication, collaboration, and creativity making Rumble Bots!
  After looking at energy transfer in guided science experiments, and learning about potential and kinetic energy while creating fast roller coasters, we applied our knowledge of energy to the creation of cardboard Rumble Bots that raced on a vibrating track!

 

We also participated in another virtual field trip with Science World, learning how to do coding online for mini ozobots! This was a great introduction for a later event in December, the Hour of Code, week-long event dedicated to learning code.

   


Structure of MATH Thinking and Our Number System

We talked about the STRUCTURE of our number system! We began by emphasizing the skills needed to be a successful mathematician, such as risk-taking, deep thinking, open-mindedness, questioning, and creative and critical thinking. We talked about how mathematicians work to prove and disprove conjectures, and we practiced being skeptics and convincers to question and to prove math understandings.

We also discussed the research of Prof. Jo Boaler and YouCubed at Stanford University, who talked about brain structure and the value of brain crossing, which involves doing two activities at the same time to better cement a concept in your head, such as drawing and math. We explored the question, “What does it mean to be a mathmatician?” This meant debunking the idea that math is all about the numbers (because you have to be able to explain your thinking, too), or that math is all about speed (because some of the best mathematicians have been some of the slowest, careful thinkers!)

To explore the structure of numbers, we completed a variety of independent math tasks to understand how we break down our number system, to discuss strategic thinking through games, and to explore new ways to apply brain crossing while practicing grade-level curriculum in multiplication, area/perimeter, and patterns.

Many of these tasks involved reading non-fiction resources for math history information, such as the history of zero or the biography of Archimedes, as well as answering critical-thinking questions about math games.


We looked carefully at a new game called Prime Climb by the mathematician/teacher Dan Finkel, discussing how to win through strategic use of the four operations and knowledge of prime and composite numbers. We had great discussions about the 4-colour theorem, Fibonacci patterns, and other fun, number curiosities, some proven, some not!

There was also the opportunity to apply our learning to the creation of a strategic math game! Working individually or with a partner, we created 3D, board, and card games, and shared them with other classmates.


Structure of a Healthy Community and World – Social Studies / PE & Health 

What kinds of structure are needed to support human life on Earth? We discussed the structure that allows our world to function, such as resource-delivery systems, government, city services, languages for communication, the nature of the land, and the Goldilocks Principle so our Earth is located in just the right place in the universe. Without all of this structure, we realized our lives would be pretty chaotic!

We were fortunate to have a virtual field trip to learn about the BC Parliament, live from the Legislative Assembly in Victoria. Everyone learned about the different levels of government, the roles of people who take part in the legislature, and about the different types of government in the world.

What is the structure of a healthy life?
We talked about the balance of work and play, as well as the importance of self-care — breathing, managing stress, mindfulness, taking breaks using our break board, staying healthy by washing hands, and getting enough sleep.

We learned about the importance of taking healthy risks, to get out of our comfort zone to do real learning! And we explored some alternative ways to get exercise and improve our focus, such as playing with devil sticks, taking mindful walks, and practicing yoga stretches during the day.

To apply our learning, we did the Your World Project, creating our own planets! We had to think about the planet’s place in the universe, the topographical features of the planet, the nature of its inhabitants, their language and government, and other elements of structure in the communities of the planet that allow the inhabitants to thrive. Then, we displayed our creative thinking through models, posters, and Book Creator e-books.


Structure of Language – Language Arts and French

Throughout all of the subject areas, as we communicated our ideas, we talked about the structure of language. We evaluated the elements of a good paragraph, we used homophones to play with language and make puns and jokes, and we discussed tools that help us with quality writing structure such as transition words. We documented our learning daily in our journals, shared ideas with partners, and wrote speeches, raps, and poems to demonstrate our understandings of mathematical concepts. After practicing how to make our sentences more complex, and how to make a proper paragraph, we applied this knowledge to several projects.

To help with our research on projects, we learned about non-fiction features we can use to help find information, how to record resources, how to look for legitimate websites, and how to ask different levels of inquiry questions. We will continue to use this in term three as we work toward our independent projects!

In French, we explored beginning vocabulary and phrases through French songs and discussion. We enjoyed doing comparisons of the structures of our mother tongues and learned about the history of language development through videos on TEDEd.


Elements and Principles – Playing with Structure in Art

We explored the elements and principles that structure art! We experimented with new materials, line, colour, and form through a paper quilling project. Our boxes art allowed us to explore making something with mixed media, while focusing on warm and cool colours, texture, and line. We created amazing mixed-media art about poppies for the Remembrance Day Virtual Assembly, using a variety of materials and techniques, as well as line, colour, texture, shape, perspective, and emphasis.


Next, we focused on
the concepts of
PERSPECTIVE and PROBLEM-SOLVING
in our unit

“Solving the Conundrum”

Unit Focus Statement:
Problem solving involves careful observation, critical thinking,
and consideration of multiple perspectives.


What are the skills you need to solve a problem?

We began our unit with cooperative games and challenges to explore the variety of curricular and core competencies required to solve a problem. Our main focus was critical thinking, but we also used communication, creative-thinking, and personal-awareness skills.

One of our favourites was playing the game Forbidden Island, which is unique because everyone has to work as a team, rather than against one another, to get the treasures and escape from the island before it sinks into the water! Everyone did a great job playing together, using communication and critical-thinking skills!

The Space Team card game was also fun, which involved quickly solving your spaceship’s problems as a team, in only 5 minutes! We also used the book Zoom and had to put a 30-page wordless book back in the correct order, as a whole class, without being able to talk or touch one another!

After finishing challenges, we reflected as a group on the skills needed to be successful in a problem or conflict, such as active listening with partners, careful consideration of instructions and perspectives, self-regulation, and the ability to stay calm when you don’t know the answer right away or something unexpected happens.


Finding Perspective – Social-Emotional Learning, PE and Health, Social Studies

Why do people act the way they do? We incorporated social-emotional learning frequently into our discussions, talking about how to apply problem-solving methods to situations at school, how to care for our community, how to see another person’s perspective, and the emotions and needs such as belonging, power, and fun that drive behaviour. In this way we can better understand why people do the things they do, which can make it easier to respond to a stressful situation.

Big problem or small problem? We explored the difference between small problems and big problems in our everyday lives. We discussed how to identify a problem and strategies for solving minor conflicts amongst peers. I appreciated how students contributed to our lesson on “Words that Hurt” as we categorized language we had heard on the playground or in our community as either playful talk between friends or very hurtful words. We made a commitment to become more aware of how words can hurt, even if the person who said them didn’t mean to hurt anyone. This was part of learning perspective.

We started taking walks as a class that were about perspective. During one of our PE walks we did a Scavenger Hunt which forced everyone to look carefully for items in the local neighbourhood. We will continue doing focused, mindful activities like these from the Walking Curriculum to improve our observation skills. Walking is a great solution to feeling healthier or just working through your feelings about a problem, too!

 

Identity and Understanding Others – Core Competencies, Social Studies, Language Arts

What is culture? How does it shape our perspective? In connection with the core competency of Positive Personal and Cultural Identity, we discussed how understanding our own culture and that of others can help us gain perspective. We interviewed one another to see how we do things at home and how our daily lives are different because of culture and family history.

In December, we had a Culture Party, and each student brought in an artifact or display to share with other students, so we could celebrate our own identities and learn about important cultural traditions of others in our class community.

For French, in addition to learning basic vocabulary and phrases, we have discussed how language is related to culture, the history of French language, and how a person’s language is an important part of identity. This is why when residential school children were punished for speaking their own language it was such a serious infringement of their human rights.

We discussed how differences are sometimes celebrated, but sometimes also cause fear, which can lead to conflict and negative outcomes. We read passages from This Book is Antiracist, which helped us understand societal, long-held beliefs that lead to racism, prejudice, stereotypes, and discrimination based on colour, gender identity, and ethnicity.

This led to a larger exploration of the history of discrimination in Canada. We discussed human rights, the UN Declaration of Human Rights, the UN Convention of the Rights of a Child, and the UN Document on Indigenous rights about human rights and ethics. Then we looked closely at how human rights had been denied through Residential Schools, Japanese Internment in World War II, the Komagata Maru Incident, and the Chinese Head Tax. As a class, we read and analyzed My Name is Seepeetza, so we could better understand the conditions of residential schools from the perspective of someone our own age.

In groups, we wrote and performed teaching skits to help everyone learn about the history of discrimination in Canada, as well as some of the ways in which the government has tried to make amends or participate in reconciliation.



To help us understand reconciliation, we looked at the “City Beyond the City” exhibit through a virtual field trip to the Museum of Vancouver. The exhibit explains the history of the Musqueam and their village on what is now the Fraser River in South Vancouver. We learned their history and facts about how this exhibit was co-created between the Museum of Vancouver and the Musqueam peoples.



How do scientists solve mysteries? With problem-solving skills and scientific knowledge! — Science and Math

Oh no! A crime happened in Division 5! Ms. D’s metal statue and a class iPad were stolen! Well, not really, but we set up a pretty fantastic practice crime scene, practicing our observation, communication, thinking, and technology skills to carefully document a crime scene!

We also used our math skills, because accurate measurement is required to document where items are located within a crime scene space.

So, we gathered evidence, took notes, and carefully measured each of the marked evidence locations from two reference points in the room. Then we did a myriad of other lab experiments to practice being forensics investigators just like on CSI.

We learned about fingerprints, measuring bones to determine someone’s height, analyzing bullet holes in windows, reading a criminal for suspicious body language, forging of signatures, and watching for physical and chemical properties to identify substances left at the scene.   


We practiced our CSI Math skills in You Do the Math Solve a Crime
, using math knowledge about coordinates, graphing, area, adding and subtracting decimals, fractions, and word problems to do some of the same math a CSI agent would do!



Proportionate Reasoning and Problem Solving – Math

Through Carole Fullerton’s Proportional Reasoning and other math exercises, we did some serious work trying to understand fractions and ratios. Using manipulatives such as coloured chips, a clothesline, and tangrams, we explored both set and area models of fractions.

Then, we applied our knowledge to recipes from home, looking at how we could make a favourite dish for more people if we had a big party! We discussed how the relationship between ingredients is a ratio, and we also looked at the types of measurement used when finding volume of ingredients, such as cups, teaspoons, and gallons. We will continue working on these concepts as we move into term three.

We also discussed the strategies you need to solve complicated word problems, such as reading carefully, making visual diagrams, and identifying important information and steps for the problem. Using the book Word Problems in Literature by Denise Gaskins, we applied Singapore visual, bar diagram strategies to solve word problems from The Hobbit and The Chronicles of Narnia!


Writing a Mystery & Philosophy Through Picture Books – Language Arts and Socials

We put our CSI knowledge to work and wrote fantastic mystery stories! First, we analyzed mystery stories we already knew and watched Scooby Doo to identify typical mystery elements such as the suspects, victim, clues, red herring, and alibi. We read Chris Grabenstein’s book Super Puzzletastic Mysteries, and identified the mystery elements used by the writer to spin an interesting tale. We learned how to use punctuation in dialogue, because no story is complete without interesting characters and conversations. Now we need to share our stories with one another!

In connection with Social Studies, we analyzed picture books such as The Giving Tree, The Important Book, and Frederick, to look at big questions (or big problems to ponder) in ethics and philosophy. Which roles are valuable in a society? What makes you, you? Should you expect something in return if you give someone a gift? What is the meaning of work? See our e-portfolios for our thoughts on some of these questions!


Applied Design, Art, and Maker Problem Solving!

Leading up to the holiday, we put our problem-solving skills to the test, finding ways to make creative decorations for our Winter Wonderland. Everyone learned how to do wool felt landscapes; created zentangle, watercolour winter trees; and made geometric, hanging ornaments with embroidery thread.

  

During our Burnaby Art Gallery virtual field trip, we learned about Coast Salish art shapes, and then we used those shapes to create our own spirit animal prints in red and black. One of the interesting things we discovered about Coast Salish spindle whorls is that they can form different pictures depending on how you view the negative/positive space and your own perspective.

We also looked at abstract art and discussed how problem-solving skills such as critical thinking can help us connect with the feeling of non-objective abstract paintings. After an in-depth discussion of the colour wheel, tints and shades, and the meaning of the word monochromatic, we made our own geometric, monochromatic abstract art that almost looks like modern stain glass windows!

 

FINALLY, we made efforts to solve our own problems – Language Arts, Socials, Science, Social Responsibility

There are many problems in the world, and even though some of them seem really big, we can all play a role in solving them! First, we looked at the United Nations’ Global Goals to end poverty, inequality, and environmental problems by 2030. The UN asks people all over the world to engage in these goals and to find ways to contribute to solving problems. You can INNOVATE, INVENT, or CAMPAIGN — three key ways to make change!

We were inspired by a long list of young people who have made change in the world, and we chose one to research further. After reading about their story, we came up with our own problems to solve and an action plan, which we presented to the class in PowerPoint format. Together, we can find creative ways to make a difference!

Stay tuned for our new units coming up in term three, as well as our Independent Project studies!

Sharing Our Form and Function E-Books With You!

Hello Everyone,

Use these links to see the books published by students in Division 5. Again the task was to select a building, object, or animal for further research, and then discuss how form follows function. As a reminder, not everyone did an e-book, as some students chose to do speeches instead. Great work learning new technology from Book Creator and discussing how to display research information in a new way. Enjoy!

Hanoks by Victoria

Golden Gate Bridge by Ninad

Sea Stars by Anya

Zebra Finches by Ella

Sino-Steel Building by Michael

Giant Pacific Octopus by Stephanie

Piano by Walter

Sino-Steel Tower by Yichen

Great Wall of China by Charles

Sea Otters by Piper

The Louvre by Aaratrika

Curiosity Rover by Jake

Great Wall of China by Cici

Igloos by Luke

Pelicans by Melly

International Space Station by Owen

Emperor Penguin by Howard

Burj Khalifa by Abhinanda

Update on Unit “It’s All in the Design” – September 28th

Hello Everyone!

We have been gradually unpacking our unit and getting used to our permanent weekly schedule! Here’s a quick update of what we are doing!

 

Schedule:

We now have a permanent schedule, and Division 5 will have music on Tuesday and Friday mornings, as well as Thursday afternoons. We will have gym before lunch on Tuesday and Thursday, as well as Wednesday after recess.

Library will be scheduled at a later date, but Ms. Ho has already come to our classroom to do a mobile library visit! Students may check out books for 2 weeks at a time. They can have up to 4 books. Books from the Suncrest Library can go home and will be stored in backpacks. Books from Ms. D’s personal library need to stay in the classroom, please. Thank you!

E-Ports and MS Teams:

We now have our user names and passwords to access both of these tools! Please make sure you test MS Teams access at home and see if all passwords work. If they do not, let me know. Right now, there is not very much on MS Teams because we are just setting it up. We do have 2 posts in our e-portfolios, though, so we welcome parents to come and check out the entries and to provide feedback.

E-Portfolio entries are used for checking in with student understandings throughout the year. I look forward to reading them as we get going with the unit. E-Portfolio entries need to:

  • have a title, provided by Ms. D,
  • have a category marked in the side bar,
  • include the questions Ms. D asked, with questions written in bold,
  • be edited before publishing,
  • have answers to the questions with complete sentences and detail to show understandings and deeper thinking, and
  • have a picture of student work or of a related image from the internet (pictures need to be sized correctly by editing them once uploaded, and please do not post pictures with copyright symbols on them.)

Language Arts:

In connection with our discussion of the concept STRUCTURE, we are looking at the structure of effective paragraphs and sentences, the structure of language, and the structure of different writing forms. How does the FORM of the writing relate to its FUNCTION in terms of communicating ideas to others?

Students now have a blue duotang for Vocabulary Study, with fun language lists and activities by Ian Byrd, who is a fantastic education consultant specializing in gifted curriculum. Our first study of words is around HOMOPHONES, and we have several tasks to complete. Students can choose which one they would like to try doing each day over the next couple of weeks. We will share their favourite task on E-Portfolios and then move on to the next challenge list. We do not have spelling tests, but this is a way of looking more closely at language.

In addition, I am introducing them to new words through two new books of mine The Dictionary of Difficult Words and The Lost Words. We also had a great discussion about the many languages in our classroom, the universal phonetic alphabet used by linguists to structure and identify human languages, and the different alphabets used to construct human language. More to come as we unpack writing and language structure.

Everyone also now has a green duotang for Reading Around the World. Your child can use this list as an optional way to structure their home and class reading. There are prizes for traveling around the world through reading! Good luck!

Science:

How do designers use scientific knowledge to make things? How is FORM related to function? For example, today we looked at the different chairs in our classroom. Why are they designed the way they are, with specific back rests, textures, supports, and materials? If we made our own chair, which features would we change or add to serve our own needs? We also looked at different kinds of sports balls. Why is a basketball spherical and rough? Why is a football streamlined and leather?

These discussions are helping us understand how FORM FOLLOWS FUNCTION!

We are investigating states of matter, molecular structure, energy transfer, Newton’s laws, and other science knowledge a designer may take into mind when creating something like a large building or even a simple chair.

  • With our rumblebots, we investigated energy transfer through vibrations, and we watched a video to learn how they travel down the track!
  • Last week, we used slinky toys to look at compression waves and how energy travels. Watch the slinky challenge here, and the answer to the challenge at this site.
  • We will be using ramps and marbles to talk about how Newton’s first law and how gravity, height, and friction affect a moving object.
  • We hope to watch Bill Nye’s video on Structure, to further discuss FORM FOLLOWS FUNCTION!

We will also discuss, how is the anatomical structure of an organism designed to serve the organism’s function? We will be looking at our own skeletons and parts of the body, how they are designed, and how they help us to be the mobile humans we are! We will also look at a large visual book of animal skeletons, and to try and guess the animals’ names just by looking at their bone structure. How do bone structures depend on animal behaviour, habitat, size, food, and predators.

Finally, we will also touch upon the STRUCTURE of our lives based upon the science of the sun, moon, and our placement in the galaxy. We will discuss the Goldilocks Principle, as well as why other planets do not have the life Earth does.

I look forward to our discussions and the projects to follow, during which students can get more creative about areas of passion that are related to our unit.

Math:

As we look at the concept of STRUCTURE, we will ask deeper questions about the structure of mathematics. For example: What are the different kinds of numbers? Why is math organized the way it is? How does looking for patterns help us better understand multiplication and division? 

We do not have one textbook to work out of in math. Instead, students will be completing activities from multiple sources. Some of our deeper thinking around numeracy, patterns, and how the brain understands math will come from the work of Jo Boaler at Stanford University. Students have already been watching videos from her YouCubed Inspirational Math series, which discuss such things as:

  • great math is more about deep thinking versus speed,
  • cementing ideas about math in the brain involves something called “brain crossing” in which two different kinds of activities are done at once, such as drawing and visualizing mathematical ideas,
  • mathematics is about understanding and noticing patterns, and
  • mathematicians who struggle with big ideas play the role of both convincers and skeptics — you need someone who tries to prove a theory, but you also need someone to ask good questions so the work is of quality.

We will also explore STRUCTURE of mathematics, as well as patterns and multiplication, through a variety of math games such as Prime Climb, Math Fluxx, and Sumoku. This will allow us to have fun and employ critical-thinking, creative-thinking, and communication skills while accessing math curricular content and competencies.

In another week, students will be receiving a list of mini projects and tasks to complete independently or in small groups. The list will have a due date; however, it is meant to provide lots of choice (as activities do not have to be completed in order), and students can work at their own pace within the larger deadline. This list will be kept in their binders.

Today, students did an exploration of Pascal’s Triangle. You may want to see it in their binder and ask them questions about the patterns they found.

After the unit ends, we will do a math project! More information to come on that soon!

Socials:

With elections coming up in both our province and in the US, there is an excellent opportunity to discuss government and the structure of municipal, provincial, and federal services that are set up to meet the needs of our large population. More to come about this soon.

Class Meeting:

Speaking of structure and governance, the way we introduce new ideas and discuss the ways to make student proposals happen is through class meeting! So far, we have a Halloween Party Committee formed. While we can’t have any food or treats brought to school, we can have a party! We will have class meeting on Tuesdays after music if you have ideas you would like the class to consider. If you want something to happen, speak up, or make a written proposal for the agenda before we start a meeting!

Personal Awareness and Responsibility Competency:

During this unit we will focus on the core competency of Personal Awareness and ResponsibilityYou can read about the competency here!

We worked together to make essential agreements as a class about our values and what kind of learning environment we want to have in MACC 4/5, which is directly related to taking responsibility for our own learning space, our relationships with other students, and our own self-management skills.

We had a personal awareness discussion and game about the Comfort Circle and in our journals began to identify characteristics of our own personal comfort zone, learning zone, and panic zone. The best learning happens in the “LEARNING ZONE” when you are slightly uncomfortable, but not too much. Great learning involves taking risks and trying new things!

We also talked about how learning is a lifelong journey and brainstormed a LIFE RUBRIC in our journals of activities we feel we are beginning, developing, proficient at, or extending/expert at, in relation to the proficiency scale used for assessment. It is okay to be developing a skill, and we do not have to be perfect at everything! Ms. D shared her own Life Rubric ideas. Even adults have ongoing learning they can do!

Okay, more to come, but…..

Too much for one entry, but more to come this week as we engage in more experiments, build some things, talk about a Skill Share Project, do some fun research, and more!

Have a great week and don’t forget Terry Fox Run on Friday! The link to support Terry Fox Foundation is on the Suncrest Website.

Thank you!

Ms. D

Welcome to MACC 4/5 — Celebrating year six!

Welcome to MACC 2020-21! I can’t believe it has been five years since I began teaching MACC here at Suncrest! While it is a strange and interesting year, I am excited for year six, and I am looking forward to getting to know this new group, with 14 new students!

We are doing a lot of fun activities this week to help foster community, such as building and experimenting with rumblebots, making marble roller coasters, playing games, and doing math challenges. Plus, we are just so excited to be seeing one another in person and playing in groups again!

Make sure you had a look at the guidelines sent out in email earlier this week, as it will help answer questions about curriculum, assessment, supplies, and how we do lunch, among other things! There is a parent questionnaire to complete by Friday, September 18th, just so I have some additional information about your child.

Thank you all for your support, and I will be posting more soon about our first unit on STRUCTURE! If you have any questions, do not hesitate to be in touch.

Kindly,
Ms. D

Activities and Assignments Week of May 11th – 15th


Activities Update for Week of May 11 – May 15

  • This list is also available on MS Teams in the General Channel.
  • Turn in assignments in MS Teams. Deadlines are flexible.
  • Choose one activity from each category each day of the week.
  • Do the NEED to DO items first, then do optional choices.
  • Need help, please ask!

______________________________________________________________________

MAKER HOUR (60 minutes)
Do something creative! 

Need to Do:

  • Art and Critical Thinking – Elements and Principles of Photography:  Finish. Post photographs to MS Teams to share with classmates. Due May 15th
  • ADST Skills – Soundtrap:  Make sure you are signed up. Overdue.
  • ADST Skills – How to Make a Podcast: Read NPR article on making a Podcast. Then, watch new video on making SoundTrap podcast. Only watch minutes 2:55 – 6:10, as the video has extra things for teachers you don’t need. Make a recording of your voice and using sound features. Due May 15th.
  • MACC Mall: You will need to create a prototype of a product you could sell, to present to our MACC Shark Tank in the future. First step? Make sketches and brainstorm ideas. Connect with classmates you may want to work with.  Details of assignment in MS Teams. Brainstorm Due May 15th, Prototype due May 31st.

Optional Choices:


FITNESS & HEALTH HOUR (60 Minutes) 

Get moving, get some exercise, get your heart pumping!

Need to Do:

  • Physical Health – Heart Workout: Pick one fitness activity each day, either of your own or from the optional choices list, that gets your heart rate up!
  • Personal Awareness – Be calm: Use the APP CALM.  Find a quiet space, put on nice music, look at a pleasant image, and do deep breathing to calm yourself.
  • Gratitude: Add to our ongoing Gratitude List on MS Teams under Just Connect.

Optional Choices:

  • NEW:  See the Optional Daily Activities Page for activities from past weeks!
  • Walking Curriculum: Do something outside if possible, using one of these walking prompts to practice observation, perspective, and critical-thinking.
    • What is looking down on you as you walk?
    • What evidence do you see of weather on your walk (e.g. sun exposed, cracking, moss, ivy creeping, wetness, etc.)
    • What is growing on your walk? How do you know? What are the different ways in which growth appears to you?
    • What do you notice on your walk that is lovely or pleasing?


INDIE READING (30 minutes) 

Read something fun and avoid news/current events.

Need to Do:

  • LA:  Read 30 minutes for fun, relaxation, or learning each day!
  • Join Daily Read Aloud: Ms. D will read Orphan Island each day 2:30-3:00 PM. Drop in, listen to the story! Look for the button to join in the General Channel of MS Teams. Afterwards ask questions or speak one-on-one with Ms. D if needed.

Optional Choices:


SERVICE and CONNECTION (30 minutes) 

Clean and help others! Connect with classmates and family. Play! Be kind! 

Need to Do:

  • ZOOM Group Meeting Wednesday 10:00 AM:  Unit discussion, science experiment, and open questions. See how your suggestions melted the PEEPS!
  • Contribute to our MS Teams channels.  Do the math and writing challenges, or participate in word games and riddles. Be part of your class community!
  • Connect with others!  Connect with a friend! Make sure you have contact with your class community and friends, which is important for your mental health!

Optional Choices:

  • NEW  See the Optional Daily Activities Page for activities from past weeks
  • Do the class OPTIONAL BEST IN SHOW CHALLENGE! See MS Teams for a Best in Show Pet, Stuffie, or Toy challenge that is just for fun and social-emotional connection as a class. We hope you will participate. Due on May 15th.
  • Escape Rooms: Here are some escape rooms you could do with friends online.
  • Random Acts of Kindness could be a great way to help improve someone’s day during our isolation at home. Here are 19 Random Acts of Kindness Ideas for Kids, and maybe just find ways to send random positive messages to family, friends, and adults in your lives. We all need some positive words right now!


GENIUS HOUR (60 minutes) 

Learn something new and document your learning in some way.

Need to Do:

  • IP:  Read Ms. D’s feedback on primary research. Do primary research and make sure to document it with a lab report, pictures, notes, observations, or reflections. Due May 22nd, Friday.
  • IP: Tell Ms. D your idea for your IP presentation. Will you use Book Creator? Will you do a PowerPoint? Create a model at home and document it with pictures? Idea is due May 15th, Friday.
  • IP Bibliography: Create a bibliography for IP. Due June 1st.
  • Typing: Do typing practice when other assignments are done. Due June 10th.

Optional Choices:


UNIT, NUMERACY, LITERACY HOUR (60 minutes)

Specific learning opportunities at grade level or connected to our unit.

Need to Do:

  • Unit Discussion, Small-Group Meeting: Check email for invite. We will discuss MACC Mall Ideas, Economics, Simple/Compound Interest.
  • Unit Group Inquiry: Choose unit topic to research further. You will work in a small group on MS Teams to make a mini presentation during a video conference to another group through a shared PowerPoint. Topic due May 13th on MS Teams Unit Discussions Channel.
  • Socials – Resources in BC/Mining: Watch Port of Vancouver video on key economic activity in BC, Mining, and one about mining all over the world, Ground Rules. Since we couldn’t go to Britannia Mines, watch their video on mining history in BC Groundbreaking. Take a few notes for later discussions. Due May 15th.
  • Science: Rock Guess! Fun activity, see if you can figure out the different names of common minerals, matching pictures to their names. See MS Teams. Due May 15th.
  • LA – Podcast: Decide on a PODCAST theme/topic. What kind of Podcast do you want to have? Brainstorm ideas and then make a draft script of what you might talk about. See the MS Teams Assignment for steps. Due May 19th.
  • Unit Socials/Science – Resources and Geology: Watch videos on TED Education’s Earth School program, review websites on blog about geology and resources, and contribute to discussions in MS Teams. Due May 15th.
  • Math – Personal Budget: Finish personal budget. Due May 13th.
  • Math – IXL Financial Literacy and Decimals: Use IXL to do math related to decimals and financial literacy. Ongoing through May, so do at your own pace.

Optional Choices:

Questions? Email me!

With kindness,

Ms. D

Activities & Assignments List Week of May 4 – May 8


Activities Update for Week of May 4 – May 8

  • This list is also available on MS Teams in the General Channel.
  • Turn in assignments in MS Teams. Deadlines are flexible.
  • Choose one activity from each category each day of the week.
  • Do the NEED to DO items first, then do optional choices.
  • Need help, please ask!

______________________________________________________________________

MAKER HOUR (60 minutes)
Do something creative! 

Need to Do:

  • Art and Critical Thinking – Elements and Principles of Photography:   Learn about the history, as well as the elements and principles of photography. Create a photo collage of letters you find in your every day environment. Instructions are included in the MS Teams Assignment. Due May 15th
  • ADST Skills – Soundtrap:  Stay tuned for information this week about how to join Soundtrap using our class account. This is the tool we will use for a Podcast.
  • Music: Go see Chrome Music Lab. Also visit Ms. Fletcher’s Music Blog for ideas about making music.

Optional Choices:


FITNESS & HEALTH HOUR (60 Minutes) 

Get moving, get some exercise, get your heart pumping!

Need to Do:

  • Physical Health – Heart Workout: Pick one fitness activity each day, either of your own or from the optional choices list, that gets your heart rate up!
  • Personal Awareness – Be calm: Use the APP CALM.  Find a quiet space, put on nice music, look at a pleasant image, and do deep breathing to calm yourself.
  • Gratitude: Make a gratitude list of the things you are grateful for! When Ms. D asks you about it on MS Teams, add to our ongoing list of things that bring us joy.

Optional Choices:

INDIE READING (30 minutes) 
Read something fun and avoid news/current events.

Need to Do:

  • LA:  Read 30 minutes for fun, relaxation, or learning each day!
  • Join Daily Read Aloud: Ms. D will read Orphan Island each day 2:30-3:00 PM. Drop in, listen to the story! Look for the button to join in the General Channel of MS Teams. Afterwards ask questions or speak one-on-one with Ms. D if needed.

Optional Choices:


SERVICE and CONNECTION (30 minutes) 

Clean and help others! Connect with classmates and family. Play! Be kind! 

Need to Do:

  • ZOOM Group Meeting Wednesday 10:00 AM:  Watch a science experiment, get ideas for Mother’s Day, and join in discussion!
  • Contribute to our MS Teams channels.  Do the math and writing challenges, or participate in word games and riddles. Be part of your class community!
  • Connect with others!  Connect with a friend! Make sure you have contact with your class community and friends, which is important for your mental health!
  • Do the class OPTIONAL BEST IN SHOW CHALLENGE! See MS Teams for a Best in Show Pet, Stuffie, or Toy challenge that is just for fun and social-emotional connection as a class. We hope you will participate. Due on May 15th.

Optional Choices:

  • NEW  See the Optional Daily Activities Page for activities from past weeks
  • Escape Rooms: Here are some escape rooms you could do with friends online.
  • Random Acts of Kindness could be a great way to help improve someone’s day during our isolation at home. Here are 19 Random Acts of Kindness Ideas for Kids, and maybe just find ways to send random positive messages to family, friends, and adults in your lives. We all need some positive words right now!

GENIUS HOUR (60 minutes) 
Learn something new and document your learning in some way.

Need to Do:

  • IP:  Read Ms. DeTerra’s feedback on last week’s IP research when you receive it. Think of new questions. Decide on your primary research method and begin working on it. If you are doing an interview, please run questions by Ms. D. Turn in new questions, added research, and primary research idea by May 8th, Friday.
  • TYPING: Do All the Right Type when you have time after other assignments are all done. Ongoing assignment. We will finish all practice sections by June 10th.

Optional Choices:


UNIT, NUMERACY, LITERACY HOUR (60 minutes)

Specific learning opportunities at grade level or connected to our unit.

Need to Do:

  • Unit Discussion, Small-Group Meeting: Check email for invite. We will discuss your job budget, rocks and minerals, economics, and MACC MALL ideas.
  • LA – Quick Write: Practice brainstorming a story structure, careful editing aloud, and the use of proper spacing and punctuation in dialogue. Read the feedback from Ms. D from last week on your writing. Watch videos and choose to Create a Superhero Lair or Talk about How You Were Shrunk. Due May 11th.
  • Unit Socials/Science – Resources and Geology: Watch videos so far on TED Education’s Earth School program, review websites on the blog about geology and resources, and contribute to discussions in MS Teams under the Unit Discussions Channel. Due May 8th.
  • Math – Financial Literacy: In EPIC, read Getting Your Money’s Worth: Making Smart Financial Decisions and take the attached quiz in MS Teams. Due May 8th.
  • Unit Project – Living On Your Own, Personal Budget: Create a budget with the information we discussed in last week’s small-group meeting. Due May 13th.
  • Math – IXL Financial Literacy and Decimals: Use IXL to do math lessons and practice related to decimals and financial literacy. Ongoing through May, so do at your own pace and level.

Optional Choices:

  • NEW  See the Optional Daily Activities Page for activities from past weeks
  • LEARN EXCEL!  To help with making budgets, learn how to use Microsoft EXCEL. Here are tutorials on all the features. Or, a basic lesson on how to make a simple chart. Here is another one on basic math in Excel. And, finally, one more that has a basic introductory tutorial.
  • READ About Unit Topics: Go to EPIC and read any other non-fiction books about money. Read the rest of the Secret Life of Money from last week.
  • I will be posting less optional activities under this category. Take time to participate in MS Teams and do assignments so we can have great discussions.

Questions? Email me!

With kindness,

Ms. D

Activities & Assignments Week of April 27th – May 1st


Activities Update for Week of April 27th – May 1st

  • This list is also available on MS Teams in the General Channel.
  • Turn in assignments in MS Teams. Deadlines are flexible.
  • Choose one activity from each category each day of the week.
  • Do the NEED to DO items first, then do optional choices.
  • Need help, please ask!
  • Pro-D April 27th. MS Teams chats closed.

______________________________________________________________________

MAKER HOUR (60 minutes)
Do something creative! 

Need to Do:

  • Art and Critical Thinking – Photo Challenge #3 and 4:   This time, let’s focus on colour and making a story with your photographs. Due May 4th
  • ADST Skills – Soundtrap:  Watch this tutorial on how to use the application Soundtrap. And this one on how to do Podcasts. Do not join Soundtrap as I will send a class account. Due May 1st.
  • Music: Go see Chrome Music Lab. Also visit Ms. Fletcher’s Music Blog for ideas about making music, including the Music Monday opportunity for May 4th.

Optional Choices:


FITNESS & HEALTH HOUR (60 Minutes) 

Get moving, get some exercise, get your heart pumping!

Need to Do:

  • Physical Health – Heart Workout: Pick one fitness activity each day, either of your own or from the optional choices list, that gets your heart rate up!
  • Personal Awareness – Be calm: Use the APP CALM.  Find a quiet space, put on nice music, look at a pleasant image, and do deep breathing to calm yourself.
  • Gratitude: Make a gratitude list of the things you are grateful for! When Ms. D asks you about it on MS Teams, add to our ongoing list of things that bring us joy.

Optional Choices:

INDIE READING (30 minutes) 
Read something fun and avoid news/current events.

Need to Do:

  • LA:  Read 30 minutes for fun, relaxation, or learning each day!
  • Join Daily Read Aloud: Ms. D will read Orphan Island each day 2:30-3:00 PM. Drop in, listen to the story! Look for the button to join in the General Channel of MS Teams. Afterwards ask questions or speak one-on-one with Ms. D if needed.

Optional Choices:

  • NEW  See the Optional Daily Activities Page for activities from past weeks
  • Contact a friend from class to get a book recommendation from EPIC
  • Listen to PODCASTS of your choice as suggested during past weeks!


SERVICE and CONNECTION (30 minutes) 

Clean and help others! Connect with classmates and family. Play! Be kind! 

Need to Do:

  • ZOOM Group Meeting Wednesday 10:00 AM: Be part of our class meeting on Wednesday. We did a scavenger hunt last week. Come for a fun group activity!
  • Contribute to our MS Teams channels.  Do the math and writing challenges, or participate in word games and riddles. Be part of your class community!
  • Connect with others!  Connect with a friend! Make sure you have contact with your class community and friends, which is important for your mental health!

Optional Choices:

  • NEW  See the Optional Daily Activities Page for activities from past weeks
  • Random Acts of Kindness could be a great way to help improve someone’s day during our isolation at home. Here are 19 Random Acts of Kindness Ideas for Kids, and maybe just find ways to send random positive messages to family, friends, and adults in your lives. We all need some positive words right now!

GENIUS HOUR (60 minutes) 
Learn something new and document your learning in some way.

Need to Do:

  • IP:  Read Ms. DeTerra’s feedback on last week’s IP research when you receive it. Think of new questions. Decide on your primary research method. Turn in new questions, added research, and primary research idea by May 8th, Friday.
  • TYPING: Do All the Right Type when you have time after other assignments are all done. Ongoing assignment. We will finish all practice sections by June 10th.

Optional Choices:


UNIT, NUMERACY, LITERACY HOUR (60 minutes)

Specific learning opportunities at grade level or connected to our unit.

Need to Do:

  • Unit Discussion, Small-Group Meeting: Check email for invite. Did you talk with your parents about how they budget? We will discuss financial literacy and resources. Bring your list of resources found in the home you did last week.
  • LA – Quick Write: Practice descriptive detail. Watch videos and choose either to Create a School for Ninjas or Invent an Underwater School. Due May 4th.
  • Unit Socials/Science – Earth School: Watch videos on TED Education’s Earth School program on the Nature of Stuff and Nature of Society. Contribute to discussions in MS Teams under the Unit Discussions Channel. Due May 1st.
  • Unit Socials-Science – Ms. D Videos:  Ms. D will post learning videos to “Guess the Rock” or on Economics during the week. Please watch and contribute to discussions under MS Teams Unit Discussions Channel. Due May 1st.
  • Unit Science: In EPIC, read Geology of the Pacific Northwest. Chapter 2 and 3, pp. 17-46. Do the QUIZ in MS Teams Assignments. Due May 4th.
  • Math – Financial Literacy: In EPIC, read The Secret Life of Money pages 19-45. Write an E-Port answering 3 thinking questions in MS Teams. Due May 4th.
  • Math – IXL Financial Literacy and Decimals: Use IXL to do math lessons and practice related to decimals and financial literacy. Goal is to complete ten lessons by May 1st. Ongoing through May, so do at your own pace and level.

Optional Choices:

Questions? Email me!

With kindness,

Ms. D

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