What is great research?

Hello Everyone!

Okay, so I have been checking in with students about their animal project research and their independent projects, and we had a discussion today about what makes great research.

Great researchers don’t just take one set of questions, answer them with brief bullet points, and then say, “I am done!”

They also don’t ask, “How many lines of research do I need?” This shows greater focus on getting something done instead of just finding out information!

Great researchers don’t go into a research project without a good question. Not having a question means you fall into the abyss of the never-ending Internet without a compass for direction and focus!

Great researchers don’t have messy notes without sources, because what if you need to remember something later, or prove that something you are saying about your topic is true?

So, what do great researchers do? They….

  • choose a topic of great interest to them! You have been given choice, but with choice comes responsibility. Choose something you are passionate about!
  • are curious! If you are not curious about your topic and ask lots of questions, then your research won’t have any detail or depth.
  • ask one question at a time, seek the answer, and document! That is why I suggested making your notes with a question, followed by information and a response, and then the resources you used to find the answer. Otherwise, you may be less focused and go all over the place with your research.
  • ask more questions than the teacher has given! Don’t just stop after you answer the key criteria. What questions do you have now? And then take some more notes on your new questions!
  • are never really “done”! They keep going and show perseverance to become an expert on their topic. That means asking better and deeper questions. Use our wonderings wall prompts as a way to shape more complex questions, too.

Obviously, in school, we have the constraints of time and schedules, which may keep us from becoming the ultimate expert. But, we can try! It is hard to give a specific number of lines of notes to give your research notes a quantity, but a project ideally has 4-5 pages of notes, not just one with brief bullet points, if it shows evidence of extending your thinking.

Great job listening today about how we can improve our research. See my next post about deadlines for the next little bit!

Ms. D

MACC Update from Ms. D on April 18th!

Hello Everyone!

So, we have had a great three weeks since Spring Break ended!

We have been doing a lot of talking about biodiversity!

If you missed it today, here are two videos you need to see about biodiversity:

What Does Biodiversity Do for Us?

and

Why is Biodiversity So Important?

Here’s a quick summary of some of the great work we have been doing!:

  • We have a LOAD of great books in the classroom to read about biodiversity, biomes, ecosystems, fossils, evolution, animals, birds, and nature! Thank you to the District Library for adding to our collection. Check them out!
  • We learned all about taxonomy and have spent time classifying or grouping animals, making careful observations, and talking about animal or plant characteristics and adaptations!
  • We have been doing the walking curriculum, looking at our surrounding flora and fauna, practicing careful observation, and getting great exercise and fresh air outdoors!
  • We have learned that our playground has blackberry bushes newly seeded behind the portable, small plants called plantains that can be used for medicine, roly polys or wood bugs (that are crustaceans, not bugs), parsley, brown ants, and more. We look forward to continuing our efforts to map the flora and fauna here, as we talk about mapping this unit!
  • We went through almost 100 poetry books and anthologies to seek different literary devices and poetry structure, such as alliteration, assonance, consonance, repetition, metaphor, simile, quatrain, and more.
  • We played a card game called PHYLO that helps us to learn about our local B.C. biodiversity, and we are working on a tough venn diagram puzzle about taxonomy. Some of those puzzles are hard and open to some debate! 
  • We discussed shapes we found in nature and talked about characteristics of 3D shapes. We built shapes out of bristol board, identified angle types, and learned to use protractors to measure angles in our classroom. 
  • We are doing math challenges from Area Mazes, using our understanding of how to find area to determine missing numbers in the puzzles! The lower number puzzles are fairly easy, but only one person has figured out puzzle #97. Keep trying!
  • And we are applying grade level math curriculum to Animal Math, which is a set of problems designed to illustrate math we would use in talking about the animal world (area, perimeter, charts, graphs, financial literacy, coordinates, triangles, algebraic expressions, and variables. 
  • And we are reading The Skeleton Tree by Iain Lawrence, practicing making careful connections, recording new vocabulary, and asking questions as we read, as we strengthen our reading comprehension skills. It is fun reading as a whole group so we can stop and ask questions about this exciting tale of survival on the Alaskan/B.C. coast.

I am looking forward to our field trip to the UBC Biodiversity Museum and Pacific Museum of Earth Science on Tuesday, April 23rd.

Also coming up are a visit to the GVRD Lower Seymour Watershed on May 8th, as well as a visit to our classroom from the O.W.L. rescue organization on May 9th. We will get to see an owl and a hawk up close! FYI, there will be a fee of $8 associated with the visit, with a notice to follow directly after on May 9th, and the money goes toward the upkeep and care of rescue birds at their organization.

We will continue our WALK 30 and Walking Curriculum Challenge through May 10th! Keep counting those minutes at home!

Also, everyone needs to go to the public library for their independent project! I am collecting books in the classroom for most of you. Many thanks to Ms. Ho, our school librarian, for helping us to gather resources from secondary schools and other elementary libraries, and to the District Library for resources, too! All of those books stay in the classroom. Go the library and talk to your local research librarian to ask for help finding even more information. Regular time for research will be given during the week.

More on Twitter, so please do check for daily pictures and updates there!

Stay tuned for the next blog post on our animal project!

Ms. D

Independent Project Process!

Hello Everyone!

As we continue with our unit called The Nature Connection, we will also be working on our independent research project

This project is about choice and passion. The topic you research needs to be important to you. You need to care about it! You need to be curious! You need to have lots of questions! If you don’t, then don’t do your topic. Each of you chose a topic before break, but if you have changed it, you need to tell me by the end of this week.

We will present our projects to parents, administrators, teachers, and some Suncrest classes on June 13th, Thursday, in our classroom, from 12-2:30 PM. 

Here are the steps and criteria:

  1. Narrow down your topic with a “search term” brainstorm.
  2. Ask beginning questions to start your research, in the form and function categories.
  3. Take notes as you research, using the format Ms. D provides in class. Notes can be taken by hand in your journal or on the iPad/laptop; however, notes are not cut and paste from websites. Please use your own words to summarize information. Notes will need to be turned in one week before presentation day.
  4. Record any resource you use. Ms. D will provide a handout on how to record all types of resources. You can also use Easy Bib as a tool for creating a bibliography. A final, typed, alphabetical bibliography needs to be turned in one week before presentation day.
  5. Please use a variety of secondary resources. You need to use at least one encyclopaedia (World Book online provided on our library website or use physical books in our library research section — Ms. Ho can make copies of pages as needed), at least 3 books (we have ordered some from high school libraries, but you will need to go to the public library), and a variety of reliable websites. We will talk about this in class.
  6. Please use at least one primary resource. A primary resource can include: an experiment you design and document with pictures and notes, an interview with an expert, a visit to a location or a specific experience to learn about your topic with pictures and notes, a survey of a larger group of people about your topic (not just our class), or the creation of an invention with documentation of the design process. There are many options and we can talk about this in class.
  7. As you find information, begin to ask more complicated questions and write them in your notes. Use our inquiry wonderings wall as a guide for your questions. If you feel you are done, you probably haven’t asked enough questions. All of your topics would take years to research if you kept asking questions! Go deep!
  8. Choose a way to present your information. This isn’t a science fair where a trifold is required with specific pieces of writing, etc. You choose how to present. When we go to see your information, you need something we can look at, something we can interact with or do, and some original writing we can read about your topic. You can do a trifold or poster for the background if you want, but there are other ways! Try a model, handout zines, do an experiment set up, write a magazine, create a cartoon, make a slideshow, create a game to learn about your topic, make amazing artwork, write a mini skit, do a puppet show on film, etc. Plan and decide what you want to do before the end of April, but I would love to see your creative thinking.
  9. Document the process of your project on your e-port. So we can share in your process, occasionally I will ask you to share some of the research, notes, pictures, or thoughts from your project.
  10. Assessment: After you present to the public, you will include thoughts about your independent project in your final reflections for report card. Your parents will also comment on your independent project process, as will Ms. D. We will create a general rubric of success together as a class to help with this. 

Okay, there we go! I look forward to seeing your research! If you have questions, please do ask!

Ms. D

NATURE CHALLENGE for April and May!

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

During the months of April and May, 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!

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 from this year.
  • Pictures need to include some identifying feature or sign behind you. You or some other item such as your hand or a personal sign need to be in the picture as proof you were there.
  • One picture per location.
  • Local parks, other school playgrounds, green belts, beaches, pond areas, pathways, hike trails, lakes, rivers, soccer fields, or any place you can play outside, etc. all count!
  • Extra 5 points for the bonus locations as described in class. As I discuss them, I will add them to this post.

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

 

New Unit: The Nature Connection!

Hello Everyone!

We have had a great first week back after break, and we are already doing our walking curriculum challenges, discussing biodiversity, getting outdoors, and talking about the concept of connection in nature. We have jumped right in to some great critical thinking about the natural world around us!

Unit Four 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 conversation continued and weather expressions

Activities and learning to look forward to:

  • Field trips to the UBC Biodiversity Museum, the Pacific Museum of Earth at UBC, and our Lower Seymour Watershed
  • Daily participation in The Walking Curriculum for April/May, honing our critical thinking, observation, documentation, and questioning skills.
  • Daily participation in The Walk 30 Burnaby/New West Walking Challenge starting April 8th, with emphasis on how walking is good for physical and mental health.
  • Dragon Boating May 22, 29, and June 5 at Burnaby Lake
  • Discussions around area, perimeter, volume, geometric shapes and patterns found in nature, Fibonacci, and other areas of math curriculum such as division and measurement
  • Research on a specific endangered animal in our environment, understanding its classification, why it is endangered, and producing an art project to display information found.
  • Walking to Everett Crowley Park to look at native BC plants used by indigenous peoples for healing and food, along with producing drawings, research, and a canvas picture with acrylics of one specific BC native plant.
  • 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, a story of survival, as well as discussion on survival techniques in nature, such as how to use a compass, how to find edible food, etc.
  • Close observation of fossils and beginning discussion around evolution. We will be looking at fossils at the UBC Pacific Museum of Earth.

And much more! Please continue to watch the blog and Twitter for more information on what our class is doing. We will begin e-port entries next week!

Ms. D

Overview Term Two: Great Work Division 5!

Hello Everyone!

As we participate in learning conferences this week, here’s a quick review of the many things we have done during term two!

To tie the many big ideas from our curriculum together into a larger, enduring understanding, we studied subject areas through the lens of universal, conceptual themes.

In late December, we focused on the concepts PERSPECTIVE and PROBLEM SOLVING in our unit SOLVING THE CONUNDRUM. 

Our unit focus statement was: 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, both in the classroom and during gym, to explore the variety of curricular and core competencies required to solve a problem. Our main focus was on 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!

 

We were also challenged to “code” a partner during basketball practice in gym! The partner pretended to be a robot that needed explicit instructions for every step needed to make a successful basket. It was hard to make your robot cooperate!

Other problem-solving activities included: Guess That Word!, Blanket Flip Challenge, Communicate Your Shape, Ball Keep Away, Ozobot Path Challenge, and more.

After finishing challenges, we reflected as a group on the skills needed to be successful, 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. We also reported on the types of skills we were using in our e-portfolios.

 

What skills do you need to solve a crime?
Math and Science in Problem Solving!


Oh no! A crime happened in Division 5! Ms. D’s precious rocks 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 had to use 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 even had the B.C. Coroner’s Office Team come and visit to tell us about their work! We completed hands-on labs about fingerprints, dental impressions, measuring bones to determine someone’s height, analyzing bullet holes in windows, and watching for physical and chemical properties to identify substances and fabrics 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, word problems, and more to do some of the same math a CSI agent would do!

CSI is all about solving problems, and we discussed strategies used to solve word problems. Using Word Problems in Literature by Denise Gaskins, we applied Singapore visual diagram strategies to break down information visually, so it could be more easily understood. We enjoyed solving problems from The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings! We also worked collaboratively on math challenges to get out alive in Perilous Math Problems! Great work, Division 5, we escaped! Whew!

Writing a Mystery!

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 the parts of a typical mystery such as the suspects, the victim, the clues, the red herring, the alibi, and more. We also learned how to use proper punctuation in dialogue, because no story is complete without some interesting characters and conversations. Everyone did a great job producing creative stories, and we edited them carefully after receiving teacher feedback. Next step is to share them with one another!

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, unique ornaments and holiday gifts through a variety of mixed media and new materials. Everyone learned how to do wool felting, creating amazing pictures to share with our community. Thank you Division 5 for also taking the time to share your skills by teaching our younger buddies how to make ornaments, as well.

We continued to focus on the elements and principles of art, and one of our problem-solving challenges involved making a picture, thinking about how line, shape, and colour communicate specific messages or a story. We looked at the book Picture This! for inspiration. Thank you everyone for your creative work!

 

Small problem or big problem?
Social-Emotional Learning & Social Studies

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.

This led to a larger exploration of the history of discrimination in Canada. Students participated in discussions about human rights and ethics. They investigated the history of residential schools, Japanese internment in World War 2, the Komagata Maru incident, and the Chinese head tax. Thank you everyone for the research and paragraphs you wrote on your e-portfolios. 

To help us understand reconciliation, we visited the “City Beyond the City” exhibit at the Museum of Vancouver, which explains the history of the Musqueam and their village on what is now the Fraser River in South Vancouver. We learned their history, and we practiced being museum curators, categorizing and displaying important belongings to tell the story of the Musqueam. 

We also enjoyed being outside, completing a scavenger hunt to learn more about Vancouver’s history through sculptures by the waterfront!

    

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 that drive behaviour so we can better understand why people do the things they do! We took a survey to understand our own needs, did some problem-solving brainstorms around conflicts, and took time to use the RULER coloured quadrant method to talk about our emotions. We will keep having these conversations throughout the year.

 

I loved how the class created their own version of the ABCs of Life, or How to Be Happy, using art skills to draw illustrations for the advice they wanted to share on how to be happier!.

 


FINALLY, we made efforts to solve our own problems!

Students chose problems in their lives, classroom, school, or community they wanted to solve. The emphasis was on following a problem-solving process and picking a method to solve the problem — INNOVATE, INVENT, or CAMPAIGN — based on the UN Global Goals Initiative.

They needed to identify a problem, find out the perspectives on the problem through conversation and research, brainstorm solutions, weigh the pros and cons of each solution, pick a solution, make a detailed plan, and try to implement it. I am proud of the many things Division 5 tried to take on during this project! While some groups have finished their solution, others are still working on the implementation, because their ideas were more complicated or involved. We look forward to each of you finishing your plan before end of year! 

_____________

In late January, we changed our focus to the concept of POWER in the unit COMMUNICATION IS THE KEY!

Our unit focus statement: Being an educated citizen requires reflection and critical thinking about how we communicate and receive information.

What is media and how can we gain personal POWER by being educated about it?


We reviewed a variety of media local newspapers to see how their construction, content, advertisements, audience, and reading level were different. We discussed what it means to be media literate, started taking greater notice of how much time we were spending with media, and discovered how it is present everywhere in our lives.

We compared the outside appearance of cereal packages, looking at how companies market products to children with bright colours, cool characters, games, and other gimmicks!

We looked at media advertisements to see what kinds of gimmicks were being used to make us want to buy products. We played games on the Canadian Media Literacy 101 website together to practice recognizing gimmicks in both print ads and commercials.

We became more aware of how to search for information online, avoiding commercial websites and looking for reliable sources not full of advertisements or false information. We discussed digital citizenship, learning how online games and social media collect personal information about us while we are having fun online! We played the game Data Defenders to practice NOT giving our information away, keeping our identities safe.

We had a visit from Scott Hinde, a contractor for Global TV, who is a technical director for events like Variety Telethons, Olympics curling events, hockey games, and more. We learned a lot about subliminal advertising and became more knowledgeable of how commercial products are present everywhere in media, not just in commercials!

 

How do we communicate our learning? Why is being able to communicate your ideas well important in all fields? Focus on communication skills!

We played several games to focus on communication skills, such as ordering fractions or decimals collaboratively on a clothesline, playing the game telephone, or doing drama games in gym such as “Guess Who is the Leader!” We reviewed active listening skills, and we talked about what makes a great “radio announcer” voice with clear tone, enunciation, volume, and enthusiasm. We practiced real radio scripts so we could get a taste of being announcers ourselves!

We communicated our ideas in a poster about our learning around math conjectures, and we campaigned using posters and PowerPoint presentations to help solve problems. Then, we reflected on our e-ports about our presentation skills.

Using the scientific method or procedure to communicate and document our science experiments and explorations!

We did three different experiments, focused on chemical reactions and seed germination, to practice using the scientific method accurately. We took careful observations as we made new substances like limestone out of baking soda and calcium carbonate! And we designed experiments to test the ideal conditions for seed germination. This was great practice, as many of us may want to use a science experiment as part of our term three independent project.

     


How are numbers used to communicate ideas in media?

We analyzed news articles on a variety of topics to see how math, particularly graphs, fractions, decimals, and percentages, are used to communicate ideas. We talked about how to recognize a “tricky graph” that may have been manipulated to back up someone’s point of view. If you see numbers, does that mean the information you see is automatically FACT and not someone’s OPINION?

We did lots of great practice around fractions and decimals, playing Fraction Wars, Fraction Concentration, Fraction Capture, making clotheslines to order decimals and fractions, analyzing seed packages for seed germination rates, and more! 

   

Making conversation is an important reason to learn a foreign language!

Ms. D challenged everyone to actively learn basic conversation in French, and we used a variety of songs and French videos to help us practice. We wrote mini conversations with friends, and our next step is to venture out and talk to someone who speaks French in our community! Great work everyone!

Sculpture and Drama as Forms of Media

In gym, we explored how the body communicates so much beyond words through active drama lessons. We found “neutral” positions in our bodies, and then we gradually added layers of movement. We moved at different levels, high, medium, and low. We led with different parts of our bodies. We walked and moved in different kinds of lines like wavy, zig zag, and straight. Eventually, we made some very cool characters and created frozen museum statues, sharing a gallery of creatures with one another. Ms. B also taught us yoga, which allowed us to become more aware of our bodies and of another way to relax and be mindful.

We also explored shape and form through sculpture in art. We went over the history of sculpture and how it, too, is a form of media, communicating a message. Each person then created their own sculpture out of steel wire, masking tape, newspaper, and acrylic paint. It was a longer project, but the result is well worth it.

  

Making Suncrest News!

Finally, we are all working together to create a news broadcast. Each person is writing a news story, and our goal is to try and complete the actual broadcast for our student-led conferences. Stay tuned! If we need more time, we will let you know how we will post it for you to see.

MUSIC at Suncrest!

Ms. Fletcher has more on her blog, but I also wanted to applaud Division 5 on their beautiful music! Ms. Fletcher wrote:  “In class, students have been exploring elements of beat, rhythm, tempo, pitch, and form through playing music individually and collaboratively on Orff instruments and boomwhackers, and learning to read music notation and play the recorder. Students also learned dances and music for our Lunar New Year Celebration.”

Thank you students for being leaders, participating in our School Choir, serving as MCs, or dancing during assemblies. We appreciate the extra time you spent rehearsing during lunch times!


We did even more than all of this
, but hopefully this gives everyone a clear picture of what we did. Please see our e-portfolios for more information. I will send everyone a Google link to additional photos from our term I am not able to post online. Thank you!

Happy Snow Day! Update on February 12th: Division 5 News….?

Hello Everyone,

Since we have a snow day, I thought it would be a good time to update everyone on what we are doing in class!

MEDIA LITERACY involves COMMUNICATION and CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS!

We have had great conversations about media literacy, including:

  • What media literacy is and why it is important (Check out Crash Course’s video on Media Literacy if you missed it!)
  • What kinds of media are out there, what are their features, and who are their audiences! (We looked at Vancouver Sun, The Province, The National, The Globe and Mail, magazines, etc. and identified their audience and reading level.)
  • Tricks and gimmicks advertisers use to sell products in the store, as well as in online, radio, TV and print commercials and ads (Watch some ads that are okay for kids here.)
  • How the media can manipulate graphs and numbers to tell their version of a story or to prove a point of view
  • How to check for reliable websites and to do effective searches online
  • The parts of a newspaper article/story (Check out Science News for Kids and Teaching Kids News for examples of news stories at our reading level.)
  • How editors of papers or producers of shows look for exciting things to report so the news programs can make money on advertising
  • How radio announcers deliver the news
  • The parts of a news broadcast
  • How to tell if something is plagiarism (Check out Byrne Creek Secondary’s Learning Commons Website as a follow up from our discussion in class.)
  • How to gather information to write your own news story.

PARENTS: I have been using Media Literacy 101 online, and there is a parents section you may want to check out for tips about media and digital literacy for children. Click here!

We had an editorial meeting of our Division 5 News Team (to be renamed by the group), and the Chief Producer (AKA Ms. D) asked for the team to PITCH story ideas for our own broadcast we will create about Suncrest Elementary News. Almost everyone has a story idea to work with now, and we also have a few commercials to make.

Everyone will be asked to write a news story for production, which will mean gathering data and doing interviews. That is for our next conversation as we get started!

As brainstormed in class, we will also need a team of builders to make our news desk, some anchors to do transitions, a new logo and news title (please bring in your suggestions!), visuals in the background for different reports, the proper clothing to wear for this kind of presentation, videographers, and editors. Our goal is to have something for people to see on March 14th.

In the meantime, here are things you can be doing to prepare for our broadcast!

  • Gather the who, what, why, when, where, and how details for your story as soon as you have been assigned an idea, which most of you have.
  • Write up some interview questions for important people you may need to talk to and get the questions approved by Ms. D. You will also need a press pass from me in order to go and ask questions.
  • Create a visual in the background for your story (simple pictures in a slideshow work)
  • Watch news reports online or on TV for examples of what a broadcast looks like
  • Listen to the radio, like News 1130 to hear how broadcasters and interviewers talk.
  • Listen to podcasts online. These are radio news broadcasts with longer stories and can give you ideas of how to report. Here’s a list of the Best Podcasts for Kids from Common Sense Media (I highly recommend you check these out, even for future research or ideas for projects, as there are all sorts of fascinating stories you will enjoy. My favourites are Brain On and Tumble — scroll down the list for the science ones.) Another list is Best Podcasts for Middle Schoolers. Get some help at home on how to listen to these. Most just require a computer and some headphones.
  • Pick out a nice outfit. Start looking at what news reporters wear. They don’t wear fleece hoodies or sweat pants. 🙂

MATH and SCIENCE:

We have finished up our Math Conjectures posters and slideshows. Ms. D is handing back feedback after reading all of your self-assessments. Some of you still need to hand in your notes and research by sharing it in Google. Thank you for getting those in so I can see all of your work!

In connection with our media unit, and as a follow up to mathematics work in our problem-solving unit from before, we have been working with our student teacher Ms. B on better understanding fractions, decimals, and percentages. On Twitter, Ms. D posted pictures of our Fractions War game, the concentration game, and the two clothesline activities we did, learning about equivalent fractions AND how to order fractions and decimals.

For science, we did a cool lab experiment on chemical reactions, so we could discuss the ways in which you can know a chemical reaction has occurred and also review the scientific method. Using this knowledge of how to communicate and document our science investigations, we created our own experiments on seed germination with Ms. B. Check out the pictures on Twitter and look at our windows, which are full of seeds waiting to sprout (or not!) We look forward to seeing the results!

COMMUNICATION is the key core competency area during this unit. How is math used to communicate ideas or to persuade others? What are statistics? What kind of graph or visual representation is best to present information? Here are some videos and websites on this topic:

FRENCH:

We continue our efforts to replace more of our basic conversation in English with French! We are finding it effective and fun to use French songs to do this. Please see the French posting, which will be updated with websites as we use them! Please practice the websites and phrases we have reviewed. On Friday, we partnered up to begin constructing dialogues. But that is just a practice. Ms. D will reveal the real French challenge soon, so keep practicing those phrases!

PE:

We have been working on endurance, improving our running times each opportunity we have in the gym! We are also mainly working on communicating ideas through movement, building communication skills for theatre and drama activities while also getting exercise. As our weather improves, I look forward to doing more of our gym outside, and we will be doing some walking after spring break!!

ART:

Students are finishing their masking tape sculptures, and we will be painting them soon!

More to come soon! Have a safe evening!

Ms. D

Please Welcome Our Student Teacher!

Hello Everyone!

On Monday, February 4th, we will welcome a student teacher from SFU’s Teacher Education Program for three weeks! Here is a quick introduction from her, and please welcome her to our community!

_________

Hello MACC students and parents,

My name is Ms. Boroumand and I am a student teacher at SFU. I will be joining the MACC classroom from February 4 to 22. I am excited to get to know and learn from the wonderful teacher and students in this class. I bring with me knowledge about environmental issues, gardening, and nutrition. I have been running a non-profit school gardens program for the past 4.5 years, where I have taught over 250 classes of students about growing and enjoying vegetables and supporting pollinators. I have so much to learn from your classroom community of learners! I look forward to becoming part of this classroom for three weeks on my journey towards becoming a teacher.

Becoming Media Literate! Update Friday February 1st

Hello Everyone,

Quick Update!

Math: We are working on finishing our mini posters or slideshows on a conjecture, pattern, or illusion from our investigations of math curiosities. You have had some time in class, and we will look to have them all done by Friday, February 8th.

Problem-Solving Projects: Everyone turned in their plans, which were reviewed by Ms. D. We had discussions about next steps, whether it was finishing models, posters, and educational items, or preparing to talk to Ms. Driussi about permission to proceed with solutions in a meeting next Tuesday. Everyone had to make an e-port entry on the solution they came up with for their problem.

Unit Review/Goals: Some of you have not published it, but everyone was asked to complete a unit review a while ago. Please check to make sure you published it on your e-port. We also took a look again at our term one report cards to review our goals for term two. Please finish your e-port entry on how you are addressing your goals by the end of next week. Great reflecting, everyone!

MEDIA! We have done a lot of great work this week talking about forms of media, how media affects us, and advertisements. This weekend you are asked to look at a paper advertisement of your choice and fill out the handout I gave you today. Please use the list of advertisement tricks I gave you as you analyze your ads. I look forward to our discussion on Monday. If you want to look at some kid-friendly TV ads to look at how gimmicks and other tricks are used to sell messages and products to you, here is a web link to find the commercials we were viewing in class.

Other updates on Twitter and in email.  Thank you and have a great weekend, especially for those of you joining in any Chinese New Year celebrations!

Kindly,

Ms. D

French Challenge! Build Vocab to Conversation! (Updated Frequently)

Hello Everyone!

In class today, we began the process of building our vocabulary together a small bit at a time to gather the tools we need to communicate in French in a basic conversation.

Each day, we will practice a few words and phrases together. We will decide as a class which 3 words or phrases we will add to our repertoire of words that we are actively using. In class we will actively use the words with one another, doing exercises to practice, but…..

The bigger challenge will be going the whole day using our new words (and all the previous ones, too), substituting Francais for Anglais slowly.

Here you will find our list of words as we continue to add to our challenge. You can watch any video of basic French greetings online to practice, and here is one we are using right now to learn the first phrases. Stay tuned as I gradually add to this list. My apologies for not using special French characters on some of the words, but we are copying them correctly in class.

Je — I  (the pronoun to refer to yourself)

merci — thank you

bonjour — hello

bienvenue — welcome

je m’appelle — my name is

je suis — I am 

Comment ca va? — How are you? 

oui — yes

ca va bien – I am good

ca va mal – I am bad

ca va pas mal — I am okay (meh)

ca va comme ci comme ca — I am a this and that / I am so so 

ca va! — I am okay

GREETINGS SONG  Comment ca va!

BEGINNING CONVERSATION SONG  Bonjour mes amis!

 

BONNE CHANCE!  (Good Luck!)

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