New Unit! April – May 2024

Hello Everyone,

We are all excited to be starting a new unit!

Unit Title:  Getting Our Needs Met

Unit Concepts:  Systems –> Interdependence

Unit Focus Statement:

Humans create and use a variety of systems, tools, and scientific knowledge to get their needs and wants met.

Areas of Inquiry:

  • The nature of needs versus wants
  • Our use, management, and conservation of natural resources (renewable and non-renewable)
  • Government systems
  • How we use scientific knowledge to get our needs and wants met (geology, chemistry, geography)
  • Community systems we create to get our needs met
  • Economics and Trade
  • Financial Literacy and Budgeting
  • Language we use to get our needs met
  • Creation of personal fitness programs to stay healthy

Core Competency Focus:  Social Responsibility, Critical Thinking

Upcoming Activities:

  • Classroom Economy, Get a job!
  • Trade Game to Learn World Economics
  • April 10 – Rocks and Minerals Workshop with Minerals Education BC
  • Cookie Mining Activity
  • April 12 – Britannia Mines Trip All Day
  • April 19 – Student Led Sharing Evening
  • Element Superhero Creation
  • Independent Project Research
  • And more to come…..

 

MACC TED Talks — Theme of “PASSION”

Hi Everyone!

We will be creating our own TED TALKS under the theme of “Passion” over the next month!

In preparation for this, begin brainstorming ideas about a passion you have that you feel you would like to share with others.

Also, begin watching some TED Talk examples, with live people versus animations, to get ideas about what a TED Talk is. This way, we can discuss it in class when we are together. Here are some possible options that are kid-friendly:

Ted Talks By Kids For Kids

Ted Talks to Watch With Kids

Be thinking of:

  • What makes a good TED Talk?
  • What will your key problem, question, or topic sentence be to start your talk?
  • What evidence will you use to prove your point?
  • Is your topic too big for two minutes? Too small?
  • Are you passionate about your topic?
  • Could you talk about anything you like to do?
  • Could you show us anything from home that is important to you?
  • Will you need to do any research to find out about your topic?
  • Have you thought about what other people who might disagree with you will think? How will you change their minds?

Right now, all you need to do is watch a TED Talk and begin brainstorming ideas. I will let you know of next steps as we are ready.

As we create our speeches, we will be focusing on strong paragraphs, descriptive and persuasive vocabulary, avoiding run-on sentences, and public-speaking techniques. The TED Talk speeches will be given in January, but by the time we go to Winter Break, we will have a very rough draft ready, so we will be ready to refine it when we get back. The speech will be five paragraphs in length. I will be sharing the rubric for performance with you in class.

I look forward to hearing your ideas.

Thank you!

End of Systems Unit Fall 2023: ADST Game Project

Hello!

Final assignment for our first unit of the year! Report Cards are coming up fast for the end of term one!

Students will be put in groups to create a game to teach people how their personal choices are connected to the health of their body.

The game needs to:

  • Show your knowledge from the unit, so you need to use your binder and journal as a resource,
  • Teach someone in grade 3 or higher how they can make positive personal choices that help the interconnected system of the human body (we will play the games with our buddy class),
  • Be a board game or 3-dimensional game (try to avoid having a game with too many cards, as they take a long time to make — no games that are cards only, as this is an ADST project and needs to involve building),
  • Have a winner for the game after less than 30 minutes of play,
  • Be easy to explain and play right away, rather than having a ton of instructions,
  • Include a set of instructions and all playing pieces,
  • Be attractive and aesthetic so people will WANT to play the game (we will look at some examples in class), and
  • Be finished and ready to play by December 5th, Tuesday. 

Here are the steps to make the game:

Step One  Make up a theme for the game and think about how you will teach what we have learned in the unit about personal choices. We will brainstorm some themes together in class, so feel free to use one of those or make up your own.

Step Two  Create the rules of the game. Write them down as a draft in your journal, then someone in your group needs to type them up.

Step Three  Look at materials we have available, or what materials you could bring from home like cardboard and recyclables. Do not purchase anything to make the game. use existing materials. Think about how much time you have to build. Then, make a draft of what the game will look like in your drawing book and create a list of the materials you will need to gather. I can provide dice, timers, and some spinners, if needed, and we have a lot of items that can serve as play tokens, so again, no need to purchase anything new.

Step Four   Make the game. As you find issues with construction, don’t worry about changing your idea, but keep track of how much time you have to build so it is finished on time and meets criteria.

Step Five   Add playing pieces and think about how to store the game so pieces are not lost. Can you create an aesthetic way to store the game?

Step Six    Find someone to play the game with. Have them evaluate your game. Evaluate yourself on the rubric I provide for you. Turn the rubric in to Ms. D. Play the game with our Buddy Class.

Tips and Ideas:

  • Always remember simple is better. If a game is easy, it will be more fun to play.
  • Add a start and a finish space.
  • Borrow ideas from other games and make them better – don’t just copy, but do use ideas you have seen before and morph them into your own!
  • Add spaces where you have to draw a card, but do not make too many cards. This is one thing that generally takes too much time. What other ways can you communicate health information in the game, other than using cards and written facts?
  • Do a few test plays by yourself to see if it is too hard or needs adjustment.
  • Cut small figures out of paper to use as game pieces, or use Legos, etc.
  • Get ideas from other people. Creativity doesn’t just come from one person. The best ideas are ones that involve lots of ideas.
  • Make it colorful and eye-popping. Make it 3D! It doesn’t need to be too big, though. Think about the size of most board games we play.
  • Name it something appealing! Come up with something of your own – don’t use a name out of a movie or comic book.
  • You could have an objective or goal of the game, instead of a finish space to reach, such as find a golden nugget or land on the water fountain 10 times.
  • For the base of the game you can ask for a clean take out pizza box from a restaurant or find a box at home from Amazon. Any supplies from home are also okay, as long as Mom and Dad are okay with it! No need to purchase anything new.

A rubric will be provided to self-assess at the end of the project. The project is due by December 5th, Tuesday. No extensions due to report card timeline!!

Assessment Reminders & Life Rubric Activity for Home

Hello Everyone,

Today, I would like to talk about assessment and the LIFE RUBRIC activity we did in class.

Some thoughts about assessment, as I shared in email to you all:

  • The goal is to get proficient; extending is reserved for going beyond criteria and grade-level expectations in specific ways.
  • To get a developing on anything does not mean a person is having trouble or needs any serious intervention at this time unless I contact you (because I would if it was needed). It means they are still developing and need special encouragement in that area.
  • Please review project rubrics you receive, then sign and return immediately to school. I track who has brought them in so I can be sure you have seen them. In this way we avoid surprises on the report card, and everyone gets communication about progress.
  • Projects involve more than one subject. As appropriate, depending on curricular competencies, I divide up the marks for a project between subjects, noted at the top of the rubric. For example, the Nutrition Poster involves language arts presentation and research documentation skills, socials research competencies, and science/health content from nutrition information.
  • All e-port marks contribute to language arts evaluation, as well as unit content in socials, science, and math.
  • You will note sometimes I indicate a mark with a slash. This means your child is between areas. I always note the stronger area of the proficiency scale first. For example, if I say PRF/EXT, it means the student was stronger on the proficient side, but they had some elements of extending.
  • For report cards I can only assign one proficiency scale mark per subject, so I gather information from all daily assignments, projects, and e-ports to make that decision. It is not an average of proficiency scale marks but based on the picture of child’s progress to date at the end of the term. I encourage you to read my feedback, report card comments, and student goals on the report, rather than just the marks, to get a better picture.
  • Please see your child’s e-ports and make comments if you have time. At the end of the term, I will be giving you a questionnaire to fill out about how you think your child is doing, so I can take your input into mind.
  • Binders have daily work that has been passed back with checks. Some students are also missing work. While I don’t have time to go through and chase every single learning assignment down, any student is welcome to ask me in class if they are missing something. Students will be asked to reflect at the end of term one how they have been doing on turning in assignments, as their input is also required for the report card.
  • A reminder that everyone responds better to hearing strengths first, and then 1-2 areas of feedback for next time. It is overwhelming to hear too much. This is especially true for advanced learners who frequently struggle with perfectionism and unrealistic expectations about performance. We can accidentally encourage their tendency to catastrophize about the importance of one mark by talking about an assignment or project for too long when it comes home. Everyone will have many more opportunities to practice and learn things they are still working on. One project is just one step in the journey.

Today, we reviewed the words associated with the proficiency rubric to ensure we all understand them.

I often say that the proficiency rubric is easier to understand, with its words of emerging/developing/applying (proficient)/extending if you create a LIFE RUBRIC.

Think of one thing that you do daily. We assigned the four parts to the four corners of our classroom. Then, Ms. D said an activity and students moved to the part of the rubric they thought they were in.

For example, where are you on “cleaning your room?”

EXTENDING — I can clean my room independently and use sophisticated skills, some of which I learned on my own time, such as feng shui arrangements, Marie Kondo folding, organizing boxes I created myself, to clean it. No one needs to tell me to clean my room. I could teach someone else how to clean a room, and I probably remind other people to “get to it!” I even developed my own personal schedule for cleaning and posted it on the fridge.

PROFICIENT — I can clean my room independently and use a complete set of skills I have been taught to organize it — for example, vacuuming, making my bed, and picking up materials to put into organizing buckets I have been given. No one needs to check in on me as I am cleaning my room. I feel confident doing it myself.

DEVELOPING — I can clean my room myself with some guidance. For example, someone might need to check in on me and say, stop reading and get to cleaning! Or, maybe I need help getting the vacuum out and turning it on. Maybe I need some advice on how to fold corners on the sheets. But, I have a partial understanding of what to do and can do some of it myself.

EMERGING — I either have never cleaned my room before, or I can clean my room with a lot of guidance, as I am beginning to learn how to do it. I might need assistance deciding when the room is dirty, staying on task and not making new messes while cleaning it up, or not shoving dirty laundry under the bed and instead putting it in the hamper. My parents are showing me how the vacuum works, as I haven’t done that before. My parents came in and modelled for me how to clean, talking about the steps as they helped me, so I can learn how to do it next time on my own.

**Try this at home as a discussion. Try something like — making your own lunch, making dinner for the family, riding a bicycle, coming up with a family activity, or playing with a sibling. It works best if BOTH parent and child identify some things they do on the LIFE RUBRIC, so everyone can see they aren’t alone in developing skills. We are all doing it, and it is a lifelong process.

E-Port #2: Science World AI & Gut Bacteria Workshop

Reminder! Use those notes in your journal to answer these questions, not the internet! And use sentences to answer. Due one week from today, October 17th, Tuesday.

Title:  Science World AI & Gut Bacteria Workshop

Questions:

  1.  What was the name of the language the AI Chatbot uses to communicate?
  2.  What are the challenges of programming a Chatbot?
  3.  How much bacteria is in your gut?
  4.  What are the conditions in our gut that this bacteria likes?
  5. What does anaerobe and aerobe mean?
  6.  What are four ways you can take care of your microbiome (the good gut bacteria)?
  7.  Name a bacteria that lives in our gut and three characteristics of it.
  8.  What are four things probiotics do for our gut?
  9.  What are three fermented foods that help with our gut and feed the good bacteria?
  10.  When should you take antibiotics?
  11.  Should a chatbot be designed to mimic a real person? When would this be okay and when would it not be okay?

Nutrition Poster Mini Assignment!

Hello Everyone!

We have been having excellent discussions about NUTRITION!

 

 

We have talked about:

  • The key food groups you need for balanced nutrition,
  • How what we eat can affect our brain health,
  • The role of fat, fiber, carbohydrates, vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients in our body’s systems,
  • How to read a nutrition label to make healthy food choices, and
  • How our gut acts like a second brain and has a microbiome that is important to our overall health.

Here are some videos you can watch that we watched in class:

Now, we are helping one another do some further research. Rather than investigate ALL of the nutrients out there, each of us is taking on the research for one. We will then produce a poster to share our information with one another. You can do research using the Internet, as well as some books found in class.

For the research, students need to take notes and to find out the following:

  • What is the nutrient?
  • Where would I find the nutrient? (In which foods?)
  • Why do we need this nutrient? Do we absolutely need this nutrient?
  • How much of this nutrient do we need?
  • What is the nutrient used for in the human body?

After finding out the answers to these questions, students will produce a mini poster. The poster will be done on blank 8.5 x 11 paper, which Ms. D will provide, and it needs to have the following:

  • A big title in the middle or at the top, which has the name of the nutrient.
  • Bubbles on the poster with key facts about the nutrient.
  • Some illustrations to help us better understand the nutrient.
  • An aesthetic presentation — coloured pictures, fine-lined words (which were done in pencil first), straight lines (use a ruler), and a nice layout (not too crowded on the page and using up the whole space.)
  • Readable information. If neatness is a concern, one option is to create the words with MS Word and then cut them out to put on the poster.

This mini poster is not meant to be a long project, just a mini research opportunity while we continue working on other interesting things about the human body! I look forward to you sharing your information so everyone can learn about all the different vitamins and minerals our bodies need.

Poster is due no later than Friday, October 27th.

Managing School Work at Home – Some Tips from Ms. D

 

Hello Parents!

Before I post details of our first project together, I would like to talk about how and when projects can be worked on at home.

You may have noticed blue binders and journals are not going home every day. They eventually will go home, but I really want students to focus on using their time well in class and on being independent with their work.

I want to see what they can do on their own during the given class time.

If students need catch up time, then that is why I have asked everyone to make sure there are 30-40 minutes set aside for catch up at home.

So, before I hand out the first project, here are some tips to follow:

  • Students are to work on assignments and projects mainly at school.
  • If they do a project ALL at home on the first night it is assigned, this leads to boredom in school, as time will be given to work on the project. As a result of boredom, unexpected behaviours that impact our classroom community can occur. It can also lead to you pulling your hair out at home as they do the entire assignment, as they will be over tired. It is the end of the day — time to rest, not time to do a whole project.
  • If they need catch up time for a project beyond class time, or they are doing some extra research at home, we will put this in their planner so you know.
  • Limit catch up time at home to the 30-40 minutes you have put aside in the schedule for each night.
  • Set a visual timer if necessary to limit the time, as many students at this age do not have a good sense of time and need to get a sense of how long they are spending on things.
  • The only reason to use more than 40 minutes would be if your child was absent, is not using their class time well, or is having fun researching something on their own. If they want to look something up, that’s great! BUT, I encourage you to limit the total time on a computer to no more than one hour because otherwise it can become obsessive (or they end up taking breaks playing games….)
  • When the time is up, ask them to pack their things in a backpack. Check to make sure they have everything they brought home – planner, journal, binder. They need help sometimes doing this as they begin the intermediate grades. The time spent on building a routine now will help them be more independent later on.
  • For students who want to work longer, as they often do, ask them what would Ms. D say about that? What do the body systems need as INPUTS to work correctly? SLEEP, REST, BALANCE, and PLAY! Have a calm discussion about what they know about how these things are important to the body.
  • When possible, encourage your child to do calm things the hour before bed. Avoid technology, listen to music, play with lego or hands-on things just for fun, have a conversation together, or read something quietly.
  • If they are worried about the next day, try some breathing activities together, or read them something funny to distract them. This can lead to better sleep and better learning for your child the next day.
  • If your child has a question about their work while at home, or had a conflict with another student in a group project that is troubling them, try not to engage in answering it, fixing it, or writing me an email explaining the whole situation. Try as hard as you can not to react too much. Say, “I hear you, that is a great question. Maybe ask Ms. D tomorrow about that.” Or, “I hear you, that sounds frustrating. I know you can be a good communicator to Ms. D tomorrow to explain what you need. Ms. D helps people in class, right? I bet she will also help you with this.” Be calm, acknowledge the emotion they are feeling, and then offer the solution to ask the question tomorrow. Then continue your bedtime routine.
  • Encourage your child to do their own communicating and fixing as much as you can, even though it is sometimes out of their comfort zone. Doing the work in class allows for them to seek me out as a guide for their questions, rather than perseverating on things at home in unhealthy ways.
  • Of course offer help to your child if they ask you questions about spelling, grammar, or facts. But, encourage them to do the looking for information rather than you giving the information to them.
  • Encourage them to do the writing and editing themselves. Avoid sitting down and editing the whole writing with them. Say instead, “I encourage you to go back and edit for capitalization and punctuation.” Or, “Here is a dictionary or technology tool to check spelling if you need it.” Get them to fix their own writing — try not to fix it for them or they will come to rely on that help and not really process their own writing errors.
  • When they finish a project or assignment, they will get feedback. Encourage then to self-reflect on how it went. Ask, “So, what do you think went well?” and then, “What do you think is one thing you would really like to work on for the next project?” You will see these reflections in e-port entries and on the rubrics marking their projects. Have a calm discussion and get them to do most of the talking. 🙂

No, the process won’t be smooth. It is normal for grade four and five students to have difficulty with organization and time management — even more normal for advanced learners to have difficulty with this!

As parents and teachers, all we can do is just keep gently guiding them forward. Try to stay calm, because none of it is worth the stress. Remember, in these early grades we are practicing these skills. Marks at this grade level are not going to be visible on the transcript they submit to university.

As someone who has seen all of this as a teacher for 22 years, and as the parent of two older children, it is very likely our efforts as a team will pay off in higher grades and help them have the tools to manage school and activities in healthy ways.

I wish you all a healthy year as we manage the balance of school and home life. 🙂

Thanks,

Ms. D

Healthy Systems Mean Choosing Healthy Inputs!

Hello Everyone!

As part of this unit, we have been unpacking the deeper concept of SYSTEMS. To do this, we are using the Universal Systems Model.

We identified what each part of the model means, and we looked at a variety of systems, such as our solar system, the government system, and the food delivery system (like a grocery store).

It has also been helpful when looking at the system involved in creating a classroom community, such as Division 5. If the OUTPUT we want is a healthy classroom community, friendships, and positive feelings every day, then what kinds of INPUTS do we all need to commit to providing to our community? What do we need? Some things we have been highlighting as important as INPUTS are:

  • Having awareness about personal space
  • Communicating our needs, and doing it in kind, mature ways
  • Following the expected behaviours
  • Working with the GROUP PLAN rather than just our SOLO (me, me, me) PLAN
  • Contributing to discussion, projects, and classroom clean up
  • Being aware of school rules for safety of everyone
  • Using the H.E.A.R. strategy to truly listen with our bodies and minds
  • Taking turns to talk and not being an “interrupting chicken”
  • Using our words rather than yelling or using physical ways to communicate

Of course, our main focus this unit is learning about human body systems. What personal choices do we make every day that impact and are INPUTS to the SYSTEM of the human body? How will we know if we have made the correct personal choices? Which choices do we have control over, and which ones do we not have control over? How do we give FEEDBACK to others when we aren’t getting what we need? How does the body give us FEEDBACK to let us know we need to change our INPUTS?

We are emphasizing these healthy INPUTS as we go along:

  • Managing ourselves – our time, our supplies, our space
  • Cultivating healthy relationships with classmates
  • Choosing healthy foods
  • Getting enough sleep (students this age need 10-12 hours a night)
  • Having balance between our activities, academics, and down time such as play
  • Paying attention to appropriate hygiene
  • Wearing the correct clothing to protect ourselves from the elements
  • Finding ways to calm ourselves and understanding how this helps (arts, mindfulness techniques, play time, fresh air, being outside)
  • Getting exercise in a variety of ways (dance, running, yoga)
  • Making goals and taking time to reflect on them

I look forward to talking with Division 5 more about this in the coming weeks!

Ms. D

Next Year 2023-2024

Happy Summer, Everyone!

For NEW Grade 4 students and parents next year ONLY: A MACC orientation to meet Ms. D, and to learn about how I implement the MACC program, will be held the second week of school. Please wait for details about this to come during our first week together. Ms. D will provide a packet of class info on the first day of school and will email you the last week of the summer. Please report to Portable 3 at 8:50 to 10:00 am on Tuesday, Sept. 5th. Wednesday-Friday that week are normal school hours from 8:50 to 3:00. Supply List can be found here. We do our own list and parents purchase the supplies. Thank you for your support! See you soon! MACC Student Supply List 2023 2024

For students going into GRADE 6 next year with Ms. PATTERSON ONLY:  Please look on the school website for Ms. Patterson’s school supply list. Also, Ms. Patterson does not use the e-ports, so please do screen shot or download anything you want in terms of pictures from your child’s e-port for safe keeping. I am not exactly sure when it may be taken down, but it will not be monitored or actively used next year.

For continuing students staying with me in Grade 5 next year ONLY:  Please see the attached supply list and notes. MACC Student Supply List 2023 2024 Read carefully, as some items have changed. Some items do not need to be purchased again, as they have been left in the classroom for next year (watercolour set, scissors, rulers), or the student has it in their backpacks (calculator, math set). If the blue binder is cracked or not in good condition, students need a new one. Please note a change about erasers, as they will be each person’s personal responsibility for next year. Thank you for reading the list carefully. I will check in supplies the second week of school. First week only a pencil with an eraser is needed.

FOR ALL STUDENTS IN MACC:  We will see you again for one hour on Tuesday, September 5th. MACC students go to their new classroom immediately, so all grade 5 students moving into grade 6 will be with Ms. Patterson on the first day. Wednesday to Friday normal hours 8:50 am to 3:00 pm.

Thank you and have a great summer! ☀️

Kindly,

Ms. D

1 2 3 12