Valentine’s Day Estimation Jar

Estimation can be a difficult concept for young kids to understand. Most of them seemed to care only about getting “the right answer.” For one of our Valentine’s Day activities, students had to guess how many fruit snacks are in this jar! We discussed how estimation can be a valuable skill to have in real life and guessing numbers that are close to the actual amount means it is a “good guess”. After looking at the size of one fruit snack and comparing this to other items we have estimated, all students agreed that it could not be 1000… or 100.  They also agreed that it could not be 0, 1 or 5, or even 10.

Here are our guesses:

After counting them, we found out there were 22 fruit snack packs in the jar! Nice work, everyone!

Literacy Week

We had a fun literacy week!  We listened to daily stories – read-alouds recorded by different staff members. Thank you parents for participating in the Family Bingo!

Students all did an amazing job on their bookmarks!  Congratulations to Everett who won the library prize.

Thank you to Ms. Sanchez for creating this campfire for our “Reading in the Dark” literacy day.

Rain and Snow Experiment

 

With a little imagination, we were able to make it rain and snow in our classroom! First, we poured water into a large bowl. Second, we added a few layers of shaving cream to the water.  The shaving cream is the cloud.  We talked about how clouds are formed from a process called evaporation (when the sun heats up water in rivers or lakes or the ocean and turns it into vapor or steam). The water vapor or steam goes into the air forming clouds. Lastly, we added food colouring. We pretended it was rain/snow. When water droplets grow heavy enough and depending on the temperature, rain or snow will fall.   We had so much fun watching those clouds!

 

 

 

Winter Break Stories

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Welcome back, families! We hope you all had a wonderful and restful holiday. All our friends had so many stories to share with each other and their teachers.  To share our favourite winter break story, we used loose parts such as gems, rocks, sticks, wooden pegs etc. to build our story.  We took pictures of their story and then they each recorded their favourite winter break moment orally! Our storytellers cannot wait to share their stories with you!   

Please login to your child’s blogfolio to listen to their story.

Be You!

Inspired by Peter Reynolds’ book, Be You!, we celebrated the importance of being unique and true to yourself. In our class discussion, there were some statements that stood out more than others. Many students liked, “Be your own thinker!” “Be okay reaching out for help,” is one that many of us adults have a hard time with. We also really liked, “Be connected,” and “Be kind,” and some students thought they were good statements in a pandemic.

We shared the connections we made to some of these statements.

“I felt brave when I jumped off a diving board into a pool.”

“I was being curious when I went for a nature walk.”

“My mom was patient when she was waiting a looooong time for me.”

hallway bulletin board
Our hallway bulletin board

Please login to your child’s blogfolio to view their response to this book. Students were asked to choose a statement that stood out for them.