Celia Marto – Division 5 – Page 7 – Comings and Goings
 

RULER is a social-emotional learning program that we use in our class and many other classes at Parkcrest and across Burnaby (Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence).  It focuses on developing positive social, emotional, and cognitive behaviour in order to support our students’ well-being.  It is integrated into many subject areas but often supports our Core Competency Curriculum.

The RULER program helps us to recognize and name our emotions.  It is okay to feel all our emotions, but sometimes our emotions don’t match the situation we are in.  For example, we may be too energetic or angry to listen to a Math lesson.  The RULER program helps students develop a set of tools to self-regulate and get back to a more desirable mood for the activity they want to complete.

See the link below for more information:

https://sites.google.com/winchesterps.org/a-parents-guide-to-ruler/home

The first part of the RULER program is developing a ‘charter’.  Its purpose is to create a positive culture and climate in our class.  I simply asked the students how they wanted to feel when they were in our class.  Through discussion, Div. 5 arrived at our charter.  For students, it is a powerful process.  In the end, we created a dual charter with an academic and a social side.  It’s not perfect, but it’s meaningful and authentic.  Our poster hangs on the wall and we refer to it often.

 

Just before Christmas, I reworded the charter guidelines (most parts) into a self-reflection.  The students then took the time to reflect on how they were doing according to our charter agreement and set goals for improvement.  In the upcoming days, look for your children’s responses in their blogfolios.  I will be posting them soon.

With the beginning of November upon us, I thought I would give a quick update on the Curricular Competencies we have been practicing and focussing on in class.  In the upcoming weeks, you will see samples of your child’s work in their blogfolios.

Language Arts and Social Studies:

-have often been integrated this term as we prepared for our Learning in Depth research

  • inquiry/research processes: notetaking; using keywords, using graphic organizers to organize and categorize information
  • we have also been brainstorming areas of interest and questions to guide inquiry directions as well as developing awareness of the variety of sources available for research
  • features of non-fiction books and how to use them for research: tables of content; glossaries, indexes, headings

We were lucky to have Mrs. Field come to our class to help us with our understanding of non-fiction books.

Language Arts:  Reading

  • We finished a class novel, Dolphins at Daybreak.  Together, we practiced:  how to write a summary (selecting the important events, using notetaking format to list them in sequential order), making connections (text-to-text, text-to-world, text-to-self), and working on comprehension strategies (summarizing, connecting, questioning, and activating our prior knowledge)
  • we are also working to answer comprehension questions using full sentences and practicing our ability to find the author’s message in a story
  • we started our “in-class” Guided Reading groups with different novels for each grouping.  We are practicing our fluency and decoding skills at our personal reading level
  • because we were able to practice writing summaries and making connections with our teacher using our first class novel, we are now trying to develop our independence and show that we can write summaries (according to our criteria), make connections, and respond to comprehension questions more independently

Language Arts: Writing

  • in addition to all of the above, we are using the Words Their Way program to continue to develop our sound knowledge
  • We do a 10-minute free write most days and share our writing with a small group on Friday.  We have been looking at all the forms of writing that are possible; from making lists to writing a play, to writing a poem or a review.  We are going to build toward a weekly editing session in the next term.
  • Journals/personal writing:  we have been looking at samples of writing that have helped us to understand the features of writing that you would see or not see in an emerging, developing, proficient, and extending piece of personal writing.  We are working to reduce repetition, add more relevant detail, use connecting words, and proofread for missing punctuation and spelling.  We have worked on idea generation, using brain pockets, so that our journal writing is not always about what we did on the weekend.

Science

From the beginning of the year, we have been doing a weekly science problem that gets us thinking critically, drawing on our background knowledge, inferring possible reasons for our findings, and connecting.  Most often, we follow up those problems with  Core Competency self-assessments focussing on the Thinking Competencies.  In the example below, we connected our findings to humans and the need for snowshoes.  We then connected snowshoes to Indigenous technology.

Through our Wilderness Wednesday periods we go outside to observe, experience, and interpret our local environment. We have observed spider webs and noticed the abundance of spiders as a feature of autumn.  We have observed the regularity of webs and explored webs and patterning in Art.  We have also focused on trees and itemized the benefits trees provide.

We will soon be starting a unit on ecosystems.

Math

  • we have worked to build number sense and mental math strategies by learning about place value
  • we have worked to represent our numbers pictorially, symbolically, and concretely
  • we have worked with money concepts
  • we have worked to build an understanding of estimation
  • we are currently learning about patterns; repeating, core, increasing, and decreasing

Art

  • has been integrated into all the other subject areas and includes an opportunity to work with a variety of materials and some student self-assessments

Applied Design, Skills and Technologies

  • with the understanding that skills can be developed through play, centre-time is an important part of our week and students have access to a variety of building and design materials
  • they have created designed environments from marble runs to Plus Plus to Lego to wooden blocks to magnetic triangles.  Through trial and error, they have made changes, solved problems, and incorporated ideas from others

P.E. 

  • through games like Number Soccer, Hula Hut, and Circulation Volleyball, we have been learning fundamental movement skills that focus on running, kicking, catching, and safe movement in our gym
  • Through our social/emotional program RULER, we have identified that physical activity is an important daily component of our lives; it helps us to feel more confident and to be mentally strong

I am proud of the involvement and participation of all Div. 5 students in the many areas of learning listed above.  Our discussions are rich and our learning is shared and appreciated between classmates and friends.

 

 

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                                                                                               Wednesday, Sep 30, 2020 3:15 pm-6:00

                                                                                                      Thursday, Oct 1, 2020 3:15 pm-5:10

 

 

Welcome

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Welcome returning and new parents of Div. 5.  The bulletin board outside our room says it all.  The COVID-19 pandemic has provided endless challenges and changes, and I expect that more may yet come our way.  In this wave of change, protocols, and precautions, the students of Div. 5, 2020/2021 year have done a great job of modeling kindness, patience, and calm.  We are all in this together and with everyone’s cooperation and understanding, we will confront whatever comes our way as we navigate education and learning during these uncertain times. Please do not hesitate to call or email if you have questions or concerns.  As the weeks roll out, I will continue to post about our learning and some of the topics and directions we will be going in this year.

 

Under construction!

 

 

Double-pronged magic!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Magic Buttercup Power!

 

 

 

 

Maple seeds dropping in soon - MSU Extension

We even found and used these beautiful

tinted oak seed pods from the park.

 

Today, in class, we had a try at making our Magic Nature Wands.  Kids online, you will be assigned yours on Wednesday (Wink, Wink, you can start yours ahead of time).   I wasn’t sure they would work, but the experiment was a success! These wands are filled with the new flowers of spring and are just gorgeous!

They also have great power, duh, duh, duh!  Their special power will be announced, for everyone, at Wednesday’s Zoom class – 10:30. Their power is linked to a Knights of Boo’Gar writing assignment that will also come out on Wednesday.  Online kids, please take a photo of your wand and upload it to Teams.  I want to continue to display your work.

Although I was inspired by the wands below (from: minimadthings  https://minimadthings.com/blogs/news).  I love the freshness of our examples.  We didn’t even finish today and I actually put the wands in the upstairs fridge.  Here’s hoping they still look good tomorrow.  So, don’t wait to take that photo!

These nature wands are super easy to make and lots of fun for imaginative minds to play with. From the Mini Mad Things children's craft blog.

All learners have a story.  Story workshop supports inspiration through play with avariety of materials.  Within play and creation, students are encouraged to develop a story and detail, consider different perspectives and develop language.  It is our hope that this process will support the children in seeing themselves as storytellers and authors.

We had been lucky to experience Story Workshop twice before the Covid Crisis. Mrs. Field, in our library, had guided the students in their use of rich materials to develop stories.  Within our theme of Castles and Dragons, I saw an opportunity for students to continue this type of learning at home.

Div. 5 did a brilliant job of using what they had to build their stories.  One of the main principals of Story Workshop is the idea of “possibilities”.  Many of the objects we used are not what they seem.  A glue stick represents a guard.  Batteries are knights.  A salt and pepper shaker is a king and queen. A pinecone can be a bear.  It is the author who assigns a role to that item.

I am so excited to read the stories that will come from these builds.  Here are some examples of the student creations:

 

 

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