Back to class in June

Updated, June 3

Our weekly online meetings will take place on Wednesdays in MS Teams. Before our next meeting, please read Gray Wolf’s Search with Mr Tsougrianis and explore these ideas after reading/listening. Then please leave a comment ON MR TSOUGRIANIS’S BLOG.

Please see the list of and ongoing assigned activities to work on over the rest of this week. Please also have a listen to “Sometimes a Dream Needs a Push“. I’ll be interested to know what you think of the father’s reaction to Chris’s dream, whether you think it is harder for Chris or for his dad and what you think about how they are reacting to hardship.


Canada Wc-1A (1950s)
It’s the first week of June. Where I lived when I was in elementary school long ago, the first week of June would have been our last week of the school year, so it seems more than a little odd to be writing about heading back to school right now, but I suppose that’s not all that’s a litttle out of the ordinary at the moment.

We welcome many of our students back to classrooms today while the rest will continue working from home. With this mix of working partially in person and partially from home, our schedules will change. We will move our weekly online meetings for the whole class to Wednesday mornings. I will continue to support students with their work and their questions, but I will not be able to be available for as many open drop-in sessions online. As ever, scheduled meetings will be found in our Teams calendar.

There will be a few new tasks to tackle this week, but for the moment, for those wtill working from home, taking some time to revisit unfinished comments, writing, problems and music tasks from the last week or two would be time wisely spent.

I hope to see all of you, via one means or another, very soon indeed!

On a bit of a roll

There may be times when it is hard not to notice what we can’t do or what isn’t getting done ore going well, but right now I cannot help but notice what is happening that is both interesting and good:

  • We had a lovely virtual assembly Friday (featuring some of your hearts for healthcare workers, thank you!)
  • Strong responses to questions about ‘The Difficult Path’ show you may be developing Lingsi’s superpower
  • I’m seeing a few of your video clips tying in with the endings you wrote to the unfinished story we heard last week
  • Several of you are having success at Farkle, the dice game I gave you this week
  • I got to read some of your lines of verse (though one was about pets that bite!)
  • I got to meet someone’s new cat virtually (but again a pet with a propensity to bite‽)

As I alluded in the title to this post, it is starting to feel like we are on a roll. So (after reminding you all to continue working on the tasks laid out for this week) I’ll recommend you plan ahead for Sunday by checking out this wonderful poem by Bruce Lansky. You should recognise the rhythm. You might try writing your own version to include (perhaps along with a copy of ‘On Mother’s Day’, crediting Mr Lansky, of course) in a card this weekend.

I’ll also recommend this online version of Farkle (There are a few ads, but it’s not too bad). The game goes quickly, but watching the text description for each turn helps. And like most things in life, the practice (including the turns that don’t go your way) help you think about and develop your strategy. (Did you know you could have this much fun learning about chance & probability?)

Let me know how your farkle games (or other endeavours) are going in the comments, and I’ll see you at our next meeting this afternoon in Teams at 1PM.

Wondering, what would I do?

We are in the middle of reading R.J. Palacio’s now well-known book, Wonder. Some of us have finished reading it on our own. Some have even already been to see the movie, which is never as good as the book, right As a group, however we are currently in the section from Jack’s perspective.

 

Jack is an interesting character. They all are, but what I find interesting about Jack is the particular set of flaws and challenges he has. Jack’s flaws are different from and less obvious maybe than August’s or less infuriating than Julian’s, but he has them. I find Jack’s challenges interesting to think about because they are familiar and common. How does one actually manage to do the right thing when it would require confronting friends and other peers, would draw a lot of attention and could mean being excluded?

Conflict is unpleasant, but to take on the kind of confrontation Jack might face were he to take a stand and declare his loyalties, especially as an adolescent when peers, friendships and social standing take on new significance, would require not only courage but the ability to think clearly and weigh big issues. Are there any of us who hasn’t avoided having an unpleasant conversation? It might be easy, reading a story, to decide what a character should have done, and that’s one great reason to read novels. Characters & stories give us a chance to think through conflicts that help us figure out who we are and who we want to be. But if I was facing Jack’s situation, as a 5th-grader, I’m not sure exactly how I would have dealt with it. I would hope I’d have done the right thing, but doing the right thing when we are called to act and in the face of all the complications of relationships & emotions is not so easy.

I do think Jack deserves a little of our scorn, but I wouldn’t want to be too quick to condemn him for having a very normal difficulty negotiating the kind of challenge we are all likely to struggle with. His character, his situation, and this whole story all help me reflect on important matters, and that is what draws my interest.

I’d like to know which characters you find particularly interesting. Who do you think is facing a particularly interesting challenge that wouldn’t be so easy to handle? What do you hope you might have done in the same situation? What do you hope the character would have done or will do?

Should we serve seals??

Image

Should we be serving seals in restaurants?

This blog is about if we should serve seals, this idea came after a restaurant called Edible Canada (Edible Canada) is serving seals and a lot of people are saying “We shouldn’t serve seals” or “Seals should be served Because” So our Teacher wanted to see if we should serve seals or Not.

Well this is what I think, I think we should serve seals because they are a good source of protein, Vitamin B12 and iron can be met with 40 grams of seal meat.

 

And also the Canadian Government allows it!!! The Government allows about 400,000 seals a YEAR! But we currently have harvested about 36,000 Seals, So if the Government allows it (since he’s like the most popular person in the world) it means we can eat seals.

 

Harp seal mother and pup

A Baby Harp Seal with it`s Mommy

 So that`s why i think it`s okay to serve seals (Harp Seals) in restaurants.