Halloween Celebrations

Next Monday we will be celebrating Halloween at Rosser.  Here is the schedule for the day:

9:00 a.m. – Halloween Assembly and Costume Parade – our Grade 2’s will be presenting their Fall poems!

** Students should come to school in their costumes prepared for this early assembly. They may bring a change of clothes for after the assembly if they will not be comfortable in their costume all day.  A reminder that Burnaby School District has a “No weapons” policy which includes any ‘toy’ weapons.  Please do not send any of these ‘accessories’ to school with your child’s costume.

10:45 a.m. – Pumpkin Carving with our Div. 2 buddies

** These pumpkins will be taken to the Confederation Park Train for their Halloween display.

Our Pumpkin Math Explorations

After our trip to the Laity Pumpkin Patch, we did some Mathematical explorations with our picked pumpkins.  These involved the concept of estimations.  I gave the students a baseline to judge by with my pumpkin – i.e. its weight, stem length, circumference. Students then did their own ‘good guesses’ on their pumpkins (in comparison to mine) in regard to:

  1. the number of vertical lines
  2. the length (in centimetres) of the stem
  3. the weight (in kilograms)
  4. the circumference (in centimetres)
  5. how many seeds are inside

Then students did the actual counting of lines, the weighing, and the measuring of the stem and circumference.  We charted the numbers for each student and determined who had:

  1. the heaviest one
  2. the lightest one
  3. the smallest one (circumference)
  4. the largest one (circumference)
  5. round shaped pumpkins
  6. oval shaped pumpkins

Students then completed their booklets.  These are pinned to a bulletin board in our room.  They look like this …

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The pumpkins were sent home on Tuesday.  Once the students have carved their pumpkins at home, they are asked to count the number of seeds inside their pumpkin. They should then write the number in their planner so that they can record it in their booklet.  They are also asked to bring in 6 seeds to glue into their booklets.  This is from a story we read called, ‘Pumpkin, Pumpkin’ about a boy named Jamie who grew a pumpkin and at the end, after carving his Jack O’Lantern, he saved six seeds to plant the following Spring.

Thank you for helping your child do these two final stages to complete their booklets.

 

Colour Theory

On Friday we spent some time reviewing Colour Theory, including:

  • Primary Colours – yellow, blue, and red
  • Secondary Colours – green, orange, and purple
  • How secondary colours are made from primary colours

Students then made a tesselation on their paper; initially drawn in pencil and then traced over with black marker.  The criteria for their artwork was to fill in each section by only using the three primary colours in wax crayon.  They were to create their own secondary colours.  Students were allowed to do some sections in primary colours but the goal was to create mostly secondary colours.  Adjoining sections needed to be different colours.

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These art pieces are placed on the bulletin board at the back of our classroom.  There are some not finished; they will be added to the board when they are completed.  I think the lesson reinforced the colour theory for the students.

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We Are Thankful For …

Last Friday we spent the day doing things all about being thankful.  We read about the history of Thanksgiving in Canada.  Students learned that the first Thanksgiving in North America was in Canada in 1578 (in Newfoundland) with Martin Frobisher and other immigrants from England.  They were celebrating being thankful for surviving the long journey and the bounty of foods grown in the ‘New World’.  After being celebrated on many different dates over the years, the Parliament of Canada declared (in 1957) that the second Monday of October would be the recognized day of thanks in Canada.

We discussed traditions and modern celebrations.  Students enjoyed a sample, or two, of pumpkin pie!

After a class brainstorming of things that we are thankful for, students were paired and set to work writing their own things to be thankful for.  These are posted on the bulletin board in the hallway.

These ‘thankful’ posters are intermingled with the tissue papered turkeys that the students worked on during Art on Friday afternoon.

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