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Saturday, November 18, 2017

Mayberry-McFarland Weekly News
for the week of November 13, 2017

Due Dates / Upcoming Events:
Monday, November 20:  reading logs are due
Tuesday, November 21: McFarlands have P.E.: come prepared for swimming
Wednesday, November 22-Sunday, November 26: Thanksgiving break for all!
Monday, November 27: reading logs due (at least four different days, for at least 25 minutes each time, as usual)
Tuesday, November 28: Home Link due / McFarlands have P.E.: come prepared for swimming
Wednesday, November 29: early release
Thursday, November 30: be caught up on math journal pages
Friday, December 1: Home Link due / SpellingCity activities due (save TestMe for in class on Friday)
Monday, December 4: reading logs due


General News and Announcements
Wonder
The movie version of our current read aloud book, Wonder, is out!  I plan to see this very soon--maybe this weekend--with my fifth-grader, and I am confident it’s a better bet than The Lego Movie (wish I could buy back those two hours).  Hope to have lost of conversations with kids at snack time, dismissal, and at read aloud time, etc., about the movie!

Towel for lockers
Students will be storing boots, snowpants, and other snow gear in their lockers this winter season.  A hand towel spread out at the bottom of the locker is ideal for absorbing melting snow and drying out quickly overnight.  Please send one in with your child as soon as you can; winter weather is apparently upon us.

Write name inside coats
Speaking of winter gear, please take some time this weekend to mark your child’s name in all outerwear.  At a morning meeting share earlier this week, kids talked about their strategies for keeping track of their gear from the transition from playground to cafeteria (because they aren’t allowed to come upstairs to drop off gear before going to the cafeteria).  All students shared reasonable ideas that mostly included hanging jackets on the backs of their chairs.  Yet, several students have left their jackets outside the cafeteria near the stairs and then haven’t been able to find them afterwards.  That’s odd.  I am confident that we’ll get to the bottom of the missing coats, but it will be a great help if students names are clearly marked on their stuff.  [UPDATE: Coats have been found in other classes’ lunch bins!]

Special Guest
On Tuesday, November 21st, Mrs. Mayberry’s daughter, Mikayla, and one of her fellow nursing classmates from UMO, will be coming to teach students about the importance of good hand hygiene (especially important this time of year) and nutrition facts about foods they eat. We look forward to their visit.

Academic Updates:
Writing Workshop
We are well underway with our Opinion Writing (essay) unit!  Students did a pre-assessment at the end of last week, and I’m studying those specifically for the way students organize their opinion ideas.  This is related to a goal for our Teacher Evaluation System.  Students have done some “practice-writing” in their notebooks, taking one of two stances: “Homework is good for kids,” or “Kids should not have homework.”  The following day, they were expected to write about--surprise--the exact opposite stance they wrote about the previous day!  I was, in fact, impressed with the flexibility of their thinking and ability to see an issue from two sides.
    When we return for Thanksgiving break, we will focus on crafting a strong thesis statement.  This is one of the most important parts of writing an essay, as the entire piece rests on this foundation.

Reading Workshop
We are winding down our unit on making interpretations about characters.  I could teach this all year long!  In fact, we revisit related concepts both informally (in read alouds and in writing units) and formally (in upcoming reading units: social issues and historical fiction).  This past week, we worked together on a practice assessment.  We used our mentor text, Journey, to answer high-level comprehension questions about how characters change, how one part of a story fits with other parts, theme, and story elements.  We studied parts of the rubric so students could see how responses are scored and how they can revise their responses to make them stronger.  
Monday and Tuesday, students will take an assessment independently to show their learning about these concepts.  Also, our super-crafty librarian and media specialist, Mrs. Hall-Riddle, has McGyvered a way to watch a VHS version of Journey through our projector in the classroom!  Can’t find a DVD version anywhere!
    Next up: nonfiction!
    
Math
This week students took the end of unit assessment for unit 2. I will be sending assessment packets home next week, please check your child’s planner for returned work on Tuesday, November 21st.
We also kicked off unit 3 this week, which is the first of three units focusing on fractions. Students explored to model by draw pictorial answers to fraction number stories. They also started to used fraction circle manipulatives to discover fraction equivalences between fractions with different denominators.

Theme
This week students were introduced to the final project in our cartography/geography unit. Captain Mayberry has given them the mission of  creating a map of a newly discovered land. This is where the skills learned in the first two projects meet their incredible powers of creativity and imagination! I am looking forward to seeing what they will create.

Friday, November 3, 2017

Mayberry-McFarland Weekly News
for the week of October 30, 2017

Due Dates / Upcoming Events:
Monday, November 6:  reading logs are due
Tuesday, November 7: ABL (sneakers are helpful) / Home Link due / McFarlands have P.E.: come prepared for swimming
Wednesday, November 8: full day / Mayberrys have P.E.: come prepared for swimming
Thursday, November 9: be caught up on math journal pages
Friday, November 10: Veterans Day observed, no school
Monday, November 13:  reading logs due


General News and Announcements
Parent/Teacher Conferences
Thanks to those of you with whom we have met so far!  We are enjoying making connections with families and discussing your kids!  Thank you also to those of you who have been able to move things around in order to reschedule this past Monday’s conferences.  Here’s hoping everyone has power again!

ABL (Adventure-Based Learning)
Last week, Mrs. Murray challenged our students to make as long a connected line as possible, using their bodies and any of their belongings.  Of course, each group started out by stretching as tall and as long as they could go.  But...then what?  Here’s what:

Academic Updates:
Writing Workshop
After much work on various aspects of narrative writing, students are nearly done with two pieces.  The first is their in-class piece, which we have been adding to and revising based on our workshop mini-lessons.  The second is the school-wide writing prompt, which the kids do independently.  They planned using the same graphic organizer/timeline we’ve used in class, and then they spent a second writing period drafting, revising, and editing the story independently.  This piece will show what our writers can do on their own, what they truly understand about writing a strong narrative, and how well they use resources around the classroom to improve their work.  It is also an exercise in stamina and problem-solving.  Both pieces will be scored using our Narrative Writing Rubric.  I look forward to seeing the growth!  
    Next up: opinion writing in the form of an essay!

Reading Workshop
Our mentor text, Journey, has provided rich opportunities for higher-level thinking!  And while our readers may not be able to replicate all of this in their own reading yet, they have built awareness, and they understand that it’s their responsibility as readers to think as they read:
  • How does this part of the story connect with the main problem?
  • Where am I in this story?  Should I be looking for clues of a turning point?
  • The character is acting differently now...Why this change?
  • This conversation the characters are having is important to the problem!
  • The author expects me to understand what happened without telling me everything.
  • I need to read ahead and backwards to try to understand unfamiliar words.
  • I might need to revise my ideas about a character as I learn more about him.
  • When the author brings up a topic over and over again, I need to realize that it’s important, and I need to be thinking about how and why it’s important.
  • Authors often use setting details to show a mood.
  • Characters’ feeling change often, but their traits rarely do.
  • Level S books are level S for a reason!
    
Math
This week we continued to work on finding all the factors for a given number and listing the multiples for a given factor. Knowing basic multiplication facts truly helps make this work easier and students become more confident in their math work. In addition to these concepts, students worked on time conversions (hours, minutes and seconds) and we ended the week working with multiplicative comparison number stories.  

Theme

Students are doing a great job with their ‘cartography flipbook’ which defines various landforms and bodies of water. This project will roll into their final creative cartography project, to be revealed in a few weeks.