Friday, May 23, 2014

Week of May 19

The deadline to order Lake Monster tickets has been extended – order by Tuesday, May 27th !!!
Take Me Out to the Ballgame, an FAP community fundraising event, is Sunday June 29 – game starts at 5:05pm.
50% of ticket sales are donated back to the schools to support the students and faculty.
If you can’t go on June 29, you can exchange your tickets for another game.
Want to throw out the first pitch??  Details in next week’s School Bell.  Order forms in School Bell, at WCS or e-mail Voyager TA if needing form e-mailed to you!
Questions? Pam pniarchos@myfairpoint.net Thanks !

CMP8
This week in class we began reviewing major concepts from solving multi-step algebraic equations, using substitution and combination strategies to solve systems of linear equations, practicing equations with absolute value.  Students have access to the  Algebra Final Review a page put together by Ms. Milks to help coordinate our end-of-year work.  

CMP7
How does the volume of a cylinder, sphere and cone with the same radius and height compare?  We experimented with these three  figures by using clay and sand to compare the amount of space a sphere and cone took up in the cylinder.  We found that a sphere takes up 2/3 of the volume and a cone takes up 1/3.  We are at the end of the unit and will take the Filling and Wrapping assessment next week.

Science 7th/8th
This week we completed our dendrochronology investigation (measuring tree growth rings over hundreds of years) and looked closely at where carbon is stored in our environment.  We became carbon molecules to get a better picture of how carbon flows through its cycle.  Students prepared for their Climate Change assessment which took place on Friday.

Mr. Merrill’s ⅚ Humanities Wrap Up
We continued to work on narrative writing this week.  Students formulated some great ideas for their stories from the draft writing last week.  We started with our first drafts, focusing on grammar and style.  Mini lessons on sentence structure, word choice, and punctuation were followed by self editing time.  We moved on to narrative structure and writing techniques.  Students wrote exciting openings by using action, dialogue, or descriptions.  Characters came to life with details on looks, movement, and personalities.  Settings were created using alliteration, rhyme, similes, and/or metaphors.
We will be finishing the revision process next week with a peer commenting/editing period before typing the final story.
We also spent some time learning about the regions of the United States.  Students made a poster of a region to use as a tool to teach about the region to classmates.  We also played an online geography game to learn the location of states by region.

The Week in Ms.Wesnak’s Room
7/8 Humanities: This week seemed to just fly by! During our morning time together students started a unit on Greek Mythology. They read a myth titled “The Beginning of The World” and did some work with how some vocabulary terms were used in the myth and how they are used in present day. Students then moved on to learning about various Greek Gods and Goddesses. They created their own booklet of the Gods and Goddesses, and completed various journal writes using the ancient Greek culture as their inspiration. At the end of the week students were introduced to their final writing project of the year, which is to write an original myth or legend about the creation of a physical feature somewhere on the globe (example: Mt. Everest, Victoria Falls, Glaciers, The Amazon, Grand Canyon, Sahara). The final outcome will be a book of global myths or legends from around the world. Our afternoon time together this week was spent working on our Endangered Places project. Students were given time to peer edit in class or work on some aspect of their project. Paragraphs about their endangered place were due on Thursday and the educational posters were due Friday. The posters looked fantastic, and students are really excited about trying to raise awareness and gather donations about these diverse and beautiful places! If you are interested in donating there will be a donation jar located in my classroom. Our ultimate goal is to raise money to donate to the World Wildlife Fund, so we can adopt 1 (or more) animals. Hope everyone has a wonderful long weekend!

The Week in Ms. O’s
Math 5:  Working our way through multiplication of fractions.  We generated generalizations for fraction x fraction, fraction x whole number and multiplication of mixed numbers.  This is not an easy topic and will be one that is addressed next year as well.

Math 6:  We are digging deep into how to generate equations for linear relationships.  Dissecting the idea of slope and seeing slope in tables and graphs; making observations of data points in which x = 0; seeing that coordinate pairs that have x = 0 help us identify the y-intercept.  Once we can see slope and y-intercept we can then take on the equation that matches all linear relationships, y=ax +/- b.  This is a first exposure, so don’t panic! We will address this for the rest of the year.  And 7th grade math is...all about linearity and nonlinear relationships!  

Science ⅚:  We ended our week with a really exciting conservation project reestablishing a forest community along the Allen Brook as a way to prevent erosion and improve habitat for wetland inhabitants.  It is such a privilege to see our students in this setting:  kids become superstars!  We had a ball and we are saving the planet! Ha!  We also started adventures in motion and forces.  Pretty cool investigations of Newton’s Laws.

Voyager News!!!
We would like to congratulate Delaney Ruggles, Parker Soares and Boedy Leombruno for their great efforts at the Bocce tournament on May 22. Many students from WCS attended the Special Olympics/Unified Sports bocce tournament. Our students from Voyager returned with a silver and a gold medal! All three of the WCS teams medalled. Great Job!!! Thank you to all the adults and students that dedicated their time to supporting and participating with the Unified Sports program.

Talbott Street Stretch of the Allen Brook Stream Restoration Project 2014







Friday, May 16, 2014

Week of May 12


Ms. Q’s Corner
CMP8
We completed our It’s In The System Review and began our unit test.  Due to Science NECAP we had abridged classes this week.  Next week we will begin our end-of-year review to brush up and reacquaint ourselves with all the math work we have done this year to prepare for the algebra final and to review areas where the class needs bolstering.  

Algebra Final Exam Review!!
Thursday, May 29th 6-8pm OR Sunday, June 1st 3-5pm in WCS Dining Room
Students need to sign-up at: http://tinyurl.com/FinalStudySessionSignUp



CMP7
Finding the surface area and volume of cylinders was the order of business this week.  This multi-step mathematical process called all of us to be precise in our calculations.  We began comparing the volume of different three dimensional figures and also compared their surface area and volume to see if we could observe a relationship between the two.  Next week we will explore cones and spheres.

Science 7th/8th
Kudos to our 8th graders for their excellent effort and focus during our Science NECAP testing.  
Our continued study of climate change began with articles about the IPCC(Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) report that came out in March.  The article highlighted that the world is not ready for the impact of climate change.  We took part in an albedo experiment to test the relationship between the surface reflectivity of solar radiation and its relationship to the temperature change in the atmosphere.  We will continue our unit next week with a focus on ways we can help lower CO2 emissions and  explore plans for a changing climate.  A unit test will most likely follow in the next week.

The Week in Ms.Wesnak’s Room
7/8 Humanities: This week in Humanities we have continued on our global geography adventure through myths, legends, latitude and longitude, and atlas use! We’ve spent our morning time together continuing with our Myths and Legends Unit. Students have created a large graphic organizer on one of our classroom walls in order to compare all elements of the stories we read aloud. Students have heard, watched, and read a variety of myths and legends. After every story students take part in great class discussions about whether the story we’ve read is a myth or legend. We compare these stories to the definitions of “myth” and “legend” we created. Our classes are starting to find that myths and legends have a lot of things in common such as characters (gods, goddesses, spirits, kings), settings, and the overall plot line. We also discuss the cultural aspects of myths and legends, which are great reminders that when we start to create and write our own myths we need to keep in mind the country that our myth or legend will take place in. The countries we set our stories in will be important in making decisions around characters, names, and color choice. Our time together in the afternoon has been spent combining our atlas skills with finding places around the world using latitude and longitude coordinates. This week students used their skills to locate the World Wildlife Fund’s 18 Endangered Places. Locating these places was the launch to our small research project titled: The Endangered Places Project. Students will be studying an endangered place of their choice, and writing a persuasive paragraph about why this habitat needs to be conserved and protected. Students are focusing on the idea that one place can be home to many diverse living things: plants, animals, and people. Students are also being asked to create an educational poster to hang up in the school. the poster will include a hand-drawn map, facts, and ways to help. This poster will hopefully encourage others in our school to donate to the World Wildlife Fund via the donation jar in Wesnak Core. We are hoping to raise enough money to make a donation and adopt an animal to act as our classroom pet. If you’re at all interested in donating, please talk to your child about the project and learn a little bit about the environment they have chosen to research!

The Global Connections Project: Connecting students through learning from VT - NZ!
Weekly Update: This week we had another great Skype session with Blockhouse Bay Intermediate! We had a fantastic group of students after school to participate in the Skype, and they came up with some great pop culture related questions. Here are some highlights from our Skype time together:
    Top 3 Sports: Rugby, Rugby League, and Netball
Popular Athletes: Winston Reid (soccer), Nick Willis (long distance runner), Valerie Adams (shot put), Lydia Ko (16 year old gold champion)
    Music:
- Lorde is very popular
- Pharrell William’s “Happy” also quite popular
- Sam Smith is at the top of the NZ iTunes chart
Popular Books: Diary of a Wimpy Kid,  Dork Diaries
Popular Foods: Fish&Chips
Accent Exchange: Students participated in an accent exchange. New Zealand students tried to use an American accent and our students tried their hand at a New Zealand accent. It was very funny, and they were quite impressed with our Kiwi accents.
The next Skype session will be Wednesday, May 21st at 4:00 and it will also be our first time using our Google Map to mark places around the globe!

Mr. Merrill’s Humanities ⅚ Wrap Up

A Picture’s Worth a Thousand Words: From Image to Detailed Narrative


After looking at a Norman Rockwell image, students brainstormed about possible events and characters the image illustrated.  Students then started writing a first draft for their story, writing from the point of view of one character.  Students could choose to describe the events that led up to the event, or the events that followed.
The use of artwork is a powerful source for inspiration and was a great way to start this writing unit.
Next week we will be reviewing narrative writing strategies and techniques.  Students will critique their own first draft, identifying and editing their hook, setting, events etc. in their writing piece.
The last week for spelling, No Red Ink, and Reading Response/Writer’s Notebook assignments will be the final week of May.  Students will be self assessing and reflecting on work from the 3rd trimester, as well as documenting any final requirements for these learning tools.

The Week in Ms. O
Math 5:  We have finished Unit 6 and are moving into an extension of this unit to address multiplication of fractions.  Again, at the beginning of any new skill, we dig deeply into the conceptual foundation or framework, specifically asking the question, what does it mean to take a part of a part?  So if we have the problem, Mara wants a snack and arrives in the kitchen to find the brownie pan is only ⅔ full.  She decides to eat ½ of what is left, specifically, she eats ½ of the brownie pan that is ⅔ full.  Modeling this is actually really cool (for all you math geeks) and lends itself to good math justification.  Today, we looked specifically at finding a fraction of a whole like what is ½ of 3?  Students again use modeling to do this and then look at the class generated generalization to see if our model matches it!

Math 6:  We are in full blown equation writing!  We have bumped from analyzing tables and graphs to matching the patterns we see in them, in order to write an equation.  And moving from equations to building a table of data and then graphing it.  The key to all of this is to encourage students to see patterns in tables, how that same pattern then shows up in a graph, and then generalize that pattern be writing an equation, that allows you to predict future data points.  This is really important foundational work for next year’s focus on linear equations.  Students are slowly getting the hang of it!

Science ⅚:  This week we have been completing a final unit project on bottled water.  Students are building a public art installation that includes the water bottles we collected for a week (from over 30 classrooms and offices) and mathematical statistics that are designed to teach others about bottled water.  It will on display next week, on the interior walls of the ABC hallway, Kaleidoscope hallway, and the World Language hallway.  It should be cool, so check it out!

Field Trip next week...don't forget the field trip form!




Friday, May 9, 2014

Week of May 5

Ms.Q's Corner

CMP8
Our investigations this week looked at inequalities; how to solve them and graph them.  We considered the amount of CO2 that cars and minivans emit to the atmosphere along with the constaints of car usage.  Understanding how to shade inequality graphs, and the meaning of the shading were explored.  We are completing this unit with a review and It's in the System Unit test will be next week.

CMP7
Students built models of prisms to calculate surface area.  We compared the surface area of different triangular, square, pentagonal and hexagonal prisms all made from an 8 1/2  x 11 piece of paper.  Through our investigations we concluded that increasing the number of sides increases the surface area and the volume.  We were able to see that as a prism became more cylindrical in shape, the more volume it held.


Science 7th/8th
This week we spent time reviewing test taking strategies to prepare for the science NECAP.  Each day we began with several questions and worked together to discern what information the questions was asking for and ways to eliminate answers.  


We continued our study of climate change by reviewing the hemospheric CO2 and temperature data since 1880.  We created an atmosphere in two bottles and added CO2 to one bottle and left both of them under a heat source.  Over time we collected data about the temperature change and compared the two to see if there was a correlation between CO2 and temperature increase.   We found that the bottle with CO2 had a significant increase in temperature in comparison to the bottle with air.


Parents of 8th graders
Next week on Wednesday and Thursday,  May 14th and 15th all 8th graders at WCS will be taking the NECAP science test.  Over the last week, we have been reviewing test taking strategies and major science concepts.  Students should plan on having a good breakfast and a good night sleep before we undertake this assessment.  Thank you for your support!


Mr. Merrill’s ⅚ Humanities Wrap Up
Students continue to focus on a different spelling and witing concept each week throughout the month of May.  For 5th graders, students learned how a prefix and/or suffix can build a word.  6th graders studied tricky words, espeically words with double letters and silent letters.  All students practiced subject/verb agreement on their No Red Ink assignment.  For our reading concept, students learned how to identify the main idea of an article by identifying the most important words.  
In our Humanities PM time, we are practicing geography and mapping skills, learning about exact location - using latitude and longitide and relative location - using distance and direction to find locations.
Final drafts of the bottle/tap water argument papers were due today.
Next Week
Spring Assessment - On Wednesday, students will be taking the DRP (Degrees of Reading Power) assessment.


The Week in Ms.Wesnak’s Room
7/8 Humanities: This week in Humanities we spent our morning time together kicking off our Myths and Legends unit! This will be our final unit of the year, and students will end up creating their own myth or legend about the creation of a global geographical feature of their choice. We’ve spent our time so far creating definitions for the terms, building a large graphic organizer to keep track of all the stories we read aloud, and reading some great examples of myths or legends. Students have really enjoyed the read alouds so far, and we’ve been having great discussions about the literary elements of each story. During our afternoon time together we started our global geography unit. We started off by viewing a video titled “25 Maps to Change Your View of the World”. After watching the video we discussed how viewing these maps changed our view of the world. Knowing that we would be looking at a lot of maps during this unit, we turned our focus to absolute location and learning about latitude, longitude, the equator, the prime meridian, and how to read maps. Students used latitude and longitude to find cities around the world, and also played a thrilling game of “Message in a Bottle”. Students used the lines of latitude and longitude to rescue castaways from a shipwreck! This was a lot of fun, and students had a great time getting used to reading the global grid. Starting on Wednesday students began work on the “National Geographic A-Z Global Scavenger Hunt”. Students are in teams of 2-3 using 1 atlas to find geographic features around the world - the real challenge? The answers for each clue have to go in alphabetical order! Let the challenge begin!!


The Global Connections Project: Connecting students through learning from VT - NZ!
Weekly Update: This week we had our first Skype session with Blockhouse Bay Intermediate, and it was a great success! Students on both sides of the globe had a great time and asked great questions. Here are some tidbits from our conversation:
    Q: Do you actually eat a lot of Kiwis (the fruit) in NZ?
    A: Yes! There are two kinds of Kiwis - green and gold.


    Q: What is your favorite American TV show?
    A: America’s Funniest Home Videos!!


    Q: What is your school day like? What is school like?
    A:    - Recess or outdoor times 3 times a day
        - Eat lunch outside and get hot lunch or prepared lunch from a concession stand type building
        - No hallways or corridors! They walk outside to get from classroom to classroom
        - They can go barefoot in school!
   
    Q: Where do you go on vacation or holiday?
    A: Australia, Fiji, India


Right now we have built a new online classroom via Kidblog, so soon our students will be able to do CNN Student News blogging with our Blockhouse Bay peers! We are also working on an interactive global map that all students will be able to access and work with for their global geography unit.


The Week in Ms. O’s

Math 5:  Yippee!  Just finished Unit 6. Our next pursuit is to investigate the story of multiplication of fractions and decimals. 

Math 6:  Variables and Patterns is proving to be a new and interesting challenge for students.  Our discussions have focused on variables (what are the variables we are relating in any given situation), how tables and graphs can help us understand patterns and relationships amongst variables and the desirable task of graphing, which I know everyone just loves.  This unit is all about generalizations for linear and nonlinear patterns and is really important algebra prep.  We will continue to plug away and towards the end of the year, secure fluency of numbers in all formats and do a little geometry!  Productive week for sure!

Science ⅚:  What a busy week!  We have been organizing a community connection around bottled water and have made some important discoveries about bottled water use in our school.  Our fact finding mission began with some early writing and editing and testing and writing and editing again, of a school wide survey to ask about practices around tap and bottled water.  More than 350 people completed the survey and we will spend Monday analyzing this data.  Students in “the plastic recovery team” have been collecting plastic bottles in classrooms at the end of each day.  It is really unbelievable how many plastic bottles we have collected, given that we are not collecting in the cafeteria each day.  Other tasks this week included:  the life cycle of a product (tracing a product we use daily back to its natural resource origin) and watching iMovies from the Human Body Project.


   
       

Friday, May 2, 2014

Week of April 28

Camp Abnaki Field Trip June 2nd - 4th  -  Permission Slips went home with students this week.  Forms are due May 9th
We are in need of chaperones!  Please contact Katie Fieldsend at 871-6148 or KFieldsend@cssu.org if interested.  

From Administrative Team...
Dear K-8 parents and guardians,

The Williston schools are pleased to announce that this year's parent survey is now available to complete on-line.  This is an opportunity for you to let us know how well we are doing, and particularly how well we are meeting the needs of your child[REN].   The more parents who respond to the survey then the more reliable and valuable the information will be, and the more able we will be to use the data to improve our schools.  We strongly encourage you to participate.

We will be reviewing this data in the days right before and after school gets out.  To have your input included, please complete this survey by Friday, May 16th.  It can be accessed on-line by copying the following link into your web browser:


If you need any help, would like to use one of the computers at school to complete the survey, or would prefer a paper version of the survey, please contact Cid Gause at 871-6104 or cgause@cssu.org.

Thank you,
The Williston Administrative Team

To parents of 8th graders...
Please consider signing your child up for 2 or more weeks at the CVU summer camp. It's 4 days a week and snacks and lunch are provided.
There are 12 different academic, artistic, recreational, and technology interest area options.
Your child will have fun while getting familiar with the building and getting to know others students from the surrounding towns.
There are partial and full scholarships available.
You can register online at www.cvuhs.org.
You can also contact Duncan Wardwell at dwardwell@cvuhs.org or contact Chris Ford at CFord@cssu.org (871-6176.)

FAP Fundraisers:
  • Williston Run for Education- Saturday, May 17th 10am  ; 5K Run/ Walk & Kids Fun Run  -   Registration forms available at WCS or day of event
  • Vermont Lake Monsters Game- Sunday, June 29th 5:05 game time. Grandstand tickets are $6 each - 50% of ticket sales will be donated back to Williston schools !!!

Ms. Q's Corner
CMP8 This week in It's in The System, we dabbled in inequalities.  We learned that the best way to solve inequalities is to solve  them like equalities  One that is done you can find the where the solution is greater than or less than.  We reviewed how to graph inequalities on a horizontal number line and utilized Desmos to see what inequalities look like graphed on a grid.  
CMP7  We began the week with exploring the relationship between surface area, volume and dimensions of rectangular prisms.  We practiced drawing different 3-D figures using isometric dot paper.  It was a very challenging activity to create drawings of cubes stacked to form irregular structures.  We completed the week with looked at garbage eating worms and the amount of garbage they can consume in relation to the number of worms and their container size.  

Science 7th/8th  
This week of science was abridged due to our wonderful 8th grade challenge presentations.  We began our investigation of climate change.  We learned about residents of Tuvalu, a grouping of atolls in the South Pacific, and how rising sea levels have impacted on their homes, livelihood and way-of-life.  We explored the difference between weather and climate and began to investigate some of our essential questions about climate change.  What are the causes of climate change?  How will our ecosystem change? What can be done?  Over the next few weeks, we will be investigating the science behind climate change and possible ways to help slow the process.

Mr. Merrill’s ⅚ Humanities Wrap Up
We started the week off with 8th grade challenge final presentations. The presentations covered a wide range of interesting topics. Students asked wonderful follow up questions and were a fantastic audience.  We then picked up where we left off before the break.  Students found their argument outlines and we continued to identify key components of good argument writing, using an article in the Observer written by a former Voyager student.  First drafts of their argument pieces are due Tuesday.  Students will write about water issues that we learned about before vacation.  
Weekly assignments will change during the month of May.  Students will have review assignments for No Red Ink and will also have a weekly spelling lesson and quiz.  See Jupiter Grades for details.
Geography lessons focused on location. We learned about and practiced using latitude and longitude coordinates, playing a game finding locations around the world. Students really enjoyed searching for countries, landforms and bodies of water.

The Week in Ms. O’s
Math 5:  We have been building some content knowledge to fuel our bottled water debate and this week in math, we were able to cross into the math realm with this work.  We took our refrigerator data on Monday and our recycling data from Ms. O’s one week collection of recycling and gave it a math spin.  Students created class data sets with their personal refrigerator inventory and came to an astounding conclusion - that 80 % of our packaging and containment is plastic.  We also investigated Ms. O’s recycling, a week’s worth of collection from one family of five living in Vermont.  Students recognized the difference in the fridge and household recycling sets and came to some conclusions of plastic.  Interesting discoveries to have!  The rest of our week was filled with decimal fun...adding and subtracting decimals and identifying decimals between decimals.  Today, we began our discussion of percent...a close relative of decimals and fractions!  Unit 6 Assessment next week!

Math 6 - We have been building some content knowledge to fuel our bottled water debate and this week in math, we were able to cross into the math realm with this work.  We took our refrigerator data on Monday and our recycling data from Ms. O’s one week collection of recycling and gave it a math spin.  Students created class data sets with their personal refrigerator inventory and came to an astounding conclusion - that 80 % of our packaging and containment is plastic.  We also investigated Ms. O’s recycling, a week’s worth of collection from one family of five living in Vermont.  Students recognized the difference in the fridge and household recycling sets and came to some conclusions of plastic.  Interesting discoveries to have!
We picked up in Variables and Patterns where we ended off before break, deepening our understanding of graphs and tables and how identification of patterns help tell us the story from the data.  Students are likely getting a little tired of graphing, but the foundation is really important for 7th grade.  Good work with week from all.

Science ⅚ :  What a busy week of learning about plastics, where oil comes from, and why plastics are an interesting and complex problem and solution for our world.  Students learned about natural resources, renewables and not, and reconfirmed understanding of the value of recycling.  Lots of math/science connections.  Superb conversations.  You would have been amazed and proud of your aware and curious and activistic children!

The Week in Ms.Wesnak’s Room
7/8 Humanities: This week on house we started off by watching our 8th graders present their 8th Grade Challenge Projects! These were fantastic! There were a huge variety of topics covered, and the students did a really great job with their presentations. Bravo 8th Grade! Once we finished up with viewing 8th Grade Challenge presentations we got back to our normal schedule. During our morning time together students finished up filming their “Day in The Life” videos to share with the Blockhouse Bay School in New Zealand! Students really had a great time filming and editing their movies using iMovie on the school MacBooks. Students say it was “fun, interesting, new, majestic, beautiful, inspiring, eye-opening, patriotic, and even funny!” During our time together in the afternoon we worked on our Road Trip U.S.A. projects! These road trips are coming along beautifully. Students were also introduced to the second half of this project which is creating an online scrapbook using Google sites. The Google site aspect of this project is allowing the students to get very creative with their road trip. They are asking questions such as: What will I bring? Will I bring a pet? What will I listen to while I drive for 12 hours? Is this going to be boring or fun? Will I get a flat tire? What kind of car will I be driving? As you can imagine, the answers for these questions span a wide spectrum! It’s been really fun to watch this trips come together, and I can’t wait to see the final products!