Friday, December 22, 2017

Week of December 18th - 22nd

TA’s Notes:
***Please do not send in any food to be shared among Voyager students***
***Please notify us if your child has strep.  Thank you for this courtesy.***

Voyager Homework Club- Tuesdays (2:00-3:30pm) and Wednesdays (3:00-4:30pm)

Have a wonderful and safe holiday break!!
Dates to Know:
  • December 25th - January 2nd: No School (School resumes Wed, Jan 3rd)
  • January 9th: Social Media Presentation for parents 6:30 - 8:30pm


The Week in Mr. Merrill’s Room (⅚ Humanities):
Congratulations to Kevin Lahiri who won Voyager’s ⅚ Geography Bee!!  Kevin will move on to the school championship in late January.Finalists from Voyager were Alexa Davis, Derek Allen and Emily Gay.  Congrats to all!!


Pictures from International Day:  Great job by all students!!

The Week from Ms. Q’s Room (⅞ Math & Science):

CMP8
This week the 8th graders were focused on operations using square roots, finding the length of diagonals using the area of the square and cubed roots. We also looked at finding perfect squares  and how they can help you estimate the square root of non- perfect numbers.

CMP7
The 7th graders began their study of similarity of geometric figures.  We began a class record of what similarity means and we looked at figures that were scaled down and scaled up. We practiced our graphing skills with drawing cartoon characters called “Wumps”.  We looked at rules that changed the size and location of  our “Wump” characters.

Science 7th/8th

This week students completed their research on genetic disorders and diseases and then presented their information to the class.  We were looking at the genetic mutation that caused the disorder, the physical impact of the gene mutation, treatments and interesting facts.

Friday, December 15, 2017

Week of December 11th - 15th

TA’s Notes:
***Please do not send in any food to be shared among Voyager students***
***Please notify us if your child has strep.  Thank you for this courtesy.***


Voyager Homework Club- Tuesdays (2:00-3:30pm) and Wednesdays (3:00-4:30pm)


Dates to Know:
  • Wed, Dec 20th- 5th- 8th Grade Concerts


  • December 25th - January 2nd: No School (School resumes Wed, Jan 3rd)
Williston Central School is in need of volunteers!
Friday, Dec 22nd morning, we need a few parents to help get our Cinema Day ready for the students!

Please contact Jackie Parks at JParks@cvsdvt.org or 871-6103 if you are available to help pop popcorn anytime between the hours of 8:00am - 1:00pm.  Thank you!!

Looking for gift ideas for your student?  Think PENCILS!!  Voyager students seem to be eating pencils these days and we are running low!
 


The Week in Mr. Merrill’s Room (⅚ Humanities):

Highlights:

  • Voyager just kicked off a 5-8 interdisciplinary one act playwriting unit. Students will work in groups to write, produce, direct, and perform a one act play. The 4 one acts will be performed in late January.

  • Students are also preparing for an International Day celebration. Performances include dance, songs, and fashion show. We will also have a taste fest, International museum, game, and craft rooms. Our International Day celebration will take place on Friday, December 22nd during the school day. We ask students to plan their food, performance, or activity well ahead of time!  We thank you in advance for your support on this project and will happily help students prepare here at school if needed. Students can access this assignment on Google Classroom.

  • Our National Geographic Bee competition started on Friday. We completed the first three rounds and will complete the last 4 rounds next week. The winner will move on to the school finals!

The Week in Ms. O’s Room (⅚ Math & Science):


Math 5:
Highlights from the week include:  
  • Modeling decimal addition and subtraction and revising our thinking on trading (trading a tenth for 10 hundredths).
  • Evaluating why the traditional algorithm works for adding and subtracting whole numbers (and how trading in base ten pieces is the same as borrowing) and then seeing that this same method works for decimals as long as you use the decimal point to align place value.
  • Comparing decimals by focusing in on how many of each place value we have.
  • Writing decimals without using the word point and writing numbers from words that represent a number.
Math 6:  
Highlights from the week include:
  • Coming to agreement on the division algorithms for fractions.
  • Deciding which operation would be necessary to solve a fraction word problem.
  • Practicing the development of fact families, so that we can solve problems that have an unknown value (variable) in the expression.
  • Creating our own review sheet for the Unit Assessment on Monday.
  • A Flip Quiz Jeopardy Game to practice the skills in Let’s Be Rational.
⅚ Science:
Highlights from the week include:
  • Learning about Phenomena of the 19th Century:  Orsted and Ampere both made discoveries about electric current long before lightbulbs, telephones, and motors.  These discoveries were instrumental in creating useful things to do necessary jobs.  Learning from their perspective helps us to see how a simple discovery blew open the industrial revolution.
  • Discovering that current (flowing electrons) makes a circuit magnetic.  Evidence:  a compass needle moves when placed under a wire in a closed circuit.
  • Creating electromagnets and determining that coiled wire makes an electromagnet stronger.  Evidence:  when we coil more wire, we can pick up more paperclips.
  • Determining that more volts also makes a stronger electromagnet.  Evidence:  a 12 V battery picked up more paperclips (with 45 coils) than a 6 V did with the same coils.



The Week in Mr. Roof’s Room (⅞ Humanities):
ELA: We continued our independent reading with reading log 14. The focus this week is on conflict, both internal and external. In class, we read the holiday season classic A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens, adapted by Frederick Gaines. This is to help us learn about the major components of drama, and to practice for our Voyager one acts. Students took turns reading the script aloud, and noting differences between drama writing and literature.  Students also worked on their spelling, grammar, and punctuation skills by completing 30 minutes of IXL.


Social Studies: This week, we prepared for our Voyager International Festival, which will take place in the morning on Friday, 12/22. Students are able to choose from a variety of products/performances to share, and can be in groups or solo. Students are conducting research regarding food, music/dance, games, arts/crafts, and/or artifacts, and then present their findings and products at our festival. It should be exciting and fun. This is an extension of our World Cultures Research project, which is moving along. Students have selected a region or country of the world to study in-depth, and are conducting research on all of the factors and components of the five themes of geography. One of the important skills we are working on is citing sources. This ensures that we give credit to those who have created what we use. As usual, we also watched CNN 10, and worked on summarizing, including text evidence.


The Week from Ms. Q’s Room (⅞ Math & Science):


CMP8
We began the week with completing our GGG assessment.  We started our “Looking For Pythagoras” with vocabulary and  review of square roots and perfect squares.  We tried our hands at finding the area of irregular figures on dot matrix paper and discussed strategies to solve these types of problems.
We then began looking  where a square root lies on a number line.  We utilized perfect squares such as 4, 9 to find the 5.  This we did without use of a calculator.  All of these skills will help us to understand the Pythagorean Theroeom.

CMP7
At the start of the week, students completed their “Accentuate the Negative” Unit test and explored vocabulary for our new unit, “Stretching and Shrinking”.  Along the way we reviewed the steps you take to add, subtract, multiply and divide fractions. We explored a problem that had us decide the height of the Statue of Liberty with just two measures given; the tablet and the width of the arm.  Students were focused and showed some wonderful problem solving strategies.  We then moved onto finding the height of the mystery teacher in a picture based on a single clue.  Students used a variety of techniques and shared their thinking with class.  Finally, we ended the week with using some hight tech rubber band devices to enlarge pictures.  We discussed how figures are similar and what that means in relation to side lengths and angles.


Science 7th/8th

The week began with students selecting a genetic disease.  They learned about the how the disease is trasmitted genetically, how it impacts on the body, what population the disease is typically found, treatments and other interesting facts.  Students could create an accessible brochure or poster.  Researching the gene location of the disease  allowed students to draw a model of the chromosome.  Students will present their diseases next week.

Friday, December 8, 2017

Week of December 4th - 8th

TA’s Notes:
***Please do not send in any food to be shared among Voyager students***
***Please notify us if your child has strep.  Thank you for this courtesy.***

Voyager Homework Club- Tuesdays (2:00-3:30pm) and Wednesdays (3:00-4:30pm)


Notes from Ms. Sherman:

Thank you SOOOOOOO very much to those of you that joined us for our 9th annual Voyager night. We all love to get together and see families before we go for our winter break. Thank you also to all the brave students that put themselves out there to perform on stage and to our sound and light crew, Baylin and Tyler. The food was great, the company was merry, and the night was bright. THANKS AGAIN!

P.S. If you have photos or videos from the night, please email to me at: csherman@cvsdvt.org
           

POLAR EXPRESS IS THIS SATURDAY!
See you there at 3:30!

The Week in Mr. Merrill’s Room (⅚ Humanities):
Highlights
Book Talks: Students presented their book talk using the organizer they completed as a guide.
Voyager Play Challenge: We kicked off our Voyager Play Challenge this week. Students are working in combined challenge teams to write a one act script to perform during our play unit in January.
World Almanac - We had a lot of fun searching a world almanac for largest, smallest, oldest, highest and lowest in a variety of categories. We found the most populated country, largest country, oldest country, lowest life expectancy etc.
5 Themes of Geography SlideShow: Students completed and shared (via musical chairs) a Google SlideShow on their selected country.



The Week in Ms. O’s Room (⅚ Math & Science):

Math 5:

It was the week of code, so we spent two days doing coded unplugged.  Monday, students wrote a code for a design on a four by four grid.  They then shared this code with a partner who then tried to read the code and recreate the design.  Afterwards we wrote code for a bunny on the Google Doodle of the day, so that the bunny could find and eat carrots.  I happened upon it at the end of class, and of course, kids were so psyched about it!  Today, we did another unplugged coding activity, where 5th graders read code for a treasure hunt written by 6th graders.  6th graders hid five colored dots in the hallways around school and then wrote code to be followed in the hunt.  We had a few unclear coding directives, but for the most part, students
enjoyed reading code to locate their colored dots.

We began Unit 3 this week, a unit on decimals.  We discussed place value, when looking at the question, are all 3’s created equal? (in the number 33,333.33).  We played around with two problem strings, one called Give and Take and the other called Ten times more, both to look at the the effect operations have on decimals.


Math 6:  

We are driving toward the division algorithm for fractions and finding great generalizations along the way.  Ideas we have been uncovering:  That when you divide by a number, say 3,  it is the same as taking a fraction of that number, ⅓ of a number.  Finding ⅓ of a number is multiplying ⅓ x that number, so we can then see that a reciprocal operation can get us to the same endpoint, when we use the reciprocal of that number.  Hard to explain...let’s see if this example helps:

45 ÷ 3 is the same at ⅓ of 45.  Since the word ‘of’ in this case means multiply, then we flip the operation from division to multiplication and flip 3/1 to become ⅓ .  Now you can see that dividing by a number is the same as multiplying by the reciprocal.  We can then apply that here:

¾  ÷ ½ we know will be 1 ½ when we model this. We can also see that we can do 3 ÷ 1 (divide numerators) and 4 ÷ 2 (divide denominators) and get 3/2.  Or we can take ¾ x 2/1 = 6/4 or 1 ½ .

It was the week of CODE, so students had several opportunities to write code.  Today, students wrote code for a treasure hunt for 5th grade.    
⅚ Science:

We have had such fun with magnets last week and electricity this week.  We began last week looking at properties of magnets and making visible some of the things that seem invisible about magnets.  See the photos below of fun demonstrations and activities we did.  We also began investigations on electricity this week and are moving toward the connection between magnetism and electricity.


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Iron filings and compasses make the magnetic field visible.                                                            Flying paperclips!




The Week from Ms. Q’s Room (⅞ Math & Science):

CMP8
This week we practiced adding, subtracting, dividing and multiplying numbers in scientific notation.  Each of these operations have distinct rules that at times combine the Commutative Property and exponent rules.  We rounded out the week with Growing, Growing, Growing Review stations.  On Friday we began our assessment.  

CMP7
This week was a mishmash of mathematical models.  We looked at solving inequalities, practiced multiplying and dividing integers and began balancing algebraic equations.  Students also had an Accentuate the Negative review with stations around the room.  We began our assessment on Friday.

Science
How are traits inherited? We took a closer look at genetics and dominant and recessive traits by breeding dragons. Through a series of allele selections students were able to create babies with interesting differences. Some dragons were fire breathers, some had horns and some had red wings and blue bodies.  We then took parent dragons with different traits and created Punnett squares.
In this Punnett Square the TT genotype represents the mother with a red tail.  The father has a yellow tail which has a recessive tt.  When the boxes are filled in you can see the possible outcomes of the children. Half will have red tails and half will have yellow tails.  
We ended the week starting our research of types of genetic mutations.  Next week we will begin looking at genetic disorders.


This week in Mr. Roof’s ELA and Social Studies classes

ELA:  This week, we worked on independent reading log 13. Students are making impressive literature decisions. It is exciting to see the growth each week. In an attempt to bring some excitement to sharing about our books, students entered a Library of Congress contest that involved writing a letter to an author about a book that has changed them or their point of view of the world. We worked on letter writing for the week, making sure we supported our ideas with evidence. The letters were mailed on Friday with the possibility of students winning $200 as a runner up, or $1000 as a finalist. Very cool!  

Social Studies: We were all over the place this week!  On Monday, we had our usual current events study with Carl Azuz from CNN 10. On Tuesday and Wednesday, students continued work on the GEO B, which were are slowly arriving at a Voyager champion that will represent us in a schoolwide competition. On Thursday, we read an article about the December 7th, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, and wrote prompt responses.