Friday, January 25, 2019

Week of January 21st - 25th

UPCOMING EVENTS, NEWS, and REMINDERS

Please visit the Voyager Web Site to keep in touch with what’s happening in Voyager this year.  


Voyager Welcomes Lauren Drasler to the Team
Hello Team Voyager Families,

My name is Lauren Drasler and I have recently enrolled in the Teacher Apprenticeship Program through Champlain College. I’m really excited to be starting my career as a teacher at Williston Central School. I was born and raised in southern Vermont, and recently moved back to Burlington after living in Plainfield, Vermont for a year.
I graduated from the University of Vermont in 2014 with a B.S. in Animal Science and a minor in Public Communication. It was through my time at UVM that I truly discovered my love of science, and further developed my passion for literature and writing through my communications classes. I am eager to share both of these interests with your students during my internship at Williston Central School.
For the past two years, I served as an AmeriCorps member in the Vermont Youth AmeriCorps program. During my first year of service I oversaw an internship program for high school students, and in my second year, I had the opportunity to assist with and grow a mentoring program in central Vermont. These experiences helped me to realize my interest in working with youth, and led me to pursue this teaching certification in both middle school English and science.
I am excited to share my experiences and ideas with your students in Voyager House at Williston Central School. Please feel free to e-mail me (ldrasler@cvsdvt.org)  with any questions. I look forward to meeting and working with you in the coming months.
Best,
Lauren Drasler

8th Grade Yearbook - Baby Pictures Wanted!
  • Every year the 8th graders get to submit a quote and baby picture to go along with their school picture. This is a fun part of the yearbook although it is not required. Every 8th grader received an email with a link for their quote. Baby pictures can be emailed to me or your house TA. If the picture is a hard copy you can also give that to me or your house TA. Please make sure your name and house is written on the back so we can get the picture back to you. Pictures will be returned to you within a week of the deadline. The deadline for quotes and baby pictures is February 18th.   
  • Please contact abeauregard@cvsdvt.org with any questions.
  • To order online go to jostensyearbooks.com
  • Yearbook Order Form
Meal Train For Matthew Yandow
  • More dates have been added to the Meal Train for Matthew Yandow, a former WCS student (and brother of Voyager's Mackenzie Yandow) who had a stroke on October 21 of last year. Matt is now a 16 year old sophomore at CVU, and is just returning part time to school after missing almost three months of instruction. He is also attending OT and PT appointments multiple times a week. His mom, Amy, has been busy driving him all around to all of these appointments and has not been able to return to work, so the meal train has been really helpful for the family. Please consider bringing them a meal if you know them and you are able to. Here is the Meal Train Link.  If it's inconvenient for you to bring a meal to their house after school, you can drop it off at Voyager House with Ted Milks and he will see that it gets delivered to the family. Thank you for considering!
Morning Drop-Off & Supervision
  • A clear and calm morning routines helps students to enter their school day successfully.  We are encountering more and more students coming to school between 7:30-7:55 am and  we are not equipped to handle the numbers. Please do not drop your child off prior to 7:55 am unless it is absolutely essential.   If you have to drop your child off early, please reinforce that the expectation is that students sitting in the front lobby until 7:55 am and engaging in a quiet activities.  Ex.  listening to music, reading or finishing homework.  Thanks for your help with this.  - Jackie Parks
Reminder from Ms. Sherman:
  • 8th Grade Challenge help is being provided through our Spark program on Thursdays. Harbor teachers, Ms. Griffin and Ms. Taylor, will be available on Thursdays from 3:00-4:30 to give students assistance from any house! It's a great time to get work done and get great advice and instruction on your challenge.
Absent Student? Appointment? Change in Bus ride home?
  • Please email tmilks@cvsdvt.org and your core teacher if your student will be absent, needs to be picked up during the day for an appointment, or will ride a different bus home. Core teacher emails are:
                     cobrien@cvsdvt.org
                     amerrill@cvsdvt.org
                          jroof@cvsdvt.org
                      mquatt@cvsdvt.org

After School Homework Club:  CHANGE IN DAYS OFFERED
  • Voyager House offers an after-school program to all 5-8 grade Voyager students who would like a smaller, quieter setting for work completion.  We accept any student who is motivated to be there and willing to work independently and who is open to support. We may also recommend this opportunity to students who are in need of work completion or who consistently fail to complete assigned work.  It has been a great program for students and we are happy to have the staffing and funding to offer it again this year. Ms. Kim and Ms. Allison, our two house paras, will be the contact adults for this group. 
  • Every Tuesday (2:00-3:00) and Thursday (3:00-4:40) right after dismissal.
  • Occasionally cancelled due to staffing.  We will let you know as far in advance as we know!
  • A late bus is available for transportation home.
  • Membership is through interest and motivation as well as strong recommendations from teachers.
Please do not bring in food to share.  We have many food restrictions on house.  Thanks!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IMPORTANT LINKS

 Voyager House Learning Tools for teachers, students, and parents
  • Google Site - an important site for regular communication coming from Voyager.  This site will be modified weekly and should be bookmarked on your desktop or laptop.  This site contains a link to weekly academic summaries as well as important upcoming events.  https://sites.google.com/cvsdvt.org/voyagerhouse/home
  • Google Classroom - an online planner platform where students can check on daily assignments.  This is in lieu of a paper planner.   Just ask your child to log in using his/her email.  It is important to know that this is not an assessment database.  We do not check completion of the assignment on this platform.  However, we do ask that YOUR CHILD press the button MARK AS DONE when an assignment is completed. This will make it easy for you and your child to discuss completion of work.
  • Google Mail - an email system used by Williston Central School.  All students have an email account and students use it regularly to communicate with peers around collaborative work and project-based learning.  This is a great way for teachers to communicate with students and a great way for students to get reminders about assignments from Google Classroom.  
  • Jumprope - an online platform for assessment of the targets.  Students can view weekly or biweekly his/her achievement on the targets by logging in using his/her email and a password.  This password was emailed to each student in a letter last week.   *Habits of Learning, like homework completion and collaborative learning skills will be posted on a biweekly schedule.  This is where you CAN SEE whether your child is in good standing on daily assignments. https://nyc.jumpro.pe/login/
  • Protean - an online Personalized Learning Plan (PLP) platform used primarily at this point by 7th and 8th graders. ⅚ students may post executive function skills reflections, personal interest projects, and other measures of growth and reflection after 1st trimester.  https://app.protean.me/index.html  
  • IXL - a program that supports students on math and language arts skills. https://www.ixl.com/signin
  • Moby Max - a math program used by ⅚ math students to build computational fluency and fill gaps in understanding on major concepts.  Students have a username and password for this program.
  • Typing Club - a program used by the ⅚ humanities students to build typing skills.
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ACADEMIC UPDATES

Survival Unit:

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE FOLLOWING TEAMS:

       1. The Dogcats: They were the overall survival challenge winners

       2. The FasterFish: They were the team "most likely to survive," based upon collaboration

       Check out more Survival pictures below!

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Mr. Roof - 7&8 Humanities

This week in humanities, students worked hard to write excellent book recommendations and to create original covers for the books. We then shared our recommendations as a class on Friday. In addition, students worked on IXL. Students are completing a diagnostic, which will help to make IXL more personalized and meaningful. We also had literature groups this week, and will finish them on Monday. In addition, we went to Harbor House's play The day the internet died,  which challenged us to think deeply about our use and reliance upon the internet.

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Ms.Q/ Mr. Sironi

CMP8
This week we completed exponential rotations that focused on a variety of problems that reviewed all aspects of our exponential growth functions, exponent rules, and operations with scientific notation.  Students created class records and then we began our assessment.   We will be moving on to a new unit next week called “It’s in the System” which will focus on linear systems and inequalities.

CMP7
The 7th graders began the week with constructing 3-D figures and comparing the surface area and volume of similar sized cylinders,triangular prisms and rectangular prisms.  We looked at the physical  properties of those figures to find out which one would have more our less surface area and volume.  Students completed class records and began their summative assessment.  Next week we will begin a new unit called “Stretching and Shrinking”  which looks at geometric scaling.

Science: 
This week was an abridged week in science.  We began our astronomy unit with the “Big Bang”. Students looked back 1.3825 x 1010 years and we started the conversation of what happened as the universe expanded.  Students began work on a timeline of what happened as the universe gained matter, energy, weak and strong nuclear forces, gravity and electromagnetism. We moved several hundred million years into the future to where stars and galaxies began to form.  As we move forward toward the present students will begin to get a glimpse of the vast nature of time, distance and space.

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Mr. Merrill - ⅚ Humanities
National Geographic Geo Bee: We had a great competition this week. Congratulations to Ian Kennelly and Kevin Lahiri for making it to the school finals. Kevin Lahiri won the school championship! He will be going to  Middlebury College to represent Williston in the state finals.

Economics: We kicked off our economics unit this week. Financial literacy is our first topic. Students read an article and then made posters with tips for spending, saving, investing, earning, and donating. We also started to make vocabulary maps for all of the economic vocabulary in the unit. Next week we will begin preparation for the Stock Market Game. Students will be on teams and investing $100,000 in the real, live stock market.

Survival Unit Wrap Up: Students used their notebooks from the survival unit to come up with details and topics to determine the “big ideas” learned from the unit. This was a writing exercise that required deep thinking skills.

More Survival Unit Pictures!




















Ms. O'Brien's Week!

Math 5: Students worked with a few real world problems in order to identify patterns and graph those patterns to allow us to know more about what was happening in the pattern as time passes. Students played a battleship type game and worked with a scenario where a kiddo is trying to figure out which job would be the better one to take, if he were trying to earn a certain amount of money. We then moved on to identifying attributes of polygons.



Math 6: Students have been working with some new resources this unit, that I believe have provided some good twists to the usual geometry resources we use. It has felt a little worksheety to be, which means that kids are working through a series of puzzling questions that allow some to move forward more quickly than others. We have had a lot of good conversations to pull us together, no matter how far students get, which I think has proven to be good differentiation.




Science ⅚: We launched our Earth, Moon and Beyond unit with Wile E. Coyote falling from the cliff, after Roadrunner scared him off! This is our anchoring phenomenon for the first part of the unit as we work to understand gravity and forces on Earth. Students brainstormed patterns they noticed and questions they have about the phenomenon on Friday and will begin to investigate next week.  

Friday, January 18, 2019

Week of January 14th - 18th

UPCOMING EVENTS, NEWS, and REMINDERS

Please visit the Voyager Web Site to keep in touch with what’s happening in Voyager this year.  


Voyager Welcomes Lauren Drasler to the Team
Hello Team Voyager Families,

My name is Lauren Drasler and I have recently enrolled in the Teacher Apprenticeship Program through Champlain College. I’m really excited to be starting my career as a teacher at Williston Central School. I was born and raised in southern Vermont, and recently moved back to Burlington after living in Plainfield, Vermont for a year.
I graduated from the University of Vermont in 2014 with a B.S. in Animal Science and a minor in Public Communication. It was through my time at UVM that I truly discovered my love of science, and further developed my passion for literature and writing through my communications classes. I am eager to share both of these interests with your students during my internship at Williston Central School.
For the past two years, I served as an AmeriCorps member in the Vermont Youth AmeriCorps program. During my first year of service I oversaw an internship program for high school students, and in my second year, I had the opportunity to assist with and grow a mentoring program in central Vermont. These experiences helped me to realize my interest in working with youth, and led me to pursue this teaching certification in both middle school English and science.
I am excited to share my experiences and ideas with your students in Voyager House at Williston Central School. Please feel free to e-mail me (ldrasler@cvsdvt.org)  with any questions. I look forward to meeting and working with you in the coming months.
Best,

Lauren Drasler
8th Grade Yearbook - Baby Pictures Wanted!
  • Every year the 8th graders get to submit a quote and baby picture to go along with their school picture. This is a fun part of the yearbook although it is not required. Every 8th grader received an email with a link for their quote. Baby pictures can be emailed to me or your house TA. If the picture is a hard copy you can also give that to me or your house TA. Please make sure your name and house is written on the back so we can get the picture back to you. Pictures will be returned to you within a week of the deadline. The deadline for quotes and baby pictures is February 18th.   
  • Please contact abeauregard@cvsdvt.org with any questions.
  • To order online go to jostensyearbooks.com
  • Yearbook Order Form
8th Grade Student / Parent Night @ CVU on Thursday, January 24, 2019

  • Where: Champlain Valley Union High School, CVU Gym
  • For:  8th Grade Parents and Students of the Class of 2023
  • When: Thursday, January 24, 6:30-8:00 p.m.
  • Click here for more information.
  • This evening will provide you and your son/daughter an introduction to the academic and elective programs they will experience in the 9th grade.
Morning Drop-Off & Supervision
  • A clear and calm morning routines helps students to enter their school day successfully.  We are encountering more and more students coming to school between 7:30-7:55 am and  we are not equipped to handle the numbers. Please do not drop your child off prior to 7:55 am unless it is absolutely essential.   If you have to drop your child off early, please reinforce that the expectation is that students sitting in the front lobby until 7:55 am and engaging in a quiet activities.  Ex.  listening to music, reading or finishing homework.  Thanks for your help with this.  - Jackie Parks
Reminder from Ms. Sherman:
  • 8th Grade Challenge help is being provided through our Spark program on Thursdays. Harbor teachers, Ms. Griffin and Ms. Taylor, will be available on Thursdays from 3:00-4:30 to give students assistance from any house! It's a great time to get work done and get great advice and instruction on your challenge.
Absent Student? Appointment? Change in Bus ride home?
  • Please email tmilks@cvsdvt.org and your core teacher if your student will be absent, needs to be picked up during the day for an appointment, or will ride a different bus home. Core teacher emails are:
                     cobrien@cvsdvt.org
                     amerrill@cvsdvt.org
                          jroof@cvsdvt.org
                      mquatt@cvsdvt.org

After School Homework Club:  CHANGE IN DAYS OFFERED
  • Voyager House offers an after-school program to all 5-8 grade Voyager students who would like a smaller, quieter setting for work completion.  We accept any student who is motivated to be there and willing to work independently and who is open to support. We may also recommend this opportunity to students who are in need of work completion or who consistently fail to complete assigned work.  It has been a great program for students and we are happy to have the staffing and funding to offer it again this year. Ms. Kim and Ms. Allison, our two house paras, will be the contact adults for this group. 
  • Every Tuesday (2:00-3:00) and Thursday (3:00-4:40) right after dismissal.
  • Occasionally cancelled due to staffing.  We will let you know as far in advance as we know!
  • A late bus is available for transportation home.
  • Membership is through interest and motivation as well as strong recommendations from teachers.
Please do not bring in food to share.  We have many food restrictions on house.  Thanks!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IMPORTANT LINKS

 Voyager House Learning Tools for teachers, students, and parents
  • Google Site - an important site for regular communication coming from Voyager.  This site will be modified weekly and should be bookmarked on your desktop or laptop.  This site contains a link to weekly academic summaries as well as important upcoming events.  https://sites.google.com/cvsdvt.org/voyagerhouse/home
  • Google Classroom - an online planner platform where students can check on daily assignments.  This is in lieu of a paper planner.   Just ask your child to log in using his/her email.  It is important to know that this is not an assessment database.  We do not check completion of the assignment on this platform.  However, we do ask that YOUR CHILD press the button MARK AS DONE when an assignment is completed. This will make it easy for you and your child to discuss completion of work.
  • Google Mail - an email system used by Williston Central School.  All students have an email account and students use it regularly to communicate with peers around collaborative work and project-based learning.  This is a great way for teachers to communicate with students and a great way for students to get reminders about assignments from Google Classroom.  
  • Jumprope - an online platform for assessment of the targets.  Students can view weekly or biweekly his/her achievement on the targets by logging in using his/her email and a password.  This password was emailed to each student in a letter last week.   *Habits of Learning, like homework completion and collaborative learning skills will be posted on a biweekly schedule.  This is where you CAN SEE whether your child is in good standing on daily assignments. https://nyc.jumpro.pe/login/
  • Protean - an online Personalized Learning Plan (PLP) platform used primarily at this point by 7th and 8th graders. ⅚ students may post executive function skills reflections, personal interest projects, and other measures of growth and reflection after 1st trimester.  https://app.protean.me/index.html  
  • IXL - a program that supports students on math and language arts skills. https://www.ixl.com/signin
  • Moby Max - a math program used by ⅚ math students to build computational fluency and fill gaps in understanding on major concepts.  Students have a username and password for this program.
  • Typing Club - a program used by the ⅚ humanities students to build typing skills.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ACADEMIC UPDATES

Mr. Roof - 7&8 Humanities
During our morning blocks, students met with their literature groups to discuss their books. Students reviewed vocabulary from the book and took notes on survival skills used by the characters. They will be using these notes for a final writing piece after the unit.
We also spent time reflecting and writing about the survival challenges.There were some great discussions on how teams can improve their performance. Taking time to read the directions, plan, assess their supplies and talents, read their survival notes, and communicate with each other were some of the big ideas that came up. We noticed a huge improvement in each teams efficiency by the end of the week.

Students had to work on an IXL diagnostic this week, which will help IXL to become more personalized in the future. Reading Log 14 is due Monday, and CNN 10 was due Friday, January 18. Students worked on the target of reasoning and analysis to explain evidence, as well as reading about the major fronts of World War I. Students will work on finishing our World War I unit with a project about the major battles of the war.

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Ms.Q/ Mr. Sironi

CMP8 - his week we revisited scientific notation.  Scientific notation is used when expressing very large numbers or very small numbers.  For example  the distance from the earth to the sun is 9.3 x 107 or the mass of a carbon atom which is 2.0 x 10-23.  We also investigated operations using scientific notation: addition, subtraction, division and multiplication.    All of these operations bring together our understanding of exponents and the rules governing them.  Next week we will review all of the major concepts in our Growing,Growing , Growing unit before we take our assessment.

CMP7 - This week in 7th-grade math, we have been finding the volume and surface area of various types of 3D shapes. These kinds of mathematical calculations are a multi-step process that push students to use multiple strategies and ways of thinking. We finished our juice-box project with presenting different 3D containers such as spheres, cones and cylinders that all  had the volume of 200 ml. We created our class public records in preparation for our summative assessment early next week.

Science: There were no science classes this week due to our Survival Unit!

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Mr. Merrill - 5/6 Humanities
During our morning blocks, students met with their literature groups to discuss their books. Students reviewed vocabulary from the book and took notes on survival skills used by the characters. They will be using these notes for a final writing piece after the unit.
We also spent time reflecting and writing about the survival challenges.There were some great discussions on how teams can improve their performance. Taking time to read the directions, plan, assess their supplies and talents, read their survival notes, and communicate with each other were some of the big ideas that came up. We noticed a huge improvement in each teams efficiency by the end of the week.
.
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Ms. O’Brien Classes

Math 5:  We finished up our Prime Time unit with an assessment this week.  Students have learned a ton about whole numbers, including how to solve problems with multiple operations, solve problems using the properties of numbers, and understanding properties of operations.  It was very foundational learning and I hope it will translate to new situations we face this year.  Our geometry unit began mid week and we have already mastered how to look at a growing cube sequence (what things must we observe in order to understand how it is growing) and how to plot points on a coordinate plane.  The algebraic connection to these two discrete learnings is that you can actually graph a pattern in order to understand the mathematics behind the pattern.  Good leaps into abstract math!

Math 6:  We finished up our Let’s Be Rational book this week.  It was a long and arduous unit which was supplemented over and over with rich algebraic reasoning.  Thus the extended time to complete.  We learned a ton and I’m hoping that our future units will shorten up, based on some solid understanding of fractions.  We are taking a break from CMP and so you may notice more handouts from a program called Open Up.  I’m making this decision based on the effective continuum of learning in this program and the richness of the materials.  If you find your child struggling at home, please let me know.

Science 5/6:  No science this week.  Just an amazing week outside!  Students applied a lot of workshop learning to the real world.  It was fun to remind them all that this whole simulation of winter survival was not real (which of course they knew) and that the point and purpose of the unit was to collaborate, apply learning and have an awesome attitude when working together.  We saw so many students step right up to the plate, and these efforts were noticed and celebrated.  Awards will go out Monday to winning teams, successful survivors, the allstar survivor team, and just overall to all students!  Talk about GRIT!  It took a lot for students to be outside for 90 minutes each day and we are super proud of them.  See these great photos below!























Friday, January 11, 2019

Week of January 7th - 11th

UPCOMING EVENTS, NEWS, and REMINDERS

Please visit the Voyager Web Site to keep in touch with what’s happening in Voyager this year.  

8th Grade Yearbook - Baby Pictures Wanted!
  • Every year the 8th graders get to submit a quote and baby picture to go along with their school picture. This is a fun part of the yearbook although it is not required. Every 8th grader received an email with a link for their quote. Baby pictures can be emailed to me or your house TA. If the picture is a hard copy you can also give that to me or your house TA. Please make sure your name and house is written on the back so we can get the picture back to you. Pictures will be returned to you within a week of the deadline. The deadline for quotes and baby pictures is February 18th.   
  • Please contact abeauregard@cvsdvt.org with any questions.
  • To order online go to jostensyearbooks.com
  • Yearbook Order Form
Deadline Extended - 8th Grade Field Trip to Ridin-Hy
  • Registration Deadline is now Friday, 1/18/19:
  • If you haven’t done so already, please review the documents below with your 8th grader about the exciting 8th Grade Celebration Trip to Ridin-Hy Ranch next spring. 
  • Registration and permission slips are due on or before January 18, 2019.
Ridin Hy Release Form

8th Grade Student / Parent Night @ CVU on Thursday, January 24, 2019
  • Where: Champlain Valley Union High School, CVU Gym
  • For:  8th Grade Parents and Students of the Class of 2023
  • When: Thursday, January 24, 6:30-8:00 p.m.
  • Click here for more information.
  • This evening will provide you and your son/daughter an introduction to the academic and elective programs they will experience in the 9th grade.
Morning Drop-Off & Supervision
  • A clear and calm morning routines helps students to enter their school day successfully.  We are encountering more and more students coming to school between 7:30-7:55 am and  we are not equipped to handle the numbers. Please do not drop your child off prior to 7:55 am unless it is absolutely essential.   If you have to drop your child off early, please reinforce that the expectation is that students sitting in the front lobby until 7:55 am and engaging in a quiet activities.  Ex.  listening to music, reading or finishing homework.  Thanks for your help with this.  - Jackie Parks
Reminder from Ms. Sherman:
  • 8th Grade Challenge help is being provided through our Spark program on Thursdays. Harbor teachers, Ms. Griffin and Ms. Taylor, will be available on Thursdays from 3:00-4:30 to give students assistance from any house! It's a great time to get work done and get great advice and instruction on your challenge.
Absent Student? Appointment? Change in Bus ride home?
  • Please email tmilks@cvsdvt.org and your core teacher if your student will be absent, needs to be picked up during the day for an appointment, or will ride a different bus home. Core teacher emails are:
                     cobrien@cvsdvt.org
                     amerrill@cvsdvt.org
                          jroof@cvsdvt.org
                      mquatt@cvsdvt.org

After School Homework Club:  CHANGE IN DAYS OFFERED
  • Voyager House offers an after-school program to all 5-8 grade Voyager students who would like a smaller, quieter setting for work completion.  We accept any student who is motivated to be there and willing to work independently and who is open to support. We may also recommend this opportunity to students who are in need of work completion or who consistently fail to complete assigned work.  It has been a great program for students and we are happy to have the staffing and funding to offer it again this year. Ms. Kim and Ms. Allison, our two house paras, will be the contact adults for this group. 
  • Every Tuesday (2:00-3:00) and Thursday (3:00-4:40) right after dismissal.
  • Occasionally cancelled due to staffing.  We will let you know as far in advance as we know!
  • A late bus is available for transportation home.
  • Membership is through interest and motivation as well as strong recommendations from teachers.
Please do not bring in food to share.  We have many food restrictions on house.  Thanks!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IMPORTANT LINKS

 Voyager House Learning Tools for teachers, students, and parents
  • Google Site - an important site for regular communication coming from Voyager.  This site will be modified weekly and should be bookmarked on your desktop or laptop.  This site contains a link to weekly academic summaries as well as important upcoming events.  https://sites.google.com/cvsdvt.org/voyagerhouse/home
  • Google Classroom - an online planner platform where students can check on daily assignments.  This is in lieu of a paper planner.   Just ask your child to log in using his/her email.  It is important to know that this is not an assessment database.  We do not check completion of the assignment on this platform.  However, we do ask that YOUR CHILD press the button MARK AS DONE when an assignment is completed. This will make it easy for you and your child to discuss completion of work.
  • Google Mail - an email system used by Williston Central School.  All students have an email account and students use it regularly to communicate with peers around collaborative work and project-based learning.  This is a great way for teachers to communicate with students and a great way for students to get reminders about assignments from Google Classroom.  
  • Jumprope - an online platform for assessment of the targets.  Students can view weekly or biweekly his/her achievement on the targets by logging in using his/her email and a password.  This password was emailed to each student in a letter last week.   *Habits of Learning, like homework completion and collaborative learning skills will be posted on a biweekly schedule.  This is where you CAN SEE whether your child is in good standing on daily assignments. https://nyc.jumpro.pe/login/
  • Protean - an online Personalized Learning Plan (PLP) platform used primarily at this point by 7th and 8th graders. ⅚ students may post executive function skills reflections, personal interest projects, and other measures of growth and reflection after 1st trimester.  https://app.protean.me/index.html  
  • IXL - a program that supports students on math and language arts skills. https://www.ixl.com/signin
  • Moby Max - a math program used by ⅚ math students to build computational fluency and fill gaps in understanding on major concepts.  Students have a username and password for this program.
  • Typing Club - a program used by the ⅚ humanities students to build typing skills.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ACADEMIC UPDATES
Survival Unit:
This week students participated in a variety of workshops to prepare for our survival unit challenges next week (see schedule below). 5th - 8th grade Challenge teams had to be sure that each workshop was attended by at least one member of the team. Information or skills from each workshop will be required in order to complete the challenges next week. Students are required to keep a notebook for each workshop attended. Notes are organized by main idea and supporting details using two column notes, power notes, or concept maps. This notebooks may be used during the challenges next week. A special thank you to Matthew Fitzgerald who shared his vast outdoor experiences with us this week.
Students should also be independently reading their survival literature group books. Each student has a graphic organizer to complete - noting any survival skills and the details of those skills used in the book. The organizers are due at the end of the unit.

Instructor
Thursday
Workshops
Friday AM
Workshops
10:40 - 11:15 1st
11:15 -11:50 2nd
Friday PM
Workshops
1:15 - 1:30 Kiva
1:30 - 2:10 1st
2:10 - 2:50 2nd
Aron Merrill
GPS Units/Signaling for help

#1 Primitive Hunting Weapons (outside)
#1 How to use a compass
Aron Merrill
#2 Primitive Hunting Weapons (outside)
#2 How to use a compass
Colleen O’Brien
Engineering with Insulators
Insulators
Exothermic Chemical Reactions
Insulators continued...
Exothermic Chemical Reactions continued...
Martha Quatt
Finding potable water and emergency stove
Stove Testing #1
Water Filters (2 per team)
Martha Quatt
Continued
Stove Testing #2
Water Filters continued...
Josh Roof
#1 Fire Making
#1 Shelter Building
#1 Map Making
Josh Roof

#2 Shelter Building
#2 Map Making
Ms. Drasler
#1 Boredom and Entertainment in the wilderness
8th grade meeting 10:40 only...
Knot tying and more
or
Hypothermia/First Aid
Courtney Sherman\
#2 Boredom and Entertainment in the wilderness
Hypothermia/First Aid
11:15 only...
Knot tying and more
o
Hypothermia/First Aid
Matthew Fitzgerald
#1 Outdoor Survival Preparation
X
#1 Outdoor Survival Preparation part 2
Matthew Fitzgerald
#2 Outdoor Survival Preparation
X
#2 Outdoor Survival Preparation part 2

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Ms.Q
CMP8
Burmese Pythons in Florida, mold growth on bread, and garter snake populations were the order of business for math class this week.  We investigated more exponential growth models with real life situations. We compared outcomes with different growth factors and initial values.  We became more fluid with finding equations from tables and graphs and began looking at equivalent exponential equations such as  .5(2x) = (2x-1).

CMP7
This week we continued our work with our “Juice box” problem.  The gist of this problem is to create a juice container that can hold 200 ml of fluid and have the least amount of surface area.  We learned how to calculate surface area and volume of rectangular, triangular prisms, and cylinders. Student created flat patterns or nets and then built scale models of their juice containers. This investigation will conclude next week with comparing their containers to the original juice box.  We will look at form and functionality and compare surface area to find a container that uses materials efficiently. Next week we will also have an assessment on volume and surface area of 3D objects.

Science: This week we had the survival workshops in the afternoon!
 
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Ms. O’Brien Classes

Math 5: We had a great week exploring the rules for solving problems with multiple terms and operations. We all learned PEMDAS when we were young and that acronym still helps us determine what problems to do first, second, third, etc. We like to see the acronym in this way.




So parentheses first, then exponents. Then multiplication or division (whichever comes first from the left to the right) and then addition or subtraction (whichever comes first from the left to the right). We practiced a lot of problems this week. Students have been solid in grabbing on to this recipe for these kinds of problems.




I also introduced the Distributive Property this week, bringing new meaning to our skill in finding greatest common factor of a pair of numbers. When we use distributive property in an area model we can think about models that look like the one below.






From this example you can see that the 3 is distributed through multiplication to both the 2 in (3 x 2) and to the 6 in (3 x 6). That way we can see the area of the this rectangle as 3 x 2 + 3 x 6. We can also this the area of this rectangle as 3 (2+6) or 3 x 8. Three expressions for one model. This skill looks easy now, but students will use this same construction for quadratics and other higher level math. It will help them also understand multiplication of multi-digit numbers, coming soon!






Math 6: We are wrapping up Let’s Be Rational and soon leaving fraction operations in our dust! I trust that most students at this point are proficient in all operations with fractions. This is great news! We did some Order of Operations problems this week with fractions, reviewing PEMDAS, but also reviewing operations with fractions. We also practiced how to find unknown values using Fact Families. Assessment on Tuesday! Then on to Geometry!




In addition, we worked on fraction word problems that required students to pay attention to key words in the problem that help them identify if you should add, subtract, multiply, or divide in order to get a solution. Determining the operation to use in a problem is the goal because it shows that students understand when they should add, or divide, for example. Great collaborative work this week.





Science ⅚: Winter Survival Games! See photos below.