Friday, September 13, 2013

Week of September 9

Important Info from the Voyager TA

Lots of information coming home with students this week!
  • Jupiter Grade logins were sent home today allowing you to view your child’s current grades, homework, missing assignments, test scores and report cards.
  • School picture day is next Wednesday the 18th!  Please send in order forms if you would like to order school pictures.
  • An information sheet regarding classrooms being peanut and nut free this year.
  • Any students who checked out library books over the summer need to return these books asap!
  • Please call or e-mail me if your child will be out for the day, late coming in, picked up early or if you need anything related to Voyager house.

Katie Fieldsend       
871-6148       
KFieldsend@cssu.org

Voyager House News:

  • Very important!!!  Voyager and 5-8 Curriculum Night - Tuesday, September 17th
           
For curriculum night parents will start on their student's team (6:30-7:30) and then  go to the auditorium from 7:30-8:00 pm for a big picture overview.
The Voyager teachers will review the website, student schedule, curriculum, homework, Jupiter Grades, reporting and answer questions.

  • Advisory Groups:  Voyager 5th and 6th graders each have a 7th or 8th grade mentor.  Among other mentor mentee get togethers, we have placed each mentor and mentee together in an advisory group so that they can begin his/her two year journey with his/her mentor or continue it from last year.  We will continue to schedule time into advisory for mentees to be mentored!  Our first theme of the advisory year is Healthy ME!  Find out what kind of healthy activity your child is participating in next week!

  • Literature Groups:  We began literature groups this week on our theme, Peace and Social Justice.  Ask your Voyager student what they are reading.  





One Half of the Equation:  News from the ⅚ side

The Schedule!  I’m sure you are all wondering what your kiddo does each day.  Here’s the good news...they are busy!  Aside from a few little edits to the schedule, our learning blocks are as follows:

8:10 5th Grade Skills; 6th Grade Related Arts and World Language
8:50 Related Arts and World Language
9:30 6th Grade Math; 5th Grade Humanities
10:30 5th Grade Math; 6th Grade Humanities
11:30 Literature and Advisory
11:50 Guided Study Hall (5th Grade Language to begin Oct)
12:30 Lunch and Recess
1:15 and 2:00 Science and Humanities multiage

Mr. Merrill’s 5/6 Humanities Wrap Up

This week students organized their Humanities binder.  The binder has 4 dividers, current (work), past (work), class tools, and readings.  We also made a reading response notebook with special tabs to be used for  whole class literature books, read alouds, and independent reading activities.  Student composition books were covered with a collage for writing inspiration, and tabs were also added for entries, writing strategies, and a personal spelling list.  The other spiral will be used as a Humanities notebook, for current events, notes, and vocabulary.  
In the morning, Humanities class is divided by grade level.  The focus of this period will be on reading and writing instruction.  The work we do will be connected to the literature, historical, global, and current events that we will be studying throughout the school year.  In the afternoon, the Humanities class is multiage, and lessons will have a “social studies” focus, be project oriented, but continue to emphasize the writing and reading instruction from the morning’s work.  
This week, students studied great peacemakers, writing and creating an illustrated “Dream for Peace” poem, and started research on a group project.  The project is to create a Peace Quilt (paper) that celebrates and identifies the 5 W’s (who, what, when, where, why) of a great peacemaker’s accomplishments.  
This assignment, along with the handouts will be available on Jupiter Grades next week.  Homework will be posted in Jupiter Grades, which will be reviewed at our open house on Tuesday.

Ms. O’s Math and Science Shout Out

Math 5:  Students in 5th grade kicked off the year with a little algebra!  Cube sequences has been our focus this week...how do we identify a pattern in a growing sequence of cubes so that we can generalize it for future cube sequences?  Students have been building and counting and seeing into the future (my determining the 201st arrangement pattern) and have been doing very well!  There is more to come, but our next stop will be in building math models for multiplication.

Our Math Habit of Interaction goals focus on the following habits:  Private Reasoning Time, Explaining my Reasoning, and Listening to Understand.  All students made a goal for this first trimester and will be self-assessing progress on this goal. So far our classroom has been quiet, quiet, and then loud, loud ( in a good way).  

Kathy Rossier is a co-teacher in our room.  We are lucky to have such expertise and support!

Math 6:  Students have been assigned a Unit Project, in which they much write a children’s book about a special number they have chosen.  The book’s theme is what makes my number unique?  We dived headfirst into attributes of a number this week by playing two games, the Factor Game and the Product Game.  While some attributes like odd and even may be review, we have learned new math language like abundant, deficient, composite, prime, and perfect numbers.  Students will use these features to describe their number and introduce it to the world in book form.

We will be addressing the photo blog from the summer through some themed studies on specific math concepts that we might find in nature.  If your Voyager did not do the summer blog, they should work on taking pictures and posting them on the blog so that next week, we can pick that project up again.

Our Math Habit of Interaction goals focus on the following habits:  Private Reasoning Time, Explaining my Reasoning, and Listening to Understand.  All students made a goal for this first trimester and will be self-assessing progress on this goal. So far our classroom has been quiet, quiet, and then loud, loud ( in a good way).  

Math Homework Check-in

Many parents have been patiently awaiting our homework policy and schedule.  The students are finally in a routine and so they are ready to invite you in.  

  • 5th grade math students have received both Home Connection packets and Practice packets in advance.  By providing students with a stapled packet, students who struggle with the daily papers here and there can receive all of the assignments and just do them when they are assigned. It’s a no mess solution!   It keeps binders neater and prevents the paper scatter that we have all experienced in our children’s backpacks! Occasionally students will have math homework in a book, but this will not happen very often.  There is plenty of homework in the unit packets you see in their math/science binder.  You should expect math homework on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday each week.  Students will also be expected to do FASTT math or Fraction Nation 4 times a week.  All homework is due the next day unless otherwise indicated.  

  • 6th grade math students are in the 6th grade Connected Math book, Prime Time.  This book is not a book students can write in.  Therefore all homework should be done in the learning log (the math spiral).  6th graders have also received a practice skills packet.  Homework is assigned daily, Monday-Thursday and is dependent on progress in class.  At the end of each investigation, there is a series of 40-50 problems and students will have 5-8 problems, due the next day, unless otherwise indicated.  6th graders are also still responsible for achieving computational fluency and are therefore required to do 4 days a week of online enrichment in this area.  Student FASTT Math, Fraction Nation, and soon Kahn Academy have been customized depending on the growth your child needs in this area or the enrichment they are ready for!  

Science ⅚:  No Homework as of this moment!  We began our unit on Earth’s Systems with a memory test!  How many objects can you remember from the table filled with objects made or originating from materials from Earth’s surface?  Some students were able to remember up to 20 objects and then guess the theme!  We took a short journey to the center of the Earth with the question in mind, could we actually do it?  We spent the rest of the week learning about the geosphere (the Earth’s physical structure) and the hydrosphere (water on Earth) as it relates to the Earth’s crust.  Students are responsible for learning new vocabulary like geosphere, hydrosphere, biosphere, and atmosphere, in addition to knowing the layers of the Earth.  Onto earthquakes and volcanoes in the coming weeks.

The Week in Ms. Wesnak’s Room - Humanities 7/8

This week has been busy, but has been such a great start to the year. We started the week off with our usual IRM (Independent Reading Monday) during our Morning Humanities, and followed it up with Current Events in the afternoon. This will be a weekly thing in Humanities as a way to ease our minds and bodies into the week. As our first full week continued we began our work on the first graded writing piece of the year: My Summer Vacation in a LEAF! Students are being asked to write about their summer vacations via the LEAF paragraph format. In class students were given time to work, but also time to discuss major parts of the paragraph such as the lead sentence/hook and transition words. This writing piece will be the first graded writing piece of the year! During our afternoon classes we have been discussing global peace. Students are being asked to put on a “chef hat” as they prepare a recipe for global peace, as one of our first projects of the school year! As prep for our first major unit of the year, all of WCS is starting with a mini unit on peace by focusing on Peace Day and the Peace One Day project. We have discussed topics such as why is Peace Day important, and could something like this actually work? We also looked at photographs and discussed the consequences of war. Today we kicked off our studies on the United Nations and its connection to the Peace One Day project. Please talk to your student about Peace Day and what the goal of Peace Day is. It would even be fun to come up with an activity to do on Peace Day (which is Saturday, September 21st) to celebrate!!

Ms. Q’s Corner
CMP8
Over the past few weeks we have reviewed number systems, commutative, associative and distributive properties of multiplication and division, multi-step algebraic problems, order of operations, mixed number operations and exponent rules.  These topics are preparing us for the upcoming NECAP tests and also retooling our mathematical minds for our first CMP unit Thinking With Mathematical Models.  Students had a quiz on Friday for the first full week of classes.

CMP7
The 7th graders revved up their mathematical minds with the introduction of number sets and how they interface. We reviewed mathematical operations using positive and negative integers and practiced solving multi-step equations using PEMDAS (Order of Operations).  We reviewed geometry vocabulary and constructed some geometric figures.  All of these topics are part of our NECAP review and a great place to start before jumping into our first  CMP book called Variables and Patterns.  Students took a brief quiz on Friday.

7/8 Science
What do engineers do?  We became student engineers and worked to solve a problem through design engineering. The problem: How can we transport GI Joe/Jane safely from a high cliff,  over a valley of seething lava, to a plateau where he/she will be rescued? Using a variety of strategies students designed, tested and redesigned an evacuation system to get their comrade out of danger.  We discussed the scientific principles observed in our devices, and the design successes and failures.

Voyager Grading System

Introduction:  Voyager House uses an online grading system, Jupiter Grades, in order to help a student understand the expectations and commitments of learning in their classrooms.  The grading system clearly outlines how an assignment is categorized and helps students, parents, and teachers see student strengths and areas for growth.  This grading system works across all core subject areas and learning settings and has been adopted in all Voyager grades 5-8.

Assignment Categorization:  Voyager students will see each assignment categorized according to the 4 categories listed below:  

  • Accountability:  This category is all about a student’s ability to do what is expected both in the classroom and independently.  We will categorize homework here, as well as being prepared to learn, peer review activities, self-assessments, oral participation in the class, among others.
  • Practice:  This category is designed to measure a student’s commitment to classwork, first drafts, graded homework, science journals, short writing pieces, and online practice like FASTT Math or Kahn Academy.
  • Performance:  This category captures performance on projects, presentations, major writing pieces, science fair, lab reports.  
  • Quiz/Test:  This category includes quizzes and tests in a given core area.

Assignments categorized under accountability, practice, performance, and tests will be scored on a 4 point scoring system.  See details below.
  • Accountability (0-4) - Homework completion, prepared to learn (completed and on time = 4, on time and nearly complete = 3, late or incomplete = 2, significantly late = 1, never turned in = 0)
  • Practice (0-4) - Classwork, graded hw, drafts, journaling, science journal, short writing pieces, math additional practices (rubrics)
  • Performance (0-4) - Projects, presentations, major writing pieces, science fair, lab reports (rubrics)
  • Test/Quiz - (0-4) The percentile grade will be noted in the comment section, so that you can see where you fall in the grade range.

These 4 categories will be weighted! The weight of each category will vary from Math/Science to Humanities due to the high number of tests in Math and high level of projects/major writing pieces in Humanities. Students and families will be made aware of these weights. In addition to getting information on each of the four categories, your child will receive an overall cumulative score for the core subject area.

Scoring Specifics in a 0-4 Scoring System

4: 95-100 - Exceeds Expectation,
3: 85-94 - Meets Expectation
2: 75-84 - Working Towards Proficiency
1: 74 and Below - Needs Assistance to Meet Expectation
0: Never turned in by end of trimester

Jupiter Grades Abbreviations to Know:
/: Missing or not completed
EX: Excused from the assignment
ABS: Absent; due upon return or shortly thereafter

Reporting/Grade Reports:
We are still a standards-based house. Our teaching and rubrics reflect and implement standards. Our grade reports reflect performance and are influenced by the standards we meet in class. At the end of each trimester students will take home a large manilla folder that will be filled with all of their work and reflections from the trimester, along with their final Grade Report. Parents and guardians are expected to receive the envelope, review the work and Grade Report with their child, and then return the EMPTY envelope to school. Grade reports will still have a narrative about what each class achieved during the trimester and will also have a list of key standards met. Grade reports for each trimester will include the following:
  • A narrative about the class
  • A list of key standards met
  • One overall grade for the class
  • Four  individual grades, one for each of the four categories
  • Comments from the teacher












Friday, September 6, 2013

Week of September 1

TA’s Notes

  • Day Planners are now being covered by Voyager house so there is no need to send in $7 for day planners!  If you have already sent in the money, it was sent home in an envelope with each student today.
  • Picture day is Wednesday, Sept. 18th!  Order forms were sent home with students.
  • Families as Partners (FAP) has kicked off their donation drive, Williston Schools Annual Fund.  This group has already funded Voyager’s two field trips and will assist in funding much more throughout the year.  A suggested donation of $45 per Voyager student is much appreciated!  

Katie Fieldsend     871-6148    KFieldsend@cssu.org

Highlights of the Week in Voyager House
We had a great WEEK!  Students have really shown up to learn.  Special shout out to 8th graders who are showing just how committed they are to leadership in the house.  Ask your 8th grader about the Kiva meeting today.

  • What is Peace One Day?:  Jeremy Gilley is an actor turned filmmaker, who in the late 1990s became preoccupied with questions about the fundamental nature of humanity and the issue of peace. He decided to explore these through the medium of film, and specifically, to create a documentary following his campaign to establish an annual day of ceasefire and non-violence.
  • In 1999, Jeremy founded Peace One Day, a non-profit organisation, and in 2001 Peace One Day’s efforts were rewarded when the member states of the United Nations unanimously adopted the first ever annual day of global ceasefire and non-violence on 21 September – Peace Day.
  • Peace One Day’s objective is to institutionalise Peace Day 21 September, making it a day that is self-sustaining, an annual day of global unity, a day of intercultural cooperation on a scale that humanity has never known.
  • For the month of September, Williston Central School is studying global issues, using “Peace One Day”, as a platform for the unit.  On Wednesday, students watched a 32 minute documentary on the the creation of Peace One Day.  Later, students generated questions for student representatives who had a SkypeTalk today with the founder of Peace One Day, Jeremy Gilley.
  • Next, week ⅚ students will begin a project on Peacemakers and ⅞ students will be studying the Consequences of War and the United Nations.
  • Literature groups will also start their first rotation next week, and all books are connected to the theme of Social Justice and Peace.

  • Assessments:  Thursday was assessment day!  We appreciated the effort put in by each student to focus and hang in there during our fact finding missions in reading comprehension, spelling and math computational fluency.  

  • Classes Begin:  Friday was our first day following the regular schedule.  Students are doing a lot of housekeeping, to organize for learning, to learn how to transition, to persevere through less than inspiring prep work necessary for each class.  Students received planners this week (take a look!), information about grading systems, and for some books for class.  We appreciate all of the efforts you made to buy such wonderful school supplies.  Ready, set, go!

Voyager FAP
Voyager House is looking for co-representatives for the Voyager FAP.  We have a couple people interested, but the more support we have, the easier the work.  Voyager House has really benefited from having amazing representatives and parent support in the past.  Please help us keep this momentum going forward.  Contact Aron Merrill if you are interested.

Peanut Allergy Alert to Families
There are students in your child’s classrooms this year that have a life threatening allergy to eggs, all peanut products and all other nuts.  For this reason, students in our classrooms will be peanut and nut free this year.

Please do not send any of the following items to school for snack:
  • Peanuts
  • Peanut butter
  • Nuts such as almonds, walnuts, cashews, etc.
  • Snack crackers with peanut butter fillings
  • Coconut

Please check the labels on prepared foods and mixes.  It will state on the ingredient label if any peanut or nut products are used.  Classroom teachers will be monitoring snacks and lunch to assure this child’s safety.  Additionally, please talk with the classroom teacher prior to sending food in for birthdays or other special occasions.  Attached please find information for reading labels.

Students with peanut butter lunches can sit at a peanut/nut free table in the cafeteria for easier monitoring. Students will be asked to wash their hands when entering the classroom in the morning and when they return from lunch.

I understand that this request may be an inconvenience for you, but it could save a child’s life.  If you have any questions or concerns please feel free to speak with me or our school nurse.  Thank you for your help in making Williston Central School and Allen Brook School a safe place for every student.


HEALTHY PEANUT FREE/TREE NUT FREE SNACKS

  • fresh fruit and dried fruit
  • apple sauce
  • fruit with yogurt dip
  • ants on log (banana sliced lengthwise, cream cheese, raisins)
  • ants on hill (half cored apple, cream cheese, raisins)
  • carrots, celery, raw veggies, with ranch dressing
  • cream cheese and jelly sandwich
  • pretzels (but NOTE: NOT SNYDER company pretzels, Snyders are all potentially nut contaminated) (Rold Gold brand is ok)
  • cheese and crackers (but NOTE: NOT packaged cheese and crackers, and NOT
  • RITZ crackers and cheese sandwiched crackers)
  • GORP (cheerios, raisins, pretzels)
  • popcorn (with cheese shake parmesan or cheddar)
  • quick breads - corn, apple, blueberry
  • gold fish crackers
  • tuna fish quarters
  • cooked pasta
  • string cheese
  • cereal bars (CHECK LABELS, Nutrigrain are ok, Special K strawberry and
  • blueberry are ok...but not all are ok)
  • salsa /chips
  • toast
  • fruit yogurt
  • non sweetened cereals (CHECK LABELS)

*PLEASE DO NOT SEND* the following as these are all nut containing or nut  contaminated products and would be of potential harm if a nut-allergic  person ate any of these products:

  • elmo snacks
  • chex mix
  • M & M's
  • packaged cheese and crackers
  • candy (For example, Brach company candies are all potentially nut contaminated)
  • Snyder pretzel company products are all potentially nut contaminated
  • granola bars (most all are nut containing or nut contaminated)
  • yogurt covered raisins
  • anything baked with Nestle chocolate chips
  • sunflower seeds
  • Sunbelt company snacks
  • Little Debbie company snacks
  • most Entennmann's company bakery products
  • most packaged cookies

*As far as sending in birthday cupcakes or cookies:*
NEED to READ LABELS and CHECK for ALLERGY ALERTS under INGREDIENT LIST
**chocolate chip cookies made with Hershey chocolate chips, Hannaford brand chocolate chips,     
   Ghirardelli chocolate chips are ok
**oreo cookies are ok
**Duncan Hines , Pillsbury, and Betty Crocker cake mixes are okay, and
   matching frostings are ok as long as it is the regular frosting (BUT
**NOTE that THE WHIPPED FROSTINGS ARE NOT SAFE)
**pudding is ok
**sprinkles are ok, but still please check labels carefully
**homemade cookies and cakes are great, as long as no nuts are added, and no
   nut butters, nut flavorings or nut-contaminated products are used
**Most local bakeries will not guarantee their cakes, cupcakes, or muffins are peanut and tree
   nut free and so should be avoided