8/27 Announcements Please look in your child's yellow homework folder tonight. There are two parent surveys I would like you to complete to help me to get to know more about your child from a parent's perspective. There is also a packet that includes various forms that need to be returned. Here is a list of everything that was sent home today: -Student Emergency Information -Household Application for Free and Reduced-Price Meals Packet: -Emergency Dismissal Form -Student Accident Coverage -A Letter (from Ms. Martinsen and Mr. Palmisano) About Computer Usage and Media Forms -Your Rights Regarding Student Records and Directory Information -Student Computer Use: Taking Responsibility Class Update We had an amazing first day of school! I can't believe how fast it went by! It was so much fun getting to know your children better and starting to build our classroom community. I had a blast eating lunch with the class. I'm looking forward to a wonderful, productive year! Today the students filled out a questionnaire all about themselves for me to read over. We reviewed some of our classroom routines, expectations for behavior, and positive consequences (ask them about tickets!). We got to know each other (our fellow classmates and our fellow third graders) better by playing some games. We also began to unpack and organize our supplies. We were able to begin organizing our binders and we labeled our homework folder. Tomorrow we will continue doing community building activities to learn more about each other. We will also talk more about behavioral expectations and work as a class to develop a set of classroom rules. We will finish sorting through our supplies and will label our folders and composition/spiral notebooks. Homework Monday's Homework: Students need to begin thinking about 5 different objects that represent their personality, their interests, and/or what's important to them to put in their Artifact Bag. Remember, the objects cannot have their name on it and should not contain pictures of them. The 5 objects should be put in a plain brown paper bag (like the ones used for lunch) and brought to school this Friday . Their name should not be on the bag either! On Friday I will collect all of the bags and then distribute them randomly throughout the class. The students will then look through the bag and use the objects as clues to try to figure out whose Artifact Bag it is. After that, students will share out the objects in their bag. This is a great way to learn more about each other and to see our common interests! As always, this should be written down in their agenda book and the packet/Artifact Bag assignment sheet should be in their yellow homework folder. I will present my Artifact Bag to the class tomorrow so they will have a better understanding of the assignment. Archive This is where I will post a link to our Class Website Archive, so if you miss a day you can go back and find out what you missed! Upcoming Events 9/3 Labor Day-No School 9/11 Back-to-School Night (7:00pm-9:00pm) 9/17 Rosh Hashanah-No School 9/26 Yom Kippur-No School 9/28 Early Release Day Schedules To see our class schedule, click here: Mrs. Talvac's Class Schedule To find out when we will be celebrating your child's birthday, click here: Birthday Celebration Schedule 8/28 Announcements Please look in your child's yellow homework folder tonight. I sent home a letter introducing myself, our morning routines, and our birthday celebration schedule. Thank you for returning the parent surveys I sent home! I really appreciate it. If you haven't returned the parent surveys, please return them as soon as possible. They really help me to get to know your child from a parent's perspective. Don't forget to send in the Emergency Dismissal Form, Emergency Information Form, and Computer Use Form. Tomorrow afternoon I will post a checklist so you can see what forms I have received and what forms I'm missing from you. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Here is a list of everything that was sent home with the students yesterday: -Student Emergency Information -Household Application for Free and Reduced-Price Meals Packet: -Emergency Dismissal Form -Student Accident Coverage -A Letter (from Ms. Martinsen and Mr. Palmisano) About Computer Usage and Media Forms -Your Rights Regarding Student Records and Directory Information -Student Computer Use: Taking Responsibility Class Update We started the day with a morning work activity that asked the students to think about and write down their goals for this year. This included "At Home" goals and "At School" goals. After that, I gave the students a room tour so they could become more familiar with the location of various things in our classroom (our classroom library, the jobs board, the supply bin, the math wall, etc). Then, we went to computer lab. At the computer lab, the students used an interactive 100s chart to practice counting by 2s, 3s, 4s, and 5s. While completing this activity, the students noticed lots of patterns and were thinking about which numbers they were shading in more than once. For example, 20 is shaded in when counting by 2s, 4s, and 5s. We will continue more 100s chart activities in class tomorrow. To see the website they used to access the interactive 100s chart, click here: http://www.teachingtables.co.uk/paint/paint99.html In the afternoon, we began reading the book How to Behave and Why. While reading, we discussed the advantages of being honest and the disadvantages of being dishonest. We will finish reading this book tomorrow and will work together to create our classroom rules. Later, we had some time to continue organizing our binders. We finished labeling the sections of our binder and labeled our blue Weekly Graded Work folder. Tomorrow, we will finish sorting through our remaining supplies and labeling our remaining spiral notebooks/composition books. Here is the order of the materials in their binders: 1. Pencil bag 2. Planner 3. Dividers: Sci/SS, Reading, Writing, WW/DOL, and Math 4. Notebook paper In science, we completed the K and W section of our science KWL chart (K=What we already know about science, W=what we want to learn about science, L=What we learned about science). After that, we discussed the definition of science. Then, we looked at various pictures. While looking at the pictures, the students discussed what elements of science they saw. Later, I did a demonstration with a ball to help the students understand that science is everywhere! We will continue our science explorations tomorrow. At the end of the day, we played a challenging memory name game! It was so much fun! I was really impressed with how well the students remembered their classmates' names and interests. We also had a fire drill. I was proud of how mature the students were! They walked quickly and quietly outside and waited patiently until we were given the signal to return. Homework Tuesday's Homework Math: On the 100s chart worksheet, count by 6 and shade the numbers in blue. Then, count by 7 and shade the numbers in red. Write down the numbers they have in common (that were shaded in blue and red). Other: Students need to begin thinking about 5 different objects that represent their personality, their interests, and/or what's important to them to put in their Artifact Bag. Remember, the objects cannot have their name on it and should not contain pictures of them. The 5 objects should be put in a plain brown paper bag (like the ones used for lunch) and brought to school this Friday 8/31. Their name should not be on the bag either! On Friday I will collect all of the bags and then distribute them randomly throughout the class. The students will then look through the bag and use the objects as clues to try to figure out whose Artifact Bag it is. After that, students will share out the objects in their bag. This is a great way to learn more about each other and to see our common interests! As always, this should be written down in their agenda book and the packet/Artifact Bag assignment sheet should be in their yellow homework folder. I will present my Artifact Bag to the class on Wednesday so they will have a better understanding of the assignment. Archive This is where I will post a link to our Class Website Archive, so if you miss a day you can go back and find out what you missed! Upcoming Events 9/3 Labor Day-No School 9/11 Back-to-School Night (7:00pm-9:00pm) 9/17 Rosh Hashanah-No School 9/26 Yom Kippur-No School 9/28 Early Release Day Schedules To see our class schedule, click here: Mrs. Talvac's Class Schedule To find out when we will be celebrating your child's birthday, click here: Birthday Celebration Schedule 8/29 Announcements Please look in your child's yellow homework folder tonight. They should have a copy of our class schedule and some notices. Thank you for returning the parent surveys I sent home! I really appreciate it. If you haven't returned the parent surveys, please return them as soon as possible. They really help me to get to know your child from a parent's perspective. Don't forget to send in the Emergency Dismissal Form, Emergency Information Form, and Computer Use Form. I posted a checklist below so you can see what forms I have received and what forms I'm missing from you. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update We started the morning by answering a question from our What Makes You Tick? Packet. This packet has a series of questions that help me to get to know the students better. Today I learned what each student liked best about second grade. We talked about writing in complete sentences and trying to add “because” to help explain our thinking. In social studies, we discussed what the students think social studies means and different things they have learned during social studies. I explained that today we would be focusing on maps. Then, I had the students sketch the shape of Maryland. Next, the students sketched the shape of the United States of America. Last, they put a star where they thought Maryland was located on their map of the USA. It was very interesting to see the students' sketches!! There were many different shapes and sizes of both Maryland and the USA. After that, the students began a mental mapping activity in which they had to draw a map of our classroom from a bird’s eye view. While the students were working, I also sketched a map of our classroom. We will compare our maps tomorrow to see what the differences and similarities are. We will focus on how a child’s perspective is often different than an adult’s perspective. We were able to finish labeling our folders and our spiral/composition notebooks today! In the afternoon, we finished reading the book How to Behave and Why. While reading, we discussed how to be honest, fair, strong, and wise. After that, we worked together as a class to discuss behavioral expectations and develop our classroom rules (posted below). The students did a great job! Classroom Rules 1.Show good listening at ALL times 2.Do YOUR best 3. Respect others and their things by treating them the way you want to be treated 4. Follow directions and behave appropriately at all times 5.Have fun! After that, the students had time to work on their All About Me Tee poster. I'm so proud of how hard they worked! I loved their creativity! We will finish the posters tomorrow. I will be hanging these posters up for Back-to-School Night! In math, the students worked on a pre-assessment that will help me to better understand what concepts they already know and what concepts they need to work on. This will help to guide my math instruction. Homework Wednesday's Homework Social Studies: Complete the bedroom "Mental Mapping" worksheet Other: Students need to begin thinking about 5 different objects that represent their personality, their interests, and/or what's important to them to put in their Artifact Bag. Remember, the objects cannot have their name on it and should not contain pictures of them. The 5 objects should be put in a plain brown paper bag (like the ones used for lunch) and brought to school this Friday 8/31. Their name should not be on the bag either! On Friday I will collect all of the bags and then distribute them randomly throughout the class. The students will then look through the bag and use the objects as clues to try to figure out whose Artifact Bag it is. After that, students will share out the objects in their bag. This is a great way to learn more about each other and to see our common interests! As always, this should be written down in their agenda book and the packet/Artifact Bag assignment sheet should be in their yellow homework folder. I presented my Artifact Bag to the class today, so they should have a strong understanding of the assignment. Archive This is where I will post a link to our Class Website Archive, so if you miss a day you can go back and find out what you missed! Upcoming Events 9/3 Labor Day-No School 9/11 Back-to-School Night (7:00pm-9:00pm) 9/17 Rosh Hashanah-No School 9/26 Yom Kippur-No School 9/28 Early Release Day Schedules To see our class schedule, click here: Mrs. Talvac's Class Schedule To find out when we will be celebrating your child's birthday, click here: Birthday Celebration Schedule 8/30 Announcements Thank you for returning the parent surveys I sent home! I really appreciate it. If you haven't returned the parent surveys, please return them as soon as possible. They really help me to get to know your child from a parent's perspective. Don't forget to send in the Emergency Dismissal Form, Emergency Information Form, and Computer Use Form. I posted a checklist below so you can see what forms I have received and what forms I'm missing from you. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update We started the morning by answering three more questions from our What Makes You Tick? Packet. This packet has a series of questions that help me to get to know the students better. Today I learned about three things they think a good teacher should do, how they would set up our classroom, and what they thought of the last book they read. In social studies, we began by discussing the activities we did in class yesterday. I used the satellite view of Google Maps to show the students the shape and location of Maryland and the United States. I also showed the students where Alaska and Hawaii are in relation to the 48 contiguous states. We practiced the cardinal directions (north, east, south, west) and identified states on the east and west coast. We also listed states that border Maryland. Later, I had the students guess the location of Potomac/Bethesda in the state of Maryland. Then, I zoomed in on Carderock Springs ES and a couple of students came to the Promethean to point out where they lived in relationship to Carderock Springs ES. Some students were unsure of the street they lived on. I gave them unofficial "homework" to memorize their full address (house number, street name, city, state, zip code). This is very important and students should have this memorized at their age. I loved how engaged and excited the students were about the activity. They especially enjoyed when I showed them a bird's eye view of my house! Later, we reviewed the activity we did in class yesterday in which the students and I drew a map of our classroom. Students compared/contrasted their maps of the classroom to my map of the classroom by using a venn diagram. It was fascinating to see the differences in our maps! We concluded that we each had a different perspective of the classroom based on where we were sitting and what objects are important to us. Before recess, we spent some time reviewing our class jobs and what responsibilities each job has. We also discussed how to check out a book from our classroom library. The students are becoming more familiar with our classroom routines and expectations. I'm so proud of them! In the afternoon, we reviewed our classroom rules and agreements. Then, we signed them! After that, the students had time to finish their All About Me Tee poster. I'm so proud of how hard they worked! I loved their creativity! I will be hanging these posters up for Back-to-School Night. Later, the students took a spelling inventory that I will use to help me determine what stage of spelling development each student is at. This will help to guide my instruction. In math, the students worked with partners to number a blank 100s chart. I challenged the students to work together to number the chart in a way other than counting by 1s. I was impressed with the multiple methods the students came up with! Once the students had numbered the hundreds chart, they shaded in the multiples of 9. Then, they shaded in the multiples of a number of their choice. After that, they wrote down the multiples that 9 and the number of their choice had in common. Later, students made their own color pattern on a hundreds chart and wrote a rule for the pattern of each color. See example below (please ignore the For Evaluation Only watermark): The rule for the red number pattern would be start at 0 and add 4. The rule for the blue number pattern would be start at 1 and add 4. The rule for the yellow number pattern would be start at 2 and add 4. The rule for the green number pattern would be start at 3 and add 4. At the end of class, I began a color pattern on the 100s chart (see below) and asked the students various questions. For example: would the number 98 be shaded in blue? and what would the 12th orange number in the pattern be? Homework Thursday's Homework Math: Complete the Naming Numbers worksheet (to see an example, click here: Naming Numbers Example) Social Studies: Complete the map worksheet Other: Artifact Bag due tomorrow! Remember, the 5 objects cannot have their name on it and should not contain pictures of them. The 5 objects should be put in a plain brown paper bag (like the ones used for lunch) and brought to school TOMORROW Friday 8/31. Their name should not be on the bag either! I will collect all of the bags tomorrow and then distribute them randomly throughout the class. The students will then look through the bag and use the objects as clues to try to figure out whose Artifact Bag it is. After that, students will share out the objects in their bag. This is a great way to learn more about each other and to see our common interests! Archive Class Website Archive 2012 Updated 8/29 Upcoming Events 9/3 Labor Day-No School 9/11 Back-to-School Night (7:00pm-9:00pm) 9/17 Rosh Hashanah-No School 9/26 Yom Kippur-No School 9/28 Early Release Day Schedules To see our class schedule, click here: Mrs. Talvac's Class Schedule To find out when we will be celebrating your child's birthday, click here: Birthday Celebration Schedule 8/31 Announcements Thank you for returning the parent surveys I sent home! I really appreciate it. If you haven't returned the parent surveys, please return them as soon as possible. They really help me to get to know your child from a parent's perspective. Don't forget to send in the Emergency Dismissal Form, Emergency Information Form, and Computer Use Form. I posted a checklist below so you can see what forms I have received and what forms I'm missing from you. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update We started the morning by answering three more questions from our What Makes You Tick? Packet. This packet has a series of questions that help me to get to know the students better. Today I learned about a moment at school that has made them proud, what they think a good author/writer does, and what they think the worst thing about math is. In social studies, we continued familiarizing ourselves with the satellite view of Google Maps. Today, we used it to explore Hawaii! While using Google Maps, we discussed important parts of the map we saw, such as the scale. There were also symbols on the map that represented different things (for example: a tree represented a forest reserve and a mountain represented a volcano or a mountain). The students knew that on a map, the key or legend explains what different symbols on the map mean. First, we explored the island of Oahu. I showed the students the bird's eye view of Waikiki Beach (they loved saying Hawaiian words!). Then, I showed them a poster of Waikiki Beach. We discussed how Diamond Head looked different from a bird's eye view than it did on the poster, which was taken from the perspective of a person standing on Waikiki Beach. We also looked at a bird's eye view of Hanauma Bay. I taught them the name of the Hawaiian state fish humuhumunukunukuapua'a. The students had a lot of fun sounding the word out and saying it! Later, we explored the Big Island. We saw lots of lava fields and learned about Kilauea and Mauna Loa. I showed them where the lava meets the ocean and they were shocked to learn that Kilauea has been erupting since 1983. I loved their enthusiasm and excitement! Once the students got back from recess and lunch, I distributed the Artifact Bags randomly throughout the class. The students looked through the bags and used the 5 objects as clues to try to figure out whose Artifact Bag it was. A lot of the students guessed correctly! We had so much fun sharing out all of the cool objects we brought in. While presenting their Artifact Bag, the students practiced speaking clearly and loudly. I took notes on each students' presentation so I could learn more about them. The students also had to take notes on 4 presentations. From this activity we were able to learn even more about each other and realized our common interests! In reading, we read an article together from the National Geographic Explorer Pioneer Edition magazine titled Insect Olympics. To read the article, click here: Insect Olympics Article. While reading, we learned that insects may not look strong or fast, but they are. In fact, when compared to other animals, the advantages of insects are hard to ignore. The article compares the speeds of a cheetah and a tiger beetle; the flying skills of a peregrine falcon and a dragonfly; the strength of a silverback gorilla and a horned dung beetle; the loudness of a howler monkey and a cicada; and the spitting ability of an archer fish and a grasshopper. After reading, we thought about all of the new information we had learned from the article. Then, we watched a short video clip of a sportscaster who was calling a horse race. While watching the clip, I told the students to focus on the sportscaster's tone and volume. The students realized that he spoke loudly and with lots of expression! He was energetic and excited about the race, which made the race more exciting for the audience. Then, the students split into groups of 2, 3, or 4. Once in their groups, they imagined that they were sportscasters announcing a race between the cheetah and tiger beetle (or two animals of their choice). They worked with their group to write a script as if they were the sportscaster. At the end of class, each group presented their scripts trying to use proper tone and volume. I'm so proud of how hard the students worked! I loved their creativity and excitement. We will continue working on reading with expression throughout the year! Homework Friday's Homework: None. Have a great weekend! 9/4 Announcements Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update We started the morning by answering the final three questions from our What Makes You Tick? Packet. This packet has a series of questions that help me to get to know the students better. Today I learned about their family and the many different words that your child would use to describe themselves! In social studies, we began class with a blank map of the United States. The students had time to work with their table groups to try to fill in as many states as they could. After that, the students were given a labeled map of the United States so they could check their answers. I was impressed with how well the students worked together and how many states/locations they got correct. Later, we discussed the definitions of rights, responsibilities, and citizenship. I read the book Being a Good Citizen: A Book About Citizenship by Mary Small to give the students many different examples of children their age being good citizens. After reading, we brainstormed how to be a good citizen of our classroom and of our school. Then we compared the rights and responsibilities of US citizens with the rights and responsibilities of students at Carderock. We focused a lot on the words cooperation and collaboration. We will continue this discussion tomorrow. In writing, we did an activator called Round Robin Writing in our table groups. The purpose of this activity is to have the students participate and work together as a table to write a creative story sentence by sentence. Each table was given a piece of chart paper with one of the following story starters at the top,"I was walking home from school one day when I heard a weird sound behind me. I turned around, but nothing was there. All of a sudden, something grabbed me. I turned around and saw…." or "It was midnight when I woke up to a loud noise outside. I ran to my window and looked up into the sky. I couldn’t believe it when I saw……." One person at each table group finished that sentence and then passed the marker to the next person at their table group who wrote the next sentence. This continued on around and around the table group with each person only writing one sentence before passing on the marker. We had a lot of fun! Some of the topics from the stories include: creepers, candy land creatures, wolves, monkeys, cheese, and carnivorous bunnies. Such creative ideas! I was happy to see the students cooperating and working together to make sure the story made sense. In reading, we discussed making inferences. Making inferences is a skill we will be reviewing and practicing all year. An inference is when we use the author's clues and our background knowledge/past experience/logic to draw a conclusion about what we're reading. I explained to the students that we all make inferences everyday! To give them an example, I did a short skit. I asked the students to figure out how my (pretend) morning was based on how I entered the classroom. For the skit, I came in the classroom by slamming the door. I stomped my feet as I walked over to my desk, had my arms crossed over my chest, and had my eyebrows knitted together. The students told me they knew I had a bad morning because I was mad/upset. I asked them how they knew that I had a bad morning because I hadn't actually told them, "Class, I've had a bad morning." The students explained that they knew because I slammed the door, stomped my feet, had my arms crossed over my chest, and had an angry expression on my face. They said they knew that people who are angry usually slam the door, stomp their feet, etc. They said if I was angry/upset, then I probably had a bad morning. I told them that they had just made an inference! I talked more about how an inference is when you 'read between the lines' to figure something out that the author doesn't explicitly say. To practice this skill, I shared parts of the book Free Fall by David Wiesner. This book is a wordless picture book, so we had to make a lot of inferences! I challenged the students to figure out the events in the story based on the clues the pictures gave us. The students did a great job! We will continue this tomorrow. In math, the students played the game "100 or Bust!" in groups of 3. The game requires the students to use estimation and their knowledge of place value in order to place each of seven randomly generated digits on a place-value chart in either the ones or tens column to make a sum as close to 100 as possible without going over 100. To see the activity, click here: 100 or Bust! After that, we completed a logic puzzle with the hundreds chart (similar to their homework). This gave the students practice with their critical thinking and problem solving skills. While solving the problem, we practiced reading the problem carefully and taking it step-by-step to solve it. I'm so proud of how hard they worked! Homework Tuesday's Homework Math: Complete the hundreds chart logic worksheet Social Studies: For Zahava, Sean, and Maddie only-Your current events projects are due on Friday 9/7 9/5 Announcements Please look in your child's yellow homework folder tonight. There were notices sent home with your child today if they're youngest in family. All students should have received an application for the Best Buddies program. Contact Ms. Klotzman if you have any questions about the program! Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update In social studies, we reviewed what we discussed yesterday about rights, responsibilities, collaboration, and cooperation. Then, we talked about the purpose of government, who makes up the government, and how our government (a democratic republic) is different than other forms of government. We briefly discussed the balance of power in the form of checks and balances. We focused on how elected officials receive their power from the people and are accountable to them for the use of that power. Later, the students worked together to sort various statements into two categories: examples of American democratic principles and non-examples of American democratic principles. The students did a great job working together with their table groups to complete the activity! In writing, we began by talking about how many writers keep a collection of things they know or care about to refer to whenever they want to write so that they never suffer writer’s block. We talked about how writers use the people, places, things, experiences, and ideas that are important to them as a person to help them write. Then, we did an activity called Heart Mapping. I did an example for the students and mapped my heart. After that, everyone received a blank heart on a piece of paper to start mapping their own heart. Starting from the center of the heart, the students wrote the most important people/place/thing/experience/idea and worked their way outward-filling their heart with things that mean something to them (this included things that upset them or scare them). Later in writing, the students filled out a graphic organizer to prepare them to write their Free to Be Me paragraphs. Once the students organized their thoughts, they began writing their rough draft in their writer's notebook. In math, we explored more patterns on the hundreds chart. Look at the image below to see the patterns we recorded (ex: if you go down one row, the number increases by ten; if you go to the right, the number increases by one) . After that, I challenged the students to find my mystery number by using the starting number, their hundreds chart, and the arrow clues I gave them. Ask your child to show you an example! After finding several of my mystery numbers, I challenged the students to do it without using the hundreds chart. They realized that the arrow clues I had been giving them could be written using all numbers. For the rest of class, the students worked on various activities that gave them practice with place value concepts, rounding, computation, number sense, and patterns on the hundreds chart. I'm so proud of how hard they worked while I met with small groups! We will continue this tomorrow. Homework Wednesday's Homework Math: Complete the Arrow Math worksheet. If you need a hundreds chart to help you, click here: Hundreds Chart Social Studies: For Zahava, Sean, and Maddie only-Your current events projects are due on Friday 9/7 9/6 Announcements Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update We started the day with a morning work activity that gave the students practice with making inferences. They read a short poem and had to use clues the author gave them to determine who the narrator of the poem was. Then, they had to explain how they figured out who the narrator was and what they thought the lesson was. In science, we evaluated ourselves and identified character traits (from a list) that we thought contributed to our personal uniqueness. Some of the words included: dedication, cooperativeness, enthusiasm, patience, confidence, courtesy, etc. I had the students read the list of character traits and check off the traits they thought describe them. After that, we discussed the character traits that a good leader usually has. Then, the students split up into their table groups and I came around to whisper one of the character traits that we had just discussed. No other group was allowed to know the character trait. The groups had to work together to develop a simple skit they will act out to demonstrate the character trait that their group was given. The other groups will have to watch every other group's skit and try to determine the character trait they are acting out by looking at what the characters say and what the characters do. One group was able to share their skit today. The other groups will share their skits tomorrow. I'm looking forward to seeing their creativity! In reading, we continued to practice making inferences. We reviewed that an inference is when we use the author's clues and our background knowledge/past experience/logic to draw a conclusion about what we're reading. I reminded the students that we all make inferences everyday! We finished the book Free Fall by David Wiesner. This book is a wordless picture book, so we had to make a lot of inferences! I challenged the students to figure out the events in the story based on the clues the pictures gave us. The students did a great job! After that, the students rotated through various activities that gave them practice with using a dictionary, using a thesaurus, pronouns, capital letters, and character traits. While the students worked, I began meeting with small reading groups to practice making inferences in their reading group book. I will continue meeting with groups tomorrow. The students did a great job working hard! In math, the students began class with an entrance card so I could assess their understanding of rounding and patterns on the hundreds chart. While I met with small groups, the students worked on various activities that gave them practice with place value concepts, rounding, computation, number sense, and patterns on the hundreds chart. The students are improving on cleaning up after themselves and making sure that all of the materials are put away in the appropriate location. I'm so proud of them! Homework Thursday's Homework Math: Complete the Numberline worksheet Social Studies: For Zahava, Sean, and Maddie only-Your current events projects are due TOMORROW Friday 9/7 9/7 Announcements The students had a great week this week! They're really settling in and are impressing me with how well they know our routines and my expectations. Today, we spent a lot of time talking about the importance of making good choices during independent and group work time. We discussed various strategies we could use to help us to do our best work and collaborate with others. Our schedule this year requires the children to remain focused for the entirety of the afternoon (during math, reading, and writing) between 12:05 and 3:05. Please reiterate to your children the importance of focusing on their work for this important academic time frame. Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update We started the day with a morning work activity that gave the students practice with answering multiple choice questions while making inferences about a book's table of contents. The students had to use the table of contents and titles of the various chapters to determine which chapter would be most helpful for them to find certain information. Utilizing different organizational tools in a book is an important skill for strong readers to develop and practice! In science, we started with our three Current Events News Anchor presentations. We learned about a female golfer, the drought that has been affecting parts of the United States, and adopting a pet! The students did a great job during their presentations. These presentations are an excellent way for the students to practice their speaking skills and for me to evaluate them. I expect the News Anchors to speak clearly, loudly, and with expression. Making eye contact is also an important part of the presentation! After that, the groups who didn't present their skits on Thursday had time to briefly practice their character trait skits. Then, they presented their skits. I was impressed with how creative they were! The students in the audience did a great job determining the character trait that the groups were acting out by looking at what the characters said and what the characters did. During our extended writing time, we focused on the organization of paragraphs. I defined what a topic is and we talked about how a paragraph should focus on one main topic. After that, the students watched me type a paragraph in which the topic was "my favorite after school activities". As I typed, the students quickly noticed that my paragraph didn't focus on the topic and I included lots of irrelevant details. They also noticed that I didn't have a catchy introductory sentence (which we call a "hook") or a conclusion sentence. I explained that strong writers make sure every sentence in their paragraph is focused on their topic and they include lots of details to make their writing more interesting. Later, the students learned about the many different types of hooks (question, capital letters, riddle, etc). The students spent the rest of class working on their rough draft of the Free to Be Me paragraph. I began meeting with students to revise/edit their rough drafts. In math, the students worked on various activities that gave them practice with place value concepts, rounding, computation, number sense, and patterns on the hundreds chart. I love the students' enthusiasm and excitement about working together and playing math games! Homework Friday's Homework: None. Have a great weekend! 9/10 Announcements Back to School Night is TOMORROW (Tuesday) night from 7pm-9pm! I look forward to seeing you all there. The schedule is below: 7:00 – 7:25 p.m. All Purpose Room 7:25 – 7:35 p.m. Transition to Session I 7:35 – 8:05 p.m. Session I (Please visit the classroom of your choice.) 8:05 – 8:15 p.m. Transition to session II 8:15 – 8:45 p.m. Session II (Please visit the classroom of your choice.) Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac journals. This journal serves a line of communication between me and the students. It gives me the opportunity to get to know them even better and keep up with what's going on in their lives! The students can write anything they want in the journal. Every Friday, I collect all of the journals. During the weekend, I write back to the students. On Monday morning, the students receive their journals back with my responses in them. They read my response and write back to me. They can write in the journal all week until I collect them again on Friday. The students and I both love this activity! In science, we started by discussing the difference between a need and a want. We also thought of a couple of examples of each. A need is something you must have to survive (water, food, shelter) and a want is something that you would like to have, but you don't need it to survive (games, toys, etc). After that, I showed the students the pyramid below to help explain the hierarchy of our needs (based on Maslow's Hierarchy of Human Needs): We are using this structure to help the students better understand our needs. The pyramid helped remind the students of the importance of building each level from the bottom to the top. All human needs build on the base. The students realized that it is important to satisfy each level of needs as we strive to be self-fulfilled. After that, the students worked in their table groups to read different scenarios. Each scenario had the students think about what need the person had that wasn't being met and what emotions they would feel because of their need not being met. While discussing the scenarios as a class, we talked about what level of the pyramid each scenario would fit in. At the end of class, we talked about stress. The students shared times they have been stressed and the signs/symptoms they had. The students learned that there is positive stress (eustress) and negative stress (distress). We will continue this discussion tomorrow and learn ways we can use to cope with stress. Right before recess, we went outside. I challenged the students to put themselves in order by their birth date without using any verbal communication. I was so impressed with how well the students did by using ways (other than their voice) to communicate. We will talk more about verbal communication and non-verbal communication tomorrow. In reading, we read the book Boxes for Katje by Candace Fleming. Before we began reading, we talked about making connections to texts we are reading in order to help us to better understand what we are reading. I explained to students that they make connections all the time and might not even realize it. I gave some examples of how they make connections to what people are saying and what they are reading in books. While reading, I modeled how to make connections to the text while reading the book. I emphasized how important it is to not only be able to tell me their connection, but to explain how their connection helped them to understand the story better. While we were reading, I loved how the students made lots of inferences and predictions about what would happen next. After we finished the book, the students read part of Ramona Quimby Age 8 by Beverly Cleary to help them practice making connections. In writing, the students continued to work on their Free to Be Me paragraphs. Students are at various stages of the writing process. I'm very proud of how hard they all worked! We are excited for you to see our Free to Be Me paragraphs at Back to School Night tomorrow! In math, we began class with an activator in which each student was given an index card. On the index card was a number, an expanded form of a number, or a base-ten block form of a number. The students had to look at their card and find people that had the same number as them in a different form. I was impressed with how quickly the students were able to do this! After that, the students practiced using their knowledge of place value and a numberline to help them round numbers. Since it was such a beautiful day, we went outside at the end of class to use chalk and work with our group to practice rounding numbers to different place values. For example, the students had to round 4,356 to the nearest tens place and nearest hundreds place. Homework Monday's Homework Math: Complete Name Collection Boxes worksheet Science: Complete Pyramid worksheet Writing: Students who didn't finish their rough drafts for their Free to Be Me paragraphs should finish them tonight Social Studies: For Rebecca, Jaymie, and Jeremy only-Your current events projects are due on Friday 9/14 9/11 Announcements Back to School Night is TONIGHT (Tuesday) from 7pm-9pm! I look forward to seeing you all. The schedule is below: 7:00 – 7:25 p.m. All Purpose Room 7:25 – 7:35 p.m. Transition to Session I 7:35 – 8:05 p.m. Session I (Please visit the classroom of your choice.) 8:05 – 8:15 p.m. Transition to session II 8:15 – 8:45 p.m. Session II (Please visit the classroom of your choice.) Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's inititals. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac journals or having DEAR time. The Dear Mrs. Talvac journal serves a line of communication between me and the students. It gives me the opportunity to get to know them even better and keep up with what's going on in their lives! The students can write anything they want in the journal. Every Friday, I collect all of the journals. During the weekend, I write back to the students. On Monday morning, the students receive their journals back with my responses in them. They read my response and write back to me. They can write in the journal all week until I collect them again on Friday. The students and I both love this activity! In science, we finished our discussions about stress management and verbal/non-verbal communication from yesterday. Then, I did a demonstration to introduce them to our next area of study. I had my teacher's assistant sit in my desk chair and I rolled him slowly around the room. At one point, I stopped the chair suddenly. This caused the student to fly forward slightly and almost fall out of the chair. I asked the students to share their observations of what happened when I stopped the chair. Our discussion caused us to focus on the following important terms: push, pull, motion, and force. I related my demonstration to real life by discussing air bags, seatbelts, and their importance in a car crash. The students are excited to learn more! In reading, we reviewed what we have been learning about making connections and making inferences. We talked about how important it is to not only be able to make a connection, but to explain how the connection helps us to understand the story better. Then we read the book Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day by Judith Viorst. While reading, the students patted their heads to let me know when they were making a connection or an inference. I modeled several examples of making connections and making inferences throughout the story. Several students shared their connections/inferences and I guided them in explaining how their connections/inferences helped them to better understand the story. You can help your child at home by asking them questions about books they are reading. Include questions about if they can relate to a character in the story and make a connection to something the character is feeling or thinking. Discuss with them how it is easier to understand a story when you have felt the way the character is feeling or have experienced something they are experiencing. In writing, the students looked at the two pictures (see below). Before I presented the pictures to the students, I told them to tell me the FIRST thing that they saw when they looked at the pictures. The students saw two different things for each picture. In the first picture, they saw a young lady with her back turned to us or an old woman's face. In the second picture, they saw a rabbit or a duck. While discussing what we saw, I told the students that we all have a different point of view, which is why we were able to see different things while looking at the pictures. I related this to our writing by explaining that most books are written in first person point of view or third person point of view. I explained that their Free to Be Me paragraphs are written in the first person point of view because they are writing about themselves and are using the important pronouns: I, my, me, etc. I explained that the third person point of view would be if someone else was writing your Free to Be Me paragraph about you. They would be using different pronouns: his, her, she, him, etc. Then, the students finished their Free to Be Me paragraphs! In math, I met with small groups to review place value and using the number line to help us round numbers. We also talked about how rounding can be used in “real life” situations. I gave the students a “real life” word problem that we worked to solve together. The students really enjoyed getting to use their ActiVotes throughout the small group lesson today! They did an excellent job following directions and using the ActiVotes appropriately. ActiVotes are little remotes that each student gets to use to answer questions (by pushing buttons) that were asked throughout the lesson in order to check their understanding of place value and rounding. The ActiVotes are connected to the computer and, immediately after the students answer the question, we can view and analyze the results to see if there are any misunderstandings or a need for further discussion/clarification of a concept. While I met with small groups, the students worked on solving several rounding riddles and various activities that gave them practice with place value concepts, rounding, computation, number sense, and patterns on the hundreds chart. I'm proud of how hard they worked! Homework Tuesday's Homework: None. Back to School Night is tonight! Social Studies: For Rebecca, Jaymie, and Jeremy only-Your current events projects are due on Friday 9/14 9/12 Announcements Weekly Graded Work folders were sent home today! There should be 1 graded assignment in their folder. Please take all of the notices and graded work out of the folder once you have reviewed it with your child and be sure to sign the Communication Sheet that is stapled to the back of the folder. Thank you! As a reminder, we are using a new standards based grading system this year. Mr. Palmisano is holding a meeting for all K-3 parents to talk more about the new grading/reporting system in mid-October. Please see the chart below to understand the grade your child received (taken from the following document): 3rd Grade Report Card. The new scores are NOT equivalent to A, B, C, D, E. All of the students should have brought their binders home today. Please reiterate the importance of staying organized and putting papers in the proper section. We have been working on this a lot at school! They should have the following items in the order listed below: 1. Pencil bag (the kind that clips into the binder rings)-This should hold a few necessary items (i.e. 2 pencils, a blue or black pen, a red correcting pen or pencil, etc). Remember, we are trying to keep the binder as light as possible. Please remind your child that there is no need for them to carry unnecessary or bulky supplies (crayon boxes, markers, colored pencils, glue sticks, etc) in their pencil holder because those can be stored in the student's desk or will be provided by their teacher. 2. Homework Agenda-This is where the students write down their homework everyday and it must stay in their binder so they don't lose it or forget it. I expect it here at school everyday! 3. Five dividers in this order from top to bottom: Math, Reading, Language Arts/Daily Oral Language, Science, Social Studies. We abbreviated the longer subjects, so you might see LA/DOL, Sci, SS. 4. Loose-leaf notebook paper right-side up (with red margin line on the left)-Students should have their loose-leaf paper at the very back of their binder. Students do not need more than one package of paper in their binder. Any extra paper packages they have should be kept at home so they can refill their binder as their paper supply is depleted. Some students chose to leave their extra paper packages on a shelf in the classroom so they can refill their paper supply at school. Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by reading the letters that you wrote them at Back to School Night! They were smiling and sharing the letters with each other. Then, they had DEAR time. In social studies, we reviewed how important it is to be able to work collaboratively in groups because we can achieve more when sharing ideas and responsibilities. We discussed how to show caring, compassion, and respect while working in groups. Then, we talked about various ways to be involved in your community and how people in the community work collaboratively to contribute to the common good. After that, we watched a video about a young boy who made a difference in his community. At the end of the video, we talked about how Percy had taken responsibility for a problem in his community and worked towards the common good by doing everything he could to solve the problem. The students were eager to share a time that they or someone they know has contributed to the common good! I loved hearing what they had to say! In reading, we talked about the genre of realistic fiction and the characteristics a realistic fiction book has. Then, we read The Memory String by Eve Bunting. While reading, the students had to decide whether or not they thought the book was realistic fiction. I modeled for the students how we can learn a lot about a character by what the character says and does. I also modeled how to ask questions while reading to help us stay focused and interested in what we’re reading because we’re searching to find the answers to our questions. This is similar to when we make predictions while reading and are eager to find out if our prediction is correct. After we finished reading, the students voted on whether or not they thought the book was realistic fiction-we decided that it is because it had the characteristics of a realistic fiction book. See chart below. After that, the students read various book summaries and determined if they were realistic fiction. Then the students worked on a Story Map of the book we just read. In the story map, they had to include the characters, setting, and beginning, middle, and end of the book. In writing, we did a Quick Write activity! This is where I give the students a writing topic and let them write for a certain amount of time. They must write for the entire time! Our topic today was: If you could only meet one person, alive or dead, who would it be? Why would you want to meet them? What would you ask them or what would you do with them? After their time was up, the students had to stop. We came to the carpet and had our Writer's Circle to give students the opportunity to share what they had written. I was fascinated by their responses and explanations! Here are some of their responses: a President, Tom Brady, God. In math, we started class with a brief activity that helped me assess their understanding of Arrow Math on the hundreds chart. After that, the students worked briefly on their math spelling words. Later, I asked the students to look at two patterns I had written on the board. I asked the students what the rule would be to describe the pattern. The students noticed that the patterns both increased by 6, but they had different numbers. We came up with many different patterns that all had the rule "increase by 6". See below: 1, 7, 13, 19 206, 212, 218, 224 3, 9, 15, 21 I explained to the students that we need to make our rule more specific by including a starting number so we would all come up with the same numbers in the pattern. The rule for the first pattern above would be: start at 1 and add 6. At the end of class, the students looked at an addition table and began highlighting different patterns they saw. The students were so observant! We also talked about how an even number + an even number=an even number, an odd number + an odd number= an even number, and how and even number + an odd number=an odd number. Homework Wednesday's Homework Math: Broken Calculator worksheet Broken Calculator Spelling: Math Spelling Words "Syllable Clap" activity due on Friday 9/14 Reading: Read 20 minutes! Social Studies: For Rebecca, Jaymie, and Jeremy only-Your current events projects are due on Friday 9/14 9/13 Announcements Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms ChecklistUpdated 9/11 Class Update The students started the day with DEAR time. In social studies, we reviewed various ways we can be involved in our community and how people in the community work collaboratively to contribute to the common good. After that, we watched the same short video from yesterday about a young boy who made a difference in his community. After the video, I told the students they would be working collaboratively in groups to act out short skits. Each script the groups were given focused on different scenarios in the community in which a group of people worked together to contribute to the common good. Three groups were able to present their skits today. After each skit, we discussed what the problem was and how they solved it by working together. The problems from each skit were: the public library was too far away from the neighborhood to be easily accessible by kids, the park was covered with litter because there weren't any trashcans, and there weren't any sidewalks in the neighborhood which caused the children not to be able to ride their bikes. Some groups even wrote their own endings because they felt that the ending in the script didn't completely solve the problem. I'm so proud of their creativity and use of props! In science, we went to the computer lab to explore the motion of an object and how its motion can be affected. The students used various objects to try to get a ball into a cup. Check it out by visiting the link posted below in the Homework section! The students were so excited and engaged with the activity! In reading we discussed how we use character traits to describe characters. We also talked about how we determine the character traits of a character by paying close attention to the actions of the character and what the character says. We discussed how character traits are different than physical traits and emotions. Then we read The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister. Before reading, I told the students that I wanted them to determine a character trait for Rainbow Fish at the beginning of the book and at the end of the book. I explained that this was because Rainbow Fish changes throughout the story. After reading, I asked the students to think about a character trait they would use to describe the Rainbow Fish. The students decided that at the beginning of the book Rainbow Fish was selfish because he wouldn't share any of his scales with the little blue fish. At the end of the book Rainbow Fish was friendly because he played with the other fish when they invited him to play and he gave every fish one scale. I reminded students that not only is it important to be able to identify a character's traits, but that is important to be able to explain how you knew the character had those traits. We explained the two traits we decided on by using examples from the text to support our answer. This is an important skill that we will be practicing all year. Giving examples from the text to support your answer is very important! In math, I met with small groups to practice Arrow Math with the hundreds chart. While meeting with groups, the students worked on various activities that gave them practice with place value concepts, rounding, Arrow Math, the hundreds chart, and basic facts. The students are getting better at putting away materials and keeping the classroom organized! I'm so proud of them! Homework Thursday's Homework Math: Rounding worksheet Rounding Spelling: Math Spelling Words "Syllable Clap" activity due TOMORROW Friday 9/14 Reading: Read 20 minutes! Science: Show your parents the website we used during Science! Tinker Ball! Social Studies: For Rebecca, Jaymie, and Jeremy only-Your current events projects are due TOMORROW Friday 9/14 9/14 Announcements Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac journals. I can't wait to read their notes and respond to them this weekend! After the announcements, we talked about what the MAP-R is, why students take it, and how to take it. Then we went to the computer lab to take the assessment. The Measures of Academic Progress in Reading (MAP-R) is a formative assessment that all students in Grades 3, 4, and 5 take on the computer to measure reading progress. It is given in the fall, in the winter, and in the spring so we can monitor how each student is improving in reading throughout the year. In social studies, we started with our three Current Events News Anchor presentations. We learned about: the new quarterback of the Redskins (RGIII), how Stephen Strasburg's injury has kept him on the bench, and about a new pet spa called WagTime. The students did a great job during their presentations. These presentations are an excellent way for the students to practice their speaking skills and for me to evaluate them. I expect the News Anchors to speak clearly, loudly, and with expression. Making eye contact is also an important part of the presentation!the remaining groups presented their skits and we discussed what the problem was and how the characters in the skit worked together to solve the problem and contribute to the common good. In writing, the students watched me write a short paragraph on the board about my pets. While writing, I asked the students to raise their hand if they noticed edits/revisions that needed to be made. The students quickly realized that my paragraph wasn't organized because I kept jumping around and talking about different pets. We talked about how I need to revise my paragraph by adding detail and talking about one pet at a time. This will help my paragraph flow and make sense. After that, the students filled out a graphic organizer for their Family Secrets paragraph and began working on their rough drafts. In math, I assessed the students' understanding of rounding concepts with a "check-in". In science, we headed outside for a tug-of-war with the entire 3rd grade! The point of the activity was to explore what we've been learning about push and pull. Before we started, the classes lined up in order from shortest to tallest. Then, all of the classes looked at each other and tried to predict who they thought would win the tug-of-war battles. We talked about how size, strength, and numbers could give some classes an advantage. Before the tug-of-war battles began, each class huddled up to form a plan. Our class planned to have the shortest people at the front and the tallest people at the back. They also decided to alternate which sides of the rope they were standing on and to dig their feet into the ground if they started to lose. Our strategy worked because our class beat Ms. Smith's class and Ms. Higgins's class!!! YAY Mrs. Talvac's class!!! I'm so proud of you for working together towards a goal!! After that, we had a girls vs boys tug-of-war battle and the girls won. I'm proud of everyone for being a good sport. We ended the day with our September birthday celebration. The students were so well-behaved and respectful. I'm so proud of them! Thank you parents for the treats and goodies you provided!! Homework Friday's Homework: None. Have a great long weekend! 9/18 Announcements Students should be bringing home their binders every day! We are focusing a lot on organization this year, so I would greatly appreciate you reinforcing this at home by checking your child's binder weekly. Thank you for your support! Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac journals. This journal serves as a line of communication between me and the students. It gives me the opportunity to get to know them even better and keep up with what's going on in their lives! The students can write anything they want in the journal. Every Friday, I collect all of the journals. During the weekend, I write back to the students. On Monday morning(Tuesday morning this week because we didn't have school yesterday), the students receive their journals back with my responses in them. They read my response and write back to me. They can write in the journal all week until I collect them again on Friday. The students and I both love this activity! In science, we discussed how an object's position can be described and changed. Then, each student was given 2 unifix cubes and an index card. I passed out folders that the students set up between them so their partners couldn't see their desk. The students took turns moving the cubes and index card around on their desk. Once they picked a place for their cubes and index card, they had to describe where the cubes and index card were on their desk to their partner using position words. Their partner used their description to try to replicate the position of the cubes and index card on their desk. When the students finished their description, the partners took down the folders and compared the location of the cubes and index card on their desks. The students talked about how they were similar and different. Then, they brainstormed ways they could have been more specific when describing the location of the cubes and index card. After that, the class shared out position words they used during the activity and I recorded them on the Promethean. I loved how engaged the class was! In reading, we reread the book Boxes for Katje by Candace Fleming. Before we began reading, we set a purpose for reading: identify main events and identify how the character's actions affect the sequence of events in the story. While reading, we worked together as a class to record the main events. I asked the students questions to get them thinking about how the character's actions/choices influenced the events in the story. For example, what would have happened if Katje didn't share the items that Rosie sent her? How would the story be different? After reading, the students read a short story and wrote down the main events in their reading journal. Then, they worked on various activities that gave them practice with using a dictionary/thesaurus, pronouns, capital letters, character traits, and non-fiction books. While they worked, I met with small reading groups to focus on identifying the main events of their reading group book. In writing, we began class by reviewing the importance of organizing details in our paragraph so it makes sense. Then, the students continued working on their Family Secrets paragraph. While waiting to meet with me to revise/edit, the students read various books that helped them compare/contrast their point of view with the point of view of someone else. In math, the students worked with their table groups and rotated through 4 different stations. The stations gave the students practice with rounding, place value, number sense, and multiples on the 100s chart. Ask your child about the highly engaging activities that they worked on at each station! I'm proud of how hard they worked! Homework Tuesday's Homework Math: Place Value worksheet Reading: Read for 20 minutes Spelling: Spelling test on math words on Friday 9/21 Social Studies: Current Events project due on Friday 9/21 for Lily, Evan, and Goldie 9/19 Announcements Weekly Graded Work folders were sent home today! There should be 3 graded assignments in their folder: -Arrow Math Assessment (max score ES) -Rounding Assessment (max score P) -Realistic Fiction or Not (max score P) Please take all of the notices and graded work out of the folder once you have reviewed it with your child and be sure to sign the Communication Sheet that is stapled to the back of the folder. Thank you! As a reminder, we are using a new standards based grading system this year. Mr. Palmisano is holding a meeting for all K-3 parents to talk more about the new grading/reporting system in mid-October. Please see the chart below to understand the grade your child received (taken from the following document): 3rd Grade Report Card. The new scores are NOT equivalent to A, B, C, D, E. Starting Wednesday, September 19th, the third grade teachers welcome Miss Veihmeyer, Staff Development Teacher at Carderock Springs ES, to our instructional team for math. In collaboration with the three third grade classroom teachers, Miss Veihmeyer will provide our math students enrichment and support opportunities several days each week. Miss Veihmeyer will be working with different students at different times; her groups will be fluid, and the instructional objectives on which she focuses will be identified to align with the third grade curriculum. As mentioned at Back-to-School Night last week, this instructional model will allow the three classroom teachers more time to focus on smaller-group instruction within the math period in their own classrooms, and it will allow our students the opportunity to work with another master teacher on skills and strategies deemed beneficial for their mathematical development. Welcome aboard, Miss Veihmeyer! We look forward to working with you. Students should be bringing home their binders every day! We are focusing a lot on organization this year, so I would greatly appreciate you reinforcing this at home by checking your child's binder weekly. Thank you for your support! Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day with a morning work activity that gave them practice with reading a menu and a table with information about past presidents. In science, the students worked with their table groups to determine a way to show a change in an object's motion. The students were given the following materials: an index card, a unifix cube, a 12 inch piece of string, a T-pin, and a bouncy ball. The students came up with some really creative ideas! After each group presented their idea, we discussed whether they used push or pull in their design to get the ball to start motion and change motion. Overall, the students worked well together and tried to make sure everyone's ideas were heard. Some groups struggled to come to an agreement on an idea. We will continue to work on the skill of collaborating with others throughout the school year. I will send everyone pictures of this activity on Friday! In reading, we read a Japanese folktale called Ooka and the Honest Thief from the Junior Great Books program. Before we began reading, the students previewed the folktale by taking a picture walk. The students shared out different things they noticed about the text and predictions of what they thought the story would be about. Then, we practiced making inferences from illustrations. I asked the students to look at a particular illustration and asked them to use clues to try to figure out who the characters were and which one was Ooka. I also asked students to share with a partner whether or not they thought it was possible for a thief to be honest. I enjoyed hearing the students' responses! Then, I read the folktale aloud. As we read, I asked the students to use sticky notes to mark places in the story that they could make a connection with, surprised them, confused them, and caused them to have questions. Tomorrow we will discuss dialogue in the story and where they placed their sticky notes. In writing, the students continued working on their Family Secrets paragraph. While waiting to meet with me to revise/edit, the students read various books that helped them compare/contrast their point of view with the point of view of someone else. In math, we began class with the last station rotation from yesterday that each table group didn't get to complete. The stations gave the students practice with rounding, place value, number sense, and multiples on the 100s chart. Ask your child about the 5 (4 yesterday, 1 today) engaging activities they worked on at each station! Then, the students practiced identifying a pattern's rule and expressing a number in different ways (standard form, expanded form, word form, base-ten block form). While the students worked, I met with small groups to begin practicing adding and subtracting 3 digit numbers with regrouping. We used Digi-Blocks (place value blocks) to help model the numbers and the process of regrouping. **Students should be reviewing their basic facts (addition, subtraction, multiplication) every night at home!! Basic facts are very important and will only be learned with lots of practice. 10 minutes of review a night can make a huge difference! There are some great free educational apps that can be downloaded on smartphones and other electronic devices such as iPads and iTouches that give the students practice with basic facts. If you'd like to get an idea of some of the educational apps there are out there, please visit the following link. The link includes apps that were created by the publisher of our former math program, Everyday Mathematics. http://www.padgadget.com/2011/04/15/mcgraw-hilleducation-offers-free-ipad-math-apps/** Homework Wednesday's Homework Math: In/Out Boxes worksheet. Optional Logic worksheet. Reading: Read for 20 minutes Spelling: Spelling test on math words on Friday 9/21 Social Studies: Current Events project due on Friday 9/21 for Lily, Evan, and Goldie 9/20 Announcements Starting Wednesday, September 19th, the third grade teachers welcome Miss Veihmeyer, Staff Development Teacher at Carderock Springs ES, to our instructional team for math. In collaboration with the three third grade classroom teachers, Miss Veihmeyer will provide our math students enrichment and support opportunities several days each week. Miss Veihmeyer will be working with different students at different times; her groups will be fluid, and the instructional objectives on which she focuses will be identified to align with the third grade curriculum. As mentioned at Back-to-School Night last week, this instructional model will allow the three classroom teachers more time to focus on smaller-group instruction within the math period in their own classrooms, and it will allow our students the opportunity to work with another master teacher on skills and strategies deemed beneficial for their mathematical development. Welcome aboard, Miss Veihmeyer! We look forward to working with you. Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day with an activity that gave them practice with synonyms and antonyms. It also gave them practice with multiple meaning words. In social studies, the students watched a brief video that told the story of Pearl Moscowitz's Last Stand by Arthur Levine. The story is about a woman whose neighborhood is changing over time and is being threatened. While watching, the students used a "capture sheet" to help them take notes and write down important examples of actions people took to toward the common good and actions people took that went against the common good. After the video, the students wrote their own definition of common good. The students shared their unique definitions. After that, I split the students into 4 groups. Each group read a short text about a real person that has contributed to the common good. The students had to work collaboratively with their groups to figure out what important information they would share with the class about the person they read about and their contributions to the common good. The students will present information about their person tomorrow. We had a Shelter in Place (code blue) and Lock Down (code red) drill this morning before recess. Some students were not taking the drills seriously, so, after the drills, we had a long conversation about the importance of these drills and how/when they would be used in a real life situation. After our discussion, the students seemed to have a greater understanding of and appreciation for both Shelter in Place and Lock Down. In reading, we reread a Japanese folktale called Ooka and the Honest Thief from the Junior Great Books program. Before we began reading, we reviewed the names of the main characters and set a purpose for reading. I asked the students to use sticky notes again today to mark places in the story where they: made an inference, made a connection with, caused them to have a question. I also asked them to use sticky notes to identify places where Ooka was fair or unfair. While reading, I pointed out the dialogue in the story and how an author uses dialogue in a story to show how the characters are interacting with each other. We also discussed how an author uses quotation marks to show when the author is speaking. Tomorrow we will have a class discussion about the story. In math, we began class with a warm-up in which the students had to watch me complete various two and three digit addition and subtraction problems on the board. While working, I made lots of common student mistakes. The students had to point out the mistakes and explain what I had done incorrectly. Then, we reviewed the process of regrouping. Next, the students came to the Promethean Board and showed different strategies they use to help them when they are adding three or more numbers. After that, the students worked alone or with a partner to write a word problem that involved addition or subtraction with regrouping. The students had to show at least two strategies they could use to solve the word problem. While they worked, I met with small groups to practice addition and subtraction with regrouping. I'm so proud of how hard they worked! Homework Thursday's Homework Math: Number Patterns worksheet. Optional Table Pattern worksheet. Reading: Read for 20 minutes Spelling: Spelling test on math words TOMORROW Social Studies: Current Events project due TOMORROW for Lily, Evan, and Goldie 9/21 Announcements I hope to see you all at the Back to School Picnic tonight from 5-7pm! Starting Wednesday, September 19th, the third grade teachers welcome Miss Veihmeyer, Staff Development Teacher at Carderock Springs ES, to our instructional team for math. In collaboration with the three third grade classroom teachers, Miss Veihmeyer will provide our math students enrichment and support opportunities several days each week. Miss Veihmeyer will be working with different students at different times; her groups will be fluid, and the instructional objectives on which she focuses will be identified to align with the third grade curriculum. As mentioned at Back-to-School Night last week, this instructional model will allow the three classroom teachers more time to focus on smaller-group instruction within the math period in their own classrooms, and it will allow our students the opportunity to work with another master teacher on skills and strategies deemed beneficial for their mathematical development. Welcome aboard, Miss Veihmeyer! We look forward to working with you. Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac journal. In social studies, the 4 groups presented important information about the person they read about in class yesterday. The groups shared who the person was and what their contributions to the common good were. Ask your child about Mattie Stepanek, Joe Breeze, Carien Quiroga, and Leonardo Lucini! In science, the students worked with their table groups to determine a way to show a change in an object's motion. Each table group was assigned one of the following changes in motion: start from a standstill, change direction (left to right), change direction (up to down), change speed, and stop from moving. The students were given the following materials: 2 pipe cleaners, 2 popsicle sticks, masking tape, a small rectangle piece of cardboard, and a bouncy ball. The students came up with some really creative ideas! I will send pictures from this week out later this evening. In writing, the students continued working on their Family Secrets paragraph. While waiting to meet with me to revise/edit, the students read various books that helped them compare/contrast their point of view with the point of view of someone else. In math, we began class with a check-in to assess their understanding of patterns. Then, the students got into groups. I gave the groups numbers and asked them to try to determine if the numbers were divisible by 6 without actually using division. The students had to use their number sense and knowledge of place value to try to help them figure it out. I loved all of the math discussions I heard! After that, the students continued working on the word problem activity they started working on yesterday. The students worked alone or with a partner to write a word problem that involved addition and subtraction with regrouping. They had to show at least two strategies they could use to solve the word problem. Homework Friday's Homework: None. Enjoy your weekend! 9/24 Announcements Starting Wednesday, September 19th, the third grade teachers welcome Miss Veihmeyer, Staff Development Teacher at Carderock Springs ES, to our instructional team for math. In collaboration with the three third grade classroom teachers, Miss Veihmeyer will provide our math students enrichment and support opportunities several days each week. Miss Veihmeyer will be working with different students at different times; her groups will be fluid, and the instructional objectives on which she focuses will be identified to align with the third grade curriculum. As mentioned at Back-to-School Night last week, this instructional model will allow the three classroom teachers more time to focus on smaller-group instruction within the math period in their own classrooms, and it will allow our students the opportunity to work with another master teacher on skills and strategies deemed beneficial for their mathematical development. Welcome aboard, Miss Veihmeyer! We look forward to working with you. Please continue to send in the many forms that have been sent home! I have posted a checklist below so you can see what I have received and what I'm missing. I used your child's initials. An X means I have received it and a blank space means that I'm missing it. I can send home additional copies if needed! Just email me and let me know. Some forms might have gotten lost in translation between home and school or might still be sitting in your child's homework folder, so please check their folder. Mrs. Talvac's Forms Checklist Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac journals. This journal serves a line of communication between me and the students. It gives me the opportunity to get to know them even better and keep up with what's going on in their lives! The students can write anything they want in the journal. Every Friday, I collect all of the journals. During the weekend, I write back to the students. On Monday morning, the students receive their journals back with my responses in them. They read my response and write back to me. They can write in the journal all week until I collect them again on Friday. The students and I both love this activity! In writing, the students continued working on their Family Secrets paragraph. While waiting to meet with me to revise/edit, the students read various books that helped them compare/contrast their point of view with the point of view of someone else. The students also worked on revising a paragraph for organization and writing from different points of view based on a picture. In reading, we reviewed the Japanese folktale called Ooka and the Honest Thief from the Junior Great Books program. Then, I wrote our discussion focus question on the Promethean and had the students think about the question independently. After that, we all sat in a big circle on the carpet. We discussed what a Shared Inquiry discussion is and what the purpose of the discussion is. We also went over the ground rules for our discussion and what it should look like/sound like. I reminded the students that it is important to support your answer to the focus question with evidence from the text. After that, I told the students we would be using the Fishbowl strategy. The “fishbowl” is a teaching strategy that helps students practice being contributors and listeners in a discussion. Students ask questions, present opinions, and share information when they sit in the “fishbowl” circle, while students on the outside of the circle listen carefully to the ideas presented and pay attention to process. Then the roles reverse. The students did a good job! We will continue to work on referring to the story to support our answer and making sure we're using good listening skills when we're not in the fishbowl. In science, we went outside on the blacktop. Once there, I explained that we would be conducting an experiment to see how the texture of a surface affects an object's motion. The 4 surfaces the students tested were: the blacktop, the concrete path, grass, wood chips, and the baseball field. Prior to starting the activity, the students had to make predictions about what would happen to a ball that they rolled across each surface. The students thought about which surface they thought the ball would roll the straightest on, which surface they thought the ball would roll the farthest on, and which surface they thought the ball would roll the fastest on. Then, they wrote a brief description of each texture. After that, the students worked with their groups to roll the ball on each surface. We will share our observations tomorrow! In math, we started class with a warm-up that got the students thinking about steps and strategies they can use to solve a word problem. I posted the word problem below on the board and had the students think about how they would solve the problem. Then, the students shared out their thinking and strategies they would use to solve the problem. 361 students attend Park ES. 149 students walk to school. 123 students eat waffles for breakfast. The rest of the students ride a bus to school. How many students ride a bus to school? Solve the problem. Show your work. -What is the question asking you to find? -Circle the information that you do NOT need to solve the problem. -What operation will you use to solve the problem? -Solve the problem. SHOW ALL YOUR WORK! After that, the students solved the word problem independently and continued practicing their word problem solving skills by working on the problem below with a partner. Try to solve it! 442 people are competing in the marathon. 62 people get hurt and withdraw from the race. 256 people get sick and withdraw from the race. 100 people cross the finish line. The rest got too tired to finish the race and gave up. How many people crossed the finish line? Solve the problem. Show your work. -What is the question asking you to find? -Circle the information that you do NOT need to solve the problem. -What operation will you use to solve the problem? -Solve the problem. SHOW ALL YOUR WORK! Finally, I introduced the students to some new math vocabulary. Together, we completed several addition and subtraction problems similar to the ones below. We discussed the fact that when we are regrouping in the subtraction problem below, we are "decomposing" a ten or a hundred. We also discussed the fact that when we are regrouping in the addition problem below, we are "composing" a ten or a hundred. 423-159 149+298 I'm proud of the students for working so hard! Homework Monday's Homework Math: Complete Word Problems worksheet. Optional Patterns worksheet Reading: Read for 20 minutes Social Studies: Current Events/News Anchor project due Friday for Isabella, Chris, and Taylor 9/25 Announcements No school tomorrow (Wednesday)! Weekly Graded Work folders will be sent home on Friday this week! Starting Wednesday, September 19th, the third grade teachers welcome Miss Veihmeyer, Staff Development Teacher at Carderock Springs ES, to our instructional team for math. In collaboration with the three third grade classroom teachers, Miss Veihmeyer will provide our math students enrichment and support opportunities several days each week. Miss Veihmeyer will be working with different students at different times; her groups will be fluid, and the instructional objectives on which she focuses will be identified to align with the third grade curriculum. As mentioned at Back-to-School Night last week, this instructional model will allow the three classroom teachers more time to focus on smaller-group instruction within the math period in their own classrooms, and it will allow our students the opportunity to work with another master teacher on skills and strategies deemed beneficial for their mathematical development. Welcome aboard, Miss Veihmeyer! We look forward to working with you. Class Update The students started the day by completing a morning work activity that gave the students practice with making inferences. In writing, the students continued working on their Family Secrets paragraph. Everyone finished their final draft today! Students who already finished their final draft read various books that helped them compare/contrast their point of view with the point of view of someone else. The students also worked on revising a paragraph for organization and writing from different points of view based on a picture. In reading, we practiced making inferences. We read the short script below and then used a 3-step process to make an inference. See our inferences below! Johnny: I'm so nervous! Susie: Me too! I studied really hard though, so I think I'll be fine. Johnny: Yeah, my mom helped me study. I think I'm ready! Susie: Good luck! Hopefully we'll both get a good grade! (Example from Text) Because the author said...Johnny talked about his mom helping him study. (Background Knowledge, Past Experiences, Logic) Because I know...when I have a test, I usually study hard and ask my parents to help me. (Inference) I can say that....Johnny and Susie are about to take a big test. (Example from Text) Because the author said...Susie said that she wants to get a good grade. (Background Knowledge, Past Experiences, Logic) Because I know...that you usually get grades on assignments and tests at school. (Inference) I can say that...Johnny and Susie are probably at school. Then, we made a list of strategies that good readers use before, during, and after reading. Making inferences was one of these strategies! We applied many of these strategies while reading Sachiko Means Happiness by Kimiko Sakai. This story involved a girl whose grandmother developed Alzheimer's disease. While reading, I did a "think aloud" to show the students how I was using many of the reading strategies from our list to help me make meaning and understand the story better. After we finished reading, I asked the students to write in their reader's journal and explain why they thought the grandmother was acting the way she was in the story. I also asked them to explain if they thought the book was realistic fiction or not. We will discuss this on Thursday. In math, we reviewed the homework from last night. While reviewing the homework, I emphasized the importance of solving a word problem step-by-step to ensure we are understanding what the question is asking us and identifying what information we need to answer the question. I loved how excited the students were to share the strategies they used to solve homework problems! Throughout class, I reminded the students that it's ok if they made mistakes because we learn from them and our classroom is a safe place to make mistakes! After that, the students worked through a couple of word problems independently. Some of the word problems didn't have enough information to solve the problem and other word problems needed multiple steps and operations to the solve problem. Later, the students wrote their own tricky word problem and solved it! In science, the students shared out their results from yesterday's experiment in which they observed how a surface's texture could affect an object's motion. We explored this further by building a ramp using a piece of cardboard and two dictionaries as the support for the ramp. The students let a ball roll down the ramp and made observations. I asked the students if they thought putting felt, aluminum foil, or wax paper on the cardboard ramp would affect the ball's speed and/or distance. We will make observations and record data to help us answer this question on Thursday! Homework Tuesday's Homework: None. Social Studies: Current Events/News Anchor project due Friday for Isabella, Chris, and Taylor 9/27 Announcements Weekly Graded Work folders will be sent home Friday (TOMORROW) this week! There is a half-day tomorrow! Dismissal is at 12:50pm. Class Update The students started the day by writing in their Dear Mrs. Talvac Journal. In science, the students explored how a surface's texture can affect an object's motion. Each table group was given one of the following materials to cover their cardboard ramp: felt, aluminum foil, wax paper, or cupboard liner. The students set up their ramp by using two dictionaries that they leaned the cardboard ramp against. The students used a timer to record how long the ball rolled and used estimation (their feet) to determine about how far the ball rolled. We conducted 3 trials to help us gather our data. After that, the students conducted another part of the experiment to see how long it took for the ball to roll to the end of the ramp. Again, we conducted 3 trials. We shared out our data and made a chart. We will analyze our data tomorrow to help us draw conclusions! In reading, we read an article about Alzheimer's Disease. While reading, I introduced the students to some non-fiction text features that help organize the article and help readers to better understand informational articles. We focused on headings today. After we finished reading, the students related the informational article to the book we read on Tuesday called Sachiko Means Happiness by Kimiko Sakai. In the book, a young girl has to cope with her grandmother's Alzheimer's. The students wrote in their reading journal about different things that Sachiko's grandmother did in the book that helped us to know she had Alzheimer's. After that, the students created a Venn-Diagram to show the similarities and differences between non-fiction/informational text and fiction text. In writing, I posted the following words on the Promethean board: cover, act, stand, mind, and clear. The students worked with a partner or a group to come up with as many words as they could that had those 5 words in them (for example: uncover, react, mindful, etc). The students shared them with the class and I recorded them on the Promethean board. Tomorrow, we will look at the words and identify prefixes, suffixes, and affixes. In math, we began class with an entrance card so I could see where the students are with adding and subtracting 3 digit numbers. Then, we reviewed the new vocabulary we learned last week and how to compose and decompose tens and hundreds in addition and subtraction problems. After that, the students wrote their own addition and subtraction problems that involved the composing/decomposing of tens and hundreds. Then, I met with small groups to practice solving multi-step word problems. When not meeting with me, students worked on various activities that gave them practice with patterns, addition, subtraction, place value, and basic facts. I'm so proud of how hard they worked today! Great job Mrs. Talvac's class! Homework Thursday's Homework Math: Complete word problem worksheet Writing: Write a paragraph about what you like to do in your spare time Reading: Read for 20 minutes Social Studies: Current Events/News Anchor project due Friday for Isabella, Chris, and Taylor