Monday, March 26, 2018

Grade 4 Newsletter March 25th - 29th



Grade 4 Weekly Newsletter

March 25th - 29th

Curriculum

Reading:


This week students will be finishing up bend two of our social issues book club unit. Students will continue to be using nonfiction texts from our Social Issues LibGuide to help them better understand the social issues in their texts. Students will be studying the different perspectives and thinking about how that understanding could help them grow their ideas during book club meetings. Students will be encourage to take risks and disagree with different perspectives and question the text or the author to help them better understand the social issues.


The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Different Perspectives

Lesson 2: Disagreeing with Different Perspectives is Ok.

Lesson 3: Asking Questions

Lesson 4: Synthesizing to Grow Understanding

Essential Questions
  • How can I determine and reflect on the social issues in texts?

Writing:

Bend two of our Literary Essays unit will be coming to an end this week. Students will focus on how they can use transition words to help them connect their evidence to their thesis. They will also be encouraged to add complete sentences to clearly show the reader why this quote or list supports their thesis. Students will be introduced to sentence starters such as the ones below to help them make that connection between evidence and thesis more clear.

This proves… 

All this evidence shows… 

This is important because 




Here are some examples of how students are revising their work to support their thesis statements.


The Lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Unpacking Evidence part 1

Lesson 2: Using Descriptions of an Author's Craft as Evidence

Lesson 3: Unpacking Evidence part 2

Lesson 4: Editing

Essential Questions
  • How do writers select a claim to write a literary essay?
  • How can I show evidence that supports the idea or claim I am making about a text?
  • How do writers analyze text for reasoning?

Mathematics: 

This week we will be completing Module 5 - Fraction Equivalence, Ordering, and Operations.


This module builds on students’ grade 3 work with unit fractions as they explore fraction equivalence and extend this understanding to mixed numbers. This leads to comparison of fractions and mixed numbers and the representation of both in a variety of models. Benchmark fractions (ie. ½) play an important role when students reason about fraction and mixed number sizes. Students have the opportunity to apply what they know to be true to new situations and problems.

Math End-Module - Module 5 Assessment: Tuesday 27th and 28th of March

Trial Assessment Reflection Feedback: Please give your student’s teacher any feedback you have on the “I can” Student Reflection students will bring home to help them reflect on their end-module assessment. Do you feel it helps your child identify strengths and areas of growth? How could we improve it?

Essential Questions:
  • Why express quantities, measurements and fraction number relationships in different ways?
  • How can fraction number relationships be expressed in different ways?

The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Representing fraction data on Line Plots with word problems involving fractions.

Lesson 2: Fraction patterns.

Lesson 3: End of Module Assessment

Lesson 4: End of Module Assessment

Lesson 5: Assessment and Module Feedback

Parent Tip Sheets: Topic A, Topic B, Topic C, Topic D, Topic E, Topic F, Topic G, Topic H.

Here is the LINK to the Growth Mindset video (Jo Boaler). We suggest you watch it with your child and discuss what might create a positive math classroom at school. How can you build a positive math relationship with your child? What type of dialogue will you use? You might like the following sentence starters to help you!




Social Studies: The Road to Independence

In this unit we will be looking at the causes of the American Revolution and discussing the issues of the day from multiple perspectives. In the culminating project the students will be selecting a famous person from the time (American or British) and created a ‘Facebook’ page for them on Glogster. This poster will include famous quotes, pictures, and some oral recordings that the students make as they attempt to become their character.

Essential Questions:
  • How do people, government and key events connect to build a nation?

Week 6 Focus: The students will be working to prepare their Glogster/Facebook page. They should be completed by the end of the week. Students will share their work with their classmates.

Lesson 15 Focus: Time for presentation preparation (Facebook/Glogster and speech)

Lesson 16 Focus: Time for presentation preparation (Facebook/Glogster and speech)

Lesson 17 Focus: Students can share their final Facebook/Glogster projects with their classmates.

Grade 4 Homework:
Daily homework tasks will be written into student planners each day. Tasks may include reading for 20-30 minutes per night, writing for 10 minutes per night along with additional mathematics work. Homework may differ according to teachers and students. Any mathematics homework that students find challenging please advise their homeroom teacher so they can progress accordingly. Homework is not meant to be impossible, challenging for students to grow their brains, but not impossible!

Grade 4 Guidance Update

Guidance Update – Thursday Puberty Talk (Part 2)

Dear Grade 4 Families,

As part of the health and social education your child receives, we will be providing puberty classes for all 4th and 5th grade students this month. This program revolves around the belief that if children are better informed they will be more comfortable with the changes they are going through and more willing to seek support from their parents and other trusted adults.

The dates for the Grade 4 puberty lessons are Thursday, March 22nd and Thursday, March 29th.

Please click on this Puberty - Letter for Parents link for important information regarding the topics that will be addressed and the video that will be showed.

All the best,

Carey Harris

charris@g-cacegypt.org


Guidance Update Gr. 4– Responding to Cyber Bullying

There are many ways to socialize with friends, such as talking to them in person or using technology to send emails or texts. Using technology to communicate can be really fun and useful, but technology can also be used to hurt or cyber bully other people. Cyber bullying is using electronic technology to purposefully hurt someone else. It is immediate, long lasting and can spread further and faster than people are usually aware. Students will learn that everything they say or do online can be tracked, nothing electronic is private and there is a lasting digital footprint.

Students will:

Discuss the importance of keeping their personal information (Y.A.P.P.Y your name, address, phone number, passwords or your plans) safe.

Review the 3 steps for handling hurtful messages:

1. Do not respond

2. Save it

3. Tell an Adult;


· Demonstrate ways to support and/or stand up for someone being hurt online (such as reporting to an adult or leaving a chat group).


From the Library…

Mark your calendars! The annual ES Book Parade Assembly is on April 10, the day we get back from the April break. This year, the ES Library Council has declared the theme to be GRAPHIC NOVELS! Stay tuned for more details.

Typing Program

Our grades 3, 4, and 5 students learn touch typing in their classes to prepare for the work they do on computers in upper elementary and in middle school. The program we use is called ‘Typing Club’ and is an online program from Google. Link here. Students can access the program from home.

Upcoming Events

Mark your calendars! The annual ES Book Parade Assembly is on April 10, the day we get back from the April break. This year, the ES Library Council has declared the theme to be GRAPHIC NOVELS! Stay tuned for more details.



Egypt Festival is coming……….

April 19

Repeat Announcements

Core Value of the Month
During the month of March we will focus on the Core Value of Perseverance.



Sunday, March 18, 2018

Grade 4 Newsletter March 18th - 22nd



Grade 4 Weekly Newsletter

March 18th - 22nd

Curriculum


Reading:

This week we will continue our social issues book club unit. Students will be using nonfiction texts to help them better understand the social issues in their texts. They will be encouraged to read the books and articles Mrs. Fitzgerald has collected for them on the Library Lib Page. Readers will make self connections and develop perspectives about their text. They will question who has upper hand or power in their books and challenge the text. Readers will ask themselves if they are ok with how certain groups are represented in their books and if this is the same way they see the world. If it isn’t what would they like to do about it?

The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Digging Deeper into Social Issues by Reading Nonfiction

Lesson 2: Putting It All Into Perspective

Lesson 3: Who Has The Power In This Social Issue

Lesson 4: Questioning the Text and Social Issues

Essential Questions
  • How can I determine and reflect on the social issues in texts?

Writing:

We have two more weeks for our Literary Essay unit. This unit aims to make reading a more intense, analytical experience for our grade 4 students. It builds upon our students prior work with writing personal and persuasive essays. Students will address the theme of a story or stories and interpret and analyze the ways words, phrases, and ideas are used in a text. Students will be encouraged to use quotes, micro stories, and lists as evidence to support their theories. This week students will be working on adding complexity to their ideas to help them develop their thesis statements. Later on this week, writers will be revising their leads and endings before exploring how authors deliberately use craft to highlight deeper meaning in a text.


Some of the books we will be reading in grade 4 during this unit are:




The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Adding Complexity to Our Ideas

Lesson 2: Flash-Drafting Literary Essays

Lesson 3: Beginnings and Endings

Lesson 4: Using Descriptions of an Author's Craft as Evidence

Essential Questions
  • How do writers select a claim to write a literary essay?
  • How can I show evidence that supports the idea or claim I am making about a text?
  • How do writers analyze text for reasoning?
Mathematics: 

This week we will be continuing Module 5 - Fraction Equivalence, Ordering, and Operations.

This module builds on students’ grade 3 work with unit fractions as they explore fraction equivalence and extend this understanding to mixed numbers. This leads to comparison of fractions and mixed numbers and the representation of both in a variety of models. Benchmark fractions (ie. ½) play an important role when students reason about fraction and mixed number sizes. Students have the opportunity to apply what they know to be true to new situations and problems.

Math End-Module - We will complete our Module 5 with our assessment next week, before Spring Break.

Trial Assessment Reflection Feedback: Please give your student’s teacher any feedback you have on the “I can” Student Reflection students will bring home to help them reflect on their end-module assessment. Do you feel it helps your child identify strengths and areas of growth? How could we improve it?

Essential Questions:
  • Why express quantities, measurements and fraction number relationships in different ways?
  • How can fraction number relationships be expressed in different ways?
The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Represent the multiplication of fractions using the associative property and visual models.

Lesson 2: Find the product of a whole number and a mixed number using the distributive property.

Lesson 3: Solve multiplicative comparison word problems involving fractions.

Lesson 4: Solve word problems involving the multiplication of a whole number and a fraction including those involving line plots.

Parent Tip Sheets: Topic A, Topic B, Topic C, Topic D, Topic E, Topic F, Topic G, Topic H.

Here is the LINK to the Growth Mindset video (Jo Boaler). We suggest you watch it with your child and discuss what might create a positive math classroom at school. How can you build a positive math relationship with your child? What type of dialogue will you use? You might like the following sentence starters to help you!








Social Studies: The Road to Independence

In this unit we will be looking at the causes of the American Revolution and discussing the issues of the day from multiple perspectives. In the culminating project the students will be selecting a famous person from the time (American or British) and created a ‘Facebook’ page for them on Glogster. This poster will include famous quotes, pictures, and some oral recordings that the students make as they attempt to become their character.

Essential Questions:
  • How do people, government and key events connect to build a nation?

Week 5 Focus: Students will argue who is right in the Boston Tea Party, giving reasons to support their argument. The rest of the week, the students will be working to prepare their Glogster/Facebook page.

Lesson 12 Focus: Mini-Lesson: Argument Talk Rules Time for presentation preparation (GLOGSTER and speech)

Lesson 13 Focus: Time for presentation preparation (GLOGSTER and speech)

Lesson 14 Focus: Time for presentation preparation (GLOGSTER and speech)

Grade 4 Homework:

Daily homework tasks will be written into student planners each day. Tasks may include reading for 20-30 minutes per night, writing for 10 minutes per night along with additional mathematics work. Homework may differ according to teachers and students. Any mathematics homework that students find challenging please advise their homeroom teacher so they can progress accordingly. Homework is not meant to be impossible, challenging for students to grow their brains, but not impossible!


Grade 4 Guidance Update 

Guidance Update – Upcoming Puberty Talks

Dear Grade 4 Families,

As part of the health and social education your child receives, we will be providing puberty classes for all 4th and 5th grade students this month. This program revolves around the belief that if children are better informed they will be more comfortable with the changes they are going through and more willing to seek support from their parents and other trusted adults.

The dates for the Grade 4 puberty lessons are Thursday, March 22nd and Thursday, March 29th.

Please click on this Puberty - Letter for Parents link for important information regarding the topics that will be addressed and the video that will be showed.

All the best,

Carey Harris

charris@g-cacegypt.org


Guidance Update Gr. 4– Responding to Cyber Bullying

There are many ways to socialize with friends, such as talking to them in person or using technology to send emails or texts. Using technology to communicate can be really fun and useful, but technology can also be used to hurt or cyber bully other people. Cyber bullying is using electronic technology to purposefully hurt someone else. It is immediate, long lasting and can spread further and faster than people are usually aware. Students will learn that everything they say or do online can be tracked, nothing electronic is private and there is a lasting digital footprint.

Students will:

Discuss the importance of keeping their personal information (Y.A.P.P.Y your name, address, phone number, passwords or your plans) safe.

Review the 3 steps for handling hurtful messages:

1. Do not respond

2. Save it

3. Tell an Adult;

· Demonstrate ways to support and/or stand up for someone being hurt online (such as reporting to an adult or leaving a chat group).

From the Library…

Mark your calendars! The annual ES Book Parade Assembly is on April 10, the day we get back from the April break. This year, the ES Library Council has declared the theme to be GRAPHIC NOVELS! Stay tuned for more details.

Typing Program

Our grades 3, 4, and 5 students learn touch typing in their classes to prepare for the work they do on computers in upper elementary and in middle school. The program we use is called ‘Typing Club’ and is an online program from Google. Link here. Students can access the program from home.

Upcoming Events

  • Tuesday March 20th Founders Day, 72 years @ 2:30pm on the ES Lawn.

Core Value of the Month



During the month of March we will focus on the Core Value of Perseverance.



Monday, March 12, 2018

Grade 4 Newsletter March 11-15



Grade 4 Weekly Newsletter

March 11 - 15

Curriculum

Reading:

This week we will continue our social issues book club unit. Students will be stopping and thinking about the texts they are reading. They will be looking for evidence to support their ideas to help them grow their understanding of the text, characters, and themes or social issues.They will be sharing their ideas with their book club members and building upon each other’s ideas.






The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Identifying important scenes to cite evidence.

Lesson 2: Books have multiple issues and issues connect to other issues

Lesson 3: Dip into nonfiction to better understand your book’s social issue


Essential Questions


How can I determine and reflect on the social issues in texts?

Writing:

This week students will continue our Literary Essay unit. This unit aims to make reading a more intense, analytical experience for our grade 4 students. It builds upon our students prior work with writing personal and persuasive essays. Students will address the theme of a story or stories and interpret and analyze the ways words, phrases, and ideas are used in a text. Students will be encouraged to use quotes, micro stories, and lists as evidence to support their theories.



Some of the books we will be reading in grade 4 during this unit are:






The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Using Lists as Evidence

Lesson 2: Putting It All Together

Lesson 3: Writing to Discover What a Story is Really About


Essential Questions


How do writers select a claim to write a literary essay?


How can I show evidence that supports the idea or claim I am making about a text?


How do writers analyze text for reasoning?



Mathematics:

This week we will be continuing Module 5 - Fraction Equivalence, Ordering, and Operations.

This module builds on students’ grade 3 work with unit fractions as they explore fraction equivalence and extend this understanding to mixed numbers. This leads to comparison of fractions and mixed numbers and the representation of both in a variety of models. Benchmark fractions (ie. ½) play an important role when students reason about fraction and mixed number sizes. Students have the opportunity to apply what they know to be true to new situations and problems.

Math Mid-Module Reflection Feedback: Please give your student’s teacher any feedback you have on the “I can” Student Reflection students brought home to help them reflect on their mid-module assessment. Do you feel it helps your child identify strengths and areas of growth? How could we improve it?

Essential Questions:

Why express quantities, measurements and fraction number relationships in different ways?
How can fraction number relationships be expressed in different ways?


The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Adding mixed numbers and fractions

Lesson 2: Adding mixed fractions

Lesson 3: Subtracting a fraction from a mixed number

Lesson 4: Subtracting a mixed number from a mixed number

Lesson 5: Using the associative property to solve fraction multiplication problems, eg. 4 X ⅗


Parent Tip Sheets: Topic A, Topic B, Topic C, Topic D, Topic E, Topic F, Topic G, Topic H.

Here is the LINK to the Growth Mindset video (Jo Boaler). We suggest you watch it with your child and discuss what might create a positive math classroom at school. How can you build a positive math relationship with your child? What type of dialogue will you use? You might like the following sentence starters to help you!



Social Studies: The Road to Independence

In this unit we will be looking at the causes of the American Revolution and discussing the issues of the day from multiple perspectives. In the culminating project the students will be selecting a famous person from the time (American or British) and created a ‘Facebook’ page for them on Glogster. This poster will include famous quotes, pictures, and some oral recordings that the students make as they attempt to become their character.

Essential Questions:


How do people, government and key events connect to build a nation?

Week 3/4 Focus:

Lesson 9 Focus: Research, Students are to continue researching their character for their Facebook/Glogster

work. Mini-Lesson: Argument Talk Rules

Give students this first attempt at thinking and strengthening their perspective planning

Lesson 10 Focus: Declaration of Independence: Watch Liberty Kids Dec. of Independence.

Was this right or wrong? Look at it from both perspectives. (British and US)

Lesson 11 Focus: Research: Students are to continue researching their character for their Facebook/Glogster work. Mini-lesson - citing sources using MLA


Grade 4 Homework:

Daily homework tasks will be written into student planners each day. Tasks may include reading for 20-30 minutes per night, writing for 10 minutes per night along with additional mathematics work, that is differentiated according to student needs. Homework may differ according to teachers and students. Any mathematics homework that students find challenging please advise their homeroom teacher so they can progress accordingly. Homework is not meant to be impossible, challenging for students to grow their brains, but not impossible!

Grade 4 Guidance Update 

Guidance Update – Upcoming Puberty Talks

Dear Grade 4 Families,

As part of the health and social education your child receives, we will be providing puberty classes for all 4th and 5th grade students this month. This program revolves around the belief that if children are better informed they will be more comfortable with the changes they are going through and more willing to seek support from their parents and other trusted adults.

The dates for the Grade 4 puberty lessons are Thursday, March 22nd and Thursday, March 29th.

Please click on this Puberty - Letter for Parents link for important information regarding the topics that will be addressed and the video that will be showed.

All the best,

Carey Harris

charris@g-cacegypt.org


Guidance Update Gr. 4– Responding to Cyber Bullying

There are many ways to socialize with friends, such as talking to them in person or using technology to send emails or texts. Using technology to communicate can be really fun and useful, but technology can also be used to hurt or cyber bully other people. Cyber bullying is using electronic technology to purposefully hurt someone else. It is immediate, long lasting and can spread further and faster than people are usually aware. Students will learn that everything they say or do online can be tracked, nothing electronic is private and there is a lasting digital footprint.

Students will:

Discuss the importance of keeping their personal information (Y.A.P.P.Y your name, address, phone number, passwords or your plans) safe.

Review the 3 steps for handling hurtful messages:

1. Do not respond

2. Save it

3. Tell an Adult;

· Demonstrate ways to support and/or stand up for someone being hurt online (such as reporting to an adult or leaving a chat group).

Shelter Drill

We will be having a drill on March 12 to practice shelter procedures. Teachers will discuss this as “shelter practice” with students in age-appropriate ways, but you may also want to also talk to your child about the subject. Last year, we shared this article with helpful suggestions for talking to children about safety procedures and practices. One of the things addressed is the impact of the terminology we use. Staff members will be going over this in advance, as we work together to ensure that students feel safe, protected, and aware of what to do in different situations.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/judith-simon-prager-phd/talking-to-kids-about-a-lockdown_b_4117330.html

The drill will be held at 12:00 pm, so if you are on campus, we ask that you follow instructions when asked to go to a safe place. Everyone who is outside will be moved to the ES Hall.


Typing Program

Our grades 3, 4, and 5 students learn touch typing in their classes to prepare for the work they do on computers in upper elementary and in middle school. The program we use is called ‘Typing Club’ and is an online program from Google. Link here. Students can access the program from home.

Upcoming Events


Wednesday, Mar. 7th - Early Release Day


Thursday, Mar. 8th - CAC Holiday


March 12th - Shelter Drill 12pm.


Tuesday, March 13, 2018, 7:55am - 8:25am - CAC ES Walk-A-Thon and Fundraiser for African Hope Food Program


Thursday, March 15, 3:10 pm - 4:15 pm: Movie Night


Repeat Announcements



Core Value of the Month

During the month of March we will focus on the Core Value of Perseverance.



Sunday, March 4, 2018

Grade 4 Newsletter - March 4th - 7th



Grade 4 Weekly Newsletter

March 4 - 7


Curriculum

Reading:

This week we will continue our social issues book club unit. Students will be stopping and thinking about the texts they read. They will be sharing their ideas with their book club members and building upon each other’s ideas.






The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: Readers not only identify issues as we read. Instead, we also want to ask ourselves, ‘What does this book teach us about this issue?’ and then to follow that up by asking, ‘Do we agree or disagree with what this book is teaching us about this issue?’

Possible Prompts:
  • What does this story teach us about this social issue?
  • Which issues seem important in this story?
  • What are the characters’ reactions to these issues?
  • How do the characters deal with these issues?
  • What perspective does each character have on this issue?
  • If the perspective is different, what explains the difference?
Lesson 2: When we want to figure out a social issue in a story we can stop and jot an important note about what is happening in the plot and then we can infer by asking ourselves, “What’s the social issue happening in this story?

Possible Prompts:
  • What’s happening?
  • What’s most important in all you just told me?
  • What is your idea about what’s happening?
  • What else do you think is a possible social issue from the story?
Lesson 3: Readers think about the mistakes the character made. Then, we think about what he or she learned from that mistake/struggle. Another way readers can use our knowledge of characters to help us understand the issues that exist in the world and in our lives is to look at characters’ reactions to the issues they face. We can then ask ourselves if we agree or disagree with our characters’ reactions.

Possible Prompts:
  • What mistake did the character(s) make?
  • Look for a place where the character feels badly about what he or she did - that might clue you into the mistake.
  • Let’s think about how the character acted right after.
  • Do you think the character learned?
  • Try to say it like a lesson that’s not just about this book, but that’s about life in general.
Sentence Starters:
  • When you (or people)____, you (or they) should or shouldn’t learn _____.
  • You don’t have to _____ to _____.
  • It takes _____ to ______.
  • Try to (or not to) _______ when you _______.
Essential Questions
  • How can I determine and reflect on the social issues in texts?
Writing:

This week students will continue our Literary Essay unit. This unit aims to make reading a more intense, analytical experience for our grade 4 students. It builds upon our students prior work with writing personal and persuasive essays. Students will address the theme of a story or stories and interpret and analyze the ways words, phrases, and ideas are used in a text.



Some of the books we will be reading in grade 4 during this unit are:




The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1: When you are writing a literary essay, as when you write a personal or persuasive essay, you find your seed idea - your thesis - by first rereading all your related entries and thinking, 'What is the big idea I really want to say?' Sometimes it helps to gather a bunch of possible thesis about a text, then to choose one.

Lesson 2: When you are telling a story in the service of providing evidence for an idea, you need to angle that story to highlight the way it supports and connects to your thesis.

Lesson 3: Essayists work hard to find 'just-right' quotations to include in their essays. A passage is 'just right' for citing when it provides strong evidence for a claim, making readers say, 'I see what you mean.'

Essential Questions
  • How do writers select a claim to write a literary essay?
  • How can I show evidence that supports the idea or claim I am making about a text?
  • How do writers analyze text for reasoning?
Mathematics: 

This week we will be continuing Module 5 - Fraction Equivalence, Ordering, and Operations. This module builds on students’ grade 3 work with unit fractions as they explore fraction equivalence and extend this understanding to mixed numbers. This leads to comparison of fractions and mixed numbers and the representation of both in a variety of models. Benchmark fractions (ie. ½) play an important role when students reason about fraction and mixed number sizes. Students have the opportunity to apply what they know to be true to new situations and problems.

Math Mid-Module Reflection Feedback: Please send your class teacher any feedback you have on our student reflection on our mid-module assessment. Thank you!

Essential Questions:
  • Why express quantities, measurements and fraction number relationships in different ways?
  • How can fraction number relationships be expressed in different ways?
The lessons for this week are:

Lesson 1 & 2: Decompose and compose fractions greater than 1 to express them in various forms.

Lesson 3: Solve word problems with line plots.

Lesson 4: Estimate sums and differences using benchmark numbers.

Parent Tip Sheets: Topic A, Topic B, Topic C, Topic D, Topic E, Topic F, Topic G, Topic H.

Here is the LINK to the Growth Mindset video (Jo Boaler). We suggest you watch it with your child and discuss what might create a positive math classroom at school. How can you build a positive math relationship with your child? What type of dialogue will you use? You might like the following sentence starters to help you!



Social Studies: The Road to Independence

In this unit we will be looking at the causes of the American Revolution and discussing the issues of the day from multiple perspectives. In the culminating project the students will be selecting a famous person from the time (American or British) and created a ‘Facebook’ page for them on Glogster. This poster will include famous quotes, pictures, and some oral recordings that the students make as they attempt to become their character.

Essential Questions:
  • How do people, government and key events connect to build a nation?

Week 3 Focus: The Boston Tea Party, Propaganda, Research and Glogster


Lesson 7: Focus: The Boston Tea Party
  • Watch Liberty’s Kids (The Boston Tea Party)
  • Write in notebook what I see, think, and wonder
  • Research Facebook character using Big6
Lesson 8: Focus: Propaganda
  • Respond to “What is propaganda?”
  • Infer bias/perspective in Glogster work
  • Work on Glogster (from research notes)
Grade 4 Homework:

Daily homework tasks will be written into student planners each day. Tasks may include reading for 20-30 minutes per night, writing for 10 minutes per night along with additional mathematics work. Homework may differ according to teachers and students. Any mathematics homework that students find challenging please advise their homeroom teacher so they can progress accordingly. Homework is not meant to be impossible, challenging for students to grow their brains, but not impossible!

Grade 4 Guidance Update 

In Guidance students are learning ways to manage peer conflicts and prevent/respond to bullying. We began with a focus on healthy versus unhealthy friendship groups and the difference between normal peer conflict and bullying. This unit is designed to prevent all forms of bullying, including physical/verbal, relational and cyber-bullying. Through the use of the Second Step curriculum, various read-aloud books, videos, discussions and role-plays, students will:

- Recognize the difference between a group of friends and exclusive cliques

- Learn and practice specific assertiveness skills to refuse the exclusion of peers

- Recognize the difference between normal peer conflict and bullying

- Learn strategies for dealing with bullying

- Understand and practice helpful bystander responses to bullying

- Recognize the similarities and differences between cyber bullying and other forms of bullying

- Demonstrate ways to prevent cyber bullying.

Shelter Drill

We will be having a drill on March 12 to practice shelter procedures. Teachers will discuss this as “shelter practice” with students in age-appropriate ways, but you may also want to also talk to your child about the subject. Last year, we shared this article with helpful suggestions for talking to children about safety procedures and practices. One of the things addressed is the impact of the terminology we use. Staff members will be going over this in advance, as we work together to ensure that students feel safe, protected, and aware of what to do in different situations.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/judith-simon-prager-phd/talking-to-kids-about-a-lockdown_b_4117330.html

The drill will be held at 12:00 pm, so if you are on campus, we ask that you follow instructions when asked to go to a safe place. Everyone who is outside will be moved to the ES Hall.

Upcoming Events
  • Wednesday, Mar. 7th - Early Release Day
  • Thursday, Mar. 8th - CAC Holiday 
  • March 12th - Shelter Drill 12pm

Repeat Announcements

Core Value of the Month
During the month of March we will focus on the Core Value of Perseverance.