A math time of year…

We’ve got some great activities going on to complement our math program right now. Students have been introduced to IXL math over the last two weeks and have put in over 35 hours on this site answering over 5000 problems; surely the extra skills practice will extend their learning, they are certainly having fun mastering specific categories, remembering that fractions and ratios are the focus for the next few weeks.

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Our class has also been signed up for the World Education Games. The World Education Games is the exciting event for ALL schools and students around the world. It runs from 6-8 March, involving 5.5million students from over 200 countries and territories. Practice opens on 1 February. This is the global challenge to get ALL students (4-18 years of age) excited about learning, and to give the top students in each school an opportunity to see how they measure up against the best.

The format is:
1 February – The Games open for Practice
6 March – World Spelling Day
7 March – World Maths Day
8 March – World Science Day

Everyone has received their username and password and they can now start practicing during their free time.  It’s lots of fun and kids get to challenge others from all over the world in real-time!

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Happy Friday Everyone

What a wonderful sunny day it is, a terrific day to start the weekend. We have had a short but very productive week back.

Most of the students were extremely successful in the recent Unit 10 Math Test with 8 students earning 100% and 7 students scoring 96% with only one error… OUCH! The class median score was 96%, our highest thus this year and the class average was 94%, also our highest average for 2009 – 2010.

This week also saw 5KP begin phase two of the Invention Convention Unit. During this project, the students will be looking closely at the process involved when you invent something. The focus is more on the process rather than the product. In past years we have found that this project has sometimes taken on a life of its own and many students have ended up with their parents doing a large part of the work for them rather than the student actually understanding all of the trial and error actually involved when you are trying to invent something.

Here are the essential questions that we will be aiming to answer and understand during the course of the 4 week project.

Essential Questions

Where are inventions located?

What steps are involved in the invention process?

What implications do these inventions have for people?

Are new inventions always better than those they replace?

How do inventions change and adapt to suit their environment?

The deadline for handing in yearbook money has been extended to May 12th.

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In Writer’s Workshop the class are starting to make some breakthroughs with the Memoir Unit of Study. It is a difficult concept for a 5th grader to get their head around but their main aim is to write a piece of writing of their own choice of genre that sums up something that has happened in their past that has meaning for them.

Thank You parents for a wonderfully appreciative lunch just now… I need a nap!

So much to blog about…

Wow, things are busy right now and I need to update you on several things.

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Halloween Parade is this Friday at 8.30 am.

Parents: You are invited to watch our Elementary School Halloween Parade on Friday, Oct. 30th from 8:30 to 9:15.  We will walk through the ES playground area along the sidewalk and then go to the outdoor running track behind the HS building. We end our parade in the courtyard outside the ES cafeteria. Join us and bring your camera!8:30 – Friday, Oct. 30th, 2009

8:30 – meet your grade level outside on the ES playground. They will be holding signs with grade level markers.
8:35 – We walk on the sidewalk, out to the HS track, make one loop around, then head back to the courtyard area outside the ES cafeteria. 8:45 – Once there, we stay on the covered sidewalks & surround the courtyard (like on spirit walk). Wait for all classes to arrive.
8:55 – Then each grade level will have a “fashion show” and model their costumes in the middle – with Halloween music playing.
9:15 – Dismissal by grade level starting with the little ones.

RAINY DAY ROUTE:
8:30 * We’ll START UNDER THE HATCHERY – walk down the main HS hallway and back to the area UNDER the Hatchery for our fashion show.

Parent- Teacher Conferences

Here is the information that has also been e mailed to you. So far I have had confirmation from 5 parents, thank you.

Parent – Teacher Conferences will be held on Thursday November 5th and Friday November 6th.
While your attendance at the conference is not compulsory, it is a great opportunity to discuss your child’s progress with their teacher.
As teachers will be meeting with parents throughout the afternoon, school will be dismissed at  11:30 AM . There will be no lunch served on these days.
Please see the schedule that was e mailed to you as a pdf on Tuesday. We try to fit conferences around many factors including allowing sibling conferences to be as close together as possible.  If you have a conflict and would like to switch times with another parent, please contact that parent directly and then notify me of the change.
If you also wish to meet with one of the specialist teachers, please e-mail them directly the same way you do for me e.g. firstname.lastname@saschina.org .
If you require a translator, please let me know as soon as possible with an e mail.
I look forward to seeing you at the conference.

Cultural Studies

Parents, it would be great if you could discuss the following questions with your children in the final week of our Cultural Studies Unit. There are some very big issues below and you are the best person to help your child as you know their background so thoroughly. They are to post the answers to these questions in completed paragraphs on the front page of their Cultural Studies page on their blog. Here is an example from Ms Yick.

Big Ideas Questions

1) What pieces of my culture have I retained? Why do I think these pieces are the ones I have held onto as a family?

2) What changes to my culture have I made to adapt to my new culture/surroundings?

3) What features of my combined cultures will see me into the future?

4) How does my culture shape who I am as a person?

Here is another great site found by a student in Ms Yick’s classroom. It may be very useful for you to look at.

Math Unit on Division

Next week we start our UNIT 4 in Math which is on Division. This is a great site recommended to me by Mr Hossack. I suggest the students add it onto their blogroll and refer to it if they are having difficulty. Traditionally Division can be a little difficult for some students so we will be taking this unit slowly.

Below is an example from the site that can be found here

We are starting to learn to divide.  There are many ways to divide things up and as a student I learned the most difficult way. The way I learned is likely the way most of your parents learned.   The Everyday math program teaches another way that is the most forgiving way.   It is called the Partial-Quotient Method.  I have put some links on this site so that your may teach your parents about dividing.  In the end it does not matter which way you do the dividing as long as you have a method that works, that you understand and can use effectively in class.  Here is an example taken from this useful math site: http://classic.sidwell.edu/academics/lower_school/LS_Math_Adventures/weeklymathnews.htm#Division_Methods_from_March_9,_2006

Division Methods

Our favorite way to introduce multi-digit division is by alerting kids to the fact that they merely need to know how to multiply (and subtract and add) in order to divide. We teach our students how to use the partial- quotients method, which is a most forgiving method for division. At each step, the student finds a partial answer and at the end, these partial answers are added to find the quotient.

Study the example below delineating how partial quotients can be used to find the answer to 94 ÷ 6.

6        94

Think: How many 6s are in 94?

(At least 10)

The first partial quotient is 10

(10 x 6 = 60)

Subtract 60 from 94

Think:  How many 6s in 34?

At least 5 [6s] or 30

The second partial quotient is 5

(5 x 6 =30)

Subtract. Add partial quotients

Total: 15  with a remainder of 4

The partial quotients method works just as well if the divisor is a 2-digitnumber. It often helps students to write down some easy facts for the divisor first. For example: In solving a problem such as 400 ÷ 22; some facts for 22 would be

22 x 2 = 44

22 x 5  = 110

22 x 10 = 220

22              400

10                 ( 10  [22s] in

5                                    ( 5 [22s] in 180)

2                                    (2 [22s] in 70)

1                                    (1 [22] in 26)

Total        18 remainder 4

The reason this method is easy to use is that the student can choose the numbers he or she feels most comfortable working with. There are different ways to find the partial quotients and yet all these ways lead to the right answer. Study the example below to see the different ways three students approached the problem 371 ÷ 4.

Here is a note from Mrs McVean

Dear Parents,

As you may have noticed, elementary school students did not come home with report cards last Friday.  The reason is that we have moved to a Trimester reporting calendar in the elementary schools to ensure that we do not “rush to judgement” in assessing our students and to provide you with an accurate portrait of your child’s new learning at their grade level.  In addition, the Trimester calendar allows for us to “report” on student progress five times throughout the year, with parent teacher conferences serving as elementary progress reports.  Parent Teacher conferences will provide an opportunity to focus our conversations on your child’s progress and for your questions to be addresses.

Please know how much we are looking forward to our first Parent Teacher conferences of the 2009/2010 school year.

I am sure your son or daughter will be happy to have this week’s IOWA test over with and I hope they, and you, have an enjoyable Halloween Weekend.

Trick or Treat?

Math Success

Welcome to the second quarter of 5th grade!

Congratulations to 5KP on the results from the latest math test. The class earned a median score of 95% and 15 out of 18 students showed improvement (with one student maintaining his previous high score). Four of the students that showed improvement actually earned their first 100% score for the year.

In the classroom we will keep two charts for math; one of which I have had in previous years; the 100% chart and another which I believe is more relevant for most of the class and achievable for all students; an improvement chart. This will be based on the results of their last test only encouraging the student to try and better their previous score. Of course, students should not feel discouraged if they cannot better their score and it is already in the 90th percentile anyway, this could be due to a number of factors and you cannot improve on 100%! This chart is mainly for the students who are often earning in the 70%-90% range and just need a bit of encouragement.

Well done 5KP for doing so well in our geometry unit.

Good luck with our next unit. Remember that starting today, you are all on the 100% chart, you start with a ‘4’…it is up to you what you do from here but by revising over each lesson at home you have a better chance of success next time around.

Unit 4 is on Division and the skills covered in unit four include:

*divide decimal numbers by whole numbers with no remainders

*write and solve number sentences with variables for division number stories

*find the quotient and remainder of a whole number divided by a 1-digit whole number

* find the quotient and remainder of a whole number divided by a 2-digit whole number

*make magnitude estimates for quotients of whole and decimal numbers divided by whole numbers

*interpret the remainder in division number stories

*determine the value of a variable; use this value to complete a number sentence

*know place value to hundredths

Homework in 5KP

On most days of the school year I hear the following comments; often within the same five minutes…”yeah, we have no homework!””man, there is so much homework” “I have too much homework” “we hardly have any homework” “I am never going to get all my homework done”” I wish we had more homework” “my mom says I have too much homework”…you get the picture?

Here is a snapshot of homework in 5KP…

Students may or may not have homework for P.E., Music, Art and Chinese: that is out of my control.

I expect that each child should be reading for around 30 minutes every night. This of course depends on the rest of their schedule for that evening and as many of the students love to read, this is often not a problem. It would be ideal if on a couple of nights a week they are able to read aloud to another person in the house, preferably a parent and that the parent then asks them some questions such as what do you think will happen next? Why did that happen? What does this mean? When parents engage like this with their child it helps the child on many levels, I think the most important one is that the child knows their parent is taking the time to show some interest in their son/daughters reading development but it also reinforces some of the skills they need for school, especially for tests such as the D.R.A. that they recently completed and that they will take again in 6 months time.

During most math units there will be a study link 4 nights a week. There should always be math revision over the lesson and some students have work from class to finish off at home. Many students were disappointed with their unit two math test result, however the class average was the same as unit 1, 83%: half the class improved on their score, three students earned the same score and more students scored over 90% than last time. I hope they spent some time going over their test with you last night as we spent a full period going over their responses yesterday.

Every week the students have two spelling units to complete between Monday and Friday. This levels out to one page of spelling/grammar/word study per night and as I showed the students in class yesterday, there are some great sites to enhance the spelling program such as spellingcity.com which is included in my blogroll. The emphasis in our spelling program is not on weekly drills and spelling tests but rather on fostering an interest in language and its origins and trying to add to our own vocabulary through discovering new words and learning to understand their meaning.

For language arts class your child may be writing or reviewing the unit we are doing in class. Often they will have drafting work to complete. I encourage the students to try and focus on a couple of ways to improve each time they draft, for example one night could be spent working on sentence fluency and word choice and another night might be about adding better verbs to their writing.

In Social Studies and Science there will be times during the quarter where there is little or no homework and at other times the students will be working on a project that will take over your spare time as well as your living room! The trick at these times is to work on balance and time management and of course not leave things to the last minute.

Technology homework is always an option. There are nights when I will set writing or researching tasks for the students to complete on their blog. I am well aware that access to a computer and a working network are not always possible and I ask that the students complete their work on paper if this is the case. I don’t want to set too much homework in tech for this reason however when a child comes home and says that have no homework, this is the first place I would send them. There is always something new being posted on my blog, the 5th grade teachers’ and students’ blogs or out there on the world wide web. They can spend that time, reading, writing or commenting on blogs.

I want the students to have time to play, to rest and to spend time with their family as well as developing a solid work ethic when it comes to school work. It would be great if at this young age they were able to find the happy balance that I am still looking for in my own life!

Everyday Math

Hi ParentsI am currently away from your child this morning as they work on their government unit and I am being educated in the new Everyday Math program. If you check out the comments from my blog post on ‘5KP working hard‘ you will see a few of the students made some interesting comments about the family letter that it is supposed to be sent home at the start of each unit.It is up to you if you would like to keep the family letter at home in a safe place or not, it depends how much time you spend with your child when they are doing their homework and also how confident your child is in this subject. I am putting a link for it now on my blog so that you will always be able to access these online from now on if you choose.Copy of Family Letter is also on the right permanently in my blog roll under ‘useful sites’.  Have a great long weekend with your children. 

5KP Working Hard

Today in class the students completed a variety of math activities as a follow up after their unit one math test and also to get a head start on the unit two math unit that we will be beginning tomorrow. Have test-run-picassa-class-pics-015-small.jpga look at the photos in the slide show below.Some students were working on brainpop.com which is a very popular site with the students that you should have a look at if you get the chance.Overall I was extremely pleased with the results of the math test where the median score for the students was 85%. A few silly errors were made by some students but it was a learning experience for all of the class and I hope you can find a few minutes to look over the test with your child and return it signed to me as soon as possible.Today we were fortunate to have a past student of 5th grade, Ben Wu, come into class and show off his expertise in animating power-point. The class were suitably impressed with what had to show them and I am sure even the brightest ‘tech kids’ in the class learned something new.Thanks very much for your entertaining and informative presentation Ben.test-run-picassa-class-pics-018-small.jpgStudents, for your homework tonight, please make a comment on one of the following topics. It should be at least two paragraphs in length. You may write on more than one topic if you wish but each topic needs a minimum two paragraph response.1. What did you like about Ben’s talk and why? What compliments would you like to pay him?2. If you had to go down and be an expert in a 4th grade classroom what would you teach them?3. How did you do on your math test? Are you happy or disappointed with your results?