FIRST GRADE LANGUAGE ARTS
Due to the holiday, we had one language arts class this week instead of two. With more than half the HA students absent, I improvised. We spent our time reconnecting. Students were given the opportunity to share three topics of their choice. After the students shared, we made connections to their topics where applicable. It was really nice to reconnect:)
SECOND GRADE LANGUAGE ARTS
As you may recall, we finished our novel study and watched the movie right before break. Instead of diving right in, I decided to give the students an "all about me" opportunity. Due to poor attendance in my first grade HA class, we spent time reconnecting. It proved to be so nice, I wanted to give the second graders the same opportunity before we move on. Each student was given the opportunity to share/bring up three topics of their choice. We were good, respectful listeners. We asked questions and made connections. It was such a nice, peaceful time together. We really enjoyed reconnecting.
THIRD GRADE LANGUAGE ARTS
As you may be aware, I was absent the last two weeks. Due to the holiday, we met once this week instead of twice. Also, nearly half our HA students were absent Tuesday. Given the combination of circumstances, I decided not to move on to our next genre of folklore. I started class by giving students a few things to take home from before our winter break. We reflected back on what the topics/lessons were pertaining to the items they were taking home. Some of the students took home an item or two that are incomplete. As much as I do not want to leave anything incomplete, I believe moving on to the next genre of folklore is the best choice for the students. Some students expressed wanting to learn more about the SS Edmund Fitzgerald and finish watching the documentary I had on while they were working on their drawings in December. I told them the documentary link and another link on topic are in a previous blog post. If your student asks you about it, you can find the links in the blog post from December 17. That blog post begins with "Happy Holidays, HA families!" The students and I also had some time to reconnect. We had missed each other, so it was great to be reunited. I look forward to seeing the absent students return:)
FOURTH GRADE LANGUAGE ARTS
The students continued working on the timeline poster for the Anne Frank biography project. They decided to use five year intervals with the first one at 1930 and the last one at 1950. During our next lesson, the students will plot the ten highlights of Anne Frank's life. They will also add pictures to the timeline. After that, they will move on to creating the Google Slides presentation of the project.
FIRST GRADE MATH
We focused on attributes this week. Our first lesson involved sorting shapes by their attributes. The students chose one of several attributes and drew three shapes inside a loop that have that attribute. They drew two shapes outside the loop that do not have that attribute. During our study of geometry, we have focused on standard geometric attributes. Our second lesson had us thinking outside the box. All the students completed their homework by bringing a stuffed animal to class:) After quickly introducing their animals, telling us why they chose them, where they got them, whether or not they have names, and how long they've had them, we moved on to their attributes. I encourage you to discuss the pictures below with your student. Your student can tell you what stuffed animal attributes we discussed. It was a great lesson in discovering attributes versus being told what attributes to focus on!
SECOND GRADE MATH
If you look closely at the picture below, you will see we worked with 3D shapes this week. The 3D shapes we discussed are: cube, rectangular prism, triangular prism, square pyramid, and triangular pyramid. The students analyzed the number and shapes of the sides. By definition, a square is a rectangle, but a rectangle is not a square. That fact comes up repeatedly in geometry. In our class, we repeatedly discuss the meaning of that. I am encouraging the students to memorize it by having them repeat it often. We also had a little time to start a Marcy Cook 100's chart puzzle. The students took home two puzzles they may complete for fun.
THIRD GRADE MATH
As you may recall, the students created their own 300's chart puzzles before winter break. This week, the students created answer keys for the puzzles they created. Each student was given a packet of the puzzles created by their classmates. The students began solving the puzzles. As the students began solving the puzzles, they found that some of the puzzles contain errors. I encouraged the students to solve the best they can. The students took their packets home. The students may choose to complete the packet and return to me for a vinyl sticker reward. It is not homework.
FOURTH GRADE MATH
Given word problems that lend themselves to algebra, students were instructed to not solve algebraically. Students began by analyzing what they know and need to know from the word problems. Instead of solving algebraically, students practiced using the guess-and-test method and making an organized list. Rather than focus on writing equations, the students approached the problems as a puzzle and used logical reasoning and problem-solving strategies to figure out the solutions. Once they found the answers, the students had to explain themselves in written words. As I've mentioned before, writing in math is a skill we work on in HA.
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