Thursday, 7 November 2019

Interview Scheduling

Dear parents,
My interview schedule is filling up very quickly, and I have yet to hear from 9 families. If you have not yet returned your yellow form to me, please know I only have two available times left on Thursday, both later in the evening. If you are able to come after 9:15 am on the Friday, please mark this on the sheet. If you are not available later Thursday or Friday morning, please give me an alternative - perhaps Tuesday the 12th after school (but before reports go home) or the following week. If I don't receive your form back by Monday, I will assign you an available time and hope that you can make it. We like to see all families at this point in the year. Thanks for your flexibility!

Today in Financial Literacy, we got another update on our characters and had to make yet another tough decision for them. Our lesson was about using credit cards - cash advances, transferring balances, all the fees associated with credit cards, how your management of your payments can positively or negatively affect your credit score, and the overall pros and cons of having a credit card. Anna is fantastic - she fields about a million questions in her hour with us, and listens to lots of opinions. She is able to give us very good base knowledge and general information about all these topics, but I do hope that the kids are coming home and asking more specific questions about finances. For example, when we talked about OSAP v. a bank loan, there were lots of opinions, and not necessarily a right answer. You might have a strong feeling about how your child might fund their post-secondary education, and it would be a great discussion to have right now!


In math, we are having a very short (1 question) quiz tomorrow on calculating moyenne, médiane and mode. I will be leaving our anchor chart up during the quiz, so as long as students have been feeling good about the practice we've been doing in class, they don't need to worry about it. We have to move on to more of the probability side of data management and we will have a test later which encompasses these terms, the graphs we have studied, and what we cover in probability.

In English and French language, while we finish up our French stories and English science project, we are also moving along with learning how to find the main idea, with supporting arguments, and write a great (but concise) resume. All grade 5/6 classes are working on these skills for the next while. We have done some guided practice going step by step through how to find the information that is important to include in a resume, and then write it up. And, we have been reading passages together to find the one specific main idea, and the arguments that support it. We will gradually move towards greater independence with these tasks. Please ask your reader what the difference is between finding the main idea, and writing a resume, and what some helpful strategies are for doing this.

In drama, we have been working on our "Novel-in-an-hour" activity, though we spent a little more than an hour. Each group was given one chapter of a fairly simple chapter book (one that some remember from grade 1), and together, they had to read it and present it as a drama. Some groups chose to have a narrator, others acted it out through the lenses of the characters. Some groups sent me background images to project, others prepared background sets and props. All groups really did a tremendous job presenting their chapter, and we all understood the whole story by the end of presentations. We actually did such a good job with the presentations, and all the transitions between chapters, that we hope to present our story to another class soon! Ask your actor what role they played in their chapter of "P'tit Jean et la Sorcière".

In Science, the grade 5s are continuing on through their 6 science activity centres, which have been really fun and successful. The grade 6s have spent a class outside investigating the Dewson school yard to complete the "Hands-On" portion of their project. They either had to compare two organisms that they found, or create an organizer to classify as many living things as they could find. I forgot to take pictures, but it was fun to see some groups digging and finding worms or insects, and other groups trying to identify types of trees or figure out how to count how much grass we have.

I also want to thank the class for their kindness with a personal matter. We had a scare last weekend with my grandmother's health, and I let the kids know that I would surely be absent for a couple days in the near future as we were preparing to say goodbye - but if anyone can escape from palliative care, you can count on my grandma to do it. She's still 94, but for now, the immediate threat has passed, and the class applauded for her - it was very sweet!

Please read on below for info on The Redeemers!

Wednesday, 6 November 2019

Shameless self-promotion!

Dear families,
As many of you know, I sing with a little group called 'The Redeemers'. We cover mostly doo-wop music from the 50s & 60s. It's super cute and lots of fun! We have two shows coming up, one of which had flyers available at curriculum night, so you may know about it.

1) Wednesday, Nov. 20, 7:30 pm @ Hugh's Room. This is a special event for us and we want to fill the venue as much as possible, but we are a small group! Tickets are available through the venue's website - $20 in advance/$25 at the door. You can have dinner while you watch!

2) Friday, Nov. 15, 7:00 pm @ The Gladstone Hotel. This will be like our dress for the big show, but we always love having a good audience at the Gladstone, and since we are inviting everyone we know to Hugh's, we would love to see some new faces here. It's casual, you can show up late, leave early, you can eat, you can dance, and the best part - this one's free!

Hope to see some of you on one of those evenings, and please share this shamelessly with any music lovers you know!
Tamara

Friday, 1 November 2019

Happy Friday!

Happy belated Halloween! I saw some great costumes yesterday! Our class had voted to celebrate by having free time with personal electronics allowed (I had also made them graph the results of our survey, hahaha!). I was pleased that all students used their devices appropriately and I didn't see any phones or tablets after our free time was over. I've reminded students that phones are not to be pulled out at recess, with the exception of grade 6 Friday lunch off-property. Phones are sometimes causing delays during transition times, for example trying to get out at the end of the day, as students are pulling them out and standing around rather than packing and moving!

After free time yesterday, we continued in a Halloween theme with an interesting listening and drawing activity. I told our class the story of Symphonie Fantastique, a program symphony by French composer Hector Berlioz. The music tells the story of a young writer who has fallen in love with an actress, but she does not return his affection. He has a series of dreams and nightmares and at one point in the music, we actually hear him get beheaded! In the final movement, witches and goblins and other monsters dance at his funeral. It's a great Halloween story, and everyone loves hearing his head bounce into the basket! As we listened, students illustrated each movement in a booklet. Please ask them about the story of the symphony and how much of it is true to life!

In Financial Literacy yesterday, we talked about credit cards. How do pay it back, and what happens if you don't pay back the entire balance each month? Ask your student how long it would take to pay back a $2000 television purchase if you just paid the minimum payment each month, and how much it would actually end up costing over that time. 
Our groups saw the consequences of the decision they made for their character last week. The characters are now 22 years old and have another life decision to make. Ask your student what choice they made this time and why.

In math this week, we have looked at several different types of graphs, determined what they are useful for, and practiced creating them. We used a great site called "Kids' Zone" for making circle graphs, and as it is linked to Classroom, the kids can try out the other types of graphs anytime. We also looked at pictograms, broken-line graphs and stem-and-leaf tables this week. 


In French, we are typing the good copies of our stories and moving ahead with learning how to write a good summary. Our grammar this week involves forming the passé composé without a Bescherelle. While there are always exceptions in French, there are some basic rules that work for most verbs. We went through it slowly together in class, and the instructions are also attached to the homework assignment in Classroom.

In Science, we are getting to the stage where our written component for our project should be done, and we can start planning our hands-on portion. Next week, grade 6s will be going outside to examine living things in our yard. Grade 5s will be doing some building, or an experiment, which may be similar to one of the centres we did the other day.
The grade 5s have started working through 6 activity centres examining different parts of the body. In two centres, we are learning to find our resting heart or breathing rate and then examining how it changes with exercise. In another centre, we are testing our brain to find our average reaction rate. In the 4th centre, we are seeing how our skin is affected by water and drawing a connection between this and swimming in the summer. In the 5th centre, we are looking at the ingredient lists and nutritional value charts on some food boxes and trying to determine which product is healthiest. Finally, in the last centre, we are assembling X-ray images to build the human skeleton and then counting up the bones in each area of the body. Approximately how many bones are there in an adult human body? We've only completed 2 centres each so far, but we will continue next week!
 

Have a great weekend!