Blog Entry –Week of
January 13th
LANGUAGE - READING
A reminder that students write a letter every
other week to me in their Readers Notebook. They are given time during Daily 5
read to self to work on their letters in class.
Here is the schedule of when students’ letters are
due. Next week the Grade 5’s (week of Jan. 27) will be handing their letters in
and the following week Grade 4’s will.
Letter Due Dates
Monday
|
Tuesday
|
Wednesday
|
Thursday
|
Friday
|
Alex
Antony
Mark
Amelia
Madison E
|
Nyle
Martina
Adam
Lucas
Ella
|
Madison J
Iqra
Samiya
Amber
Bella
|
Fatima
Lindsay
Ben
Fernanda
Josef
|
Nick
Taha
Eshaal
Zoya
Yasmeen
Sahar
|
Letter Due Dates
Monday
|
Tuesday
|
Wednesday
|
Thursday
|
Friday
|
Lauren
Eric
Daniel B.
Ethan
Adrian
Talla
|
Nathan
Stuart
Je Nae
Tristan
Iris
Sam
|
Samuel
Filip
Jonah
Sarah
Hanna L.
Pratham
|
Aistis
Alex
Hannah N.
Abdullah
Omar
Reid
|
Will
Zeerak
Daniel S.
Aaron
Isaac
Emily
|
I’m very impressed with many students who respond
and answer the questions I have asked them in my responses to their letters. A
few have asked for sample letters that fall in the 3+ to a 4 range. Here are
some examples.
Grade 5 Sample
Grade 4 Sample
Recording
Students Fluency
Over the next few weeks students will be reading a
“Good Fit” Book Aloud and I will be recording there reading. Afterwards they
will have the opportunity to listen to themselves read and self assess their
own fluency. Helping them hear their strengths and next steps when it comes to
their fluency.
At home during when students are reading 20
minutes a night. Ten of those minutes should be spent reading their books aloud.
What is fluency?
Fluency is
the ability to read a text accurately and quickly with expression..
Why is fluency important?
Fluency is
important because it allows students to focus on making meaning rather than
sounding out words.
How can fluency be developed and improved?
Model fluent
reading and engage children in repeated oral reading.
Fluency has important elements to focus on:
1..
Expression & volume: The reader is reading the passage with feeling, paying
attention to
punctuation
marks. The reader is also loud enough for the audience to hear with correct
emotion.
2.. Phrasing:
Reader is using punctuation and meaning to read complete thoughts. (Reader
stops at
periods and pauses at commas.)
3.
Smoothness/Accuracy: The reader can read smoothly without having to sound out
words as
they read.
4. Pace: The
reader is reading at a normal pace. Reading sounds like a conversation. It is
not
slow
or choppy. It’s also not too fast!
MATH
We finished our Data Management Unit. Students
created their own survey questions, and collect data from their peers in the
school. Using the data they collected they graphed their results. There will
not be a test for Data Management their assignment was their final assessment.
We will be starting Decimals!!
Grade 4 Expectations:
* demonstrate an
understanding of place value from 0.1 -10,000 using a variety of different
tools and strategies
*count
forward by tenths from any decimal number expressed to one decimal place, using
concrete materials and number lines (e.g., use base ten materials to represent
3.7 and count forward: 3.8, 3.9, 4.0, 4.1, ...;
*add and
subtract decimal numbers to tenths, using concrete materials (e.g., paper
strips divided into tenths, base ten materials) and student-generated
algorithms (eg., “When I added 6.5 and 5.6, I took five tenths in fraction
circles and added six tenths in fraction circles to give me one whole and one
tenth. Then I added 6 + 5 + 1.1, which equals 12.1.”);
* compare whole numbers
from 0.1 to 10,000 using a variety of tools (e.g. base ten blocks, number
lines)
* order whole numbers
from 0.1 to 10,000
* explain equivalent
decimals to tenths (e.g. three tenths (0.3) is equal to thirty hundredths (0.3)
* represent whole
numbers to 10, 000 and decimals to 0.1
* demonstrate
equivalent representations of a decimal number, using concrete materials
Grade 5 Expectations:
*demonstrate an
understanding of place value from 0.01 -100,000 using a variety of different
tools and strategies
* compare whole numbers
from 0.01 to 100,000 using a variety of tools (e.g. base ten blocks, number
lines)
* order whole numbers
from 0.01 to 100,000
* explain equivalent
decimals to hundredths (e.g. three tenths (0.3) is equal to thirty hundredths
(0.3)
*round
decimal numbers to the nearest tenth, in problems arising from real-life
situations;
*add and
subtract decimal numbers to hundredths, including money amounts, using concrete
materials, estimation, and algorithms (e.g., use 10 x 10 grids to add 2.45 and
3.25);
*multiply
decimals numbers by 10, 100, 1000, and 10 000 and divide decimal numbers by 10,
and 100 using mental math strategies (e.g. use a calculator to look for
patterns and generalize to develop and rule)
*count forward by hundredths from any decimal number
expressed to two decimal places, using concrete materials and number lines
(e.g., use base ten materials to represent 2.96 and count forward by
hundredths: 2.97, 2.98, 2.99, 3.00, 3.01, ...; “Two and ninety-six hundredths,
* represent whole
numbers to 100, 000 and decimals to 0.01
* demonstrate
equivalent representations of a decimal number, using concrete materials
Math Help
Wednesdays (1st break) and
Fridays (2nd break)
E-TEXT (a great resource for extra practice)
The pages on the E-text for this unit is…
Grade 4 p. 299-307
Grade 5 p.112 -149