Monday, December 31, 2012

Winter Break Question #5

Let's dip into a bit of reading: main idea and supporting detail.




Saturday, December 29, 2012

Winter Break Question #4

The next installment of our Winter Break series discusses subtraction across zeros.  Good times!


Friday, December 28, 2012

Winter Break Question #3

Subtraction :insert evil laugh: is today's video of the day.  Enjoy!  AND PRACTICE!!

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Winter Break Question #2

Yikes!  Talk about time flying.  Sorry about the delay.  Here is the question I intended for December 27!


Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Winter Break Question of the Day, Day 1

Welcome to the first installment of Winter Break Question of the Day!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Baby, It's Cold Outside!

Winter Break Packet went home today!  If it did not make it to your home, here's a link to it.  The packet is not required, but it's a nice way to keep skills fresh!

Tomorrow is our read in.  Students can wear PJs, and bring pillows and/or stuffed animals.  They should have the most important thing: something to read!


The All School Sing Along is tomorrow at 2:15.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Math: FASTT Math; meanings of division; math terms retakes

Social Studies: Economist discussion

Literacy Block: Rotations; My Mouth is a Volcano; discussion of metaphor; no Handwriting this week; treat for reaching 1,000,000 words read in Reading Counts! as a class

Party tomorrow!  Also persuasive letter rewards day!

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Math: Prime and composite activity

Literacy block: finished letters; Handwriting, Week 14, Friday is due on Monday

Mark chart slips will go home Monday, along with a schedule of things that will be happening this week

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Math: FASTT Math; meanings of division; fact families; Reteaching sheet for homework; study fact family triangles

Social studies: Geographer; landforms

Literacy block: Persuasive writing; rotations; Handwriting, Week 14, Tuesday

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Mrs. Plato...Where have you been?!

Hello everyone!

For the last two days, I have been in Springfield writing fourth math items that align to the Common Core Curriculum Standards.  In the next few years, you will see a huge change in what is taught at which levels in mathematics (not to mention English Language Arts).  Some of what I taught at the middle level is now in the fourth grade curriculum.  The good news is that the curriculum is supposed to allow for teachers to go more in depth with the content instead of teaching and moving on so material can be "covered" before the beginning of March.

District 87 teachers have been working on the transition to the Common Core Curriculum Standards for a few years.  Our students are still assessed on the 1997 Illinois Learning Standards as part of ISAT in March.  Discussions are happening at the state and national levels, as the Core Content Standards are being adopted by many states, with alterations here and there depending on the state.  In your student's experiences in public school, and in most private schools in the state as well, from now until high school graduation, major changes will be witnessed.  The testing is slated to be expanded throughout the year instead of happening in just one week.  Details are being hammered out as to how that will work, as the testing being suggested might happen on computers.  The times are a-changin' for sure!

I wish I could tell you education is an exact science.  It isn't.  We deal with tiny humans with minds of their own.  Education is a science that changes (just think of how you were taught concepts and how your student is taught the same concepts...some things change, some stay the same).  I can tell you that the main target of student achievement never changes.

I have been out of the classroom working on several initiatives this year.  We are revamping D87 elementary curriculum in order to align with the Common Core.  We will be changing report cards to reflect these changes.

The teacher appraisal process is also changing, and huge changes started taking place this year.  I have been invested in these changes for four years now.  I firmly believe that the process is a better one that allows for teacher reflection and for evaluation to consider all that a teacher does, rather than just look at one lesson on one day out of 180 days in a school year.

Yep, there's one more thing!  I have been spending this year as an administrative intern.  In May, I will be graduating with my second Master's degree.  My first, from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, focused on Curriculum, Technology, and Education Reform.  My second, from Concordia University Chicago, is in Educational Leadership.  That means some days I might be substituting for Mrs. Lammers or running a school event.  I get to work very closely with the PBIS committee at Irving in my role as intern.

Through all of these activities, when I am gone from the classroom, two very positive things are true.  One, 99% of the time I have the same guest teacher, Mrs. Carole Kalmes.  Mrs. Kalmes is a retired Irving teacher who knows fourth grade curriculum quite well, and she gives students a perspective of their learning that sometimes does not occur to me.  Second, Mrs. Svob and I co-teach literacy block.  When I am gone, she usually remains, and instruction can continue uninterrupted.  This has been a great thing.  We are seeing good achievement scores from our students in the co-taught class, and the students seem to enjoy the range of choices they are given.

Thanks for reading this far!  I felt that my class deserved an explanation for the amount of times I must be gone this year.  I tell them each time that I would rather be with them, and I mean that 100%!  They are the reason we all do what we do.  They are having an outstanding year, and each day I am gone, I miss them tremendously!

Mrs. Plato

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Math: FASTT Math; students were given a print out of their focus facts, ask about it!; multiplication strategies; practice fact family triangles

Social studies: talked about social scientists and geographers

Literacy block: completed class compare/contrast essay; rotations; strategy groups; no Handwriting this week

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Math: Discussed November goals and how to prove we met, or did not meet, them; discussed multiplication strategy booklets

Social studies: Worked on Me and the Map project

Literacy block: Worked on comparing paragraph for compare contrast class essay; Handwriting, Friday, Week 13 is homework AND an assessment; rotation

Get mark chart summary signed