Sunday, April 22, 2012

Learning Updates 4.20.12

We had a great week back from Spring Break, filled with lots of learning. Here's a bit of what we've been up to:

Math

  • Finished Unit 9 and worked on the unit math review in class on Friday
  • Unit 9 test on Monday--as we wrote in their planners, students should study for the test over the weekend
Reading
  • Worked on the reading skill of comparing/contrasting using two different photos. We did some whole class and teacher modeling, and then students tried it independently on a new set of photos. Students made some great inferences and conclusions about the similarities and differences they saw
  • Started to talk about theme (the lesson or author's message)--we'll do more with this next week
Writing
  • We're going in to publishing mode! Many students finished their rough drafts of their realistic fiction stories and conferenced with me. We'll do more conferences the beginning of this week and get everyone publishing their picture books. Very exciting!
Social Studies
  • Delved deeper in our Pacific Rim Trade unit. Learned about Fair Trade through a story called Zapizapu. Ask your student to tell you about this. Specifically, what drink from our lives does Zapizapu represent and what is some evidence from the story to support this?
  • Students met in small expert groups and read about one of five different Pacific Rim countries. They highlighted, mind mapped the information, and planned a presentation for the class, plus worked a bit on a visual aid poster. Groups presented their information on Friday to the class and we all took notes.
Expert Groups. Students read and highlighted information about their Pacific Rim Country.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Learning Updates 4.6.12

Wherever Spring Break finds you I hope you have a safe, fun and relaxing time with friends and family.

Here's a super quick update from this week:
Researching and taking notes on the Pacific Rim and its connection to trade and Washington State.

Proud published authors. Fourth graders shared their published essays and second graders shared their published realistic fiction pieces. It was fun for us to compare our current work in that genre to that of our second grade buddies.
Social Studies
  • Started Pacific Rim unit, learned that Pacific Rim is ring of countries around outside of Pacific Ocean that engage in trade with one another
  • Students read and took research notes on the topic
Math
  • Working a great deal with percentages--calculating them from fractions both mentally and on the calculator
  • Solved story problems and made sense of survey data by converting between fractions, decimals and percents
Reading
  • Met with our second grade reading buddies--we each shared published writing pieces
  • Working to make inferences from short mystery stories involving a fictional crime--students focused on the background knowledge and text clues that led them to that inference
Writing
  • Continuing to make progress on our realistic fiction stories. Talked about grounding our characters in a setting rather than having them floating in space, worked on writing 2-3 potential endings, talked about how we only revise our best work--the work we care about and that revising is "re-seeing" possibilities, and reviewed charts/lesson topics from earlier in the year in the hope that students will call on these earlier learning in their writing now. Not bad for one week!

Friday, March 30, 2012

Learning Updates 3.30.12

Evaporation experiments in progress--surface area (front), type of liquid (back left), adding an object--sponge vs no sponge (back right)

Air movement--fan vs. no fan. Other experiments that groups conducted: temperature--fridge vs. room temp., and light--dark cupboard vs window sill vs fluorescent light.
100ml of different liquids. Did type of liquid affect rate of evaporation? Ask your student. Groups presented their findings and conclusions on Friday.
Writing procedures and materials lists--before conducting their experiments, groups had to write a detailed plan as well as a hypothesis of what they expected to find.
Writer's Workshop debrief and sharing. Students were eager to share the leads they wrote for their realistic fiction narratives. They envisioned with a partner the sort of story this sets up and discussed whether that matches where they think the story actually needs to go. Students are more apt to make these front end revisions before they've written great volumes and are committed to that story.
Science Fair was last week and we had some great projects:








Art Docent--thank you to Lisa Purdon and the Grand Ridge PTSA for a great opportunity. Instead of creating art this time, students had a chance to view a special exhibit from the Bellevue Art Museum. Students did some in depth thinking and had a great discussion about each of the seven pieces in the exhibit.
Recorder Concert. The culmination of the fourth grade recorder unit was a concert for the school in the afternoon on Tuesday and also a concert for parents in the evening.

Other Odds and Ends
  • Finished Math Unit 8 and started Unit 9 on fractions, decimals, and percents
  • Math tests are headed home today
  • We're making great progress on our stories in writing, learning about character traits, story mountains, and leads
  • Focused on visualizing strategy and responding to our reading. Ask your child how "Still Pictures," "At the Movies," and "Experience the Story" work. These are the three different response strategies I modeled and we practiced this week.
  • Finished up our Matter unit in science

Friday, March 23, 2012

Learning Updates 3.23.12

Happy Friday. And a bright, blue-sky sunny one at that. We've been quite busy these last days. Read on to learn more about BizTown, including lots of pictures from last Friday (in their own album). Here's what we've been up to in Room 264:

BizTown
By now you've probably heard all about it, but have you seen the pictures? Click to see the full album. BizTown truly would not have been possible without the terrific support of our parent volunteers. We had 33 parents in all, who attended a 2-hour training session in February, then arrived an hour before us at BizTown, and facilitated the experience for students the rest of the day. I'd like to especially thank our class' parent volunteers for their help:
  • Luvlee Lee, Mariner's Team Store
  • Brianna Eigner, Tacoma Water
  • Mark Shields, Puget Sound Energy
  • Kim Mitzel, Staples
  • Mike Purdon, Chase Bank
  • Christina Anagnostopoulos, SuperGraphics
  • Kristine Hannley, UPS
  • Heather Kearns, Q13 Fox News
Students were excited and amazed, to say the least as they first walked in to BizTown. It's like the Disneyland of Economics.
Math
  • Nearly finished with Unit 8. Students will finish/study the review sheet over the weekend. They should also complete any unfinished pages in their math journal for Unit 8. Test on Monday
  • Learned to find the area and perimeter of figures. Learned formulas for area of rectangles and parallelograms (bxh=area -- base x height = area). And we learned that a triangle is 1/2(bxh) because if you take two triangles of the same size, rotate, and plug them together you have a parallelogram. Thus we need to take 1/2 of bxh so that we're only talking about area for one triangle--not two.
Science
  • Started matter unit. Charted similarities and differences of solids, liquids, and gasses on a venn diagram. We drew on our observations of mystery balloons which contained different types of matter--ask your student about this.
  • Tuesday we dropped everything and did a 4th grade science rotation day. Throughout the day students rotated to each of the five fourth grade classes for a different lesson on matter. Among other things, students learned about volume, how gas takes up space, how different shapes still weight and take up the same space, and more.
  • Conducted a class-wide evaporation experiment. Ask your student what container evaporated most/least. Students began designing their own evaporation experiments in groups
Reading
  • Started a new read aloud. Ask your student what's happened so far with Miranda. What lessons can we learn from the characters in this story that we can apply to our narrative writing stories?
  • Practiced some more with lifting a line
  • Worked on a new reading response strategy involving visualizing what we read, called "leaning in"
Writing
  • Began an exciting new writing unit on realistic fiction narrative writing
  • Learned that ideas can come from past entries in our writing, thinking about people we've encountered & experiences we've had
  • Began to brainstorm the outside (external features) and inside (internal features) of our characters
  • Learned that stories generally have characters who want something and struggle in some way. Often wants and struggles are connected somehow. And our job as writers is to show wants/struggles through our story, but not just come right out and tell this. (Show, not tell)

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Learning Updates 3.10.12

Author's Chair--Essays are finally finished! And this is impressive, complex fourth grade work!
A cranberry juice toast to all our hard work. 
Silent author's chair. Students roamed desk to desk, reading each others' essays, and then writing two specific compliments and one question for the author.
Modeling the four step problem solving method, Mr. Ciraulo met with our class again on Wednesday
Evidence circles. Students share their ideas about gravity and earth in space. They used an inflatable globe to help explain their thoughts.
Earth in Space concept wall. Can you believe all that we've learned in one week?! (Click on the picture--can always do this to view larger)
More information on our week:
  • Spent more time preparing for our upcoming BizTown field trip this Friday 3/16
  • Look for more final reminders about BizTown soon
  • Reviewed and took unit 7 math review. Started unit 8 and learned about perimeter, scale drawings and area
  • Began space science unit. See concept wall photo above. We'll try to finish up this next week and then move on to States of Matter
  • Met with our 2nd grade reading buddies and modeled more "lift a line" response journal entries in reading. Had an exciting assembly with Matt Holm, author of the Babymouse series (Thank you PTSA!!)
  • Report cards will come home this Friday 3/16

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Learning Updates 3.4.12

Dear Families,

Here's a quick update from our first week back from Mid-Winter break. We're off and running again!

Cube Drop Experiment. We looked at fractions and probability with this fun, hands-on math experiment.

Pacific Science Center: Science on Wheels. Thank you PTSA for a great assembly. We learned some great things about Matter and the powers of liquid nitrogen, too. What a great tie-in with our upcoming Matter Unit!
Math
  • Continued to learn about probability and fractions. We had our final lesson of the unit on Friday. We'll review on Monday and test on Tuesday
Reading
  • Took a mock MSP reading assessment and learned a new reading response strategy called "lift a line," where you copy a thought provoking line. Then you write about the thoughts that line evoked for you.
 Writing
  • Students made huge progress this past week. They finished drafting, ordering, cementing (writing transitions) between all the parts they've written, revising and editing. I read through each piece and then conferenced with each student. They made some additional changes and began publishing on the computer. Typed, published pieces are due tomorrow (Monday)
  • It's looking like Author's Chair will happen Thursday!
Social Studies
  • We've been working hard and studying lots in preparation for BizTown. We'll continue to finish some odds and ends prior to our trip on Friday the 16th. 
  • A BizTown newspaper assignment will come home tomorrow (Monday)
Science
  • We'll start our Space Science studies this coming week!

Friday, February 17, 2012

Letter from Leika!


Class,

The other day I received this email from our former student, Leika. Write back to Leika and tell her what's been new for you in the past month. Write in full paragraphs. Remember our blogging rules and please stay on topic. 

Parents--this week's Learning Update is one post below...

Mr. Herzberg,

One picture was missing in the first email, and I think this one has the right picture!!
Thank you!

Hi guys! How are you? It's been about one month since I came to Taiwan, and I have been very busy!
  
My new school, Taipei American School, (we call TAS) is a huge school for Kindergarten through High School. It is over 60 years old.  It has a swimming pool, 2 large tracks and fields,  2 children play areas, 2 theaters, libraries,  labs, music and art rooms and a lot more, so I can't list all! There are 20 students in my class, and my new teacher is Mrs. Fox. The name of her class blog is Fox News!
 
 
It's such a fun environment to be in!

During Chinese New Year from January 23 to January 27,  I went to China for 5 days to spend Chinese New Year break. There were lots of "bangs" and "pops" because Chinese people celebrate a New  Year day with firecrackers, along with saying,"Gong hai fat choi!"or "Shin nien quaila!"  to each other. They both mean Happy New Year in Cantonese and Mandarin.
 

 They are my cousins!

I received a lot of Laishi, which is a red envelope with money in it. Grown-ups give children new year’s money.
 
Now my wallet is full of money!.....and candies!

In Taiwan, the food is delicious!! I eat a lot!
  
This is milk pudding. So yummy!
 

This is Wonton in soup.
 


This is sticky rice cooked in bamboo. The rice has some bamboo flavor. Ummm...good!
 


I REALLY miss my home and my friends in US, but I also enjoy my Taiwan life!
 
See ya!
Leika
 
Sent from Wong's iPad