Friday, July 12, 2013

Magnificent Model Schools Conference

US Capitol Building. Photo by Ms. Tulbure

I was very fortunate to attend the Model Schools Conference this summer. 
It was held in our nation's capital, Washington DC.

Over 5,000 educators attended from our 50 states. WOW!
 The LVUSD team had over 100 attendees. 

Below are a few of my notes on sessions and thoughts from the conference. 

Linda Jordan and Sue Gendron: 'Effective Assessment for Rigorous and Relevant Instruction',
The presentation taught me more about Common Core Standards and the SmarterBalance assessments.
We discussed the Rigor and Relevance framework, and how crucial it is that students are able to work in Quadrant D rigor as well as extend their thinking with higher depths of knowledge. 

There were a few key points that stood out to me:
Today's students don't have the same relevance that we do
-their technology relevance is higher. 
Another point, echoed throughout the conference, was the importance of relationships.
Partner relationships are very important:
students will spend 75% of the work time learning about the other person.


That evening came the inspiring keynote, 'Leading For Change: It's about the Adults, not the Kids' by Dr. Sue Szachowicz. The adults, educators, should teach in a manner that represents both change and staying with what works.
School culture is important, and building those relationships is key.


Dr. Bill Daggett: 'Begin with the End in Mind' keynote focused on college AND career readiness for students.
He explained the current path in education, and how college readiness is the focus of tests and benchmarks.
The focus should be on 'and career ready.' 

Culture trumps strategy every time,
therefore building meaningful relationships is important. 

A key point was "Relevance makes Rigor possible." 

Val Barrett and Alice Cushing from Country Meadows Elementary School: 'Changing Culture and Raising Achievement'
The presenters showed us that relationships make a difference.
 "The right environment equals student learning for all."
 Greet students in the hallways daily and letting them know they're welcome.
A take away quote:
 "If you don't capture the kids' hearts, you won't capture their minds."



Bernadette Lambert: 'Quadrant D writing Habits'
The song motto was "This pen is on fire,"
 Writing in the classroom to be WARM (warn, analyze, reject, monitor).
 Students need real world purposes to write about and real world things to write about.  
We should provide opportunities for students to research authentic and essential questions.



Linda Jordan: 'Brain Health: Meeting the needs of at-risk students'   
 Learning is the brain's primary function, and students learn with real things. 
To grow dendrites, tell a story that goes along with the information taught
-the brain is likely to remember the story rather then lesson alone.
Take-away:
"for change to happen your strategies need to be consistent, purposeful, focused, and relentless."



'Quadrant D Classroom' by Alissa Braddy, took our Chaparral team through a Quad D lesson using the Rigor/Relevance framework.

As 4th graders, we experienced interactive and mobile strategies such as
"Stand Up, Hand Up, Pair Up," "Pass the Buck," and "Jigsaw."

 Each group member had a role, and can be designated with different color index cards or markers. 

As you finish the lesson, "keep the end in mind and let students know again what the end goal is." 




 Denise White: 'Effective Ways to Open and Close Lessons to Increase Rigor and Relevance '
Opening a lesson by using anticipatory sets
'hooks' the students and mentally engages them in a lesson
-  helps connect something familiar to new content. 

Closing a lesson with Exit tickets
 such as 3Ws (what did you learn today and WHY is it important) and
 3-2-1 (3 things you learned, 2 questions you have, 1 thing my teacher should know),
allows students to "synthesize the main idea and evaluate their own understanding".


It was a pleasure being at the conference with the wonderful Chaparral and LVUSD teams! 

What were some of the key points you took away from the conference? 







Thursday, May 16, 2013

Outstanding Open House

Welcome to our 3rd Grade 2013 Open House!


Take a look at some of our work around the classroom.


Way to Go!















Leave us a comment

What did you think about what you saw?

What were your favorite items?
 
Any positive suggestions and advice for us?

Bountiful Biographies

This week students completed a research report on a Biography Subject.
A biography is a true story about a person's life. It is told by a narrator. 


We wrote a speech for our biography subject and put ourselves in their shoes. Then, we created wondrous dioramas to show our story. 


We had a lot of interesting biographies to admire. 
Take a look!



Who was your favorite biography subject and why?

If you could ask a question of any biography subject what would it be? (name the person in your comment)

Monday, April 29, 2013

Fantastic Fiesta

As a culmination activity for "Pepita Talks Twice," and learning the Spanish language and culture, Ms. Tulbure's class celebrated by performing the Mexican Hat Dance. 

¡Qué grandes bailarines! 

(What great dancers!)

Olé




¿Qué piensas de la fiesta?

(What did you think of the fiesta?)




Use translate.google.com to leave a comment in English and Spanish!

Learning Languages

This week Ms. Tulbure's class read "Pepita Talks Twice."

Pepita, who is bilingual and speaks both Spanish and English, decides she does not want to translate and talk twice anymore. 
Her decision to stop speaking Spanish creates many problems she had not predicted.

Finally, Pepita realizes that it is a good thing to speak two languages.




The story is even written in both Spanish and English!

So we decided to learn a little Spanish ourselves!

Below are some Translations:


¡Bueños días! Good day!


¡Bueñas tardes! Good afternoon!


¡Bueñas noches! Good night!


¿Cómo estas? How are you?


¡Muy bien! Very well!


¡No muy bien! Not very well!


¡Que lástima! What a pity!


¡Gracias! Thank you!


De nada. You're welcome.


¡Hasta mañana! See you tomorrow!


¡Hasta luego! See you later!



Los Días de la Semana The Days of the Week


lunes Monday


martes Tuesday


miércoles Wednesday


jueves Thursday


viernes Friday


sábado Saturday


domingo Sunday



Me gusta...I like...


el pan bread


los tacos tacos


escuela school


matemáticas math



¡Que divertido! What fun!


¡Que buena idea! What a great idea!


¿Vamos a aprender Español? We're going to learn Spanish?




What was your favorite part about the story?

Can you carry on a conversation in Spanish?

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Exciting Chumash Adventures

Ms. Tulbure's Class took an exhilarating and educational trip to the 
Chumash Indian Museum!




In the slide show below you can see some of the activities and sights we enjoyed. 
 





What was your favorite activity of the trip?

Leave a comment about facts you learned about the Chumash.

Try answering the following questions:

What is the name of the Chumash canoe?
What are two ways the Chumash used asphaltum (tar)?
What beach is named for the tar that was found there?
What did the Chumash do to remove tannic acid from acorn?
Explain how to play a Chumash game.
Name some foods eaten by the Chumash.
What materials were used in building a Chumash ap?
What type of plant would the Chumash use to 
get rid of a headache?

Friday, March 8, 2013

Rowdy Rain forest



Picture from The Great Kapok Tree


We are learning all about the rain forest this week by reading The Great Kapok Tree by Lynne Cherry. It is a beautiful book about conserving the delicate diversity of the rain forest that all can enjoy.

Rain forests are thick, green forests that receive a lot of rain and are very hot and humid.
Most rain forests in the world are in South America, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Australia. 

It rains more than 200 days a year in a rain forest, and it receives up to 240 inches of rain a year. 

Picture from The Great Kapok Tree




Rain forests are home to many different plants and animals, many of which are still undiscovered by scientists. Many species of insects, amphibians, mammals, and birds live in various rain forest habitats.


Picture from The Great Kapok Tree


The rain forest has 4 layers. The Emergent Layer is the tallest and here trees can be as high as 200 feet! They form a big umbrella with their branches over the lower trees. Butterflies and birds call this layer home.
The Canopy is the next layer, and many animals live and eat here, such as monkeys and sloths.
Next is the Understory, where only small trees grow. Snakes and small mammals call this home. 

From The Great Kapok Tree
Finally, the Forest Floor is where moss, and small bushes grow as it is wet and dark. This is where you will find many insects. 
Picture from The Great Kapok Tree

The rain forest has many treasures for us to use in our daily lives. The wood from the trees are used to make furniture and houses.
Many fruits and vegetables come from the rain forest, such as guava, papaya, Brazil nuts, and tapioca. Beautiful orchids and zebra plants grow in the rain forest.
There are many oils, spices and gums we use in cooking and in the home such as: sandalwood oil, palm oil, cocoa, cardamon, chili pepper, and rubber for erasers.
 Numerous Rain forest plants are used to make medicine.

It is important to protect the rain forest so that we preserve the biodiversity of its plant and animal life.

What are your favorite rain forest animals? Why?

How would you save the rain forest?

What items in your home come from the rain forest? 

Have you ever been to the rain forest? What country was it in?




Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Winter Season Wonder

In the Northern Hemisphere, winter is the 
coldest season of the year. 
It begins about December 21 and lasts until about March 21. Around December 21 or 22, 
the sun's rays fall directly over the farthest point south of the equator - marking the first day of winter. 
Winter days have fewer hours of daylight because of the path the earth takes as it revolves around the sun. The earth completely revolves around the sun during 365 days. The earth's axis always tips about 23 1/2 degrees from a line perpendicular to its path. 

In the Southern Hemisphere, winter begins in June.
Different regions have longer winters than others. For example, in the polar regions, winter takes up half the year. In the Temperate Zones winter takes up about one quarter of the year. 
In regions where there is cold weather, it causes many changes in the environment. Water may freeze and become ice, snow, sleet or icicles. Most plants and animals become dormant and rest. 
Some animals hibernate. 
The only plants that grow and remain green are evergreens. 
People protect themselves from the cold climate with winter clothing when they go outdoors. They enjoy a variety of indoor activities or outdoor winter sports such as skiing, skating, or sledding. 


*     *     *     *     * 


Here are some fun winter links!
 


Want to make an online snowflake? Click here! 



BrainPop has some great winter and snow movies! Click here! 
Snowflake Workshop? Click here! 
What do you enjoy most about winter?


What activities will you be participating in this winter?



What is your favorite season? 

Friday, February 8, 2013

Solid Figures

Geometry is Great! 

We are learning so much about solid figures. Solid figures are always 3-D. That means they have a length, width, and height.

Solid Figures may have faces, edges, and vertices.
A face is the flat surface on a solid figure
An edge, is a line segment where two faces meet.
A vertex is a corner point where three or more edges meet.

There are many different types of solid figures:










Cube- It is a prism that has 6 square faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices










Rectangular Prism- it has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 vertices.









Square Pyramid: it has a square base and triangular sides. There are 5 faces, 8 edges, and 5 vertices.

photo by Ms. Tulbure



Sphere: a curved, round solid figure. It has 0 faces, 0 edges, and 0 vertices.



Picture by Ms. Tulbure





Cone: it has a circular face and connects at one vertex.













Cylinder: this solid figure has 2 equal circular faces. It has no edges or vertices.











Our class made some solid figures 
using toothpicks and marshmallows. Many solid figures are combined into one larger object. Can you identify the different solid figures you see?





2 square pyramids
Cubes and Square Pyramids











What is your favorite solid figure and why?


How many faces, edges and vertices does it have?


What is a famous example of your solid figure?