Thursday, March 29, 2007

Homework - 3/29/2007

  • None - between a quick trip to the library, an assembly on recycling, a math test, and a kickball game, there is no homework today. Besides, it's spring break, and I am not assigning any homework over the break. However, I do hope that students will read for pleasure and review math and science material for the STAR test.

Today I gave the students two pages of a Mathematics study guide to help them prepare for the upcoming STAR test. Please ask your child to see this paper; it specifically references many pages from the textbook that will be a helpful review for your child.

Also, I passed out three California standards-based test preparation booklets today: 1) English-Language Arts, 2) Mathematics, and 3) Science. I have asked the students to bring these home over spring break so that you can see some of the materials that we'll be using this year to prepare for the STAR test. These are new this year, and replace CAMS and CARS you may remember from previous years. I have asked the students not to start working on these yet, until I can familiarize myself with the new format and decide how I want to use them. We will absolutely be using them in class when we return from spring break, so remind your children to bring them back to school on Monday.

Homework - 3/28/2007

None - Students worked on science, reviewed math, and took more of the physical fitness tests, so it was a busy day, but no homework.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Panoramic Picture

The fifth grade panoramic picture is scheduled for tomorrow. Please send a check with your child if you want to purchase the panoramic picture. Thank you.

Homework - 3/27/2007

  • Grammar - PB 285, 298, and 303
  • Math - 345: 8-16; 351: 8-18; 353: 12-21; 356: 17-26

Monday, March 26, 2007

Homework - 3/26/2007

  • Spelling - PB 329-331
  • Grammar - PB 283/284

My Brother Sam Is Dead:

  • Students should finish reading the book today if they are on schedule.
  • Comprehension - Chapters 11 & 12 - due tomorrow (Tuesday)
  • Vocabulary - Chaptes 12, 13, 14, & Epilogue - due Wednesday
  • Comprehension - Chapters 13, 14 & Epilogue - due Wednesday

Friday, March 23, 2007

Curriculum Update: Mathematics

  • Chapter 19 is Add and Subtract Fractions
  • The important lessons are 1 through 6
  • Lesson 7 is a problem solving strategy and is extra credit
  • The important standard is Number Sense 2.3: Solve simple problems involving the addition and subtraction of fractions and mixed numbers, and express answers in simplest form

Homework - 3/23/2007

  • Grammar - PB 278

My Brother Sam Is Dead

  • Comprehension questions - Chapters 11 & 12 - due Tuesday
  • Comprehension questions - Chapters 13 & 14/Epilogue - due Wednesday
  • Vocabulary - Chapters 12 & 13/14/Epilogue - due Wednesday

Homework - 3/22/2007

  • Science - Answer review questions 1 to 5 on page A13
  • Math - Study for Chapter 18 test

My Brother Sam Is Dead

  • Vocabulary for chapters 10 and 11 are due tomorrow (Friday)

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Grammar Study Guide: Quotations

A direct quotation gives a speaker's exact words. Set off exact words using quotation marks. Begin each quotation with a capital letter. Place end punctuation marks, like periods, question marks, and exclamation marks, inside the quotation marks.

Examples: "Why haven't you finished that yet?"
"Because I just got home, that's why!"

Use commas inside the quotation marks to separate quotations from the rest of the sentence. The only time you don't do this is if you are using a period, question mark, or exclamation mark; compare the first two examples below. Remember to begin each quotation with a capital letter, unless the quotation is interrupted by the name of the speaker, as in the third example below.

Examples: At dinner, I asked, "Would you pass the salt, please?"
"Would you pass the salt, please?" I asked at dinner.
"Well, certainly," my mother replied, "since you asked so politely."
"There may be hope for him yet," my father remarked.

If a quotation is two sentences, use a period after the speaker's name, and be sure to start the second quotation with a capital letter.

Example: "I'd really like to go," I said. "I just have to get my parent's permission first."

Do not use quotations with indirect quotations.

Example: My mom said I could go if I finished all my chores first.

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Grammar Study Guide: Interjections

An interjection, one of the eight parts of speech, is a word or phrase that expresses feelings. They almost always appear at the beginning of a sentence.

Mild interjections are followed by a comma.

Example: No, I didn't do my homework.

Strong interjections are followed by an exclamation point. Don't forget to capitalize the word that comes after the exclamation point.

Example: No! I didn't do it, I tell you. I swear I'm innocent.

Here are a few common interjections: ah; aha; ahem; all right; ew; fine; gee whiz; good grief; gosh; hello; help; hey; hooray; my goodness; no; no way; oh; oh, no; oops; ouch; phew; right on; super; ugh; well; whew; wow; yes; yikes; yippee; and yuck.

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Grammar Study Guide: Words ending in -ed or -ing

Because both suffixes –ed and –ing start with vowels, there are some rules that we must follow when adding them to the ends of base words.

If the word ends with a silent e, then you drop the e and then add –ed or –ing.

Examples: hope becomes hoped or hoping, store becomes stored or storing

If the word ends with a consonant and then y, change the y to i and then add the suffix –ed. When adding –ing, you leave the y as it is. Note: all words that we're adding these suffixes to are verbs. Also notice that we do something similar with words ending with ie. When adding –ed, drop the final e and add the suffix. When adding –ing, drop the final e and change the y to i.

Examples: study becomes studied or studying, try becomes tried or trying, die becomes died or dying, lie becomes lied or lying

If the word ends with a consonant, there a couple of different rules to follow.

1) If the word ends with a consonant, and has a short vowel, double the final consonant and then add the suffix. Most of these words are just one syllable long.

Examples: hop becomes hopped or hopping, skip becomes skipped or skipping, control becomes controlled or controlling, submit becomes submitted or submitting

Of course, if the verb already ends in a double vowel, then you just add the suffix, so that kiss becomes kissed or kissing.

There is one important exception to this rule. If the verb ends with an x, then just add the suffix.

Examples: mix becomes mixed or mixing, box becomes boxed or boxing

2) If the word ends with a consonant and has two or more syllables, then just add the suffix.

Examples: offer becomes offered or offering, visit becomes visited or visiting

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Homework - 3/21/2007

  • Grammar - study for test
  • Science - A13: 1-5 (room 25)

My Brother Sam Is Dead

  • Comprehension questions - chapters 9 & 10 - due tomorrow (Thursday)
  • Vocabulary - chapters 10 & 11 - due Friday

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Homework - 3/20/2007

  • Math - 326: 10-32 (even); 329: 10-29 (odd)

My Brother Sam Is Dead:

  • Vocabulary - Chapters 8 & 9 - due tomorrow (Wednesday)
  • Comprehension Questions - Chapters 9 & 10 - due Thursday
  • Vocabulary - Chapters 10 & 11 - due Friday

Monday, March 19, 2007

Book Fair Wish List

Dear Parents of Room 27 (classroom visits on 3-22 at 8:15)

Here is a list of books Mr. Walker would like to add to his classroom Library.

You may purchase a gift certificate for him or circle the book you would like to purchase – and attach a check for that amount. All checks are payable to Lafayette PTA. Please place money in an envelope and address it Book Fair Chairperson / Penny Lopes and I will make sure it is taken care of.

You may also visit the fair anytime from Monday, March 19- Friday, March 23 from 7:30am-3:00pm, or at our family event Tuesday, March 20, from 6pm – 8pm and buy them directly.
All prices shown include tax.

NAME OF BOOK - PRICE - LOCATION
hand pointer - 4.33 - adult books
Room One - 7.58 - best sellers
Heat - 5.41 - best sellers
The Sea of Monsters - 5.41 - best sellers
The Sisters Grimm - 5.41 - 12c
Princess Academy - 5.41 - 10c
Each little bird that sings - 4.33 - 10b
May Bird - 5.41 - 9a
Midnight Library Voices - 5.41 - 9c
The Wright 3 - 5.41 - 11d
Kingdom Keepers - 4.33 - 11c
Spiderman: back in black - 7.58 - 11c
Charlie bone hidden king - 5.41 - 9b
Goosebumps: creepy creatures - 7.58 - 9d
Half Moon Investigations - 5.41 - 9d
Drums, Girls & Dangerous Pie - 6.49 - best sellers
High-flying stars - 5.41 - 8c
This book is a joke - 4.33 - 8d
Book of Lists - 10.83 - 7a
Be a Super Test-taker - 8.66 - Top 4

Homework - 3/19/2007

  • Math - 322: 6-16 (odd); 18-29 (all); 326: 10-33 (odd)

My Brother Sam Is Dead - Comprehension questions for chapters 7 and 8 are due tomorrow, comprehension questions for chapters 9 and 10 are due Thursday, and vocabulary for chapters 8 and 9 is due Wednesday.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Book Fair

Also, don't forget the Scholastic Book Fair is going on all next week during Parent-Teacher Conference week. Please stop by and see all the great books in Room 18. Penny Lopes and her parent volunteers have done a fantastic job again this year! I made an extensive wish list. If you can purchase books for our classroom, the students and I would greatly appreciate it. Thanks in advance.

Parent-Teacher Conferences

Don't forget that Parent-Teacher Conferences are next week. I must have 100% participation from all parents. Students will be dismissed one hour earlier, at 12:55.

I did my utmost to give you one of your requested times. However, some of you did not mark three choices or indicate a first, second, or third choice. If you just marked boxes with checks, then I felt free to use any of those times. Also, the times at lunch and right after school were the most requested; there just aren't enough of those blocks to accomodate the requests you made. Factoring all of that in, a majority of you did receive your first choice, and nearly everyone received one of their three choices.

I look forward to meeting with you again and discussing how your child is progressing through fifth grade this year.

Homework - 3/16/2007

  • Grammar - PB 257/258
  • Math - 319: 5-26

My Brother Sam Is Dead - Vocabulary for chapters 4 through 7 is due Monday and the Comprehension questions for chapters 7 and 8 is due Tuesday.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Homework - 3/15/2007

  • Grammar - PB 244
  • Science - Read Lesson 2

My Brother Sam Is Dead - Comprehension questions for chapters 5 and 6 are due tomorrow.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Homework - 3/13/2007

  • Grammar - PB 237 & 252
  • Math - 305: 8-21; 307: 9-28; 309: 3-8

My Brother Sam Is Dead - Comprehension questions for chapters 3 and 4 are due tomorrow, as well as Vocabulary for chapters 1 to 3.

Monday, March 12, 2007

Homework - 3/12/2007

  • Grammar - PB 243
  • Spelling - PB 314-316

My Brother Sam Is Dead - Due tomorrow: Comprehension and Discussion Questions for chapters 1 and 2.

Friday, March 09, 2007

Reading Assignment

I have assigned My Brother Sam Is Dead, a chapter book that takes place during the American Revolution. Students are expected to read fifteen (15) pages per schoolday. If they fall behind, they can catch up on the weekend. We will not be reading any stories out of our Houghton Miffling Reading anthology while we are working on MBSID. I will be spending more of our language arts block working on grammar skills.

Students are given two different types of worksheets to complete: 1) Vocabulary, and 2) Comprehension and Discussion Questions. They are to complete these worksheets as they complete reading the appropriate chapters. The worksheets are then due two schooldays later. For example, they have a Comprehension and Discussion Questions worksheet that covers chapters one and two. They should have finished reading chapter two today; the end of chapter two falls between pages 31 and 45. The comprehension questions worksheet covering those two chapters is then due next Tuesday.

  • Comprehension Questions - Chapters 1 & 2 - due Tuesday, March 13
  • Vocabulary - Chapters 1 to 3 - due Wednesday, March 14

Homework - 3/9/2007

  • Study for science test - Unit C, Chapter 3

Homework - 3/8/2007

  • Science - C94-95: 1-28, WB 172, and WB 155

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Issues to Consider in Standardized Testing

As we get closer and closer to this year's STAR test, I thought this article from GreatSchools might be interesting reading.

How high should the standards be?

This is a question that states and education leaders continue to grapple with. They face the challenge of "raising the bar" and holding high expectations for students while keeping the standards realistic so that schools, parents and students will take them seriously.

In August 2006, The Thomas B. Fordham Foundation released an updated report analyzing the standards for all 50 states, building on a similar report they issued in 2000, before Congress enacted the No Child Left Behind law. The report noted that while 37 states have updated or revised their state standards in at least one subject since 2000, on the whole they are "just as mediocre as ever." The average grade for state standards across all subjects was C-minus in 2000 and remains so in 2006. Two-thirds of the nation's K-12 students attend schools in states with standards of C-minus, D-minus or F.

California, Indiana and Massachusetts received the highest marks for their standards while Indiana, New York, Georgia and New Mexico showed progress in improving their standards. Utah, Nebraska, New Hampshire and Wisconsin were cited for showing a decline in their standards.

When considering state standardized tests results, it's important to know where your state stands, relative to other states, in terms of its expectations for students. One way to compare states on a national basis is to look at the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores. Every state is required to give the NAEP test to a sample of students in fourth and eighth grade in reading and in mathematics. By comparing the percentage of students achieving proficiency on state tests with the percentage achieving proficiency on the NAEP, you can get an idea how demanding each state's standards are.

In 2005, the Hoover Institution’s Education Next compared the 40 states for which data was available. You can see the results here.

To get better informed about what the tests mean in your state, examine the state standards, which tests are given, what the level of difficulty is, and what the overall level of achievement is. Take into account the NAEP scores as well.

How do the tests influence what happens in the classroom?

Proponents of state standardized tests believe these tests drive schools to focus on getting all students to meet basic proficiency levels and achieve basic skills. The tests provide a measure of accountability for what goes on in the classroom.

Critics of the tests are concerned that the pressure to raise scores encourages cheating and "teaching to the test." Subjects such as art, music and social studies, which are not currently tested in most states, get less emphasis, and students may miss being exposed to a rich academic environment.

What about high-stakes tests?

The use of these so-called "high-stakes" tests is on the rise. Twenty-three states currently have high school exit exams that students must pass to receive a high school diploma, and three additional states are planning to implement them. Some states use tests in certain grade levels (generally third and/or fifth grade) to determine promotion from one grade level to the next.

"High-stakes" tests have generated much controversy. Proponents believe they propel schools to focus on getting all students to achieve and create a "no excuses" environment. Opponents counter that it's not fair that a single test determine whether a student is promoted.

How important are test scores?

On the whole, test scores give you an indication of how students are performing. But test scores don't tell the whole story. They don't tell you about the richness of the curriculum — whether there is art or music, or opportunities for individual or group exploration into a particular subject. They don't tell you whether students are learning critical thinking skills or how engaged students are in the learning process. These are all important factors to consider when evaluating the effectiveness of your school.

What should I do if I am concerned about my school's test scores?

If you are concerned about your school's results or the amount of time students spend preparing for state tests, here are some suggested questions you can bring to your school principal and school site council:
How are the tests changing the nature of teaching and learning at the school?
What are the content standards for each subject and grade tested?
How much time is spent practicing test-taking skills and memorizing lists?
What is being sacrificed to make room for these test-prep activities?
Does the school use test results to identify areas that need improvement or to target support for certain students?
What is the school or district doing about students who consistently score below grade level?
What is the school doing to address any disparities among particular groups of students?

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Lunch Money

The amount for school lunch is $1.75. Please send your child with exact change. It is not my responsibility to provide change for you and your child. I will not deny a child lunch for that day if they bring in $2. I will still give them their lunch card so that they may get a school lunch, but I cannot send too much money to the cafeteria. It is also not the responsibility of the cafeteria worker to provide change. And frankly, managing the money to make sure everyone gets back the correct change is a waste of my time. Your cooperation is greatly appreciated.

Wednesday Envelopes

Speaking of Wednesday envelopes... I am going to begin assigning lunchtime detention to every child who does not return their Wednesday envelope on time. If you or your child has lost their Wednesday envelope, then please send $2 and they will be issued a new one. Similarly, if your child's Wednesday envelope has become so damaged that it cannot be used, they need to bring in $2 for a new one.

Stop, Drop and Go

I still have no volunteers from this class for the PTA's Stop, Drop and Go program. Please e-mail me; my e-mail address is on every newsletter I've sent home this year. Or e-mail our PTA president at Stephaniepta@aol.com. There was also a form included in the Wednesday envelope a few weeks ago that your child could return to me.

Wednesday Envelope

Today I sent home a form in the Wednesday envelope, so that I can begin scheduling parent-teacher conferences, which take place the week of March 19, 2007. Please have your child bring this back to me immediately. The sooner your child returns it to me, the more likely it is that you'll get one of the times you request.

Homework - 3/7/2007

  • None

We had a busy day today. It was spring picture day. We started our crochet project with Penny Lopes, which will be the fifth grade students' gift to the school. We also had two tests today, James Forten vocabulary and Chapter 16 in Mathematics, not to mention P.E. with Mr. T, so, yes, no homework today.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Homework - 3/6/2007

  • Vocabulary - study for James Forten test
  • Math - study for Ch. 16 test

Monday, March 05, 2007

Homework - 3/5/2007

  • Spelling - PB 299-301
  • Reading - James Forten - study for test
  • Math - 295: 10-25 (all)
  • Science - C89: 1-5 and WB 171

Note: I am out of the classroom but at Lafayette working on the site plan for next school year. I will be out tomorrow as well.

Friday, March 02, 2007

Vocabulary - "James Forten"

Here are the ten vocabulary words for James Forten and the page numbers on which they appear in the story:

  • influential - 315, 326
  • coarse - 316
  • dexterity - 316
  • relented - 316
  • vessel - 320
  • subsided - 321
  • languished - 323
  • tentative - 323
  • authorites - 320
  • brisk - 315

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Homework - 3/2/2007

  • None

It was a busy day. We had our Read Aloud Day, so we spent time having the students read aloud. I read aloud. And we had a guest, John Power, read aloud to us today. He is the Executive Director of The Volunteer Center, which serves both San Francisco and San Mateo counties.

We also went to the library today, and spent some time deciding our vocabulary words for James Forten. The students will take the reading test for James Forten next week on Tuesday, and the vocabulary test will be on Wednesday.

We had an early lunch today, because of a kickball game between the Lafayette Breakers and Argonne. The breakers were victorious, 7 to 4. The Argonne team played well and were gracious losers.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Homework - 3/1/2007

  • Health - The Heart 13/14; Health Detective Crossword; Be Choosy!/Heart Word Game; and Circulatory System - 13/Heart - 14 (The first two of these may have been completed in class.)

Today was Jump Rope for Heart day, so we spent the better part of the day discussing heart health. We discussed the heart, a combination of health and science, as well as various health topics, including a healthy diet, smoking, cholesterol, exercise, etc. I hope you will review all of these assignments with your child when I return them; there is a great deal of information from the American Heart Association that may be helpful to you. On their website, you will also find information about Children's Health and Jump Rope for Heart.