December 2014 - Suring Public School District
Transcription
December 2014 - Suring Public School District
Eagle News UPCOMING EVENTS Early Release Dates: December 10 February 11 April 15 Parent Teacher Conference Dates: V O L U M E 1 , I S S U E D E C E M B E R 5 , 2 0 1 4 Staff and Students from the Suring Public School District wish you a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year! December 10 February 25 April 29 The weather outside is frightful … Upcoming Vacations: 2 Please remember to send your elementary son/daughter with a hat, mittens or gloves, winter jacket, snow pants and boots. Thank you! Christmas December 24January 2 Upcoming Events: Band/Choir Concert December 16 Elementary Christmas Concert December 19 @1pm Please Share with Family and Friends … To keep expenses down, copies of the newsletter are not mailed throughout the year, but can be found at the local gas stations in Suring and Mountain, Suring Public Library, and Banks in Suring and Mountain. Thanks for your understanding. Thanks to those parents who continue to work with us with the new drop-off and pick-up locations before and after school. Your support and follow-through is greatly appreciated. National Honor Society Several students from the Suring School District were inducted into the National Honor Society on November 5, 2014. They include: Front row—Courtney Heimerl, Greta Sleeter, Breanna Tienor, Mackenzi LaMarre, Courtney Stelzer, and Faith Buhrandt. Back row—Scout Gerndt, Katie Stegeman, Josh Vollmar, and Victoria Yando. Suring High School- 2014 National Honor Society PAGE 2 SOAR (Be Safe, Be Outstanding, Be Accountable, Be Respectful) First Quarter PBIS winners: The excellence of a gift lies in its appropriateness rather than in its value. Charles Dudley Warner Elementary – Autumn Dryja, Brenna Garrett, Peyton Huth, Ginger Gerndt, Carli Holub, Nevaeh Bender, Kierstan Ermis Christine Sleeter, London Faulkender , Precilla Otradovec, Lizzy Carlson, Parker Haak, Logan School, Carly Geniesse, and Cheyenne Taraska Middle SchoolJosh Zilkoske, Logan Stuart, Arianna Sepulveda, Cash Van Bellinger, Linzy Runge, Justin Heckl, James Ponton, Michael Christensen, Angel Griffin, Colton DeKeyser, Paige Krueger, Wylee VanBellinger, Neil Koral, and Tanner Freibel High SchoolLetitia Walker, Nikki Niemann, Ryan Mahoney, Autumn Fisher, Josh Vollmar, Nick Wirth, Scout Gerndt, Justin Rustlie, Mackenzi LaMarre, Riley Nitzske, Milton Christensen, Amber Trudell, Hailey Thompson, and Trent Lechleitner. 2014 Volleyball Team—Regional Champs Thanks to those who continue to support our school district by providing generous donations. Community Health Foundation Saint Michaels ! tJ Grea EAGLE NEWS gles a E y d ob La VOLUME 1, ISSUE 2 PAGE We collect ... 1. BOX TOPS FOR EDUCATION www.boxtops4ducation.com 2. CAMPBELL SOUP LABLES www.labelsforeducation.com 3. MILK MOOLA www.milkmoola.com 4. USED PRINTER CARTRIDGES 5. TYSON PROJECT A + cut off Its as easy as 1-2-3 “One Person’s 6. Trash is Another LOAVES 4 LEARNING Person’ s Loaves 4learning.com Treasure.” Students give to our community and school…. The students from our school raked leaves from after school until dark for people in our community. The students included: Josh Vollmar, Greta Sleeter, Trent Lechleitner, Felicia Wachtendonk, Scout Gerndt, Adam Huth, Jade Schneider, and Mark Runge. Students from the high school student council clean up local highway. Do Something... Josh Vollmar collected aluminum cans and designed a visual art piece employing the cans collected as a part of his DoSomething.org "50 cans" college scholarship application. 3 Cold and Flu Season is Here! According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the typical child has 6 to 12 illnesses a year ranging from mild to severe. So how do you decide when your child is too sick to go to school? These tips, from Pediatrics Now, can help you decide whether to keep your child at home: 1. If your child complains of not feeling well but otherwise has no definite symptoms, your child can likely attend school. Be sure to contact your pediatrician if the complaints persist or other more definite sick symptoms develop. 2. Fever is a symptom of illness that usually indicates that the body is battling an infection. A child with a fever greater than 99.9 degrees Fahrenheit needs to stay home from school until the fever is gone for at least 24 hours without medication (Acetaminophen or Ibuprofen). If the fever does not resolve in 2 to 3 days, or if your child appears very sick with any fever, call your doctor to have your child evaluated. 3. Many rashes will resolve spontaneously and are not reason alone to keep a child home from school. Any rash associated with symptoms such as trouble breathing or swallowing, fever, or ill appearance, should be evaluated by your physician. Rashes that are itchy or scaly may be contagious and should be evaluated before sending a child back to school. 4. Cough alone may not prevent your child from attending school unless it is interfering with a child’s sleep or ability to participate in school activities. If the cough is productive and has phlegm or is associated with fever or trouble breathing, keep your child home from school and arrange to have the child seen by their pediatrician. 5. Stool problems do sometimes require a child to stay home from school. This is especially true with diarrhea where the stool frequency is often many times an hour. Diarrhea that is bloody or associated with fever, abdominal pain, or vomiting should be evaluated by your doctor. 6. A child with vomiting, with or without diarrhea, needs to stay home from school. Your child can return to school when the symptoms have stopped and the child can tolerate a regular diet. 7. Children can attend school with mild sore throats if no other symptoms are occurring. Any child with a sore throat associated with fever, vomiting, abdominal pain, or difficulty swallowing should be evaluated by a doctor before returning to school. A child with a diagnosis of strep throat needs to stay out of school until on antibiotics for 24 hours. 8. A child with eye symptoms that include redness, swelling, tearing, itching or burning, mild sensitivity to light, drainage or overnight crusting may have conjunctivitis (pink eye) and will need to be evaluated by a physician and needs to stay out of school until treated with antibiotic eye drops for 24 hours. 9. If your child appears really sick, keep your child home and arrange an evaluation by your doctor that day. If you can’t get through to your doctor and you are really concerned bring your child to the nearest emergency room for evaluation. 10. Call your doctor’s office for advice if you are not sure about your child’s condition or have questions about whether your child should stay home from school. Physicians have an answering service 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. So, even after hours, you will be able to reach someone for assistance. Many illnesses can be stopped before they spread by reminding everyone to practice frequent hand washing, blowing noses into tissues, and covering mouths when Suring, Crivitz, and Coleman Varsity players honored these families by wearing pink attire. The M&O Conference honors a family from three of the conference's communities. This year Suring had the honor of choosing two families to receive a monetary donation from the M&O conference. The families who were honored were Louise Christensen and Debbie McMahon. ck Che T ut O his Suring Eagles Clothing for Sale…... The Yearbook Staff has a variety of new Suring Eagle clothing for sale. Clothing is available for sale at the following times: 8th Hour & After School - available in room 412 Girls Varsity Home Basketball Games - December 15, January 8, and January 29 Boys Varsity Home Basketball Games - December 18, January 5, January 15, January 20, and February 23 Ms. K’s Life Skills Class The Suring High School Life Skills class will be assembling fleece tied blankets. These blankets are made by the MS/HS 7th hour Life Skills class. There will be 3 different blankets to choose from; Camouflage, Basketball, and Holiday themed. We will have ticket sales starting December 1st; tickets will be $2 each or 3 tickets for $5. We will have sales that will be held at various times before and after school, at limited sporting events, and at holiday concerts. You may also contact a Life Skills student or stop down to Ms. Kapalczynski’s room. The final drawing will be held on December 19th after the elementary concert. We are going to use the funds received for our Life Skills class projects and learning experiences. Thank you in advance for your support. Stay Warm! Students may receive iPods, iPads, tablets, etc. for Christmas. There are a number of places online where free e-books can be found. Having books available on your child’s device will hopefully encourage your child to read. The following is a list of sites that can be used. Nook Books--nook.com (5 free books when you download) Storia--Scholastic.com/storia (5 free books when you sign-up and occasionally additional book offers) The public library--infosoup.org (top left corner of homepage--OverDrive Digital Downloads, need library card, can search by AR level) Amazon--amazon.com (Amazon Prime members get 1 free download per month) OceanhouseMedia--search in AppStore free, Dr. Seuss, Berenstein Bears, Little Critter Storyline--storylineonline.net (celebrities read popular books aloud) Individual books can sometimes be found by searching the AppStore or Google Play. Searching the internet for "free kids ebooks" or similar phrases can locate services that monitor when something is available for free and notify you because they are usually only free for a short period of time. Growing Readers! Parent tips for raising strong readers and writers Brought to you by Reading Rockets, Colorín Colorado and LD OnLine Fluency Matters If you’ve been around classrooms and teachers, you’ve probably heard the term “fluency.” Fluency is something worth knowing more about! Read on to find out what it is and how to develop it in your young learner. Fluency: What is it? Why is it important? If someone is fluent in speaking another language or in playing an instrument, there’s a smooth, graceful and easy quality to it. The same is true with reading skills. Reading fluency is a child’s ability to read a book or other text correctly, quickly, and with expression. A fluent reader doesn’t have to stop and “decode” each word. Rather, most of the words can be read automatically. This means the reader can focus his attention on what the story or text means. For that reason, fluency is critically important — it’s the bridge between decoding words and understanding what has been read. How can we foster reading fluency? Parents can help their child develop reading fluency through a few simple and fun activities. Paired or “buddy” reading The easiest and best way to help your child develop fluency is to sit with your child and read! Read together every day, which is often called paired or buddy reading. To use paired reading, simply take turns reading aloud. You go first, as your reading provides a model of what good fluent reading sounds like. Then, ask your child to re-read the same page you just read. You’ll notice that your child’s reading will start to sound more and more like yours. Do this for several pages. Once your child is comfortable enough, and familiar enough with the book, take turns reading page for page. Reread favorite books Another way parents can help develop fluency is to build a tall stack of books that your child can read quickly and easily. Encourage your child to reread favorite books over and over again. With each reading, you may notice your child reading a bit easier, a bit faster, and with a bit more confidence and expression. Record it Another fun way to practice reading and build fluency is to have your child create her own audio books. This can be done simply with a tape recorder or audio recording feature or app (like Audioboom) on your phone. Or, use something more sophisticated like StoryKit, where a user can create an electronic storybook and record audio to accompany it. Regardless of the method you choose, your child will be practicing what they want to record and that reading practice is critical. Sharing your audio recordings with family and friends is a great motivator too! Look what is going on inside the school…... Students in 8th grade science classes have been learning about weather. As part of this unit students made hot air balloons to show how air currents move. They also had to make their own weather station tools to measure wind, humidity, and air pressure. Students had to be able to explain how their devices worked and actually show them in action. The 8th grade students are working hard together as teams in their Robotics Class! They are learning the structural, mechanical, and assembly of the robotic cars. Thanks to their ingenuity and teamwork, their robot cars are a success. We will soon learn that their radio controlled cars are more than that, they are robots that can sense their environment and adjust its own behaviors on that. Good Luck and great job to all robotic students. "Working together and forming friendships begins at a young age". German II students enjoy field trip to the Bavarian Inn Eagles Build Catapults Prior to competition day the students spent time researching and designing a catapult that fit parameters of the competition and would maximize throwing range of a baseball. On competition day the groups were allowed 5 launches and took the best of those 5 throws. First place was awarded to the machine designed by Darian Bowman, Mikaela Reed, and Josh Vollmar with a record throw of 164’6”. Second place went to Breanna Tienor, Mackenzi LaMarre, and Grant Fisher’s machine which hurled the baseball 154’3”. Third place went to the catapult designed by Carly Christensen and John Philippi with a throw of 150’6”. Fourth place with a throw of 108’3” was Brooke Gauthier, Amber Trudell, and Johnny Haure’s machine. Great job was done by all. Pictured from left to right are; sitting -Mikaela Reed, Mackenzi LaMarre, and Breanna Tienor, standing -Josh Vollmar, John Philippi, Brooke Gauthier, Carly Christensen, Grant Fisher, and Darian Bowman. Not pictured is Johnny Haure. Phuture Pheonix Field Trip The Suring 5th Grade students attended a program called Phuture Pheonix at UWGB's campus on October 16th, 2014. All students were guided by college chaperones throughout campus and even got an opportunity to meet the chancellor. Students were able to get a chance to see what it’s like to be in college and encouraged to work hard toward someday going to college themselves. Reading Room – Suring English Department Our Reading Room is in its initial stage here at Suring middle/high school. Mrs. Stocki and Mrs. Trader have been envisioning this room for quite some time and we were able to take our first steps this fall with the help of Superintendent Mrs. Casper, Principal Mr. Huisman, and great support and help from the Suring custodial staff. The Reading Room is currently a shared space, but with the additions of room dividers it is a great space for silent reading, group literacy activities, study tables, think, pair, share activities, homework help area, and countless other enrichment opportunities. There is a bookshelf filled with reading material to supplement/enrich those students who are looking to expand their knowledge of the classics of our great American and foreign authors. Some needs we still have for this room are storage and office style furniture. Please contact Mrs. Stocki or Mrs. Trader at Suring High School if you have something that might help us move our Reading Room in the right direction. Students Study OWL PELLETS Fifth graders have been working on their annual Owl Pellet science unit. Students dissect the pellets, clean and sort the bones, and reassemble the bones into a skeleton. The final step of the project is to then use Chrome Books and describe the entire process using Google Docs. First grade students learn about the role of the Native Americans and pilgrims in the first Thanksgiving. They designed costumes and dined together for a reenactment of the First Thanksgiving. The first graders from Mrs. Runge's and Mrs. Stegeman's classes read a story about making tacos. At the end of the story there was a recipe for making homemade tortillas. They made tortillas at school and then brought in all the yummy fixings for them from home. Both classes enjoyed a special afternoon snack together that day! The kindergarten students did their part this Thanksgiving season to help some turkeys avoid becoming Thanksgiving dinner. Each kindergarten student was given a turkey with the job of disguising their turkey. Each child had the help of their family. We had a witch, a princess, a leaf pile, a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle, a clown, a baby, a Santa, and many other creative disguises. Thanks to the kindergarteners many turkeys were spared this Thanksgiving! Maniac Magee After Mr. Breed’s 5th grade class finished reading Maniac Magee and doing all the activities, they had a poster contest promoting the book. 1st Place Winners: Ryann Wagner, Kierstan Ermis, and Caden McClure 2nd Place Winners: Katherine Mahoney and Elijah Harris Ways to Stay Connected with School Family Access How to sign up for Suring School’s messages: Get instant information on your child’s attendance, lunch account, discipline record and grades by contacting the secretaries in the student office for your Family Access username and password. To receive messages via text, text @suri to (920)933-1900. You can opt-out of messages at anytime by replying, ‘unsubscribe @ suri’. Together we can make a difference! Or to receive messages via mail, send an email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe, reply with ‘unsubscribe’ in the subject line. Check us out on the web! http://www.suring.k12.wi.us/ Student Council News... As a service project both the junior high and high school student councils collected items for King Veteran's Home. The 6th grade student council members delivered personal care products, crossword puzzles, clothing, and $300.00 from donations received by St. Clare Hospital, Klondike Sportsman Club, Suring Junior High Student Council, GG's Cheese Mart, Joe & Lisa School, and many community members. Candy Cane Sales Starting Monday, December 1st through Wednesday December 17th the Junior High Student Council will be taking orders for candy canes. The money raised will be used to adopt a family at Rainbow House, a domestic abuse shelter. Our goal is to sell 1000 candy canes in order to provide gifts for a family which includes a mother and three children, ages 15, 7 and 3 who otherwise may not receive any Christmas presents. Randy Fisher Tribute Provides Students New Basketball Equipment Many years ago Wayne Wasmund and the late Randy Fisher started the Suring Youth Basketball program to teach the foundation skills necessary to be a competitive team when they enter high school. This past June a tribute was held in Randy's honor and just under $8000 was raised through community support and donations for the Suring Youth program that Randy so loved and put his heart and soul into. Through those donations, a number of youth basketballs were purchased as well as two portable basketball hoops. These hoops are being utilized with our youngest future basketball stars in kindergarten through second grade. Randy always wanted the basketball players to shoot and with the smaller youth basketballs and adjustable hoops we are hoping that these kids will have more success with shooting at an earlier age. 2007-08 WIAA Boys Basketball State Runner-up – D4 The WIAA is celebrating its 100th Anniversary of the Boys Basketball Tournament in Wisconsin. Because of this the WIAA is asking all schools to select a night where each school recognizes its State Champion or State Runner-up teams. We will be recognizing our 2007-2008 State Runner-Up team on January 2nd. It will follow the same site games that evening vs Bonduel. We will recognize the team following the Boys Varsity game with a variety of memories relived. This will also be Parents Night for both our Boys and Girls High School teams. These players will be recognized between the Varsity Girls game and Varsity Boys game. It should be an exciting night of basketball, so please come out and enjoy reliving the memories of the past and creating more with our 2014-2015 teams. Mark this date on your calendar!
Similar documents
February 2015 - Suring Public School District
Trudell, Rachel Ritter, Courtney Heimerl, and Greta Sleeter. Advisors for the chapter are Becky Dickson and Tammy Steffeck.
More information