The Gashland Stars - North Kansas City School District
Transcription
The Gashland Stars - North Kansas City School District
North Kansas City School District March 2016 Volume 7, Issue 7 Extraordinary Educational Experiences The Gashland Stars Gashland Elementary School Excellence in Primary Education “The Gashland School Community will provide a learning environment that is safe and productive to promote development of the whole child.” (Mission Statement adopted 2005-2006) 2016 Read Across America Week March Calendar of Events Read Across America Week Feb 29Mar 4 Kdg. Music Programs @ Clardy 6:30 pm Bryant/ Kingery/Watkins 7:30 pm Agbaji/ Knox 3 Daylight Savings Time Begins Set Your Clocks Forward One Hour 6 Kindergarten Roundup 6-7:30 p.m. 10 3rd Quarter Ends 11 PTA Board Meeting 6:00 p.m. @ Clardy 15 Cultural Arts Assembly “Peter & The Wolf” 16 PTA Mercury Gym Night 6:30-8 p.m. 18 Spring Break No School 21-25 Grade Cards Sent Home With Students 30 “The more you read, the more you know; the more you know, the further you’ll go!” It is Read Across America Week beginning Monday, Feb 29. This week coincides with the birthday of one of the greatest authors loved by children and adults alike – Dr. Seuss. We all have our favorite Dr. Seuss book, but one that I think teaches some of the best lessons for life is Oh, the Places You’ll Go! This is a great book that inspires us that we can “move mountains” and that life is what you make of it. Here are some of the other life lessons we can teach our young learners about from this book: 1. Be a thinker of great things. Dr. Seuss teaches us, “Oh, the things you can think up if only you try!” Take a moment and just listen to your child talk about the world. They are fearless dreamers, invincible and amazingly creative at this age. 2. Be your best “you.” In the words of Dr. Seuss, “There is no one alive who is You-er than You.” Make the most of what you’ve got. 3. Dream it and do it. “You have brains in your head; you have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose.” Isn’t it wonderful to know how many opportunities there are and will be in the future for our young learners? What a time to be alive! 4. Life is about choices, so make them good ones. “You’ll look up and down streets, look ‘em over with care. About some you will say, ‘I don’t choose to go there.’ With your head full of brains and your shoes full of feet, you’re too smart to go down any not-so-good street.” Such an important lesson and one we as parents constantly worry about no matter how old our children are! 5. Be decisive. My grandfather use to say to me when I was trying to make decisions, “You can’t move a parked car.” So, once you’ve weighed your options, make a decision, get out there and “just do it!” 6. Face your fears and usually your fears will flee. “And when you’re alone, there’s a very good chance, you’ll meet things that scare you right out of your pants…On and on you will hike. And I know you’ll hike far and face up to your problems whatever they are.” 7. Keep balance in your life. “You’ll get mixed up, of course, as you already know. You’ll get mixed up with many strange birds as you go. So be sure when you step. Step with care and great tact and remember that Life’s a Great Balancing Act.” 8. You will succeed (most of the time.) “And will you succeed? Yes! You will, indeed! (98 and ¾ percent guaranteed.)” Life sometimes gives us lemons, but it is when we turn whatever comes our way into lemonade, then we truly succeed. Success is a journey and we all have our own paths. Make your journey count. Don’t let fear stop you. Don’t let conventional wisdom stop you. Lead the life you want to live, and when there’s no path, make one. Today is your day! Your mountain is waiting. So…get on your way. There is nobody you-er than you, and remember the more that you learn the more places you’ll go. Happy Reading! Mrs. Lakin Gashland Gets A Facelift XLT (Summer Learning) & K2K Forms Due Friday, April 15, 2016 During spring break our classrooms, office, computer lab, gym, library and kitchen are being painted and any old carpet replaced with new carpeting. While we are excited about having fresh rooms for our students upon their return from break, we also realize we need to have a quick turnaround with packing and unpacking so this work can be done with minimal disruption of the teaching and learning process. So, if your child mentions he/she is seeing boxes in the back of the room the week before break, you’ll know why. We’ll be sharing this information with our students as the time nears, but until then we don’t want any distractions to interfere with our daily goal of providing excellent primary education for our Gashland Stars. Nurse’s News ELL NEWS By Mrs. Akman, ELL Teacher In March, kindergarten ELL students will work in a unit titled “People at Work.” In this unit, students will identify and discuss various jobs. Students will talk about what people do at work using verbs in the present tense and also practice asking and answering questions about what people do at work. Kindergarten students will continue to work on reading sight words and writing sentences as well. First grade ELL students will begin a new unit titled “Animals and Plants.” Within this unit, students will speak, read, and write about how living things can help each other. Students will read and write using the long e, long a, ch, sh, and th sounds. They will work on making predictions, sequencing, retelling, and finding the main ideas and details in a story. Finally, first graders will learn when to use the articles a, an, and the. Greetings from Physical Education and Health Our Jump Rope for Heart was a big success. I enjoy having conversations with the students about how this benefits our community. Over the month of March, we will begin working our way back outside as much as possible. We will begin some baseball type games, and working on our fitness testing. Please have your child prepared to be outside by having appropriate clothing. I also wanted to let you know our lost and found box is getting pretty full! If your child is missing any jackets, hats, or gloves please send them to me to check the lost and found. Thanks for your help. Stay healthy and keep moving! Coach Heller Library Fundraiser We appreciate your participation in our Reading Rewards Magazine Fundraiser! The proceeds from this fundraiser will fund author visits for our school and also help provide magazines for our classrooms. Thank you for supporting Gashland Elementary! Thank you! Mrs. Bradfield, School Librarian By: Jan McSpadden, R.N. As we look forward to warmer weather, your students will be able to go outside for recess most days. The winter thaw brings muddy conditions on the playground. Please include a change of clothing in your student’s backpack when possible, “just in case”. Allergy season is here. When your student needs medication at school, please have an adult bring the medication to the school. Students are not to carry medications of any kind on the school bus. I am glad to help your student with allergy relief so that he or she has a more pleasant, productive day. We are in the process of welcoming and enrolling Kindergartners for next school year. Please remember that each student must be upto-date on their immunizations before starting the K2K program in June and/or school in August. A current record of immunizations is required and can be turned in to the school office. Please call me at 321-5103 if you have questions or need more information. Art March is Youth Art Month. Each elementary school in the NKC school district submits works to be displayed at the First Bank of Missouri in Gladstone throughout March. Gashland has two participating artists! Congratulations to the following artists: Dylan Eckles-Kindergarten Ainsley Scheib-1st grade Follow us on Instagram for more updates: @gashlandart Mrs. Harman Mrs. Koester Pre-School News We had a great February in preschool! We began the month learning about groundhogs and celebrating Groundhog’s Day with the groundhog not seeing his shadow. Will it be an early spring? We also had a fun 100th day celebration on February 3rd! We had some creative 100 day projects, and the students loved sharing their creations with their friends. We focused on the numbers 5-8 as we worked on writing the numerals correctly, using one-to-one correspondence to count these numbers, and used ten frames and number lines to explore these numbers. We were introduced to the letters Ff, Bb, and Gg this month. We had a fun Teddy Bear Picnic to celebrate the letter Bb! Thank you to all the parents who helped organize and run our Valentine’s Day parties! The students had a wonderful time! Mrs. Tapp, Preschool Teacher Mrs. Settles, Preschool I.A. Kindergarten Kids~ First Grade News~ February has been a fun month in kindergarten. We had our 100th day of school on celebration. Kindergartners did lots of counting for their 100th day. Classes did various activities, such as bringing collections of 100 items, wearing clothing items with 100 of something on them, dressing up like an “100 year old”, making special necklaces or hats, making and eating special snacks and reading counting books and books about the 100th day of school. It was a day to celebrate the growth we've seen in our students since the beginning of the year. Thanks for your support on our 100th day and all that you've done throughout the year, parents! (This is a good reminder that our kindergartners should be able to confidently count to 100 before the end of this school year. If your child needs practice with this, please count with him/her daily.) Springtime is always an exciting time in first grade! This is when we really start to see our kiddos grow in their learning. As teachers we enjoy seeing our students progress; making leaps and bounds from where they started in the beginning of our school year together. Another highlight of February was our Valentine's Day parties. Children enjoyed games, crafts and treats thanks to our room parents. They also enjoyed giving and receiving Valentines. Thanks to all the parents who have planned and helped with parties this year and to those who sent party items! The children appreciated all you did. In Readers Workshop students will spend time focusing on non-fiction materials. Students use text features and illustrations to help make sense of informational texts. Students will deepen their comprehension skills by comparing and contrasting two texts. Students will also have to identify the reasons an author gives to support points in informational texts. February brought another holiday to learn about, too, with President's Day. Students have been interested to learn about George Washington and Abraham Lincoln this month. We learned many interesting facts about both President Washington and Lincoln. Are you reading daily at home to and with your kindergarten student? Please do your best to accomplish this as much as possible. Our goal is to have each child in the 100 book club. Encourage your child to practice reading our sight words often and have your child try to write sentences using some of these words, too. Remind your student to add an end mark (period, question mark or exclamation mark). Kindergartners are bringing home a new book daily for reading practice. Please encourage your child to read this book to him/herself and to a parent. Record the book title on the log and fill out the other information. This will help your child’s teacher in providing “just-right” books for home—not too easy and not too hard. Please return the book to school each day even if your child didn’t yet read it. We appreciate your taking good care of these books, so that they are available for all students. Books recorded on the log will also be counted for our “Buzz. . .Bee a Reader” program Mrs. Agbaji Mrs. Bryant Mrs. Kingery Mrs. Knox Mrs. Watkins Thank you to our families for continuing to support your students at home. Filling out Buzz Bee A Reader lists, reading those Just Right books, finishing homework, and exploring math concepts at home are all a huge help in their learning progression! March brings even more learning for our students. In Writers Workshop the students will begin writing Question and Answer books, Writers will select a topic and gather information to identify facts to share in their Question and Answer book. The students will inform their reader about the topic, supply facts on the topic and provide a sense of closure. In Math Workshop students will learn subtraction fact strategies and attributes of shapes. Students will continue to add and subtract within 20 and work with equations. They will also tell and write time. This is a busy math unit. For Science, students will identify materials that make up an object and the physical properties of the material. They will also measure and compare the mass of objects. Students will identify everyday objects as a solid, liquid or gas. As always, thank you for being part of your child’s education! We thank you for your continued support at home! Mrs. Boyer Mrs. Kimball Mrs. Markovich Mrs. Minter Mrs. Robke Literacy Launch By: Darcy Gilbert, Reading Teacher A trip to the mall can be exciting for your child. It can be even better if you have time to window shop. Specialty shops are good places to learn a lot about categories of items like clothing, shoes, jewelry, and books. Shoe stores are really good because the shoes are displayed on shelves. That makes them easy to see and compare. When you read a shoe store tip, think about how you can use it in any store. People Rhymes. Sit on a bench where you can see shoppers passing by. Start a rhyming game about the people you see. “Man in red, man in red, you have yellow hair on your head.” Then start a rhyme and invite your child to finish. “Girl in blue, girl in blue, you have buckles on your ……” Encourage your child to make more rhymes, even very silly ones! Guess What Shoe. Play a guessing game with your child in the shoe store. You start first. “Look at those boots. I think a person wears those in the rain.” Then invite your child to play. Point to a different type of shoe and ask “where do you think a person wears those shoes?” Confirm your child’s answer by saying “Yes, those are slippers, a person wears those at bedtime.” Or, you may say “No, I think those are sandals. A person wears those in the summer.” When your child gets used to the game, have some fun with it. Point to a pair of high heels and say “I think a person wears those to work in the garden. What do you think?” Buying Shoes. Explain what you are looking for so your child can help you. “You need new sneakers. You said you wanted green ones.” As you look at the sneakers, use words that describe how they are the same or different- colors, styles, and sizes. Some are small, some are medium, and some are large. “What size do you need?” As she tries a pair on, use words that describe the parts of shoes and feet. “Push your foot in all the way up to the toe. Push your heel down. Pull up the tongue. Let’s fasten the Velcro.” Fun with Books. Spend a relaxed time in the children’s section at the mall bookstore. Pull out a picture book that looks interesting. Show your child the cover of the book and read the title, and the names of the author, and illustrator. Flip through the book slowly from beginning to end. Invite your child to make up the story by “reading” the pictures. Then read the story to your child. Using the Map. Before you start to shop, look at a diagram of the mall. This is often located right inside the front door. Explain that this is a map or diagram of the mall. Remind your child of other maps that he has seen. First show your child the dot that indicates where you are. Then look for the store you want to go to first. Use your finger to trace a line from where you are to the store. “We will have to walk straight down this hall until we get to the corner. Then we will take a right turn and we will be there.” Measuring Feet. In the shoe store look for the foot scale. Explain to your child that this is a kind of ruler that measures your foot. “It measures the length and width of your foot so you will know what size shoe to buy.” Encourage your child to put her foot on it. Show her the number at her toe that indicates the correct shoe size. “You wear a size 5 now. Your feet are growing!” If you don’t know how to use the foot scale, ask someone who works at the shoe store to help you. Fun with Books. For a special treat, go shopping for a book at the mall bookstore. Before you go, share some ideas with your child. Do you both like poetry, or stories about sports, or animals? Does he want to find information, for example, about the trees at the park? When you get to the store, find a salesclerk. “Can you help us? We are looking for a book about ….” Invite your child to look at some books and choose his favorite one. When you get home encourage your child to write his name inside the front cover. “This book belongs to Jack.” Source: http://www.pbs.org February Milk Contest POP TAB UPDATE The February totals are in: 3 Gallons Kindergarten students won this month’s Milk Contest with the most milk consumed. They will each be receiving a Milk Sticker. Congratulations. Total –gallons thus far 54 Gallons Our goal is 100 Gallons Thank you families for helping support Ronald McDonald houses. GASHLAND XLT 2016 Enrichment Summer Learning “EXPLORERS Program” May 31-June 23 Are you looking for something fun for your child to do this summer? Does your student enjoy learning about new things, creating fun projects, and conducting experiments? Then Gashland’s enrichment summer learning program – Explorers – is for you. The “Explorers” program will explore fun scientific concepts. Students will create interesting projects, conduct experiments, learn about the scientific process, and enjoy testing predictions and hypotheses. Students will also enjoy sessions for music, computer lab, and library. They will continue practicing important skills in reading, writing, and math. Students will have a great time exploring all of these fun and interesting classes! Classes fill quickly, so reserve your child’s place by returning the XLT enrollment form by April 15 to ensure a spot for your Gashland Star. If you have any questions, please call the school office at 321-5100. From The Counselor’s Office By Angela Nakoulima Greeting families! You may think that kindergarten or 1st grade is too early to discuss careers with children, but the truth is you have already begun having these conversations with your children. We have so many opportunities to discuss the world of work with our young learners. We may ask them what they want to be when they grow up or talk about their interests and talents. My own children have had big plans for their future careers, from scientists to authors, paleontologists, hair stylists, and teachers. Although these career plans change weekly, I continue to encourage both of my girls to dream about their future and imagine all possibilities. I do the same with your little ones here at Gashland. In the upcoming months, I hope to reinforce all of those career related conversations and dreams that your little ones have shared with you. Angela Nakoulima School Counselor Music Tons Of Tabs! Our Tab collection is growing but we need lots more to reach or surpass last year’s donation. We’re currently trying to fill our 55th gallon. Last year we filled a total of 142 gallons! Ronald McDonald and friends will be here in early May to collect our boxes, so we have just over 2 months to keep popping tabs and asking for help from friends and relatives. Your support is so appreciated! Please take a look at the Ronald McDonald House graphic and you will see the importance of this project. Way to go Gashland Kindergarteners!! We have been working so hard on our program, and can’t wait to share it with our families on Thursday, March 3! After our program, we will be learning about the musical story, Peter and the Wolf, a wonderful introduction to the instruments of the orchestra. First graders have been learning to read and write music, as well as work with each other in duets and trios to make music together! This month we will become composers, and look to another child composer, Mozart, to find out about his life and the music he created. Kindergarten Music Program Now I Know My ABC’s Thursday, March 3 Clardy Elementary Gym 2 performances: 6:30-7:00 PM BRYANT/KINGERY/WATKINS 7:30-8:00 PM AGBAJI/KNOX February Perfect Attendance as of February 26, 2016 Congratulations Kindergarten Abubakar Abukar Jamisen Allen Ivy Baptiste Michael Barba-Capps Abigail Barlow Ava Bennett Joss Buchanan Cameron Carter Elizabeth Christensen Jimmy Coleman III Nolan Cook Gabriella Cox Xden David Godhavi Dumbai Jaylen Echevarria Dylan Eckles Ensley Fisher Jaylen harris Ansam Hassan Hayden Heathman Brooklyn Hendren Kayleah Hill Dylan Holland Allison Holsted Ayesha Khan Kayden Kohler Caleb LaFever Gordon Lewis Carter Mast Aaden Moore Lucy Nading Miles Olmedo Zane Phelps Kaden Pressley Chase Redwing Skyla Scholtes Nikko Sims Gage Smith Mason Stefek Samantha Swierski Yazmin Tate Maddilyn Vandenberg Brennan Williams Kennedy Williams Lola Wooten First Grade Khadija Abukar Nali Ahmed Hunter Ake Akuei Akuei Akon Akuei Amelia Billings Logan Bouphanouvong Collin Bransfield Knox Burns Jayden Burton Tony Byas II Kaden Diven Tiffany Eckerley Abigail Garris Ethan Gillespie Luis Gonzalez Angellina Goodyear Alex Grider Antwan Harris Jr Kennedie Holland Makayla Ilon Kieron Jones Benjamin Kuykendall Lilly Lockhard Ramiro Lunares Jr Daniel McCall Hayden McGaughey Ty McKinnis Jackson Mick Gracie Navarre Elsa Norman-Mennig Lillian Parsch Nathan Peycke Mario Piatkowski Jaxom Piatkowki Jude Salame Salma Sarhan Steven Schrader Briella Simpson Emya Sims Desteny Spears Savannah Stephens Tristan Tatum Randal Thompson Jr Cole Tucker Emily Vu Seneca Walker Steven Walker II Olivia Weddle Pre-School Zayleigh Davenport Joseph Lopez Addison Oakden Chloe Simmons Jaxson Sorenson Lilly Stricken Evanne Williams Attendance Thank you parents for reinforcing with your child the importance of school attendance. It really makes a difference! Please remember our overall goal is for every child to be at school more than 90% of the school day. Overall school attendance for February 94.2% Reading Aloud to Children: Presenting the miraculous gift of reading - Nova Bradfield, Gashland Librarian I’ve been teaching kids to read in some form or another for 13 years, but having my own emergent reader at home and sitting on the “other side of the table” during parent teacher conferences has given me new insight into this process of growing a reader. I’m walking in the shoes of the teacher and the parent, and it has given me an opportunity to really think about what active parents should be doing at home to support their learner and what is the best way to bond children to reading. “Reading should not be presented to them as a chore, a duty. It should, instead, be offered as a gift: Look, I will help you unwrap this miraculous present. I will show you how to use it for your own satisfaction and education and deep, intense pleasure.” The quote above was said by Newbery award winning author and U.S. Ambassador for Young People’s Literature, Kate DiCamillo. This piece of wisdom is never far from my mind when thinking about reading and children. I believe the simplest way to offer this miraculous gift is to read a story aloud to a child. And not just the very young. Reading educators have done a wonderful job educating the public to read to babies and preschoolers, but I think we abandon this practice once children are able to actually read a few words on their own. What a missed opportunity to bond children to reading! I read a charming New York Times piece once about a father who continued to read aloud to his daughter even into high school. This young lady was a thriving scholar with a secure attachment to her family. Some of my best memories from childhood are listening to my mother read The Secret Garden and The Little House on the Prairie. I had a college professor who took the time to read The Bridge to Terebithia aloud to us during class. It’s no surprise that I loved that class and adored the teacher. The author of the book, Read & Write It Out Loud! Guided Oral Literacy Strategies writes: “One of the most effective ways to guide children into becoming stronger readers and to give them the necessary mental practice for doing so is to read aloud to them every day.” One of the primary reasons given in this book is that children can understand a more sophisticated text than what they can read on their own. A well chosen read aloud story will strengthen the listener’s vocabulary and can help the listener build more sophisticated language structures. (Polette, 2014) The gains for the listener are impressive. Listening to a story increases attention span, strengthens cognitive ability, and enhances the affective domain (Polette, 2014). I witness a reoccurring scene each year during parent teacher conferences and book fair. Parents of struggling readers enter the book fair and tell their children they can only have books that they “can actually read.” I see a distance grow between children and their parents in these interactions; and I see a distance grow between children and reading. This distance is not what we want. It is crucial to bond children to reading and books at this young age, and the way to do that is through the stories that lay between the covers. If you are feeling that reading time is a battle in your home, rather than a pleasure, try something different. Go to the library and check out a tall stack of picture books and read those to your child. Let your child pick out a chapter book and read it to them. Offer the gift of reading…with no strings attached. See if it helps. I offer this advice as a parent of a first grader. I became so focused on my daughter filling her daily reading log with on-level books, because I felt that was what her teacher wanted me to do, that I completely abandoned reading aloud to my six-year-old. The result was that reading was becoming a chore and a fight each evening. The librarian’s kid didn’t want to read! I was heartbroken. Since then I have switched my focus to reading to my daughter in the evening, with a sprinkling of on-level reading practice. I’ve seen her grow as a reader because of this decision. In the spirit of this I would like to share a list of my favorite books to read aloud to five and six-yearolds. Appleblossom the Possum by Holly Goldberg Sloan – A thick chapter book with talking animals, in the tradition of Charlotte’s Web. When I read this to my daughter she would beg and cry for “one more chapter.” Bink and Gollie by Kate DiCamillo – This is a two-character story, like a modern day “Frog and Toad”, with wonderful vocabulary like Kilimanjaro, pungent, empire, and kudos. This hilarious book is brain food for kids. Nursery Rhymes – Any nursery rhyme anthology will do, but I like Mary Engelbreit’s most of all. These are a child’s first poems and have been teaching children to read for centuries. Mercy Watson by Kate DiCamillo – Early chapter books about a pet pig who loves hot buttered toast. The text is dense and the character names are strange, but the stories are a delight. Marshmallow by Clare Newberry – This story about the friendship between a cat and bunny was published in 1942. Sometimes when I read old stories like Marshmallow or The Pokey Little Puppy I wonder at the impressive attention span of children from “the good-ol’ days.” Listening to old-fashioned stories is a powerful antidote for our little screen-zombies. Elephant and Piggie books – Very simple books by Mo Willems that all of our children adore. To read these books to children is to suddenly become a theater person; using your whole body to “perform” the story. Penny and Her Song – I love the sweet simplicity of Kevin Henkes (author of Lily’s Purple Plastic Purse) books. I like Penny and Her Song the best because it requires the reader to SING. Singing and literacy go hand and hand. Ricky Ricotta’s Mighty Robot by Dav Pilkey – This is a book about a little mouse with a very cool robot. These books are for the little guys….but I’ve seen fifth grade boys fight over Ricky Ricotta. I hope you enjoy this list and spend some time pondering the act of reading aloud. I hope you do not give up the practice of reading aloud to your children each night, no matter what their age. For our reluctant readers, this may be the way to turn reading from a chore to a miraculous joy. ~ Nova Bradfield, Gashland Librarian