Saturday, September 26, 2015

LEW Newsletter 9-26-2015

Good Morning LEW Families, 

What we've been doing

As a group, LEW got to perform Life Comes to Earth.  Erik told a wonderful, impressionistic story of how scientists believe life came to Earth. The students got to act like the first plants, creep around like the first invertebrates, swim around like fish, crawl around like amphibians, slither and hop like reptiles, and walk and run around like mammals.  The students had a great discussion about our job and responsibility as humans to give back to the life around us and to be appreciative.  Ask your child about their favorite part of the story.  

On Friday, the class also got to make kindness with Teresa Hichens-Olson - an incredible administrator and art expert.  Students went around "catching" each other being kind and giving each other the cranes.

First graders are working on number sense and addition, using the colored beads. They are creating a model of a globe with modge podge as well as their own world maps. The are also beginning their work with geometry by learning and feeling 9 different geometric solids (spheres, cubes, cylinders, cones, rectangular prisms, square-based pyramid, triangular-based pyramids, ellipsoids, and ovoids). Ask them about the hidden shapes game. They've had the chance to classify living/nonliving things and plants/animals around campus. They are also exploring different ways we measure time through the seasons, night/day, clocks and being very creative with their follow-up work.  

Second graders are wrapping up their study of the world. They are writing stories about 3 types of geometric lines - parallel, convergent, and divergent.  They are brushing up on their addition and subtraction facts.  Their review of the 5 vertebrates has been very elaborate and it's been a pleasure to observe their scientific brains classifying different characteristics of vertebrates.  Second graders are also working on word problems and using calendars to find the answers.  They've also had a chance to brush up their functions of words and review the noun family and the verb family. See if they can tell you the different symbols and functions for nouns, articles, adjectives, verbs, and prepositions.  

Third graders are also brushing up on their addition and subtraction facts.  They've had a chance to review the types of angles we covered last year plus some others like - right angles, acute angles, obtuse angles, straight angles, and more! See if they can remember why we measure angles in degrees (hint: Sumerian scientists measuring the stars) and how many degrees are in each type of angle.  In science, they have gotten into classifying different things around them - animals in particular.   They are also working on telling time and reviewing the functions of words we worked on last year (noun, article, adjective, verb, preposition, adverb, pronoun).  

Lots of big work happening! Please note that a lot of the students' work is being done in their notebooks. So if you're wondering why some of this work is not coming home, it is most likely because they have chosen to do that work in their notebooks.  

A Note from our Creative Movement Guide

Greetings and welcome to all new and returning families! I am thrilled to have joined Great River School and be working with your children as Creative Movement Guide. Four afternoons each week we've had the pleasure of moving and grooving as we get to know each other. It is such a joy to have their engaged participation and to witness their creativity and abundant energy. If they haven't already, please encourage your child to teach you the mirror game or another one of their favorite activities that we've done--and enjoy moving together at home! 

We've attached a picture of the human peace sign they made for International Day of Peace; a theme we explored during our movements last week. 

Please contact me if you have questions or ideas or talents you would like to share with our group. My email is kegge@greatriverschool.org

Grownups, I look forward to meeting those of you I haven't already met, and students I look forward to more exploration and fun through movement! 
Peace,
Karin 

A reminder of upcoming special events:

On Friday, October 2, we'll be going to Buttermilk Falls Farm, as you know.  Please refer to the GRS Newsletter for full information.  A thousand thanks to all of you that volunteered to help with this.  There will be more opportunities!

On Tuesday, October 6, in the evening, there will be a lower elementary family night--a bring-your-own-picnic event--at the area just south (and across the street from) of Comotown at Como Park.  Here is a map if you need it: http://www.stpaul.gov/DocumentCenter/View/67807.  Look for the West Picnic Shelter.  Specific time is yet to be announced, but it will be in the range of 5:00 to 7:00pm.

On Saturday, October 10, there will be a Harvest Festival at Great River, from 2:00-5:00pm.  It's a great way for all of us to build a strong school community.  Look for specifics in the GRS Announcements.

On Friday, October 23, at 1:15 until 3:00, Lower Elementary West will perform the fruits of their two-week residency with the St. Paul ballet in a performance called Luna Bella.  After working on campus every day for these weeks, the children will show what they've learned for anyone who wishes to come and see.  Hope you can be there!

FYI:


It has been pretty incredible to see our community truly transform - even just in the last week! The students are getting used to the routine, great work is being done, and we've enjoyed observing how well they have been working and playing together. 

Warm regards,
--
Jessy Eaton Fabel
Lower Elementary Guide

"Our aim therefore is not merely to make the child understand, and still less to force him to memorize, but so to touch his imagination as to enthuse him to his inmost core." ~ Maria Montessori    

Saturday, September 19, 2015

This week in Lower Elementary West...

Dear Lower Elementary West Community,

We are very happy to express our gratitude after these two weeks, both for all of you and for your children.  Jessy and I are truly enjoying our time with the children, and the successes they have had thus far.

The focal point for our first month is building community.  Our goal as a classroom is to see our interconnectedness, and how we must function as one group, in order to achieve success and happiness in our work and play.  As such, the children (with very little guidance) have created guidelines for relationship, work, and behavior, and these guidelines serve as reminders to us all as we make our way through each day--making mistakes, experiencing success, and learning through the process.  Below is a copy of the jobs the children came up with.

Another recent development is singing!  It turns out the group loves to sing, and we're fitting more of it into our schedule, to build community and to have fun.  Their voices are amazing together.  I've attached the lyrics of our current favorite song.

Of course, there is work as well.  Jessy has been giving geography lessons on the globe, the continents, and the Earth.  We have begun studies in biology as well, with the first years studying the basic differences between animals, plants, and non-living things.  The second years are reviewing their knowledge of vertebrate animals, and the third years are dipping into the notion of classification, for later work with animals.  In math and language, we are still assessing and getting a sense of what the children know.  We have begun exploring subtraction, patterns to 100, free writing, and cursive letters.

Some announcements;

On Friday, October 2, we'll be going to Buttermilk Falls Farm, as you know.  Please refer to the GRS Newsletter for full information.  A thousand thanks to all of you that volunteered to help with this.  There will be more opportunities!

On Tuesday, October 6, in the evening, there will be a lower elementary family night--a bring-your-own-picnic event--at the area just south (and across the street from) of Comotown at Como Park.  Here is a map if you need it: http://www.stpaul.gov/DocumentCenter/View/67807.  Look for the West Picnic Shelter.  Specific time is yet to be announced, but it will be in the range of 5:00 to 7:00pm.

On Saturday, October 10, there will be a Harvest Festival at Great River, from 2:00-5:00pm.  It's a great way for all of us to build a strong school community.  Look for specifics in the GRS Announcements.

It's never to early to put something important on your calendar: On Friday, October 23, at 1:15 until 3:00, Lower Elementary West will perform the fruits of their two-week residency with the St. Paul ballet.  After working on campus every day for these weeks, the children will show what they've learned for anyone who wishes to come and see.  Hope you can be there!

I can't thank you all enough.  Jessy and I feel so supported, and it has a very definite effect on the life of our classroom community.  We appreciate you!

Best wishes,
Erik


Tuesday, September 15, 2015

LEW Volunteers Wanted - Field Trip Oct. 2

Good evening everyone,

Field Trip to Buttermilk Falls Farm
I'm contacting all of you tonight about a field trip we have coming up.  Lower elementary will be hopping on a bus to go on a trip to Buttermilk Falls Farm in Osceola, WI. This farm and the people who run it have very special connections to Great River and we're all excited to go and harvest veggies, see the animals, go on hikes, possibly make natural mandalas, or make butter!

We need 4 volunteers to help out with this special day.  If you are available from 8:20-3:00 on Friday, October 2nd, please contact me. We would love to have you!

FYI - Lower Elementary West Blog

We will be emailing the newsletter to each of you each week, but you can also check the blog if you missed a week or want to easily find information from a previous week. All of the newsletters will be archived on the blog. Click the link below and check it out! (Just so you know... I posted the first 2 newsletters out of order - sorry for some of the formatting errors - I'm still getting used to this).


Hope to hear from some interested volunteers soon! It should be a great trip.

In gratitude,

--
Jessy Eaton Fabel
Lower Elementary Guide

"Our aim therefore is not merely to make the child understand, and still less to force him to memorize, but so to touch his imagination as to enthuse him to his inmost core." ~ Maria Montessori    

Fwd: Greetings LEW Families!

Greetings all LEW families!

Erik and I were so grateful to have the chance to meet with so many of you last night.  We're looking forward to getting to know all of you better as the year progresses.  

We just wanted to take moment to send all of you message to say, "Welcome!" and that we are so excited to work with all of you and your wonderful children this year.  

I've attached a copy of the Orientation Letter which has information about our day-to-day operations in LEW.  Also, here is a link to volunteer opportunities this year:


We have a lot of volunteers already which is wonderful! The only immediate volunteer we need is for someone to take care of our weekly laundry (washcloths mostly) for the month of September. If you've signed up to volunteer, I will connect with you when it's about to be your turn.  

If you have any questions or would just like to check in, don't hesitate to contact me and Erik.  I will mostly answer questions regarding logistics and Erik will most likely answer other questions regarding life in the classroom. Also, if you know of someone else in your family that would like to receive communication from LEW, please let me know.  

Here's to a wonderful year!

All the best,

--
Jessy Eaton Fabel
Lower Elementary West Guide

"Our aim therefore is not merely to make the child understand, and still less to force him to memorize, but so to touch his imagination as to enthuse him to his inmost core." ~ Maria Montessori    



--
Jessy Eaton Fabel
Lower Elementary Guide

"Our aim therefore is not merely to make the child understand, and still less to force him to memorize, but so to touch his imagination as to enthuse him to his inmost core." ~ Maria Montessori    

Fwd: LEW Newsletter 9-12-2015

Hello LEW families on this beautiful Saturday evening, 

Erik and I had an incredible first week with your children. Let me share some of the highlights (apologies in advance for the length. Every week won't be this long). 
 
To welcome the new members of the community, we had students last year buddy up and show the newcomers around the school, walk together to the park, and help to answer any questions about how things work at Great River. For instance, we observed one of the third year students show 5 second years how to create their own world map after their world study lesson. It was also heartwarming to see some of the second years befriend the new students and share their favorite works or favorite games at recess.  As we transition into this new year, we noticed another third year (who has been in LEW for three years) console some students that were feeling anxious or scared about the new year.  We discussed all through the week the importance of community and how this is our classroom. We each have our own light that we bring to the community each day - it may be bright or it may be dim - but when we all come together, are flame is so much brighter.  

What we're working on...

All of the students have been getting accustomed to practical life works such as napkin folding, knot tying, solving puzzles, pin punching, finger knitting, and much, much more.
 
First years have  started working on the beautiful Montessori material known as the bead chains. The bead chains help the students see exactly what skip counting by 2s,3s,4s...all the way up to the 10s looks like.  They are also beginning their world study and experimenting if the earth contains more water or land with a globe tally experiment.

Second years have begun their world study by recreating maps of the world and labeling the continents and oceans. They will also be creating compass roses and answering questions like: Which continent is the furthest south? Which continents touch the Atlantic ocean? 

Third years have begun their solar system study. We had a blast examining scale models of the size of each of the planets (Did you know that you could fit around 11 Earths across Jupiter's diameter?). We also got to go outside and experiment with how far each planet would be from the Sun if 1 meter represented 93,000,000 miles (the Earth's distance from the Sun). They are also working on researching and/or creating plays about the Cosmic History of the Universe. Nobody knows exactly what happened when the universe began, but these students decided that they'd like to act out the Big Bang and we're so excited to see what they come up with.  

Restitution

This year our school as a whole is adopting restitution, a method created by a school teacher named Diane Gossen, as a way to instill the importance of community and self-discipline.  

For example, this past week we discussed how everyone has specific needs. We all have the need to survive, to have a sense of belonging, to feel power, to have fun, and to be free. When our needs our fulfilled we feel happy and content - our light is bright! I attached a picture of the chart we created during this discussion. The children came up with profound ways to meet their needs.

We also discussed what we believe our ideal classroom would look like, sound like, and feel like.  I also attached a picture of that chart to this email. Be sure to take a look!

Next week, the restitution topics we will cover include:
- An outline of what is our job (the guides) and your job (the students)
- Creating a social contract based on our needs and beliefs
- Outlining bottom-line behaviors and how students can come back to the community restored.  

The discussion and work we've done in just 4 days has already been fruitful.  We can see how having common beliefs and language are essential to developing a strong community. If you're interested in learning more about restitution, click the link below:


Big Thanks!

To all of you that signed up to volunteer. It means so much to us to have your support. 

Thank you Joanna Chao for bringing in our snack this week. The students love learning how to prepare snack and use the snack area. Great practical life skills happening here :)

Volunteer Opportunities

If you are still interested in volunteering. There are still a few spots available. Check the link below.

LEW Volunteer Opportunities 15-16


Coming Soon...

A class blog! That's how we will primarily communicate the news from the week. 

That's all for now!

In gratitude,

Jessy & Erik