Monday, March 30, 2015

Run For the Arts

Run for the Arts is coming up on April 9th!  It is a fun event that raises a bundle of money to support the arts at Chapman.

Pledge forms should have come home this afternoon.  Students collect pledges ahead of the race and then follow up afterwards to collect money.  Here are a few pointers/recommendations I have assembled through the years...

  • Have sponsors make a flat donation, rather than sponsoring by lap.  It just makes things easier and allows for those kindergartners who might not run so many laps.
  • There are prizes available!  Simply turning in a form wins you a participation prize.  If things like t-shirts are important to you (and they will be to your child on the day they are delivered), please pay close attention to the formula in the golden box on the top/inside of the sponsor form.
    • Students need a certain amount of points to earn a t-shirt.  Those points are earned through running laps plus the number of sponsors they have.
    • The more sponsors you can accrue, the fewer laps your child will have to run.  (On average, kindergartners run anywhere from 5-11 laps).  To accrue a maximum number of sponsors, consider having everyone sponsor separately (mom, dad, grammy, grampy, little brother, etc).
Please return signed pledge forms before race day.  I will return them that afternoon having filled in the number of laps your runner completed.  

The race is typically around 1:00 PM and parents are welcome to come watch.  I will send out more information as we get closer to the big event.

Monday, March 2, 2015

Cho-co-la-te

Our Culture Fair visitor on Friday was the one and only Tatiana Elejalde, otherwise known as Julian's mom!


She is from Colombia, so she shared with us all the many things her country has to offer.  We learned where it is, what they eat, what animals live there, what language they speak and more.  She taught us how to say chocolate in Spanish and then we sang a fun song about chocolate - yum!


We were so lucky to have such an articulate, well-prepared speaker who knew her kindergarten audience well.  Muchas gracias Tatiana!


P.S.  Tomorrow evening is the Math & Science Festival at school from 6:00-8:00 PM.  Check out some more talented Chapman families as they present various skills and talents.

Monday, February 23, 2015

100th Day and South Korea

Yes, you read that right!

Today was the 100th day of kindergarten!  We celebrated with a special snack, crowns and a gathering of all the kindergartners for some activities outside.  Here's a great shot of our outside time...



After lunch, recess, P.E. and music, we had a special visitor.  JJ Kim, a Portland State student, gave us some information about South Korea.  We learned a Korean folk tale about how the country was founded.


After the folk tale, we went outside to play a typical Korean game called "Rose of Sharon," which is a lot like Red Light, Green Light.  We lucked out with a gorgeous sunny day today!

We had a lot of fun today!

Friday, February 20, 2015

Gratitude

Our character strength for February is Appreciation.  Below is a Gratitude Scavenger Hunt you might find interesting.  If what the weatherman says is true, this weekend might be a great time to search out some things you're grateful for...


Friday, January 16, 2015

Book Recommendations

Looking for something to read?  Here are the two best child-related books I've read recently.

NurtureShock: New Thinking About Children
This book covers topics such as Praise, Race, Sleep and many others relevant to our lives as parents.  NurtureShock is completely research-based, but very readable.


How Kids Succeed:  The Power of Grit, Curiosity and the Hidden Power of Character
This is the book we (the Chapman staff) based our Character Education work on this year.  It, too, is very readable research.  It conveys the value of character education and the impact it can have on learning.

Happy Reading!

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Mathematical Practices and Character Strengths

There are eight mathematical practices we work on throughout the year.  You will see them on the report card.  They are:

  1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.
  2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively
  3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others
  4. Model with mathematics
  5. Use appropriate tools strategically
  6. Attend to precision
  7. Look for and make use of structure
  8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning

They are K-12 ideas and are challenging for kindergartners.  Because of this, we try to embed at least one math practice within every math lesson.  The one we've talked a lot about lately is the third: "Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others."  In kindergarten, the language we use is, "I can use my thinking and consider the mathematical thinking of others."

Where does character come into all of this?  Well, the character strengths we've focused on so far include: Self Control, Courtesy, Optimism and Perseverance.  These, too, are challenging lessons to learn, so we embed them throughout our day.  

In pushing the thinking of your child during math conversations, I do my best to marry the two components - math practices and character strengths.  The math conversations we have definitely stretch your child's thinking.  We do a lot of learning from one another, which requires some students to explain their thinking and everyone else to be listening to the thinking of others.  The listening component is difficult for students this age.  It requires a great deal of self-control and courtesy.  It also takes perseverance to slog through a conversation about a tricky concept or pattern, which we do daily during our number corner (calendar) time.  (It also takes optimism on the teacher's part to believe that they can really do it!)  One character strength not covered, but equally as important, is courage.  It takes a courageous person to be able to share their thinking - right or wrong - with the group.  Luckily we have many courageous kindergartners!

We talk about nearly all of the character strengths throughout the school day.  Feel free to reinforce them at home so we have some common language between home and school.  Please also feel free to talk to your child about his/her participation during our math conversations.  Some conversation topics might include:
  • Do you ever raise your hand during math conversations?  Are you able to share your thinking with the class?  How do you feel about sharing your thinking with the class?  
  • What kind of listener are you when someone else is speaking?
  • What is one thing you've learned from listening to someone else's thinking?
  • Have you ever been able to explain something to others that helped them learn?
  • Is it ok to share your thinking with class even if it might not be correct?

Thanks for your partnership in this difficult task of educating your child! 

Thursday, January 8, 2015

What the heck do you do all day?

You might be wondering what we've been working on lately in kindergarten.  I know some of you hear a lot about our days, but many of you hear that we do "nothing" all day.  Here are a few things we've been working on lately...

In morning circle, we:
  • practice reading and finding word wall words
  • re-read for fluency, look for spacing, punctuation, and more
  • started number of the day (to look at numbers in different ways and gain number sense)
  • started fix-it sentences to start recognizing mistakes and practicing correcting them

In math, we:
  • measure using length, using phrases like longer than, shorter than
  • practice counting strategies (counting by ones, grouping twos, tens, etc)
  • continue to familiarize ourselves with a ten-frame to help us gain number sense
  • work towards being able to explain our thinking and also be able to listen and respond to the thinking of others

In writing, we:
  • practice writing both our first and last names using appropriate capitalization
  • leave spaces between our words
  • experiment with punctuation at the end of our sentences
  • spell word wall words correctly
  • use our senses to make writing more interesting (I feel, I see, I smell, etc)

Of course, there are many other things scattered into our days.  I just thought I'd give you a snapshot of some of the things we're working on these days.  

Cheers!