Showing posts with label 2015-2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2015-2016. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

End of the Year Festivities

We had an eventful last few days of third grade this year!!

On Monday afternoon, we celebrated one another with "Paper Bag Awards"...honoring the positive qualities in our classmates that we discovered over the course of the year!

  On Monday evening, families celebrated our year of learning as we shared our portfolios and final projects...



On Tuesday, we celebrated our final PBIS celebration for being Resctful of Ourselves, Others, and our Environment with Water Recess!  (We were very happy that the warm weather returned in time, too!)

 And, finally, we shared a special video we made for Mr. Berry as he prepares to leave RES for a new position at the MMMUSD-CESU Offices. 


Mr. Berry's Video

It's been an amazing year together...have a wonderful summer!  

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Westward Expansion Projects in Enrichment

Throughout the year, we collaborate with Mrs. Rankin and Enrichment class to enhance the learning in our classrooms.  Students spent three enrichment classes creating and making something that would share their learning about the Westward Expansion topic of their choice.

We had students cooking, creating green screen videos, making 3D projects from wagons to models of gold rush panning and the Alamo.  I love giving the students freedom to create anything that showcases their learning and to see what they produce.  I also really valued that students wanted to include reports and information that they had collected in their classrooms during their research. I think that creating a project at the end of a learning process can be a great way to give students creative freedom and to help them synthesize the knowledge they have acquired.

Sharing their learning in a project was great, but what gave it additional meaning was the knowledge that they would also share their projects with second graders and in the display case at the front of RES....as well as online in this blog post. As second graders prepare for grade 3....this connection at the end of the year is meaningful for all!

Here is a glimpse into the share with Grade 2:

 

This post originally appeared on Mrs. Rankin's Enrichment at RES blog.

Invention Prototypes

In third grade students had an opportunity in enrichment to design and build some invention prototypes.Their creativity and inventiveness was inspiring!


Here are some examples of the excellent inventions made by third graders during enrichment:




For details on our process check out this blog post:  http://enrichmentatres.blogspot.com/2016/04/engineering-design.html.

This post originally appeared on Mrs. Rankin's Enrichment at RES blog.

Friday, April 29, 2016

Google Expeditions!

On Thursday April 28th, RES students in grades 2-4, and CHMS students in grades 6-8 experienced virtual field trips through the Google Expeditions Pioneer Program. Google Expeditions is a new product that allows teachers to take their classes on virtual field trips, immersing students in experiences that bring abstract concepts to life and giving students a deeper understanding of the world beyond the classroom. These trips are collections of virtual reality panoramas — 360° photo spheres, 3D images and video, ambient sounds — annotated with details, points of interest, and questions.



Several months ago RES third grade teacher Tonya Darby applied for our students to get this opportunity to try a new and innovative technology! Students in second grade traveled to China, and even got to see pandas in the wild! This trip connected to their unit on cultural studies around the world and helped to further extend their learning about a country that they have been learning about over the last month. Students in third grade traveled west to support their social studies learning about life on the Oregon Trail. Fourth graders traveled to Mars, connecting to their solar system unit of study, and allowing them to see close up a planet beyond Earth!

We are thankful to the Pioneer program for their support as well as teachers and staff who gave time and classroom space to host this great experience.

Want to learn more about the Expeditions Program? Check out: https://www.google.com/edu/expeditions/
OR ask your student "Where did you go today?!"

 

(Thank you to Mr. Berry for sharing his video & blog post with us!)

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Engineering Design

In third grade enrichment this year our classroom activities have been fairly well synched to the work students are doing in their regular classroom.  Our work has focused on enhancing and adding to the science and social studies curriculum.  However for the last four weeks, we left this lock step and students have been spending time in enrichment experiencing the engineering design cycle.  Time in the enrichment classroom is often spent making and creating, but for this challenge I wanted students to have a larger purpose.  Accordingly to the Engineering is Elementary website (http://www.eie.org/overview/engineering-design-process) in order to experience an engineering design cycle, students must ask, imagine, plan, create, and improve.

Ask--What is the problem?

We began our engineering design cycle by asking the question: What bugs you?  After we clarified that siblings did not count (!) and that students had to think about things in their daily life, or community or world problems that bothered them..the ideas began to flow! Each student began with an Inventor's journal in which they wrote down their 'bugs'. This was an odd experience for us...spending a large chunk of time just documenting negative things.....but we discussed the idea that often great inventions are born from necessity or the desire to improve something.  Many students wanted to jump right into creating, but to honor the design cycle we spent one class period simply asking questions.  I encourage you to talk to students about what bugged them.  The lists were thoughtful and interesting. Some students focused on one particular issue and spent time thinking about the constraints and how others have approached fixing the problem, while others listed many ideas!  Since students had just completed a persuasive essay, I encouraged them to try to think of physical things that they could manipulate, design or change.  A very few students really struggled to think of any issue that they felt worth working on and so they brainstormed with myself or a partner. (Can you imagine if nothing bugged you?  I think that sounds nice, so could not find fault in that feeling if they truly meant it!)


Imagine- What are some solutions?  Brainstorm and pick your best idea!

On the second day students read back through their problems.  Some added a new problem they had thought of since our last meeting too.  Then the creative process began.  Some drew pictures, others wrote down ideas, some talked to a classmate or me.  Students added an idea or ideas to their Inventor's Journal of how they would solve their problem.


Plan- Draw a diagram and make lists of materials you will need.

Before leaving our class on the second day, students had to create a materials list. They let me know what they might need to build a prototype.


Create-  Follow your plan and create a prototype.  Test it out.

Last week students began building their prototypes.  We had many successes and many failures.  We learned that sometimes  making something is harder than imagining how to make it!


Improve- What works? What doesn't? What could you do better?

We are finding that improving and creating are happening all together as students iterate on ideas as they complete their prototypes.


By next week our goal is to have a working prototype that students can bring home to share with families.  I also challenged students to think of a name for their invention!



As we wrap up, stay tuned for a video of their awesome prototype inventions!


Original Post on Mrs. Rankin's "Enrichment at RES" blog.

Tomatoes in Space?!

(Originally posted on Mrs. Rankin's "Enrichment at RES" blog.)
This year students from Richmond Elementary School are participating in the TomatoSphere project in third grade to connect with their interdependence science unit. This is an amazing opportunity to participate in a real citizen science project. Last Friday we planted our blind study seeds as well as made predictions as to which seeds would yield the best tomato plants. Over the next few weeks we will watch and record our findings.

Here is information about this project as described on the TomatoSphere website http://tomatosphere.org:
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What is Tomatosphere™?

Tomatosphere™ uses the excitement of space exploration to teach the skills and processes of scientific experimentation and inquiry. Students investigate the effects of the space environment on the growth of food that will inevitably support long-term human space travel.



Pictured above is NASA Astronaut Scott Kelly with 600,000 Tomatosphere™ seeds. These space-faring seeds will be distributed to about 18,000 classes in Canada and the US during the 2015-16 school year. The seeds were launched to the International Space Station (ISS) on board SpaceX’s Dragon on April 14, 2015 and will return to Earth after spending 5 weeks in space.
What does the program involve?

Each classroom is sent two packages of tomato seeds. One package contains seeds that have been sent into space or treated in space-simulated conditions. The other package will contain "control" seeds, which have not been in space. Through the Tomatosphere™ project, students will learn how to conduct a scientific experiment and compare the germination rates of the two groups of seeds. Tomatosphere™ relies on a "blind test" in which educators and students will not know which of the two packages are the "space" seeds and which are control seeds until the germination process is complete and results have been submitted.Watching these seeds germinate and grow will encourage classroom dialogue about the elements of life that support the requirements for space missions:- food, water, oxygen and the need to consume carbon dioxide exhaled by astronauts. Traveling to and from Mars could take more than two years, therefore it is vital to know how to grow food while astronauts make the journey to the Red Planet, spend time on Mars and make the return journey back to Earth.
The results from your Tomatosphere™ science experiments will help Canadian scientists understand some of the issues related to long-term space travel. It’s an out-of-this-world opportunity for your students!
Why grow tomatoes in space?

Tomatoes are practical and valuable plants for space applications. They provide wholesome nourishment, as well as purified water through evaporation from their leaves.
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All the seeds are planted! One tray for each Grade 3 class



Tiny precious experimental seeds and careful scientists at work!



Students predicting which seeds will grow the most tomatoes



Thinking about ensuring this is a fair experiment.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Changing our World #tcrwp #comments4kids

For the last few months, third graders have been working on opinion/argument writing in workshop.  We first began by developing opinions about the characters or themes in the books we were reading.  Now, we're writing to convince others about changes we think need to be made or people we think should be recognized.

During writing workshop for the past few weeks, students have been revising and editing a speech that they felt particularly passionate about.  Some students will be presenting these speeches in front of others.  Others chose to present via VoiceThread to a more global audience.  Please listen and leave a comment to these convincing speeches!

Miss Darby's Class










Mrs. Ankerson's Class











Mrs. Ayer's Class





Monday, February 8, 2016

Scenes from #GSPD2016

Friday afternoon, we joined hundreds of thousands of students around the world for Global School Play Day 2016!  We had a variety of activities happening in our classrooms for students to choose from including: legos, board/card games, Calico critters, arts & crafts, origami, paper airplanes, No Endz, squishy circuits, Little Bits, Snap Circuits, and more!

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Global School Play Day is coming! #gspd2016



Third Graders at RES are participating in the second annual Global School Play Day on Friday, February 5, 2016.  On this day, students will have an opportunity to PLAY -- all afternoon -- with board games, dolls, Legos, blocks, trucks, cars, racetracks, playing cards, empty cardboard boxes, markers, jigsaw puzzles, blankets (for forts), social games (charades, Pictionary, etc.) The only rule:  no electronics (except a board game that has an electronic timer, an electronics play kit, or similar).

***


Press Release from GSPD:

Last year, a small group of 6 educators, took action and created Global School Play Day after continuing to see things encroaching on play time for children. They did this because they were angered by the increasing number of schools eliminating recess for children. They were also inspired to take action by the TEDx talk, Dr. Peter Gray, who argues the case that today's kids do not grow up playing and this has led to increases in childhood depression, increased stress related issues and the highest suicide rates in history. Over 65,000 participated after only 4 weeks of social media promotion from those 6 educators.

This Year, over 131,000 (As of 1:00 on January 29th) have been registered by their administrators or teachers to participate in Global School Play Day.  Schools from around the world will stand together to say unstructured play for children is a vital part of their development.

Global School Play Day is for public schools, private schools, and homeschool families! Let's spread the word about the benefits of play. If anyone asks why you're doing this, just tell them, "...because kids have forgotten how to play!"

For more information or to interview a teacher involved Contact the GSPD Leadership -

email - Global School Play Day @globalschoolplayday@gmail.com

Twitter - @GSPlayDay

 

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Brave, Bold Opinions #tcrwp

We've embarked on a new Writing Unit of Study...writing our opinions in order to change the world!  Alas, before we get too carried away, we're trying our hand at small, little changes in our local world -- RES.

So, after a class conversations about little changes we'd like to see to make RES a better place, we struck out to write mini-speeches in order to convince Mr. Berry to see our side of the issue.  At the end of our first class, Mr. Berry happened upon our classroom and listened in on our opinions, and even gave us some excellent advice to make our speeches even stronger!

We think that the RES Cafe should have breakfast as a lunch option more often!



After listening to Mr. Berry's sage advice, we put the finishing touches on our speeches and sent them off with Mr. Berry to give to Chef James...

[embed]https://youtu.be/CSf0gTifCwA[/embed]

We're anxiously awaiting Chef James' thoughts on the subject...stay tuned!
UPDATE January 25:

  
Chef James stopped by to check in with us regarding our speeches about more breakfast.  We were quite pleased to hear Chef say that we have convinced him to not only offer breakfast more often, but to also offer more choices when breakfast is served for lunch!!  Woohoo!

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Coming Soon: RES Science Fair

(Posted on behalf of RES Enrichment Teacher Darcie Rankin)

The RES Enrichment Program is excited to announce the annual


FAMILY SCIENCE FAIR  !COMING SOON!


Thursday March 10th, 2016





[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="476"] Photo Courtesy: Bartelso Elementary[/caption]

We look forward to the excellent projects presented by students in grades K-4!  Please mark your calendars and start thinking about how you would like to participate.



Do you have a science fair project in mind?  Here are some ways to make a plan:


ü  Expand upon an interesting topic you have studied in class


ü  Think about a topic that interests you, or a science question that you are curious about


ü  Talk to family and friends to brainstorm ideas for a project


ü  Stop by the enrichment room and borrow a fair idea book and talk with Mrs. Rankin


ü  Check out science project resources in the library





The RES Science Fair is a non-judged family event.  Students are encouraged to work together with family and friends to develop a project they are proud of presenting to our community.  Your entry does not have to be a science experiment. It may be as simple as a display of your leaf collection or as complex as an experiment on how the circulatory system works.  Look at the world around you. What are you curious about? What interests you?  Ask why something is the way it is. Do experiments, demonstrate a scientific principle, make observations of the world around you, design and make something or collect and analyze data.  Most importantly- be creative and HAVE FUN!



In a few weeks Science Fair entry forms will be sent home.  At that time you will be asked to share your planned science fair topic as well as any special display requirements you have.



Questions?


Contact: Darcie Rankin, Enrichment Teacher by email at darcie.rankin@cesuvt.org

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Happy Winter!

From the Third Grade Team to you and your family, we wish you the winteriest of winters.  Enjoy your vacation and we'll see you in 2016!!

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Thursday, November 5, 2015

Pilot Project: Minecraft

Mrs. Rankin worked with a small group of third graders recently to try out Minecraft (the oh-so-popular building video game) as a possibility for sharing research related to our recent World Geography research project.

Here's an excerpt from Mrs. Rankin's blog about the project:
Due to the small group nature of our project we were able to team students together so that experts could support novice players.  Next, we explored the application.

When students understood the tool useage expectations, they got right to work! I could clearly see their informational knowledge as they designed, built and created!  Students had to problem solve how to create animals, stop ice from melting, and more.  They also collaborated on how to add labels (most settled on capturing a screenshot of their biome and then editing it in Explain Everything, but then others found a way to make signs inside of Minecraft!)

This project was a way to share already understood information.  Students could have certainly drawn a picture or written a description of their understanding...but I believe the Minecraft tool added three additional components to their learning:  a need to collaborate and learn from each other, high (very high!) engagement, and problem solving.
Below are two images created during our small group pilot.





We're hoping that we can bring this experience to ALL third graders next year!  Thank you, Mrs. Rankin, for helping us to pilot this project.  You can read Mrs. Rankin's entire post here on her Enrichment at RES blog.

 

 

Andes Manta Visits

This is a guest post from RES Enrichment Teacher Mrs. Rankin.

 

Today third graders had the amazing opportunity to make musical instruments with the musical group Andes Manta.  Students visited the Flynn for a performance this morning. Students and chaperones got to experience quite a show.

Embedded image permalink

Here is an example of a similar performance of one amazing part of the show, when the Lopez brothers create a rainforest:



We were very lucky to not only see this great performance, but to welcome Andes Manta to our school to create payas, an Andean musical instrument.  Each student created their very own paya and participated in small group discussions with the artists.  Students talked about music, creating instruments, Ecuador (culture and geography) as they worked alongside great musicians!



 

This work connected to students study of South America in Spanish classes as well as their third grade geography unit (biomes, landforms, and culture!).

This great opportunity was made possible by the Flynn Education Department, collaboration between enrichment, Spanish and third grade teachers AND a very generous donation from Cumbancha (http://www.cumbancha.com/). Thanks to everyone who supported this effort to bring an enriching experience to our school!