Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Gingerbread making!

Gingerbread House Making

1L wrapped up an amazingly fun and festive unit on the folktale of the Gingerbread Man this week.
We retold the story from various cultures and celebrated our learning by writing our own gingerbread stories and making our own Gingerbread House to catch those tricky little cookies!

Reminder: Tomorrow we will host a reading of the Polar Express, with a secret surprise for the students of hot coco! Shhh! They don't know yet! Remember to pack a "special healthy snack" to enjoy!














Thank you so much to all of our 1L families who came in today and donated materials for our activity. I couldn't do it without you! Thank you for the generous holiday gift and books for our classroom as well. Students will enjoy them for years to come! I am very blessed to spend my days with your students. Being a teacher is the absolute best and this year I am especially thankful for our little family of first graders. They inspire me to push my teaching to new heights and the gifts that they share with our community each day bring me so much joy! I wish you all a very happy and restful break. 

Love,
Mrs. L


Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Student Council Updates

Student Council Updates!

Friday, December 15th will be the next School Store. ($5.00 limit please)

December Spirit Days: 
-Wednesday, December 20th = Sports Day
-Friday, December 22nd = Holiday Colors 

Friday, November 17, 2017

A Pilgrim Visit!

This week students welcomed Susannah, a woman from Plymouth Plantation. 
Students learned about life as a pilgrim and compared it to their own life experiences. Check out the fun we had with the hands on centers Susannah brought for us to explore!








Monday, November 13, 2017

Patterns of the Moon!

Patterns of the Moon and Stars

Students will be thinking about patterns that exist outside our Earth in the coming weeks!
Please read this background information from our Stemscopes Curriculum to guide your home conversations!

We can observe and record how the Moon’s appearance changes each month. The Earth and Moon waltz together around a common point, their center of mass, called the barycenter. From our perspective, however, it looks like the Moon orbits the Earth. The Moon goes through a cycle of phases about once every 29 ½ days. These phases are caused by our seeing more or less of the Moon’s sunlit side. This occurs because the relative positions of the Sun and Moon change each day in our sky. Starting when the Sun and Moon are closest in the sky, New Moon, it takes about 1 week for us to see the Moon become a crescent (waxing crescent) and proceed to being half lit (first quarter – always lit on the right side). During the next week it becomes more than half full (waxing gibbous). About two weeks after it was new, the moon is full. During the next two weeks, we see less and less of the lit side, reversing the order of phases through waning gibbous, third quarter (always lit on the left side), waning crescent, and finally back to new moon. At all times, we are seeing the Moon because of sunlight scattered off its surface. This cycle of patterns allowed ancient cultures to create lunar (Moon phase-based) calendars that signaled times to fish, hunt, plant, and harvest. These calendars also formed the basis for the 30-31 day month used today. 

Note: Students do not need to know the names of the Moon phases, but the names may help them remember the cycle of phases. They do, however, need to know that the phase shapes follow a pattern. It is hard to detect the change in the Moon’s phase over a period of just 1 day. Also, explain to students that the Moon rises approximately one hour later each night. This means that only the first two weeks of Moon phases are visible during early evening. Weeks 3 and 4 of Moon phases are only visible late at night or too early in the morning to catch. The Moon is up all night only when it is full. On every other day, the Moon is visible for some time during the day. Encourage your students to look for it in the daytime sky! They can see phases during the day or during the night. 

No one should ever look at the Sun directly for more than a fraction of a second. Doing so will cause eye damage. Having said that, note that we can observe and record how the Sun appears to change position in the sky throughout the day. It is easiest to do that around sunrise and sunset. This is best done by observing the changing length and direction of an object’s shadow during different times of the day. 

Ancient people worshipped the Sun for heat and light, but feared winter, when the lack of Sun brought death and despair. Today we know the Earth rotates, giving the illusion that the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west. The Sun also appears to move in a curved, rather than a straight, line as it slowly moves from east to west. 

Lengths of shadows cast by the Sun vary throughout the day. Because the pattern is repeated each day, shadows were used to tell time. This eventually led to the use of the sundial. When the Sun is low on the horizon, objects cast long shadows. When the Sun is high in the sky, objects cast the shortest shadows. 

When our side of the Earth rotates so that the Sun is up in our sky (daytime), the air scatters sunlight and turns the sky a blue color. At night when the Earth turns away from the Sun, our planet blocks the Sun’s light and the air on a cloudless night is transparent, so we can see the stars. Humans make patterns out of their points of light, like dot-to-dot pictures that seem to slowly move across the sky in big curves, just like the Sun. This apparent movement of the Sun and stars is caused by the Earth’s rotation. The stars do move in space and relative to each other, but they are all so far away that these motions are not detectable over a human lifetime without using high technology. 

Stars are actually present in the daytime sky, too. However, the air scatters so much sunlight and hence is so bright that these dim points of light can’t be seen. Also, bright city lights scatter so much light in the sky at night that overwise visible, dimmer stars are invisible when you are in or near cities. If students want to watch for these amazing star patterns, they will need to find a place without much human-made light. That is the reason astronomers put telescopes on top of mountains, far away from city lights.
-Stemscopes Curriculum

Thursday, November 9, 2017

Veteran's Day

Veteran's Day Learning

Today our class was lucky enough to have a special visitor! One of our parents who served in the Navy came in and spoke to our students about his experience in the armed forces. He brought pictures and items from his work to share and the students asked really thoughtful questions.

With your students over this long weekend, be sure to start some conversations about Veteran's Day! Ask them about what they have learned and how they feel about the important job of being in the military. 

Consider taking a walk around town or Boston, noticing how we honor Veterans in different ways.

Brainpop has a great video to guide your talking points as well.  







Thank you to our Veterans!

Love,
Mrs. L

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Happy Halloween!

Happy Halloween 1L!

Check out some of the fun activities we did today!






Thank you to the volunteers who came today and provided supplies!

Mrs. Erwin was even our Mystery Reader today!

Have a very happy and safe evening with your families!
Love,
Mrs. L

Wednesday, October 18, 2017

How does a thermometer work?

How does a thermometer work?

Students took part in a demonstration of how a thermometer works this month. Students learned that a thermometer measures how hot or cold something is. A scientist says that the liquid in the thermometer expands and moves up or contracts and moves down the tube when the air, or other substance in contact with the thermometer, has more heat or less heat, respectively. How hot or cold the air will feel is measured by its temperature. We discovered that the red liquid inside the bottle will move up and down. When the temperature is hot, the red liquid will expand and fill more of the tube. In other words, the top of the liquid will rise. We also so when the temperature is cold, the red liquid will contract and move down. Finally, students came to the conclusion that the temperature of the air in the room is called room temperature.




Love,
Mrs. L

Bat Unit

Bats
A Nonfiction Unit of Study

We have learned that...

Nonfiction texts are about real life. 
Readers "read to learn" about topics from nonfiction texts. 
Nonfiction readers take a sneak peak even before they read a book or watch a video. 
Readers ask questions! 
Readers "stop and jot" down answers to questions they find on stickies or organizers.
Nonfiction readers learn more by chatting about a page with a friend 
Nonfiction readers and writers are word collectors.
Fiction can help to teach us about nonfiction topics too!


Over the next week or so feel free to take a look at these great Books and Videos about BATS! These are great homework choices that can enhance classroom discussions!




Be sure to visit Brainpop and search BATS. There is a great video there as well!

Love,
Mrs. L


Readers build good habits!

Reader's build GOOD habits!
Reader's set up their reading space, they take a sneak peek at their book before reading and they think about what the story is going to be about!
Reading partners work together! They grow ideas and give reminders!

Reading partners take turns reading the same page, different pages, they talk about the book after they are finished reading it and help each other set or meet reading goals!