Sunday, February 25, 2007

February 25, 2006

Hi 4B Parents & Students,
 
This week in 4B:
 
All students need to get to one of the San Mateo - Foster City Library branches and find a research book or two, about their California Missions.  The book(s) are due on Tuesday.
Wednesday March 1st, Suzi's photography art project is due.
The following day, the final drafts of the explorer's journals are due.  All notes, gathering grids and rough drafts need to be turned in as well.
Also, please remember to bring in two pieces of 8" x 11" cardboard for our explorer's journal covers.  We will decorate them on Thursday.
 
We will complete all of the writing of the California Mission reports in class, over the next three weeks.  Assignment sheets were sent home last week.  Instructions for the optional, extra credit, assignments was also sent home.  There are 6 assignments to choose from.  All extra credit work is optional and needs to be completed at home.  Due dates for all these assignments will be given soon. 
 
The students are nearing completion of their auction item Synagogue sketches.  They look great!
 
Our school Purim celebration is Friday, so we will move Science to Thursday.  We are making electronic game boards.
 
Our next field trip is coming soon.  On March 6th, both 4th grade classes will be traveling up to San Francisco to visit Mission Dolores and Temple Sherith Israel.  Please get your permission forms in now.
 
-Steve
 


===========================
Stephen Blatteis
sblatteis@wornickjds.org

Friday, January 19, 2007

Guggenheim 4th grade drama program

Dear 4B Parents & Students,

I'm sorry to have to relay this to you, but the
funding for our fourth grade Guggenheim drama program
has fallen through, forcing us to cancel the program.
We are hoping to offer drama with the Guggenheims as
an after school activity. We will keep you informed.

-Steve

===========================
Stephen Blatteis
sblatteis@wornickjds.org

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

January 17, 2007

Hi 4B Parents & Students~
 
Attached are instructions for the City of Ember game.  This outside of class assignment is due on January 25th.
 
Today Suzie Roberts began a study of Photography with both 4th grade classes.  Suzi's focus of study over the course of the next couple of weeks is to use photography to help students explore their own personal traits and characteristics.  Part of this unit will require us to visit the The Contemporary Jewish Museum of San Francisco.  We will be announcing a date for this field trip soon.
 
I have been in contact with a 4th grade teacher from our sister school in Haifa, the Reali School.  We are just about ready to establish a connection between our 4th grade classes.  This connection and friendship between our students, we hope will last for many years.  We have decided to begin this process by sending the kids in Israel photographs of each of our 4th graders.  Accompanying these photographs will be a separately written physical description of each of the students as well as some basic interests and information.  The Israeli kids will send us the same.  Our first task will be to carefully read the descriptions of our the Israeli kids and decide which description matches up with each picture.  All of the descriptions will be in Hebrew.  We will continue to work together as the year progresses.
I'd be happy to hear any of your thoughts about this project.
 
Have a good evening.
 
-Steve


===========================
Stephen Blatteis
sblatteis@wornickjds.org

Saturday, January 13, 2007

January 12. 2007

Dear 4B Parents,
 
For our next core-literature book(s) the students will be participating in Literature Circles.  A Literature Circle is a student centered reading activity for a group of students.  Each member of a circle is assigned a role which helps guide the group in a discussion of the novel they are all reading.  Literature Circles is a fun activity which provides an opportunity for students to control their own learning; share thoughts, concerns, and their understanding of the events of a novel. Lit circles are comprised of  'jobs' ; Summarizer, Discussion Director, Predictor, Connector, Illustrator,  and Vocabulary Enricher.  As we delve into the novels, students rotate through the jobs so they have an opportunity to experience all the components that will support and clarify their understanding. The 3 books from which the students will choose one (based on level of difficulty), are Pedro's Journal; Christopher Columbus: In His Own Words; and 1492.  All three books look at different aspects of 1492 and provide a closer look into the age of exploration of North America. The students have begun reading one of these three books and a rotating job schedule and reading schedule has been given out to each student.  Through mid February, each student will be responsible for a different assignment and they will be due every Tuesday and Thursday.  Most of this work will need to be completed at home.  
 
The 4B students have been studying life in California up through the 16th century.  We have begun contrasting the lives of California Native Americans with life in Europe.   Students have begun learning why explorers began sailing from Europe, what some of them hoped to find, and what they did find.

I will make available data and stories about Sir Frances Drake, Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo and Sebastian Viscaino.  Students will imagine themselves as a
member of the crew aboard the ship of on one of these explorers.  They will collect information about that particular voyage and keep track of it on a gathering grid.  The who, when, where, why, what, and how of the voyage will be recorded.  This factual information will be infused into a sailor's journal.  
The students will create an imaginary character to sail along with one of these 3 explorers to the new world.  Based upon the factual information they've learned and researched, the students will create a semi-factual series of journal entries.  Their character will be fictitious, but the information they record will be about actual events that did take place.  For instance, if a student picked Drake to sail with, they could imagine what it was like when Drake encountered and took over the Spanish sailing ship, the Nuestra Senora de la Conception. They can choose to be a first mate, a sailor, a cook, or an apprentice.  They will need to write at least 6 separate journal entries.  The final drafts of these entries will be on 'aged' paper. Most of the work will be done in class.  Important dates will be announced.
As has become a fourth grade tradition, the students are creating synagogue note cards for their class auction items.  This year each student will research a synagogue that has some particular importance to their family history.  I'd like students to have conversations with their parents and grandparents and collect information about a temple that was ideally attended by one of their grandparents or parents, or if that is not practical, then a synagogue that was from a parent or grandparent's hometown prior to emigration to the United States.  To ensure we can find information about that temple, it will be important for each student to choose one or (preferably) two temples. The student will research that temple and will then trace a picture of it onto a notecard. Each set will have one card from each student in the class and will be sold on auction day & will make great gifts for Grandparents Day.  In addition, the original drawings will be grouped into a class set and framed as collage, which will be sold at the auction as well. This year's 4B theme will be tracing the Jewish community of each student in our class.  We are extremely fortunate to have the help of Debbi Seligman & Suzi Roberts for some of the development of this artwork.
 
Have a good evening!
 
-Steve


===========================
Stephen Blatteis
sblatteis@wornickjds.org

Saturday, January 06, 2007

January 6, 2007

Dear 4B Parents~

Happy New Year!  

In the fourth grade we have jumped into the curriculum with both feet.  This past four day week was packed with activities.
This week we began discussing the early exploration of California by the Europeans.  To understand this topic, we needed to understand what Europe was like in 1492, and what would compel someone like Christopher Columbus to sail out into the unknown.  From there we are moving into the explorers of California; who they were, when they traveled, what they were looking for, and what impact they had on the Native culture.  To help organize and display this material we are creating a giant time line on our class bulletin board.   Additional and related elements to this study will include a large in class historical fiction writing assignment, that includes literature books, science, math, mapping skills and as well as our field trip to the Tall Ships in San Francisco on February 1st.

In addition to the introduction of explorers, we are moving to the end of the City of Ember. The students are truly enjoying this book and are enthusiastic about reading it.  One of the things I like best about this book is that the author poses some ethical dilemmas.  This past week we discussed a particularly interesting conflict.  If you’ve been following the story, you know that the city of Ember is running low on supplies.  One of the characters, Lizzie, works in the supply office and has been secretly offered several cans of rare and delicious food.  She takes them and enjoys them.  When Lina, one of the other main characters finds out, she is horrified.  Here is the question:  if there is only enough of an item for one person, is it right for one person to have it, while the others have nothing?   As Lizzie says, “You can’t share a can of applesauce with the entire city.”  But Lina goes on to say, “That doesn’t mean it’s right for your to have it.”  Who’s right?  What would you do?  These are the types of questions we discuss through the reading of the story, and the discussions can get intense.  It’s exciting to see the students interacting with literature on this level.

On Friday we began our unit on magnetism and electricity.  To begin with, the students observed the interaction of permanent magnets to a variety of common materials.  Through observation, discussion and questioning the students gained a clear understanding that iron needs to be present in an object for that object to be attracted to the force of a magnet. They also discovered that magnets display forces of attraction and repulsion.  Future activities in this unit will include identifying materials that are conductors and insulators; understanding and constructing simple open, closed, parallel, and series circuits; and use scientific thinking processes to conduct investigations and build explanations.  We will connect this unit to our social studies and literature units as we discuss early navigation and the use of compasses.

 
We continue to work on grammar and will begin a new Words Their Way list next week.  We are just finishing up a writing and illustration activity using the book, Two Bad Ants.
 
If you have not already done so, please make sure to turn in your field trip permission form and your report card envelope.
Thank you!

Have a good week-end,
 
-Steve




===========================
Stephen Blatteis
sblatteis@wornickjds.org