The day started out with our long-awaited celebration...PANCAKES with the PRINCIPALS for being the 4th grade class that read the most minutes over Winter Break!
Our top reader, Allena Jeter, was proud to be the one to bring back the trophy for our classroom!
Alexey was wanting the works on his pancakes... syrup, chocolate, sprinkles, and, of course, whipped cream!
Miyona, Catherine, and Julia dressed up for the occasion, down to their fingernails.
Three is not a crowd especially when there are so many pancakes to eat!
We were finally ready to shine after practicing for weeks. The room was decorated with posters of famous poets, the programs had been printed, the mic was on its stand by the Walt Whitman stool, and our refreshments were set up.
Aynee was the first to welcome everyone and explain how in real poetry cafes back in the 40s and 50s you snapped your fingers instead of clapping. She started us off reciting "Caged Bird" by Maya Angelo...
There's nothing that compares to a grandmother's love and here's proof...Kameron's grandmother sat through two Poetry Cafes because Kameron got the time mixed up and she's still smiling!!
Sydney knew that if she brought a prop she would get extra points, so she brought her mom to help prove her point in Kenn Nesbitt's poem "My Mother Does My Homework!".
Last but not least, a big thank you to Reese, her grandmother and mom for bringing refreshments for all!
Congratulations Students! You did it! You read more minutes than any other 4th grade class at OES over Winter Break!
All the grade level winners will be invited to have pancakes with the principals and claim ownership of the Best Reader trophy for the remainder of 2016. I couldn't be prouder of you! Special thanks to Allena who read 3.000 minutes and Brooke who read 1,500 minutes.
We did it!!
Meet Austin Kleon and his Blackout Poetry. Check out the videos below and get a preview of what we will be trying this week in our poetry unit. Professional writers sometimes find it difficult to think of an idea to write about and the words just won't come...Writer's Block! But, when it does he has a totally different way to making the words flow again. He gets grabs a newspaper and a black Sharpie.
This famous poem written in 1823 and submitted to a newspaper anonymously was later attributed to Samuel Clements. It has a lot of challenging vocabulary in it, so we decided to work in teams to annotate it while dressed in "mama's kerchief. To make it extra challenging one of our rules was that it had to be done with no oral communication. Check out our kerchief pics below:
The winning table was #4! Congratulations Catherine, Julia, Aynee, Ashley, Kaydence, and Kellan!
See if you can remember the meaning for the following 11 phrases. Number a piece of paper with the phrases and write synonyms next to them for two clips up tomorrow.
nestled all snug in their beds...such a clatter...threw up the sash...lustre of midday...coursers they flew...prancing & dancing...looked like a peddler...droll little mouth...encircled his head...we had nothing to dread...down of a thistle...
Earlier that morning, 7 am to be exact, we had breakfast with some
As part of our Astronomy unit we are studying phases of the moon. Keeping a Lunar Log for the next two weeks and building a model of the phases has kept us busy. Here are several pics of some of us trying to recreate the phases and trying not to snitch any Oreo filling until we were done!
Remember to bring your dad to school extra early on Friday for a special treat!
The highlight to our study of the American Revolution is singing along to the following video: Too Late to Apologize!
This past week was a tough one for me as I had to be absent from the classroom Monday to see a hand doctor, half a day Tuesday for an operation, and half a day Thursday to go back to the doctor to check the results. Losing the tip of my finger was quite an ordeal! In the future I will be hiring professionals to do yard work!!But, through it all I was reminded that little kindnesses are soooo appreciated. I so appreciated...
Mrs. Gault for typing up my sub plans because my handwritten ones weren't very legible!
My 4th grade team for helping out by splitting up my class when my sub called in sick and they had to get another!
Miss Morrison for unpacking my lunch and handing me my sandwich!
My class for trying to focus on doing their best all week and proving it by 14 students getting an "A" on their long division test!
Shelby, Reese, and Sydnee getting signed papers stapled and put in folders when I couldn't!
Reese and her mom for sending in the best little orange and celery pumpkin snacks for everyone!
Julia sending me the sweetest note ever!
Dr. Falcon for doing an incredible job on my finger operation! (After I told him in the operating room, I had just signed a contract for a hand modeling job : )
My husband for cooking, cleaning, and chauffeuring me all week!
The weather was perfect as we traveled back in time...two hundred and thirty-five years to be exact to the Revolutionary War. We found ourselves on Colonel Bratton's homestead complete with a militiaman, the colonel's wife, a slave girl, and a housekeeper all waiting to tell us their stories.
We saw barns with livestock, tools, kitchens, a one-room school house and walked on miles of trails through the woods. As we walked we got a glimpse of what life might have been like back then as we fought for what we believed to be right...patriot or loyalist in this new land.
might have been like for our ancestors back then.
Stay tuned for student artwork and descriptions of their personal highlights from our trip...