Sunday, December 14, 2014

Week 18 Announcements (December 15-18)

Week 18 Announcements (December 15-19)


Parents,

This is the last week before Winter Break! While students are looking forward to the break, I’ve encouraged them to keep working hard for four more days. Because report card grades are due on Wednesday, I will finalize most grades on Monday. With that in mind, there will be No Reading Log Homework. Please make sure they are still reading every day. However, we will still have a sight word quiz on Thursday, so students will still be given sight words for the week.

Reading

Last week we talked about Poetry and compared the differences between freeverse and lyrical styles of poems. Make sure your students can tell you the difference between the two! We will come back to poetry after Winter Break, but it is important for students to read poetry and understand how the poet feels or why they are using the writing strategies that he or she is using. This week, as we introduce Drama, students will have an opportunity to get into student groups and practice acting as characters in a play. Towards the end of the week, after students are tested on parts of Drama, they will have the opportunity to perform for their fellow students in something we like to call Reader’s Theatre.

Writing

Last week, due to testing, a lot of our Writing Block was limited to only a few minutes per day. This week, with four full days, we will have a chance to re-visit Expository writing. We will review the differences between Expository and Narrative writing as well as how Expository is organized. We will talk about brainstorming strategies and also how to organize Expository using either 1) a “Funky E organizer” or 2) a Box Plan. The key things to remember about an Expository papers is that they are divided into 4 paragraphs (Intro, Body1, Body2, Conclusion). Writers use the Intro to grab the reader’s attention and build interest in the topic (\we call a Hook) and tell the reader what main topics will be discussed throughout the paper (Thesis statement). In Body 1 and Body 2, students are to introduce two main ideas to help support their paper’s main argument. Each body has a Topic Sentence, which tells the reader what the paragraph is about. In the Conclusion, students restate their thesis statement and include a final thought or comment about the topic.

Sight Word Homework

Parents, sight word homework is due on Fridays! This work only requires about five to ten minutes each day.



Monday: Write each word 5 times each

Tuesday: Write each word using stairstep spelling ( students should know what this is)!

Wednesday: Write each sight word in a sentence.

Thursday: Define each sight word and provide a synonym and antonym if possible.


unique
exactly
express
paragraph
receive
represent
observe
plural
singular



Like always, never hesitate to call or text 214-517-3793, and you can find these announcements any time at goingplaceslife-school.blogspot.com

Monday, December 8, 2014

Week 17 Announcements

Week 17 Announcements (December 8 - December 12)



Parents,


This week is an important week because students are going to be taking the District’s CFA (common formative assessment) in both Revising/Editing and Reading. Students will be testing on Tuesday and Thursday, so make sure that they are well rested and in a test-taking mindset when they come to school on these days.


Reading


Last week we worked on “paired passages,” which is when a reader is asked to read two separate stories and answer questions about the similarities and differences between aspects of each story. This week we will be discussin two different skills--Fact and Opion and Poetry.


Writing


Last week we introduced how Expository essays are structured using something known as the “Funky E” organizer. It organizes the paper into 4 paragraphs--Intro, Body #1, Body #2, and Conclusion. Each paragraph has very important elements. In the Intro, students are to engage the reader’s attention with something known as a hook. After students have engaged the reader, they are to include a thesis statement, which is one sentence that tells the reader what the paper will be about. The first sentence of the first body paragraph is known as a topic sentence and it connects with the thesis statement from the introductory paragraph. It tells the reader what the paragraph is going to be about. Students are to use their body paragraphs to support to their main defends.



Sight Words


Parents, this will be our first week of sight word homework. Up until now, we’ve been completing many of these tasks in class, but as the year goes on and we continue to raise the rigor in our classroom, we will move this work out the classroom and hold our students accountable for learning beyond the school day.


Sight Word Work is due at the end of each week (on Fridays!)


Monday:     Write each word 5 times each


Tuesday:     Write each word using stairstep spelling ( students should know what this is)!


Wednesday: Write each sight word in a sentence.


Thursday:     Define each sight word and provide a synonym and antonym if possible.



prove
debate
opinion
demonstrate
illustrate
allowing
refuses
contribute
reveal


Reading Logs and Sight Word Homework are due on Fridays!



Parents, remember that you can call and text me at 214-517-3793 and follow what’s happening at goingplaceslife-school.blogspot.com



Monday, December 1, 2014

Week 16 Announcements


Parents,

 

I hope you and your students had a restful and enjoyable Thanksgiving break! We have three more weeks of instruction and then another break (two weeks this time!) As we reach the last stretch of the semester, we will be touching on several new topics. Also, I have a few announcements regarding homework. See below.

 

Reading

 

Before the break we discussed Main Idea in Nonfiction texts. This week we will be covering what we call “paired passages,” which is when we read similar stories across genres and find similarities/differences between the texts. Students will be asked to compare/contrast plots, character traits/feelings, etc.

 

Writing

 

This is a very important week in Writing. We will be introducing Expository writing, which asks the students to argue (more or less) a point to their reader. This week we will look at how Expository writing is organized, and we will begin drafting our expository paper about our favorite time of the year. This week, we will be discussing thesis statements, hooks, topic sentences, supporting details and conclusion statements. If you have any questions about this, please reach out to me.

 

Sight Words

 

Parents, last week only a handful of students turned in sight word homework. Remember that it will be turned in on Friday with the Reading Logs. I am only asking students to complete about 25 minutes per night of homework. Please make sure that they are doing so.

 

Sight Word Work is due at the end of each week (on Fridays!)

 

Monday:     Write each word 5 times each

 

Consider

Consider

Consider

Consider

 

Tuesday:     Write each word using stairstep spelling ( students should know what this is)!


c
co
cop
copy

Wednesday: Write each sight word in a sentence.


The property is normally closed off to the public.


Thursday:     Define each sight word and provide a synonym and antonym if possible.

 


replace: to swap out or exchange

This weeks Sight Words:
 

support
prevent
concern
brag
patient
random
achievement
humble
proud

 

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Week 15 Announcments

Parents,


The last two weeks have been very chaotic! We’ve had three benchmark tests and scattered instructional days. This week I am very excited to be back on normal schedule! We will have 5 straight days of instruction before we let out for one week of Thanksgiving break!


Reading


This week will be covering or reviewing several things. Before we began testing, we were covering main idea in fiction stories. Our students know that main idea is what the text is mostly or mainly about. This week we will extend that idea and apply it to non-fiction texts. Remember that main idea asks us to add up the most important details into a concluding statement. Sometimes students get this confused with picking out one important detail, but main idea includes several important details.


Writing


I’m sad to say that this will be the last week of formal lessons on writing narratives (at least until STAAR gets a little closer). We will review the writing process and use it to write a narrative throughout out the week. When we get back from Thanksgiving break, we will move onto Expository writing. In conventions, we will discuss antonyms, synonyms, quotations, and subject-verb agreement.


Sight Words


Parents, this will be our first week of sight word homework. Up until now, we’ve been completing many of these tasks in class, but as the year goes on and we continue to raise the rigor in our classroom, we will move this work out the classroom and hold our students accountable for learning beyond the school day.


Sight Word Work is due at the end of each week (on Fridays!)


Monday:     Write each word 5 times each
 
Consider
Consider
Consider
Consider


Tuesday:     Write each word using stairstep spelling ( students should know what this is)!

c
co
cop
copy
Wednesday: Write each sight word in a sentence.

The property is normally closed off to the public.


Thursday:     Define each sight word and provide a synonym and antonym if possible.
 

replace: to swap out or exchange

This weeks Sight Words:
 
compare
consider
copy
design
interesting
distance
property
replace
entire


Reading Logs:


Now that we are back on a regular routine, reading logs will be check each day. Parents, please remember that reading logs need to be signed and checked every day, and they will be turned in on Friday!


Benchmark scores and other info!
If you would like to see your child’s scores/test, please schedule a conference. As also, you can call and text me at 214-517-3793 and follow what’s happening at goingplaceslife-school.blogspot.com


Sunday, November 9, 2014

Benchmark Season is Upon Us!

Last week we took our first Writing Benchmark! I have noticed significant improvements from the beginning of the year until now, which is definitely something to celebrate! I am extremely proud of how hard this group of students continues to work each and every day. The Benchmark has also opened my eyes to several things that we need to continue working on. This week, we will continue to show what we have learned by taking the Math Benchmark (Tuesday) and the Reading Benchmark (Wednesday). The remainder of the week, we will be working on something known as Testing as a Genre, which is basically taking a closer look at how test taking strategies can help compliment our knowledge and skills while we take tests. We will use the benchmarks as a review and discuss strategies like process of elimination, logic, and common mistakes made during testing. For the writing portion, we will continue to analyze what makes good writing and reflect on which strength and weaknesses we have in our own writing!


Homework


Parents, beginning next week, we will have three types of homework: reading logs, sight word work, and writing journals. I’ve decided to do away with daily reading logs because I think it creates negative reading habits and views towards reading (students should still be reading at least 15 minutes every day).


A sneak peak


Reading log:


The new reading log will basically be downsized from daily to weekly. As part of this transition, students will be expected to write ONE summary per week on the book they are reading outside of the classroom. These will start next week and will be due on Thursdays.


Writing Journals:


The writing journal is an idea I am tossing around. I think that, similar to reading, practicing writing outside of the classroom is extremely important in order to become better readers and writers. More details are to come on this, and it will most likely not start until AFTER Thanksgiving break.


Sight Word Work:


This will begin next week, and it basically includes assignments that are expected every day and due at the end of the week on Friday. More details of this will come next week.


Sight Words


debate
decide
develop
produce
determine
observe
necessary
survive
surround




Next week our sight words will be transition words!


Parents, as always, please feel free to reach out and contact me at any time. Also remember that I am doing my best to try and communicate with more than 45 parents, so please be patient. Call or text 214-517-3793 or email me at nicholas.miller@lifeschools.net.


My goal is to have a parent-teacher conference with every parent before Winter Break!



Sunday, October 26, 2014

Week 12 Announcements (October 27-31)


Parents,

Many of you may have been wondering why a lot of graded work has not been sent home over the recent weeks. I apologize for not communicating clearly about this. Beginning this week, students will only bring home graded work home if it is below a 70%. If the student scores below a 60%, it will be required as a REDO grade. If you would like to have blank copies of what we are reviewing in class each week, please reach out to me and I can send home a packet. Please know that any time I hand out something in class, we review and discuss it the same day so that students can see what the correct answer is and why.

 Reading

Last week we talked mostly about making inferences while we read. Towards the end of the week, we transitioned into Main Idea in fiction (which is what we will be covering this week). This is how we discussed it.

 
Main Idea can be found by asking these two questions:

  • What is the text or story is mostly or mainly about?
  • What is the author trying to tell or show the reader?

In order to draw conclusions about main idea, students have to find supporting details. Supporting details are the Most Important details in a story. Oftentimes, when discussing a story, students pull out the small details. We want them to look at the big picture by combining important events and details of a story. If you’re watching TV, reading a book, or listening to a song, be sure to ask your student, “What is main idea?” and “What do you think the main idea is in this ?”

 Writing

 
Last week we published our stories of a time we got in trouble. This week, we are going to look at how STAAR scores papers. STAAR scores papers on a 1-4 scale, with 1 being the lowest grade and 4 being the highest. This week we will review good student samples and talk about “must haves” in our writing. One day this week, as part of writing on demand, students will write a fictional scary story!

 
WRITING CONVENTIONS:

 

Last week we covered simple and compound sentences. We will continue creating compound sentences and move into dependent/independent clauses.

Sight Words

 

As writers, it is important to describe in detail when something is happening. With that in mind, we plan on introducing adverbs to help enhance the actions of stories! An adverb helps to describe how an action is being done. For example: Shelby finished her homework quickly! Remember parents that we will have to spell and use our sight words correctly in a sentence.

 

swiftly

nervously

politely

anxiously

reluctantly

loosely

courageously

recklessly

violently


Tutoring

 Parents, beginning this week, I will host tutoring sessions on Tuesdays and Wednesdays ONLY from 3:45pm to 4:45pm. I will only be allowed to have 4 students on each day, so I will contact students’ parents in regards to tutoring. If you are interested in tutoring, please contact me. I will no longer host tutoring sessions in the mornings, but if your student arrives before 7:15am, he or she can come up to the room to work on reading, writing, or any homework.

Bridging the Gap

 Like always, parents, if you ever need anything, please do not hesitate to call or text me at 214-517-3793. Remember to follow what’s happening on twitter @goingplaces303. Also, we have a classroom blog. Student work, updates and other info will be posted at http://goingplaceslife-school.blogspot.com 

 
Staying in the Loop

 

Parents, please remember to join the remind101 group by texting @4b2n to (319) 774-3341.