Friday, January 25, 2019

Weekly Update 1/25/19

We continued our study of forces and motion this week with a new set of catapult experiments. Students worked through the steps of the scientific method to determine whether a cotton ball or a ping pong ball would travel farther when launched from a catapult. The class first participated in a "fish bowl" where volunteers came into the center to use the given supplies to design a catapult. After watching the volunteers, partners split off to either mimic or recreate their own designs. Once each team had their catapults constructed, they did several trials and recorded their results. They had some great ideas about why the ping pong ball seemed to go farther most of the time. It was great to see them apply what they have learned about forces and motion. Later in the week, they had some fun redesigning their catapults and trying to hit a bulls-eye target on the board!













In math this week, students practiced regrouping with subtraction in both the tens and hundreds place. We will continue to work on subtraction skills next week with lessons 7-9. We also added STEM bins to our math centers this week. Each week the kids will have a different engineering challenge. This week, they were tasked to build a house using the STEM bin material of their choice. Materials included Legos, toothpicks and Play-Doh, base ten blocks, index cards and tape, and more. Each child's house looked unique, and the students were very creative in their thinking.














Our study of characters in reading this week focused on characters' feelings and how those feelings can change frequently throughout a story. The children also are practicing reading with more expression when they read dialogue in order to convey the emotions of each character. They learned that authors use many other words than "said" to help us know how a character should sound as they are speaking.

Many students are getting close to finishing up their first round of informational books. Students worked on writing conclusions and added "About the Author" pages to the ends of their books. Writing partners worked to help each other peer edit their work.




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