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4th grade
S. Ingold
ETHAN H SHIVE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
Zip Code: 28138
Contact S. Ingold

Page Last Updated Oct 13, 2011
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Book Buddies  Posted October 11th, 2010 at 12:37pm   Comments(0)


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Welcome to Mrs. Ingold's
 


We are hatching chicken eggs!! Our chicks should be hatching around Oct. 21.  We are looking for a good home for our brooder chicks. Please let us know if you are interested!  We are learning about animal habitats and characteristics in Science.


Our first field trip is to Horizon's Unlimited in Salisbury on Oct. 27th. We will be learning about minerals, animal adaptations and animal behaviors.  We will return to school prior to dismissal.


Please sign planners and check over your child's homework nightly.  Your child should be reading at least 30 minutes every night. Students should be writing their homework in their planner daily.

Our focus in math is adding and subtracting, solving word problems and multiplication.  Please help your child memorize their multiplication facts, this will greatly increase their success in math this year.  We will have a multiplication test every Friday.

In reading, we are learning about the story elements of character, setting, problem, solution, and conclusion.  We are learning about mysteries and elements of mystery stories.  We will have a spelling test every Thursday. We will normally have a vocabulary test on the first Friday when we read a story and a reading comprehension test on the second Friday. 

We have completed our Titanic stories and the students will be working on writing a pirate mystery story.  Students may dress up like a pirate when we read our stories to younger students the last week of  this month.  We are also practicing our reading fluency by participating in a Mystery Reader's Theater.

Please feel free to contact me with any questions!  

Thanks for all you do to help make our year a successful one,

Sharon Ingold

Please check the bottom of our classroom site for flashcards, links to educational websites and other information.

Ways to help your childs writing at home are:
1) Share your own writing with your child- for example, notes, shopping lists, e-mail responses, personal or business letters you write.
2)
All of my students should be keeping a “writing journal recording characters and places they may be able to use in their stories.  They should also be recording good story beginnings and action words in their journals.
3) Ask your child to help with writing that needs to be done in the home-- shopping lists, instructions for baby-sitters, notes to relatives, plans for family outings, plans for the holidays, and directions for visitors.
4) Help your child write thank-you notes, holiday cards, and invitations.
5) Allow your child to keep a car journal for trips or simply a day event such as a visit to the store or park.
6) Encourage your child to write stories and poems to relatives as gifts.
7) Help your child writes letters for various purposes. Maybe they could write to their grandparents, other adult, or a pen pal on a regular basis.
8) Write down and collect family stories into a “family book”book they can illustrate.
9) Encourage your child to write daily journals at home.
10)
Put a bulletin board in a convenient place and use it for messages for the entire family.
Please chose one or more of the above ideas for your child to do in the next months before our State Writing Test. It will make a huge difference in their self-confidence and writing ability.

Remember that good readers make great writers. READ READ READ read READ read READ read READ


 

Math Help

How Will Math Look in Your Child's Classroom?

As a result of the recent effort in mathematics teaching to include understanding in the teaching of math, from basic through advanced levels, the picture of your child's math class may,indeed, look different from what you remember when you were in school. For instance:

     Children will be expected to know their math facts: Children will be learning their math facts with an understanding of how facts relate to each other.
     Children will be doing more than arithmetic:
    Children will be seeing that math is much more than arithmetic (knowing the facts and number operations); it involves estimation, geometry, probability, statistics, and more.
     Children will be striving to achieve high goals:
    Children will be achieving high standards of understanding, complexity, and accuracy set for them by their parents, teachers, schools, and states.
     Children will be actively involved in the study of mathematics: Children will be doing tasks that involve investigations. They will be talking and writing explanations for their thinking.
     Children will be working with one another: Children will be collaborating to make discoveries, draw conclusions, and discuss math.
     Children will be evaluated in a variety of ways:
    Teachers will use many different ways to determine if children know and understand math concepts. Some of these will include writing samples, projects, or written tests. Not all evaluation will be the same for
    every classroom or every child.

     Children will be using calculators to solve problems:
    They will be using calculators not as crutches but as tools to solve more complex problems with bigger numbers than they could do otherwise.
    Children with good knowledge of math facts, number sense, and reasoning about math will be able to use the calculator most effectively.

     Children will be using computers: They will be developing databases, spreadsheets and computer graphics, while solving problems.


Math Survival Tips

Ten Steps for Solving Mathematics Problems

1. Whisper read the problem at least two times. Make a mental picture of what you are reading.

2. Circle the key words in the question.

MAKE SURE YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT THE QUESTION IS ASKING!

3. Identify and circle/underline the key numbers and labels.

4. Eliminate unneeded data by drawing a line through it.

5. Thoroughly study any graphs, charts, or Venn diagrams.

6. Determine the operation(s)/strategies needed to solve the problem.

7. Solve the problem. SHOW YOUR WORK! (Draw a picture, work backwards, make it simple, etc.).

8. Evaluate the answer. DOES YOUR ANSWER MAKE SENSE? DOES IT ANSWER THE QUESTION(S) ASKED?

9. If an answer sheet is used, check your answers with the answer choices.
If your answer is not found, repeat steps one through eight.

10. Bubble in the correct answer in the right space on your answer sheet.






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