Friday, May 28, 2010

Classroom newsletter and Summer Birthdays

Hi~

I heard from one person that she couldn’t open my classroom newsletter that I sent via email last night.  I’m sending a hard copy home to all of you this afternoon because it has important end of year dates to remember.  Sorry for the black and white photos.  Unable to print in color, and it’s quite expensive to do so.

 

Also, we have a few summer birthday folks to celebrate the last week of school.   On Wednesday, June 9th we will be celebrating Summer Birthdays in the afternoon.  We will be making a special treat and rather than having those summer birthday folks all bring in a treat for the same day, I’d like to ask you to please send in the following for the birthday surprise treat:

 

Logan:  4 8 oz packages of cream cheese

Peter:  8 fresh, whole kiwi

Anja:  2 quarts of fresh, whole strawberries

Alanya: 3 pints fresh blueberries

Please send in the above in the original packaging, unwashed and uncut.  We will take care of all of the preparation and putting together.

Since my birthday is also in the summer, I will bring in an ingredient we need to begin the process—it’s surprise.

 

If you are your unable to send in the ingredient listed above with your child, please send me a note or leave me a confidential voice message at 496-3742, ext. 122, by Friday, June 4th so I’ll know I need to pick up some extra things.   

 

Also, I want to wish Levi and Hunter a happy birthday as they celebrate this long Memorial Day weekend, and we will celebrate with them in school next week, June 1-June 4.

 

Happy Memorial Day!

Brenda

 

 

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Classroom Newsletter

Hi All~

Attached is our classroom newsletters this week.  You will notice that it is a combination of photos I haven’t yet sent you of our experiences these past couple of weeks.   There are important DATES to REMEMBER at the very end of the newsletter.

 

Can’t wait to see you next week at our Family Sharing night for the class play and collage story book time!

 

Brenda

PS:  Your children handled the heat this week very well.  Thank you for sending water bottles in with your children.  I’m reminding them to take them home each evening, so they can be washed and refilled for the next day.

 

Thursday, May 20, 2010

Classroom news

Dear Families,

 

Well, things have begun to move at warp speed as the year end races to the end.   We are on for the class play for the evening of June 3rd at 6:00.  I believe only one family can’t make it.   We are combining this play with Mrs. Orr’s class poetry, and then we will gather in our classrooms to share their collage stories they are working so very hard on with Kathi in writing.   The evening is planned to be no longer than an hour.  We will not be having a dinner or food sharing at this event.  That would make the evening longer for some kiddoes who are already pretty tuckered out by the end of the school day.

 

There are a few things I will need parents to help out with to pull this play off.   If your child has a play “hard hat” or construction tool belt that we could borrow, that would be great.   Ask your child what his/her part is.  Several scripts went home to help with that also.  If your child is a village person or village woman (including the two jailers), which is most everyone, please have him or her wear large pieces of bright colorful fabric wrapped around with a rope.  Girls can also have a piece of scrap fabric tied around their head as a headband.   Please don’t buy anything for this.  Just scrap fabric or colorful old sheet could be used.  We’re trying to dress as village men and women from a village in Kenya.  I’ve got some fabric at school, but not enough for everyone.  We also talked about how the boys could have a large piece of fabric folded in half and put over their head (just hole cut in it) and then tied around waste to create the sleeves.  Boys can also wear bright colorful shorts and bold “Hawaiian-type” shirts if fabric isn’t available.  The fabrics don’t have to match, and actually would be great if they didn’t—just big, bright, vibrant colors and patterns/designs.

 

If your child is construction worker, then he/she just needs pants, t-shirt, and hopefully we’ll have construction hats and work belts that come to school for us to use.

 

I’m also looking for one more old umbrella that we could use to tape paper leaves to for the play.  We will return it after the play.

 

I think that’s it for now.

Brenda

 

 

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Kite News

Dear Families,

 

“Go fly a kite, kid!”   How many times does a teacher get to say THAT to her students?   I had the good fortune to be able to say that on Monday this week as Jeremy, Kite Man, led us to the “big kids” playground to test out the flying capacity of our kites.  We learned to wait for the wind, and figure out which way our kites and we had to be facing to “catch” the big one.    After a while of running and running, and evening more running, some of us figured out that we could actually stand still and let the wind do all of the work for us, IF we stood in the right place with the kite and wind “telling” us what to do by “feeling” it.

 

What a wonderful experience we all had with Jeremy last week and into this week.  Thank you to all of you who helped fundraise with the PTN so that this amazing opportunity could happen for our children.

 

Enjoy the photos!

Brenda

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Classroom News

Ms. Hartshorn’s Classroom News

May 6, 2010

Dear Families,

Only 26 days left! I cannot believe we are almost finished with this school year. Your children have been working very hard and I have enjoyed every minute of watching them grow and become members of a learning community.

As the days to the end of the school year draw near, I would like to remind you that the classroom schedule often gets a bit jumbled up with special events, visitors and experiences that we value as much as readin’, writin’, and ‘rithematic.

This week we had the good fortune to have Jeremy Seeger of the Vermont Council on the Arts join us for kite-making thanks to the fundraising efforts and generosity of the Moretown PTN. Every child made a kite. We had 90 minutes scheduled, and your children listened and followed directions so well, that we actually were finished 40 minutes ahead of time. We will paint our kites tomorrow (Friday) and then actually fly them with Jeremy on Monday!

Next week we have an Arbor Day celebration planned for Friday, May 14 at 8:15. Weather permitting it will be outside (location yet to be determined—we need to decide where the magnolia tree will be planted). John Hoogenboom, a Moretown resident, former parent of three Moretown graduates, and a member of the Waterbury Rotary, has once again, generously offered to present a tree ( a magnolia this year!) to our school, along with sunflower seed packets for each student. This school-wide assembly will be a short one, and you are welcome to join us if you are so able. National Arbor Day is always the last Friday of April (April 30th this year), but Vermont is different. Vermont’s Arbor Day is always the first Friday of May (May 7th this year), but we will celebrate this day at Moretown School on May 14th this year.

Megan Allison, our school librarian, has been able to schedule a visit to our school by a Vermont author, Tanya Stone. She has written several books responding to a wide range of ages and interests. She wrote Sandy’s Circus, a Red Clover nominee book for 09/10, Almost Astronauts, Elizabeth Leads the Way, and biographies of Amelia Earhart and Laura Ingalls Wilder. She has written several other books for early teens and young adults in addition to her picture books for young children. Ms. Stone will be visiting us on Tuesday, May 11th.

Once again, thank you for sending your child to school prepared for our Four Winds lesson about streams this past Monday. Unfortunately this lesson had to be rescheduled. We now have a new date. On Tuesday, May 11th in the afternoon we plan to explore the stream close by the school. Your child will need mud boots and appropriate outerwear for the weather that day. We have our last Four Winds lesson planned for Monday, May 24th (Birds will be the theme), and we will be outside again that day for part of the lesson. We have a “raindate” scheduled for Tuesday, May 25, if we need to make up either of these lessons due to inclement weather or volunteers not being able to make it. Please mark these dates on your calendar and take notice of the weather for each of these dates.

Thanks to the efforts of the PTN, several parent volunteers, and especially Sarah Zschau, our school grounds have been spruced and greened up this past weekend. The raised beds on the primary playground have been readied for planting with new compost. After lots of “breaking up” of the soil, turning the soil over, chopping the big clumps, smoothing out the bed of soil, we planted radishes, spinach and a spicy mesclun mix (greens for a salad) in one of the frames. We’re hoping that these greens and radishes will be ready in time for us to enjoy at our school picnic lunch on field days, June 8th. Special thanks to Mrs. W. for bringing her tools and watering cans to school for us to use and make the work a bit easier. We plan to plant carrots also so that we will be able to harvest something in the fall when we return to school. There will also be another raised bed used for planting sunflowers by the incoming kindergartners this spring for them to enjoy in the fall.

You may be wondering who won the Red Clover Book Award this year. Out of ten books nominated, the book titled Pale Male won for Moretown School and the book Owney, and the Mail Pouch Pooch won for the state of Vermont. Every April there is a vote taken by all K-4 graders in the state of Vermont to determine the state winner for the Red Clover Book Award—quite an honor determined by Vermont schoolchildren.

Our class decided they’d like to put on another play using one of the Red Clover book nominees for this year, Wangari and the Trees of Peace, a story from Kenya. We are in the process of turning this story into a play script, planning the props, characters/actors, etc. We are tentatively scheduling this performance at school in the morning of June 3rd, and possibly and evening performance as the main event of a “family sharing” night. I know this time of year can get crazy for families –baseball, t-ball, soccer, etc. Would you please let me know by tomorrow if your child could make an early evening performance on June 3rd at school. It will make a difference in my planning for this event. The play will be no longer than 30 minutes and we could begin at 6:00, ending at 6:30, with a possible potluck dinner if you’d like. Please let me know by tomorrow if you and your child could make this date and time on June 3rd.

The photos attached or embedded are of our kite-making, working on Mothers’ Day project, planting greens in the school raised beds, green-upping the school yard, and first graders counting backwards using footprint strips.

From Mrs. Orr in writing: “Wow! This salt is cool”, said many children as they created a paint paper at the salt station for their upcoming collage story. They have thoroughly enjoyed creating textures with salt, plastic wrap, sponges, straws, and Plexiglas. Remember to send those home-school journals back. We usually write in them on Thursdays.

Dates to Remember:

May 10th: PTN meeting, 7:00.

May 11th: Author Tanya Lee Stone visits Moretown School at 10:15.

May 12th, Early Release Day

May 13th: Art Show, 6:00-8:00

May 16th: Bike Safety Fair, 1:00 at the school.

May 17th: Fieldtrip to ECHO Museum. Your child will need a cold lunch for this trip. I will notify you if you indicated that you would chaperone this trip.

Blog Archive