Structures in our Neighborhood!

Structures in our Neighborhood!
A shelter built by 2010-2011 Hoover 6th graders. This year, all 6th graders will go to School of the Wild the week of April 9th!

Sunday, August 12, 2012

NEW BLOG:

To connect to the new blog of Ms. Ahlers and the 2012 5/6 class, please click on the following link:

http://www.ahlersclass.blogspot.com/




Wednesday, May 16, 2012

End of Year Items




  • Great job, Hoover Hawks! The  annual 5/6 Track and Field Meet was a blast - It was lovely to see students persevering, cheering on their peers and enjoying the day.

  • Patrol members are invited to a Bowling Party with Mr. Kosier, Friday, May 25th.  They took home  a permission form last week, that they should return to school before next Wednesday, May 22.  Students should bring money (no more than $10),  and socks.

  • Soon to be 7th grade students will receive their schedules August 9th. They can pick up these schedules at SEJH and take photos the same day.

  •  If students would like to come tour the building this summer, they may come with friends, family or parents. Students are welcome to practice using the lockers to get used to using combinations. Ms. Wretman welcomes all incoming 7th graders to feel comfortable by touring the building and asking questions before joining the Little Hawk family.

  • LAST DAY OF SCHOOL SCHEDULE:
9am -Awards and recognition for intermediate and upper units - Gym
Following the ceremony, 6th graders will be honored with a reception -All 6th graders and their families are invited!

11am Bring a sack lunch - We will eat at the City High Bleacher area, if the weather is nice

11:40-12:40  Games - Hoover lower fields

12:40 Enjoy popsicles with Hoover peers

1:00-1:30 All School Assembly - all grades

1:30-2:00 Classroom final preparations and farewell activities - in homerooms

Monday, May 7, 2012

It's May!

             May
         A fresh
  Beginning to bloom
 As the earth shifts
 and changes come
         for all
           June

 Students have created Diamantes (like the one above) and limericks to end our month of poetry. They have submitted poems to be shared in a class poetry book, that they will recieve before the end of the year and several poems are displayed on the west hallway outside our room. Come read the Haiku, Cinquain, Clerehew, Acrostic poems and more!


 ANNOUNCEMENTS:


  •  All 5/6 graders will be coming home today (May 7th) with a 5/6 Track and Field Day permission form. 

  • Patrol members are invited to a Bowling Party with Mr. Kosier, Friday, May 25th.  They took home  a permission form today, that they should return to school.  Students should bring money (no more than $10),  and socks.

  •  The annual Track and Field Day will take place Tuesday, May 15th starting at 11:45 at the track at West High. Come cheer on your Hoover Hawks! 

  •  6th graders visited South East Junior High this morning with Mrs. Whittington and Ms. Dobyns. They each took a a tour of the building and listened to a panel of current SEJH 7th graders share their perspectives and advice for the incoming class. Yara Moustafa and Louis Craig were on the panel representing former Hoover Hawks!

  • Students will receive their schedules August 9th. They can pick up these schedules at SEJH and take photos the same day.

  •  If students would like to come tour the building this summer, they may come with friends, family or parents. Students are welcome to practice using the lockers to get used to using combinations. Ms. Wretman welcomes all incoming 7th graders to feel comfortable by touring the building and asking questions before joining the Little Hawk family.

Monday, April 16, 2012

New Units and Music Concert

School of the Wild and 5th grade adventures have come to a close and we have memories that will last a lifetime. When I look back on my week in the wild each year, I count those days as some of the best in my professional and personal life. Students shine at Lake McBride from the way they inquire about nature around them, to the ways they go out of their way to help others.

Thank you to parent volunteers who came to help during our 6th grade SOW week! I hope you enjoyed the time together with Hoover students.

NEW SCIENCE UNIT - MAGNETS AND MOTORS!

Throughout this new unit, students will be encountering phenomena and formulating questions about their experiences. This unit about magnetism and electricity mirrors the historical development of our understanding and use of magnetism. electricity and electromagnetism. Students investigate magnets and compasses. They'll learn about electricity from batteries, then electromagnetism from motors and generators. Students will reflect on their own involvement with magnets and may discover that like many people, we sometimes take magnets for granted. How might the world we live in be a very different place if magnetism and the electricity it allows us to produce were never investigated scientifically?

Poetry is all around us. Students have begun to draw inspiration, inspire those around them and create poems that lift, crush, highlight and invoke peace. In our April Poetry month, students will learn many different characteristics poets use in their poetry, analyze, reflect and create poetry of their own.

UPCOMING MUSIC CONCERT

Monday, April 23 - Kindergarten - 2nd grade - Concert
1 PM Gym

Tuesday, April 24 - 3rd - 6th grades - Concert
1 PM Gym

There will not be any general or adaptive music classes on Monday and Tuesday.
(No indoor PE Monday and Tuesday) If weather allows, PE can be outdoors.
Media and art schedules stay as usual unless they fall during rehearsal or performance time.

**(Sack Lunches during these days)

Monday, March 26, 2012

WORLD FAIR and School of the Wild

You are all invited to our WORLD FAIR!

What? A collection of projects that students in our class have created. These displays are an expression of the knowledge about countries from around the world that each student has selected themselves.

Where? The Hoover Media Center

When? 1:00-1:55pm

How? Please tour the media center, listen to the students share the information, try foods from around the world and learn interesting things about the cultures, history, geography (and much more!) from many countries. Other Hoover classrooms will be touring during this hour.

SCHOOL OF THE WILD

6th grade parents: Please sign your student's two sheets that they brought home last Friday. One is a permission form. The other is a medical release. The students should bring these gold and blue sheets back to school before or on April 2nd.

Meredith Caskey, one of the School of the Wild instructors will be here Tuesday, April 3rd, to prepare our 6th graders for their week in the wild. It is truly an amazing and meaningful week and I look forward to teaching the students at McBride Nature Center, with Jeff Kosier and the other Nature Center instructors.

Please look over the packet, return the two forms and let me know if you have any questions.

dobyns.lynn@iccsd.k12.ia.us

Thanks!

~Lynn Dobyns

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Science challenge, Parent invite, and World's Fair

Hoover Families - In science, students will begin to plan a design for our "one minute timer challenge." For this project, we will reuse any items from home or school in creative ways. The items that will be very helpful to reuse are:

-empty 2 liter plastic bottles (any from soda, drinks, etc.)
-empty 1 L bottles
-any empty plastic bottles (water, sports drinks, etc.)
-sand (In sealed bags. Some students may use the sand in the timers)
-duct tape


If you have any of these items that you wouldn't mind donating, please send them with your students this week. Thank you very much!!!

Also, all parents are invited to school from 2:25-2:55 on Friday, March 9th in a celebration of reading. Parents are invited to get their student(s), bring a blanket to sit on, and pick a place in the school or outside to read with their child(ren). You may take your children home after this event. Cookies and water will be in the hallway outside the office for parents and students to help themselves to.

WORLD'S FAIR!

Students have finished their research papers on their country of choice and are now beginning to plan their project for our WORLD'S FAIR. These projects will be created and developed by students over the next few weeks. Students have chosen to immerse themselves in knowledge about countries from almost every continent!

Our World's Fair will be held on March 28th, in our classroom, from 1-2pm. The first half hour will be for other classes to tour the world, and then parents are invited to attend from 1:30-2:00.

Some students have chosen to create a poster presentation. I have been looking around for a good deal and found a set of several boards, and it came out to $2.80 for each tri-fold board. To help cover the cost, if your student would like to use the tri-fold board, it would be great if each student could bring $2.50. Thank you! Some students are using other presentation methods, and they can share with you tonight about what they've chosen - so no need to worry about the cost.

I can't wait to have the students share a bit of the world!

Thanks,


~Ms. D.

Monday, February 6, 2012

February is a lovely month...

February...already? Time has flown by and it seems appropriate to discuss time since it is the very topic of study right now for all 5th and 6th grade scientists in our unit of "Measuring Time." The very question, "What is time?" has intrigued people for centuries. Does it only move forward? How does it pass? What are the ways to record time? The philosophical discussions lead us to the technological perspective of looking at inventions that have kept track of passages of time. In this unit, students will observe the apparent sun's changes and the recurring cycle of the moon's phases. Then, they will plan experiments with some of the principal timekeeping devices developed through the ages from water clocks to mechanical escapements. We are currently reading about the history of timekeeping and people's evolving understanding of how to measure time.

Question to ask your student: Why does this February include 29 days? How does the earth's rotation around the sun affect our calendar days?

MATH:

5th grade students are zooming through parts of Chapter 6, reviewing addition and subtraction of fractions with unlike denominators. The students have been meeting in small groups and making great connections to the real world with their knowledge of fraction algorithms.

Fun question to ask your student: If a minute of Superbowl commercial time costs $6 million, what would 2/3 of a minute cost?

LANGUAGE ARTS:

Students have finished their novels and we are now putting the finishing touches on the novels by creating personalized book bindings. Several students are experimenting with sticks, ribbon, lace and other materials to bind their pages of beautiful text together.

February brings about a new unit in Language Arts: World's Fair. We delve into the world of informational texts and read non-fiction, evaluate and make meaning from the new knowledge. We will be learning about choosing a topic, creating questions to form subtopics and then choose texts that are applicable and bountiful for our purpose. At the end of the month, students will present a project on their country of choice.

Beyond the research of different countries, we will be exploring texts that articulate world events in our news. This week, we are reading about daily life for a woman named, Aylito Binayo, who lives in her village of Foro, in the Konso district of Ethiopia. As we read about the affect that the lack of clean fresh water has on people and countries, I am encouraging the students to evaluate the text from differing perspectives.

This week's Spanish assignment: Use a "me gusta" (I like), "Yo quiero" (I want), or "Yo necesito" ( I need) phrase at home.


From Ms. Whittington's Room:

Social Studies: We are studying ancient Greece. We started with a look at the geography of Greece. Next we covered different forms of government from monarchy to democracy. Right now we are doing a comparison of Athens and Sparta. This will probably take until sometime next week.

6th Grade Math: We just completed the unit test on unit 4 which was a study of fractions, decimals and percents. We began this unit shortly after Thanksgiving and spent quite a lot of time on the concepts. Students had about 15 out of 42 items incorrect on average. We are struggling to maintain student attentiveness in class. It seems this has worsened since installing the smartboard and rearranging seats. We are trying a variety of strategies to get and KEEP student attention during class time.

Our new unit is on geometry and the measurement of angles and drawing geometric figures. As we start the unit with review items, students seem anxious for a new topic of study and so are we!

6th Grade Math Scores: Some students took the pre-algebra placement test earlier this month. This test is necessary for placement in pre-algebra next year at SEJHS. We will be sending home a sheet with our recommendation for your student's junior high math placement SOOOON!!! We are currently waiting for IA (formerly known as ITBS) scores. Generally, an IA math score of the 90th percentile or above combined with a score of 65% or higher on the placement test garners our firm recommendation. No matter what we recommend, you may request a different placement for your child. As soon as we have these scores, we will be sending you the placement recommendation which you will need to complete the teal blue SEJHS course selection sheet.

Conferences: These are coming up soon and sign up sheets will be up in the front hall as usual. The dates are February 23 and March 1 for after school to evening conferences and February 28 for conferences scheduled during the day. If you have a preference, feel free to contact me earlier.

Monday, January 9, 2012

It's a new year! What's happening in room 12?

5th grade Math: Students are discovering the equivalencies and conversions among fractions, decimals and percents. There are certainly some practical difficulties in converting from one notations system to another, since many fractions written as decimals go on forever (boy did we find that to be true for fractions like 1/3!) While we address the difficulties and challenges (often fun to find these challenges!) the main purpose of our math unit 5 is to review the many meanings of fraction, decimal and percent notations for rational numbers. Then, we will soon turn these fractions and decimals and percents into bar and circle graphs for meaningful and practical data we collect as a class.

Students also were given a logic challenge puzzle packet before break. They have the freedom to challenge themselves with as many problems as they like and soon they will receive new logic puzzles.

SCIENCE: We are finishing up our Structures unit this week and the following week.

The past weeks, students have had firsthand experience with tension and compression. Next, students build on this knowledge and investigate more closely where tension and compression exist within triangular trusses, a very powerful component of structural frameworks. Coming up soon, the students will take part in a BRIDGE CHALLENGE in which they will have to plan, construct and exhibit a bridge that spans more than 20 inches long with no vertical supports and can hold a live load of 60 pennies - quite a challenge! We will start this challenge on Wednesday, so be sure to ask your student how their group's bridge is coming along.

***WE WELCOME PENNY DONATIONS TO OUR SCIENCE CLASS. Please place the pennies in a bag with the # and your name. We will return all pennies after our bridge challenge. Thank you!

After structures, the last two units for 2012 are Magnets and Motors and then Measuring Time.

Reading - Our focus in on PREDICTING this week - using our prior knowledge along with textual clues to make meaning from text. Students will be reading the following 4 novels, below, in class soon as they journal with a buddy. These novels all share themes of how life changing moments can come in all forms and between all people. These books are all very different, however..with some taking a more serious tone and others capitalizing on the humor of life.

A Single Shard by Linda Sue Park
Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key by Jack Gantos
From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankeiler
The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin


LAST BUT certainly not LEAST: NOVEL WRITING!!!

I am so proud of all students who have dedicated their time, energy and creative spirit to the writing of their novels. This week, we begin to peer edit, work on revisions and making the novels the best they can be. We will take considerable time to revise and edit and make meaningful connections with the best possible texts - their own! Then, they will have the opportunity to type and illustrate their novels. Eventually, they will also write a submission letter.

Keep up the great effort, Hoover Hawks!

~Ms. Dobyns

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Happy New Year!

Wishing all Hoover families a very happy new year! I look forward to many learning adventures in 2012!