Title: At Lewis Elementary School
1Third Grade
- At Lewis Elementary School
- Solon, Ohio
2Welcome to Third Grade Curriculum Night!
- Please find your childs desk and make yourself
comfortable. - We will begin promptly at 750.
- While you are waiting, use the yellow stationery
to write him/her a note. Please leave it on your
childs desk. - Thanks! Mrs. Garfield
3Purpose of this Evening
- Tonight we will cover classroom expectations and
the third grade curriculum. - If you would like to discuss your child, please
contact me to determine a day and time. Thank you!
4How to get in touch with me
- Voicemail 440-349-7757, ext. 5814
- Check messages before and after school
- If calling about a bus change or pick-up change,
please call the office - directly instead of leaving me a voicemail
440-349-6225 - Email elissagarfield_at_solonboe.org
- Check email once a day
- Fall Conference
- Please complete a schedule form and return to me
as soon as possible. I will send a confirmation
letter to you once all conferences are scheduled. - Additional Conferences
- As needed, please call or email to schedule a
time to meet.
5Family Information System
www.solonschools.org ? Schools ? Lewis ? Elissa
Garfield
- The Family Information System is a vital
parent-teacher link. On my classroom website,
you will find - Calendar
- Upcoming assessments
- Holidays
- Field trips
- Homework
- Special events
- Class News and Photos
- I Can Statements for all units of study
- Useful website links that can support your
childs learning - Email access
6Behavior Expectations
- Rules
- Follow directions
- Keep hands, feet, and objects to yourself.
- Teasing and name-calling are not permitted.
- Respect is the key!
- Consequences
- Reminder Blue Card
- Think Sheet Yellow Card
- Note or phone call home Red Card
- Severe behavior Principal
- Rewards
- Classroom money for monthly prize shop
- Whole-class parties for earning 30 marbles
7Homework and Behavior Follow-through
- Daily log is used for recording behavior,
assignments and reminders. - Homework packets go home on Monday and are to be
returned on the following Monday. - Homework packets will include nightly reading,
First in Math and assignments that support
classroom learning. -
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9Homework and Behavior Follow-through
- To help reinforce positive study habits at home
- Have your child complete some homework each
evening. - Check your childs work for errors and have them
correct it before turning it in. - Sign your childs Daily Log sheet at the end of
the week (turned in Mondays). - Science and Social Studies materials will come
home one week prior to an assessment. - Review Unit tests that are sent home. Sign and
return the next school day.
10Birthdays
- You are welcome to send in birthday treats on
your childs birthday. - If you would like to come in and read a book to
the class, please contact me to set up a time. - If your child has a food allergy,
- please let me know.
11Ohio Achievement AssessmentsGrade 3
- Reading Test October 6 April 26
- Math Test April 27
- Results shared with parents once they are
received (usually 2 months following test). - Regardless of test results, all students will
continue to receive focused instruction
appropriate to their needs. - Students who do not pass the reading test in the
fall will receive intensive instruction that
targets areas of weakness.
12Solon Language Arts Philosophy
- Differentiation/Grouping
- Direct Strategy Instruction
- Student choice
- Assessment and Feedback
- Guided Practice
- Time for Independent Practice
- Intervention
13 Readers Workshop
- Mini-Lesson - Daily, brief, powerful, whole group
demonstrations about how reading works or how
readers work. - Example Using context clues to determine the
meaning of unknown words.
14Readers Workshop
- Independent Reading Daily, silent, sustained
reading from a self-selected text. Students are
expected to read just right books from a
variety of genres, stay on task, and reflect upon
their reading.
15Readers Workshop
- Guided Reading - groups are flexible and fluid.
Students are grouped according to needs and
appropriate focus. - Teacher role
- Teacher meets with small groups. Teachers select
a text and focus based upon data, provide a text
introduction for students, and provide
descriptive feedback to students across the
guided reading lesson. - Student role
- After having read chunks of the text, students
meet with the teacher and share their thinking
and reflect on their success with the reading
topic. Students participate in an active
discussion which incorporates comprehension,
questioning, and higher-order thinking skills.
16 What is a just right book?
- A book is "just right" when a student thinks
about a purpose for reading and can evaluate a
text for its ability to match that purpose. - Students are more likely to be able to choose an
appropriate text when they know a variety of ways
to evaluate it. - Students who can effectively choose appropriate
texts will be less likely to abandon books they
choose and more likely to spend more time in
engaged reading.
17 Finding The "Just-Right" Book
- Easy Books (Downhill Books) Help children to
read more smoothly and are fun to read aloud or
silently. - A favorite book that has been read multiple times
is an easy book. - Your child knows, can understand, and read almost
every word. - Your child reads the book easily and smoothly.
- Fun to read, but does not provide mental
exercise.
18Finding The "Just-Right" Book
- Just-Right Books (Flat Road Books) Just-right
books help children learn the most as they
provide just enough challenge. The child should
be able to figure out most of the words and
understand what is going on in the text. - Your child is interested in the book.
- Your child can tell you what is happening in the
story. - Your child has to occasionally reread parts of
the text to understand it. - There may be a few words on the page that your
child needs help reading. - Most reading is smooth-only occasionally choppy.
- Provide good mental exercise.
19Finding The "Just-Right" Book
- Hard Books (Uphill Books) Hard books can do more
harm than good. If your child selects a book that
is too difficult for him/her to read suggest
reading later or read it to him/her. - Your child is interested in this book.
- Your child is confused about what is happening.
- Your child has difficulty understanding the book
even after reading passages. - Your child needs a lot of help to read this
book. - Feels exhausting.
20- Excerpt from Report Card Guidelines for Reading
- (3 or proficient level on the rubric)
- Fluency
- Occasional teacher support necessary to
Demonstrate mostly fluent and phrased reading,
with an adequate reading rate and with attention
to most punctuation Read with expression that
demonstrates comprehension - Acquisition of Vocabulary
- Occasional teacher support necessary to
Determine the meaning of unknown words and
phrases by using a variety of context clues - Reading Process
- Occasional teacher support necessary to Use
strategies such as predicting, inferring, and
summarizing Compare and contrast information
between texts Self-monitor and adjust to
comprehend a variety of text - Informational Text
- Occasional teacher support necessary to Use
non-fiction text features/structures to locate
and comprehend information Use main/central
ideas and supporting details to summarize text - Literary Text
- Occasional teacher support necessary to Describe
the characters using thoughts, words and actions
of a character Describe the setting of the
selection Identify the main incidents of plot
sequence, including the problem and solution
Identify the theme - Written Response to Reading
- Occasional teacher support necessary to Use
graphic organizers to demonstrate comprehension
Answer literal, inferential, and evaluative
questions to demonstrate comprehension Write
responses to reading that includes a simple
interpretation of a literary work and supports
judgments with specific references to the text
21Word Study
- Mini-lesson Teacher presents whole group
demonstrations about spelling strategies. - Example Visualizingwrite the word several ways
to see what looks right - Word Study Groups - Teachers assist children in
socially constructing spelling generalizations.
Children respond to teacher questions/directions
by completing sorts, tasks, looking at writing,
completing assessments, or engaging in spelling
activities. - Application to Independent Writing - Teacher is
primarily focused upon working through writing
content and conventions. When spelling is a
convention focus, past spelling generalizations
are reinforced. Children look through their
writing for evidence of spelling transfer or to
reflect on feature knowledge already studied.
22 Word Study
- How can parents help their children with
spelling? - Encourage your child to reread his/her work.
Have your child identify words that do not look
correct. This is the first step to better
spelling. Encourage your child to apply the
spelling patterns he/she knows. - Help your child review or learn our list of sight
words. These words do not necessarily fit into
any spelling pattern, but are extremely important
in daily writing. Children will be expected to
spell these words correctly in their writing.
23Third Grade Spelling Standard (excerpt from
report card)
- Late Within Word
- Consistently Uses
- Long vowel patterns (boat, meet, drive)
- Pre-consonant nasal sounds (land, jump)
- Complex consonant units (scrap, throw)
- Ambiguous vowel units (spoil, shawl, moon)
- Uses But Confuses
- Consonant doubling e-dropping with ed and
ing endings
24Writers Workshop
- Mini-lesson
- Daily, brief, powerful, whole group
demonstrations about how writing works. - Example One powerful introduction strategy is to
write an interesting fact.
25Writers Workshop
- Independent Writing
- Students write on self-selected topics or
teacher-directed topics. Students maintain a
writing folder and/or writers notebook.
26Writers Workshop
- Guided Small Group Instruction
- Teacher meets with small groups of students to
teach or re-teach about some aspect of writing
that represents a common need for the group.
Children apply the concept into their own
writing.
27Writers Workshop
- Conferencing
- Teacher confers with students to give
descriptive feedback on one aspect of writing
and/or to collect data. Students are expected to
act on this feedback to improve some aspect of
their writing. - Group Sharing/Authors Chair
- Students listen to writing and offer feedback in
a three point discussion for example positive
comments, suggestions for improvement, and
questions for student author.
28Writing Genres of StudyGrade 3
- Expository
- The student understands that the purpose of
expository writing is to describe, explain,
instruct, retell/recount, or to explore or
maintain relationships with others. - Narrative
- The student understands that a story gives an
account (fictional or personal narrative) of a
sequence of events. Generally, the beginning
introduces the setting and characters and
sometimes introduces the problem the middle
further develops the problem the end provides
closure for the reader. Writers use descriptive
words to add interest and details for more
clarification.
29Math
- Patterns, relations, and functions
- Example Extend multiplicative and growing
patterns, and describe - the pattern or rule in words.
- 2, 4, 8, 16, ____
- Numbers and number relations
- Example Identify and generate equivalent forms
of whole - numberse.g.,36, 30 6, 9 x 4, 46-10, number of
inches in a yard. - Geometry
- Example Analyze and describe properties of two
and three - dimensional objects using terms such as vertex,
edge, angle, side - and face.
30Math
- Algebra
- Example Represent problem situations using
equations (e.g., 5 n 7) and inequalities
(e.g., m 2 lt 5) and solve. - Measurement
- Example Measure weight, length, and volume
(capacity) to the nearest ½ or ¼ unit by using
appropriate metric and customary units.
31 Math
- Estimation and mental computation
- Example Demonstrate fluency in
- multiplication facts through 10 and
- corresponding division facts.
- Data analysis and probability
- Examples Analyze and interpret information on a
timeline. - Conduct a simple experiment or simulation of a
simple event, record the results in a chart,
table or graph, and use the results to draw
conclusions about the likelihood of possible
outcomes.
32Math I Can Statements
- Each unit has a set of I Can statements, which
align to specific state indicators in math,
written in child-friendly terms. - I Can Statements identify all the concepts and
skills that students should be able to do by the
end of the unit.
- Unit 1 - Sampling and Classifying
- I Can Statements
- I can draw conclusions based on the information
from a table or graph. - I can make predictions based on the information
from a table or graph. - I can match a set of data to a specific
graph.D6I can translate a set of data - between a chart, a table or a graph.
- I can find the mode of a set of data and explain
what it means.
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34How can I help my child in math this year?
- Once you receive information on First in Math,
our online math program, please make sure your
child is playing on a daily basis. The focus
this year will not be on accumulating stickers.
Rather, students are encouraged to increase their
speed while solving problems. - Tell time and count money together. Ask
real-world questions such as - What time is it? What time will it be in 15
minutes? - How much time before soccer practice begins?
- How much change should we get after we buy
these pencils? - How much more money do you need before you can
buy ....? - Check over math homework together.
- Check over math assessments together.
- Let the teacher know if there is a concept that
is particularly difficult for your child.
35Science Units
- Rocks Soil
- Nutrition
- Forces Motion
- Animal Adaptations Environments
36Rocks Soil
- Unit Summary
- Rocks and soil have distinct properties. The
properties of rocks help scientists identify what
type of rock they are and how they are formed.
The properties of soil help scientists identify
the composition of the soil. All living things
are dependent on rocks and soil. - Big Idea
- Rocks and soil are important because they are
interconnected to Earths living things and its
history.
37Nutrition
- Unit Overview
- Nutrition directly affects a persons physical
and mental health. Using the food pyramid, people
can create a healthy, balanced diet. It is
important to understand the relationship between
exercise and calories. Experiments conducted with
nutrition will be expected. Scientific
observations should be recorded and communicated
accurately. Through technology, the career of a
nutritionist will be expected. - Big Idea
- Understanding that nutrition makes a difference
in our health and lifestyle.
38Forces Motion
- Unit Summary
- An objects position can be described by locating
it relative to another object or the background.
An objects motion can be traced and measured
depending on its position over time. Gravity,
magnetism and collision are forces that affect an
objects motion. When an object experiences a
force such as a push or pull, changes can be
predicted. - Big Idea
- Forces directly affect objects and their motion.
39Animal Adaptations Environments
- Unit Summary
- Animals have different life cycles that can be
compared and contrasted. Animals have a variety
of structures and functions that can be related
to survival. Changes in animals habitats
positively or negatively affect their survival. - Big Ideas
- Animals have different life cycles. They adapt in
a number of ways in order to survive in their
changing environments.
40Social Studies Units of Study
Solon History People in Societies (Culture)
Geography
Local Government
Economics
41 Solon History Culture
- Unit Overview
- The focus will be a historic and cultural study
of the local community over time. Using multiple
sources, students will analyze perspectives,
practices and products of different cultures.
They will draw logical conclusions to evaluate
the impact of their commonality and diversity
within local settings. Students read and
interpret pictographs and bar graphs to
communicate information. - Big Ideas
- People have different cultural practices which
should be appreciated and respected. - People cause changes in their community, the
effects can be positive or negative. - Tools are available to help locate information
and solve problems.
42Geography
- Unit Overview
- Students use knowledge of geographic locations,
patterns, and processes to show the
interrelationship between the environment and
human activity over time. Students use maps as
tools to learn about physical and human features.
The Greater Cleveland area has landforms (e.g.,
rivers, Lake Erie) climate (e.g., 4 seasons),
vegetation (e.g., corn, apples, trees),
population (e.g., rural, urban, suburban) and
economic characteristics (e.g., the types of
jobs). - Big Ideas
- Tools are available to help locate information
and solve problems.
43Local Government
- Unit Overview
- Students use knowledge of the purposes,
structures, and processes of political systems at
the local level to understand that people create
systems of government as structures of power and
authority to provide order, maintain stability
and promote general welfare. - Students use knowledge of the rights and
responsibilities of citizenship in order to
examine and evaluate civic ideals and to
participate in community life and the American
democratic system. - Students collect information from multiple
sources. Students communicate this information
using appropriate social studies terminology in
oral, written or multimedia form and apply what
they learned to societal issues simulated or
real-world settings.
44Economics
- Unit Overview
- Students use economic reasoning skills and
knowledge of major economic concepts, issues and
systems in order to make informed choices as
producers, consumers, savers, investors, workers,
and citizens in an interdependent world.
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46Technology Across the Curriculum
- 3rd Grade Technology Standards Include
- Basic operations and computer awareness
- Example opening closing programs
- Document design (word processing)
- Example editing text with copy paste
- Data analysis (spreadsheet)
- Example creating a graph using the chart wizard
- Multi-media design
- Example creating a Power Point presentation
- Communications information literacy (search
engines) - Example performing an advanced search using
Google or Yahoo
47Specials Please refer to insert for curriculum
information
- Physical Education Ms. DAmato
- Day of the Week Wednesday
- Media / Library Mrs. Ebert
- Day of the Week Thursday
- Art Mr. Nyerges
- Day of the Week Monday
- Music Mrs. Kleman
- Day of the Week Tuesday
48Handwriting
- Students will review all printed and cursive
letters throughout the year. - Please refer to the cursive strokes included in
your packet. - Students are not required to write in cursive in
journals, on tests, etc. - Students are expected to write neatly, whether
printing or using cursive. Writing neatly
includes using proper letter formation and
spacing.
49Reminders
- Please write a note to your child and leave it on
or inside his/her desk. - Complete conference forms and return as soon as
possible. - Visit the book fair tonight-proceeds benefit the
classroom?.
50We are a team!
- Together, we can make this a positive, successful
year for your child! - Please do not hesitate to contact me with
questions or concerns.
51PTA Announcements
52Thank you for coming tonight! I look forward
to seeing each of you at our fall conference.