4th Grade

Course Description

4th Grade Year    ---Ready for Action---that is a 4th grader is a nutshell!
 
From start to finish, this year is about integrating the pre K/K years to 3rd Grade. The kids have been part of a school environment to understand the concept of school, responsibilities, consequences and learning. This year is really cooperative--that means growth personally, socially, and academically.  From the kids sitting with different classmates each day at their tables to having Home Base Bins for their things, 4th grade is learning about being flexible learners and stretching their thinking on what they can do and what we can do together. Through meta-cognition (the term means to think about what and how you are thinking, learning, behaving), the kids reflect and grow in deep meaningful ways. 9 and 10 year olds are curious, inventive, and aware.
 
The concept of time becomes more real. I help the kids realize that we learn in quarters and each one has certain concepts that we focus on. Our weekly schedule is packed with Social Science, Readers and Writers Workshop, Physical, Earth, Biological Science, Chinese, Music, Art, P.E., Cursive and Grammar,Technology, Keyboarding, and Math. We go on plenty of field trips to support their curriculum and many guests or experts come to our class to teach. Many of you may be part of our learning! :) 4th Graders want to see how things relate to each other.
 
The flow of the day is up on the white board in our room. We go over it every morning in our Morning Meeting.  The MM has a format that they learn and will begin to lead in January. The structure has 4 parts- Greeting, Sharing or Reading, Activity, and Announcements. It gives us a chance to get to know each other, set the tone for the day, and learn how to discuss ideas. At the end of the day, we have TBaA. Those letters stand for Think Back and About. During this last half hour, we review what we learned and what we did to learn the material. It is very important to reflect because it helps wire information to long term memory.
 
The kids all have class jobs and work in partners. These jobs rotate weekly. Learning how to talk to each other and work with a partner is very important in life. Negotiating and Compromising are things I do with them if there is a problem. They have to learn the skills of conversation and listening, problem solving and building relationships of all types.
 
The main tool for communication, besides our website, is through the Planner. It is a calendar type of tool that really helps kids learn to organize themselves. It is very useful for Parents to write to me or messages to their kids. When you notice their learning-- they love it! It is in the Planner that we write the TBaA. It gives you a way, parents, to talk about what is happening each day. 
 
Homework means reading. It has been proven through research that doing that one thing each day after school makes a huge difference in learning. Please have your child read every day/night for 40 minutes. They have reading logs to keep up with this and 3 are required to be filled out each quarter. There are 15 lines on each-- so you get the idea-- it adds up to good habits and increased stamina for focus. They can read or be read to. The goal is an sustained 40 minutes. Other homework is usually work that isn't completed. That happens on occasion, but there is plenty of time to come in at lunch-- 15 minutes or before school to do those things. The kids are very tuned in to if they have puttered or progressed through an assignment or project. :)
 
Assessments or tests are integrated in each day. I let the kids know that how they behave, how they work, what they get done, how well they work with a partner, how work gets done, and what they have learned is measured.  The goal is to have them take ownership of their learning, get them to ask questions, and for us to create a dynamic and interesting space.There are many ways to check in on how they are doing- through verbal or written communication, or projects, or having them reflect with a partner. Even doing 'thumbs up or down' with a few questions helps the whole class tune in. Cooperation for all to learn is key. That is why the kids remember to do Job #1 Learn, and Job #2 Let Others Learn.
 
Student Teacher Parent Conferences are a very essential piece of finishing up the first quarter. Each student will lead their parent(s) through several academic areas and discuss with their parents and me what they learned, and how they learned it. It is a wonderful time for the kids to see us all together. I love these conferences because I get to see how proud each child is telling about their work and how interested and amazed the parents are seeing through this conversation where their child is academically. 
 
Parents are always welcome to visit our class and if you want to make an appointment to have some sit down time together, that is great! My goal is to have 4th grade be a wonderful stimulating year.:)
 
Birthdays-- we Love them. If your child wants to share a treat, that is great. We sing Happy Birthday and share the treats at 2:30.
 
4th Graders are very capable and the more they find out what they can do, the more they will do. 
I look forward to being with your child this year and getting to know you too. 
 
Thanks, Ms. Bonzo
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Posts

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4th Grade Lionel Hampton Jazz Posters are at the Moscow Chamber of Commerce!
The 4th Grade did a STEAM Project when they made posters for the Jazz Festival. From measuring font size and margins for math to understanding the power of artistic messaging, their work took a full week of learning and applying skills. They studied the history of Jazz too. They learned about the importance of Lionel Hampton and his vibraphones ( how they are an engineering marvel) and his love of the Jazz Festival here at the University of Idaho
The Official Posters that share the space with the work from the kids are from 2009-2018--which is fun to think that these are the ones that were up for the last 10 years while these kids were growing up. 
Make some time to go to the Chamber of Commerce on Main Street and see many more posters from UI Special Collections celebrating jazz hereMoscow.
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 At 7:30 a.m. yesterday at the Capitol, Mr. Bonuccelli and I start our meetings with 6 representatives to discuss funding for and requiring kindergarten, fund support for staff like aides and mental health counseling among other issues around facility maintenance and school security.
 
Representative Bill Goesling was our first meeting and he described the new funding formula for getting money to K-3 and 9-12 thought a 'weights' method. At midday, we met with House and Senate Chair for Education Mortimer and Clow. Both provided us with interesting and clear ideas of where the legislature is going with education.  By 4 p.m. we had finished our other meetings where there was more discussion about long term education issues. We even got to talk with President Staben of the University of Idaho before he presented to the Education Committee.
 
The conversations were productive and very interesting! 
 
 
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Lionel Hampton Festival Posters Project will be at the Moscow Chamber of Commerce during February.
 
Last week, the focus of the Social Studies, Math, and Language Arts Poster project was for the kids to communicate this wonderful international jazz musical event that Moscow has hosted for over 50 years. And because vibraphone legend Lionel Hampton, who was so excited to have students involved in the event, he gave his name to the musical event and the School of Music at the University of Idaho. 
 
The photo is 'a gallery walk' activity where the kids see each other's work and give feedback. They were in their 4th revision or so and really sharing valuable critical feedback and compliments to each other. They way they have worked together to measure their work and use the criteria list to create a cohesive message showed good intellectual stamina. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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First Morning Meeting led by student leaders!
 
 Jack and Henry were the first in the rotation of this class job. They took the class through all 4 parts.--the greeting, sharing or reading, activity, and announcements.
 
The picture is from the activity they led called Cooperative Musical Chairs. We have only done this fun game twice before so the kids were super happy to be playing again. They really get a kick out of sharing and love when they get only 1 chair for all of them to sit on. It really works when they have such a playful attitude like today. Way to go 4th Grade!
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Sharing Plastic Collection with the 8th Graders
 
With members of the community bringing in plastic film and our own school kids bringing in in plastic-- we are averaging 40 pounds of plastic collected per week!!
 
 
 
 
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MCS School Spelling Bee is February 8
 
Spelling Bee Club will meet until the Bee. I think this is the 5th or 6th year for our Bee. And, last year we had 55 kids from grades 1sr through 7th compete the day of the Spelling Bee. 
Practice helps a lot that is why I run the Club on Tuesdays. The kids can practice by reading the dictionary and noticing patterns and word origin. Our language is historical and so interesting. 
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 "Deep Thinking"  The kids return to our 4th Grade school routine.
A nice person in our community donated to a program called NIE or Newspapers in Education that allows a teacher to get a class set of newspapers. It is so wonderful to have this resource. I get a class set once a week.
 Newspapers are an essential tool for helping kids learn to find non-fiction facts, apply past knowledge, and connect to the world.
The kids found the 5 Ws, underlined, highlighted, cut out, and glued the article on to a loose leaf page.  These are a lot of tools used strategically. It was a good exercise for them to see how far they have come this year and what they can accomplish in a 1/2 hour.
The focus of the questions is being able to understand the central idea in a text is a key to comprehension. It takes a lot of practice. They have really learned that in this format central ideas are the first paragraph of a news story.
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Happy New Year!
Learning Chinese and Turning in Reading Logs
 
It has been a great 2 quarters with our Chinese Teachers. The kids have learned how to create sentences and since the structure is so different from English, we have had good conversations about the differences and similarities. Definitely learning another language strengthens their understanding of their first language. They have learned that it takes a lot of practice to have an ear for new sounds. Many are doing very well writing the characters too.
 
We are a few days away from starting back and I hope that many Reading Logs come in. This quarter ends on Jan. 24. Make sure to help your child have 40 minutes of uninterrupted reading time as it builds stamina for concentration and helps them see that reading is a priority for learning. Just a reminder that the Reading Logs help teach responsibility too. They need to be signed by you and there are 3 required per quarter.
 
I look forward to 2019 with these 4th graders! See you soon! Ms. Bonzo
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Gnomes of Nobility Game The kids were so excited today as they exchanged their last gift. They played nobly-- showing how they belonged to our class and keeping the fun for each person to experience. I am so proud of them all. At the end of the game, the kids took one guess to say who they thought was their special gnome. It was great-- everyone was stumped. It was a wonderful way for them to get to know each other better.
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Math Fact Game with Dice and Calculator
-- Drill to Instill, The Learning is Real! --;)
Josiah and his partner Abby are playing a game I made up with 4 dice to practice all the operations in math. With their partner, they roll and multiply, then add and check with subtraction. It is fun to do together and practice works. I gave the kids another game today.
Over the holiday break, if you can get some dice and time together with your kids, you will have 20 minutes of fun and reinforce their math skills.
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Gnomes of Nobility Game
 
In case you hadn't heard ;), the is a fun time coming up with week with the kids playing a game tied to our school matrix! Details are in the picture and in their Planners and you can always email me questions, though I am sure your little gnomes "gmomes"a lot!
 
Thank You!
 
 
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Simile Scrolls showed quality work by the students and they met the deadline!
This work was the project for finishing The Whipping Boy. The kids know that scrolls were the first way to make writing portable. :) They went through many revisions and careful thought.  Yesterday, they used the rubric to self evaluate their work. I get to look at their evaluation today. We had a good chat about how integrity is the key to fair judging. They were super proud of their work.
 
P.S. The Gnomes of Nobility Game is on...in case you haven't heard!
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So Zen with measuring the scroll length he can do it with his eyes closed!
 
All the kids did an exceptional job with all the steps of the Simile Scroll that were the project from reading The Whipping Boy as our Class Literature Text this quarter. The project deadline was yesterday and they all made it. Great progress for doing Job #1- Learning, and Job #2- Letting Others Learn. 
The result of their work will be self-evaluated with a rubric and then you will get to see these interesting examples.
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Treat Others as You Wish to be Tree-ted! That was a Door Decoration Theme and since it is the motto of the 4th grade class, we decided to make it the reason for the season sentiment. :) The kids to collaborated in Morning Meeting to come up with the design. Small groups did different jobs from the few Gracie, Meredith, and Abby that put up the snow and sky paper, to Sophie who created the tree ornament template. Gabe and Claire put up the decorations. And, the tree is upcycled from Ms. Anne, our Tech Teacher, who was giving it away. I added the lights to it and the class picture. Anabelle made the star for the top with the message. Everyone made a wish from wanting the world to be more welcoming to simply wanting there to be more kindness. All the ideas that were shared are original and in the voice of each student. They did a wonderful job working together and this was done in about 45 minutes over 2 days. They are really learning to work well together. I am proud of their growth as a class.
Have a look at all the doors done by our classes at the school on the MCS FB page. You can vote on the one you like too!
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Dr. Kayler, Oz's Dad, came to talk all about soil, erosion, the age of the earth, and other huge ideas. He got the kids acting like nitrogen molecules and played with the idea of time. The kids really enjoyed thinking about how farming has changed the world. His presentation totally connected to the PCEI collaboration we did a few weeks ago.