WELCOME TO
BACK-TO-SCHOOL NIGHT
2010-2011
Dear Third Grade Parents,
I am delighted to have your child in my
class! I am anticipating an
exciting, challenging and fun year.
The Student Learning Expectations are taught and
experienced in all areas of the curriculum. The following is a brief summary of the third grade
curriculum.
RELIGION
Faith First
provides a foundation by which students understand and create their faith. It interweaves church doctrine,
scripture, and the liturgical year.
Each unit is divided into chapters that reflect the three areas of
emphasis. Activities in each chapter provide both students and their families
with a chance to reflect on what has been learned.
Family Life instruction will begin in
September. We will be using the Growing
in Love Program. The text
leads to many interesting discussions in the classroom. A summary of each unit will be
sent home for you to review with your child.
Our class Service Project will be to make
delicious monthly and seasonal treats for the women and children at the St.
Vincent de Paul Dining Room. Each
month a small group of children will bake together with the room parent and
other parent volunteers. A small
group of students will deliver and serve the treats at the dining hall. Students will have time to share their
reflections of the experience with the class. All students will participate at
least once in the delivery and baking process during the year. Parents are needed for assisting in the
kitchen and delivering.
Second Step and Steps
to Respect are the programs that will be used to teach the students about
respect, bullying, inclusion, as well as how to verbalize and identify
emotions.
MATH
Our text is Scott Foresman,
Addison Wesley. The primary
skills stressed in third grade mathematics are place value to one hundred
thousand, time and money, simple multiplication and division, addition and
subtraction with regrouping, fractions and an introduction to geometry and
decimals. Algebraic concepts are
introduced. Problem solving will
be taught as a life long skill.
Math manipulatives and
small group instruction will be used frequently to help students move from the
concrete to abstract concepts.
Student will have many opportunities to apply concepts and skills through
hands on investigations, math stations and games. Please encourage math in your everyday living situations!
LANGUAGE ARTS
We have an exciting literature, reading,
writing, language arts program. We are using Houghton Mifflin's Invitations
to Literacy. The text includes
a wide variety of quality literature and "real world" resources that
will increase their knowledge, understanding, and appreciation of themselves,
other people, and the world in which they live. Additionally, two novels will be taught: Charlotte's Web, by E.B. White
and Soft Rain by Cornelia Cornelissen. Students will participate in literature
circles as a means to explore the novels and practice their reading
comprehension skills.
Our goal is for students to become fluent,
motivated, and confident readers and writers. Through the language arts program
we will develop essential reading and writing strategies.
WRITERÕS WORKSHOP
Each week with 1/2 class there will be a
Writer's Workshop. During this
time, students will learn to work through the writing process of prewriting,
drafting, revising, proofreading, editing and publishing.
There will be a variety of writing projects
throughout the year with a focus on the 6+1 writing traits as a means of
assessment: ideas, organization,
voice, sentence fluency, word choice, conventions and presentation.
DAILY ORAL LANGUAGE
Each morning two sentences will be assigned to
the class for correction. This
helps make young students aware of spelling, grammar, punctuation, and
capitalization rules.
JOURNALS
We will be writing in journals daily. These personal journals will not be
corrected for spelling (inventive spelling will be common), sentence structure
or grammatical errors. The journals
should encourage the children to become comfortable writing and putting their
thoughts, feelings, and impressions on paper. I will collect and read the journals monthly to comment on
quantity and quality of thought.
The students will have the opportunity to share their stories aloud with
each other.
INDEPENDENT READING
Every day the students will spend between 15 to
30 minutes reading silently and independently. Independent reading conferences will be held regularly so
that individual reading goals may be set and student progress monitored. Each student will be required to keep a
Reading Log.
The student may use books from home, our class
library, the school or public library.
SPELLING AND VOCABULARY
We are using Houghton Mifflin's Spelling and
Vocabulary text. Each week a list of spelling words will be assigned. We will review book assignments during
class. Through a combination of phonics and spelling strategies, we will focus
on the high frequency words, which will be reinforced through the use of a word
wall. A weekly test will be given
on each Friday with the current Units words. Two sentences from the lesson will
be dictated for listening skill development.
Vocabulary will be taught in the context of the
story we are reading.
HANDWRITING
The DÕNealian
Cursive Alphabet is being taught.
Attached is a copy of the alphabet for home use. Correct pencil grip will be
emphasized. The pencil grip should
be checked at home as well as at school.
In the months of September through December, students are encouraged to
use cursive for their written work.
READING - WEB LOG
Students are expected to read at least 20
minutes each night as a part of their homework assignment. A reading log will be collected each
Friday. Parents are expected to
sign off nightly reading. Reading
fluency is the focus in third grade.
It is important for the students to read each day. They should select a book that they can
read independently.
SOCIAL STUDIES
Reflections, Our Communities by Harcourt School Publishers focuses on Geography, Native
Americans, Community History, Government and Citizenship and Understanding
Economics. Through a combination
of textbooks, literature, maps, art and field trips, the students will explore
history.
Current events will be reviewed weekly through
class discussions about newspaper articles, and by an article brought in by our
ÒStar of the WeekÓ.
SCIENCE
We
will be using a hands on investigation focused program developed by The
Lawrence Hall of Science called FOSS.
The students will first explore and experience the big idea through
hands on activities. After exploration, they will read and reflect upon the
concepts taught. Three different
units of focus will be taught:
Life Sciences, Matter and Energy and Sun, Moon and Stars.
HOMEWORK
Every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday
your child will have a homework assignment. The purpose of homework in 3rd grade is to build
organization skills and provide practice for concepts learned in class. Each student will be responsible to
write down homework assignments in his/her homework notebook. Your child will have a designated
homework folder which will be used to carry assignments to and from home and is
an important part of classroom management, student responsibility, and
accountability. If homework is not
turned in when due, it may be turned in the following day and it will be marked
late.
INCOMPLETE OR MISSING WORK: Sometimes a student may not finish the
assigned class work. If this
occurs, the work will be sent home to be finished at home. A note will be attached in their
homework planner as a means to remind students to finish their work as
homework.
If a student forgets their homework or does not
turn in an assignment, they will receive an Incomplete Assignment Form. This form will serve to alert the
parents and the student. Incomplete work must be signed by a parent.
FRIDAY FOLDERS: On Friday, your childÕs weekly work
will be sent home in their Friday folder.
This folder will inform you of your childÕs progress for that week. This ÒFriday FolderÓ is to be returned
with your signature and all the student work on Mondays. We will keep all the student work in a
portfolio until the end of the quarter, at which time, it will be returned.
FIELD TRIPS
Third graders will experience a field trip a
month to enhance our classroom learning.
Please refer to the parent-student handbook for information regarding
being a driver. All money for
field trips must be handed in ahead of time with a signed permission slip. A
child may not go on a field trip without a permission slip. Additionally, a field trip will be
canceled if there are not enough drivers two days prior to the trip. The 3rd grade web site has a field trip
page that lists dates and times of trips.
Lastly, do not forget to cancel hot lunch orders
on the day of a field trip.
STAR OF THE WEEK
Each week one child will be honored as our
ÒStarÓ. As a class, we will
express what we like about our ÒStarÓ and what s/he does well. These thoughts and feelings will be
made into a poster for the student to take home. I will also be asking for photos of your child so we can get
to know him/her better. Pictures
of family, friends, favorite activities, special occasions, pets, etc. are all
great! This will also be your
childÕs week to share a pet. Only
caged pets may be left for the school day.
ENRICHMENT
Your child is very fortunate to have several
enrichment programs through the week. If your child is having a hard time in any of the
following classes, please contact the appropriate teacher. Third graders will
be enriched by:
CLASS TEACHER
1.
Spanish Ms.
Ruiz
2.
Music Ms.
Miller
3.
Physical Education Mr.
Shimabukuro
4.
Capon (Motor Development) Mr.
Shimabukuro
5.
Computer Mr.
David Malone
6.
Library Mrs.
Alex Walton
7.
PEP Trained
School Parents
CLASS RULES, REWARDS, and CONSEQUENCES
Please see attached paper for third grade rules,
rewards, and consequences!
GRADES
Grades for report cards are based on a variety
of assessments, both formal and informal.
á
A grade of ÒEÓ indicates
your child has exceeded expectations set for third graders.
á
A grade of ÒMÓ indicates satisfactory
á
A grade of ÒIÓ indicates improvement needed.
Grades on papers:
á
Ò+Ó indicates that the student
shows strong understanding.
á
ÒaÒ indicates
that the student is making good progress with minimal error.
á
Ò-Ó indicates that the student needs help, the work is not
getting done, and/or there are many errors.
Again, I am looking forward to working with you
and your child. Please feel free
to contact me if you have any questions, concerns, comments and/or life
changes. I can be reached via
e-mail at jmurray@csdo.org or by phone 510-530-4056.
We are going to have a great year!
Sincerely,
Jessica Murray