Monday, May 25, 2015

Medley of Activities Marks May and Closes Out Yet Another Successful Year



With the coming of May, so too came a whole host of third-grade activities as well!

First was our MCA Reward Outing on May 1st, which included a two-hour morning swim period at Vogel Arena in New Ulm. Everyone had a great time sliding down the waterslide, playing Popsicle in the hot tub, fighting over and/or floating on the pool tubes, or just splashing about with one another! For lunch we headed over to Herman Heights Park with a school-provided bag meal, with a lot of the students joining in a spirited game of football afterwards. Then it was off to see the “Martin Luther King Junior” play at Martin Luther College before finally heading home.

Wednesday, May 6th, marked Grandparents’ Day for the whole school, with no shortage of third-grade grandmas and grandpas in attendance. Students and their family members were divided into groups beforehand and then assigned to three different group activities, ranging from “Name That Tune”, Karaoke, a 70s TV Theme Show Sing Along, Picture Frame Making, Card Games, Playing Parachute, Hula Hooping and Jump Roping in the gym, an Ice Cream Sunday Social in the cafeteria, and/or partaking in Me Moves. The latter a classroom exercise/stretching program used to help students focus and de-stress.  The whole event lasted approximately ninety minutes, with over 370 grandparents attending for all grades.

Following that was the first of three performances of the school’s production of Disney’s “The Jungle Book Kids” on May 8th, which all third-graders attended. There is absolutely no question that the afternoon production was a SMASH hit with everyone! The play’s cast and crew did a phenomenal job and was well represented by our very own students, including the following third-grade cast members:

Mowgli—Zach R.
Kaa 1—Envy M.
Kaa 2—Lydia H.
Kaa 4—Kylyn W.
Kaa 5—Julia B.
Monkey 1 and Prickly Pears—Isaac L.
Elephant Troupe—Winsten N., Ellen W., and Austin U.
Flowers—Madison S.

Hopefully friends and family all had a chance to catch one of the two shows that were open to the public that weekend!

After rain threatened to mar our original class picnic date, third-grade students opted to head to Flandrau State Park on May 14th instead where they then dined on roasted hot dogs and freshly assembled smores! In addition to playing in the park, students and chaperones also went on a hike, logging sightings of at least twenty-five turtles sitting on a log, two deer, a whole slew of butterflies, and two different kinds of flowers that apparently got an early start blooming this spring. There was also a rousing game of kick ball, which was enjoyed by all as well!

Our annual class trip to Como Park Zoo and Conservatory this year was also cut a little short due to the closing of Como Town as a result of the cold, damp weather on Monday, May 18th; however, there was still plenty of time for everyone to enjoy all of the open exhibits. In addition to checking out some of the animals studied as part of our Alaskan Adaptations Unit, including a pair of arctic foxes, several caribou/reindeer, a group of penguins, two polar bears, lots of puffins, a seal, a small colony of sea lions, and a pair of roaming wolves. Students also enjoyed a very special viewing treat that included other baby animals--most notable was Baby Arlene, a Western Lowland Gorilla born on February 22, 2015. Though cradled in her mother’s arms, she was still quite visible while nestling there. Students were thrilled with the sight and also enjoyed seeing the other babies that were also located in the Primate Building, including the baby orangutan Kemala who was born January 7, 20015, and an equally adorable baby tamarin that sat atop its parent’s back and sported an already well-established white “mustache” and curious peering eyes that studied us with just as much intent as ours did studying it!

Following a bag lunch that was, again, provided by the school, students then made their way over to Nickelodeon Universe at the Mall of America in order to fill out the rest of the day and compensate for the closure of the Como amusement ride portion of our trip. Once wristbands were distributed, students spent another three hours whirling away on everything that was offered before we headed home!

Thank you for a memorable and fantastic year Sleepy Eye third-grade students and their families.

Good luck to all of you next year as fourth graders!

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

MCA Testing Update



After many, many weeks of careful preparation and extremely hard work on the part of the students themselves and then several more weeks of individual administration of the test itself, third graders have finally finished up with the required third-grade MCA testing. And from the looks of the results, it appears that all of those strategies we learned about test taking and being a good and careful reader were put to good use!

Some of those classroom strategies that were discussed and practiced over that past couple of months included the following tips and/or recommendations:

*This is neither a race nor a competition. Take your time and read the passage closely and carefully as a good reader would.

*After reading the entire passage once, go back and reread it again, just as carefully and closely as you did the first time. If necessary, reread it again, until you are sure you understand what the text is about.

*When it comes to answering posed questions on the test, first eliminate all possible answers that do not apply to the given question.

*Go back and find the specific portion of the text that refers to the posed question and find the actual answer to that question as it appears in the text itself.

In recognition for a job well done, students will celebrate with a tasty Dairy Queen treat!

Congratulations to all! Way to show your Sleepy Eye Pride Third Graders!

Third Graders Get a Jump Start on Annual Earth Day Clean Up



Despite the fact that April 22 has been decreed as the official date of observance for Earth Day since it first began in 1970, this year’s students got ahead of the game when it came to their own celebration and clean-up efforts. Instead of waiting for the rest of the world’s environmental initiatives, including those of more than 192 countries, third graders led the way with their own contribution on Friday, April 17th.  As per our annual tradition, students spent some time outside at Eagles Park, cleaning up garbage and debris, picking up sticks, and just generally sprucing up the area. 

North To Alaska Via Skype!



With a little help from a handy technological tool, third graders were able to garner some real-life insight what it’s like to be a resident in our 49th state via Skype.

As part of our science and writing units, students are studying about Alaskan animals and the necessary adaptations they must develop in order to not only survive, but to actually flourish, in some of the state’s more extreme environmental conditions. In addition to our online investigation and/or other media research source endeavors, students were able to garner a unique inside view of what it’s like to actually live in the state during several Skyping sessions with longtime residents.

Our first two sessions were with Andrew, a local Alaskan newspaper journalist, who lives in the city of Wasilla. He is the stepson of Mrs. Moore, our own Title I coordinator. He and his friend Gil, a recreational specialist, sent us a YouTube video about how snowshoes work and why they’re so important when it comes to getting around in the winter. This was an especially nifty nugget of information, because it tied directly into the adaptations found in so many Alaskan animals that have evolved in order to help them stay mobile in the frigid cold and snowy conditions found in the far north!

In fact, did you know that the coldest temperature on record for the state of Alaska is -80 degrees Fahrenheit at Fort Yukon on January 23, in 1971? The state’s warmest temperature recording was 100 degrees Fahrenheit set back on June 27 in 1915 at Prospect Creek. Talk about a wide-range of extremes!

Next we skyped with Miss Schmit’s grandparents, Steve and Mary Schmit, who have spent the last sixteen years living out in “the Alaskan bush” in a small community called Skwentna. The term “bush” is used to refer to any wilderness area where there are either few or simply no roads linking it to any main centers of population. In fact, for a lot of the smaller villages and/or communities scattered across the state, air travel is the only way to get in or out of the area. Sometimes, residents may have the added option of going to town via boat as well, using one of the larger rivers, but for many, the small-engine plane is the only way to move about. Which explains why there are more than eight hundred airfields in the state of Alaska.

Such was the case for the Schmits, who either flew in or floated out in order to get groceries, go to the doctor, or for any other reason they might need access to what the city had to offer. Otherwise, they spent their time surrounded by water, trees, the native animal residents, and an ever-changing population of about ten other people for the majority of the year. Due to the sheer expense of air travel, students learned that trips to town were done as a necessity and only came about once or twice a year for a lot of “bush” residents, including these longtime inhabitants. The third graders also learned about how much work it was living so far away from other modern conveniences that we so often take for granted such as municipal water supplies and citywide-supplied electricity and/or gas hookups. Students also got a glimpse of how much planning actually has to go into simply surviving out there all alone, with few to rely on but yourself. For example, everything has to be well stocked, including food, and fuel, tools and parts, and especially medicines. Because if you run short, it can be days, even weeks sometimes before you can restock, which could potentially lead to some dire consequences, depending upon the situation.

Click on the link below to check out read students’ individual books about the Alaskan animal of their choice and its many adaptations!