Monday, December 16, 2019

November/ December

We are off to a great start in SPARK! I have loved getting to know students and am impressed with the effort and great thinking already happening in our classroom! I hope students are excited about our Royal Academy Adventure and our Medieval Times theme. Here are a few details about the work we have been doing in class.

Math: The Royal Academy
Students have been accepted into the "Royal Academy" and are seeking to become royal apprentices to the king. They have sorted into their house teams and the Thinkerdoodles, Turnblitzers, Thunderwits, and Trognoggins are all adding problem solving strategies to their tool belts as they proceed on a quest to find their swiped scepters. So far we have used the process of elimination and deductive reasoning to find where the scepters are hidden and then used organizing data in tables and guess and check in order to get past the trolls in the clearing on our journey. We will continue on our problem solving quest for the next 4 weeks and then use the skills we've acquired as we move into some differentiated activities with Math Superstars and Greg Tang resources.

Reading: Jacob's Ladder
Our first reading story in our Jacob's Ladder curriculum was the fable, The Ant and the Dove. Students have been growing their vocabulary and using the ladder to build skills in decoding and comprehension. 
Our skill focus so far has been to:
  • Develop prediction and forecasting skills by analyzing text.
  • Sequence events from a text in logical order, identify cause and effect relationships, recognize consequences and implications, predict future events, and judge probable outcomes.
  • Develop deductive reasoning skills in order to make general statements spanning a topic or concept. 

Project Based Learning: Medieval Times Projects 
We got in the spirit last week with some middle ages activities!  First students created their own helmets with aluminum foil, which took a day's share of problem solving.  There was definitely some creative design thinking at work!  Then we mounted our horses to compete in a jousting tournament.  We had some pretty impressive pool noodle lance wielders!  Lastly, students created their own catapults. Wrapping up the day, students did online investigations of castles, got to choose their knightly names, and began their Chess sketchbooks which will serve as the first phase of our project. As the project progresses, students will learning about the roles and history of the chess pieces and then complete a class study of the book Knights and Castles by Mary Pope Osborne. Putting into practice their learning from the text students will have choice in creating pieces for their own castle lap books. Finally after a study of reader's theater, students will write and present their own scripts based on life in Medieval Times.

Growth Mindset:
We start each day with a morning Jumpstart activity. So far we are building skill at finding relationships between analogy pairs.  We have also done a short study on the brain and focused on ways to maximize our learning. Students got to "touch a brain" and test the idea that challenges help the brain grow by trying out a variety of games that help build perseverance and scaffold their critical thinking skills.

 













 








Thursday, August 22, 2019

Welcome!


Dear SPARK Families,

Welcome to a new year! I am thrilled to have the opportunity to serve your child in the SPARK program. This will be my second year teaching SPARK and my 11th year teaching in the district. I am originally from the midwest where I received my B.A. from the University of Missouri. I moved to South Carolina in 2008, attending graduate school and receiving my MAT from Columbia International University. I love being in the classroom, doing craft projects, and relaxing at home with my husband and two sons.

SPARK is a program for students that have shown potential for rigorous work through aptitude or achievement test scores. The priority of SPARK is to meet that need in a direct way. Our mission is to provide students with experiences and foundational skills necessary to pursue knowledge, develop character, and strengthen personal motivation in order to engage and persist in more rigorous academic challenges.

I am looking forward to sharing an incredible curriculum with your child. This year students will be focusing on the 6 C’s of the 21st Century Learner. These skills, Collaboration, Communication, Content, Critical Thinking, Creative Innovation, and Confidence, are the basis from which we have built the SPARK program. Everything we do can find its foundations in building these abilities in our students. We will also be utilizing the Jacob’s Ladder reading curriculum, do an integrated thematic unit researching medieval times and the game of chess, and building strategies for problem solving and logical reasoning in mathematics. Students will also participate in targeted projects and activities to help build a growth mindset.

Communication is the key to a successful year. Each student will be given a take home folder as one way to keep information organized. Any notes, papers, and assignments will be placed in the folder. Please take the time to check your child’s SPARK folder each week and use it to return any correspondence. I will also keep families informed by the use of a classroom blog that you may check for a glance at what we have been up to in class. You can find the link to your child’s day of instruction at https://rtespark.blogspot.com/.

If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to call or email me. Email is usually the best form of communication. My address is jhoft@richland2.org. I look forward to getting to know you and your child as we work together to make this a great year in SPARK!

Mrs. Jessie Hoft
Gifted Specialist