Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Non-Fiction Science Reading PowerPoint

This is a required assignment due Thursday, 10/18 at 8:30 AM please*

*(Unless special arrangements have been made.)

We have had two and one-half hours of computer time to assist students complete the project in school, but ask and encourage students to deepen the work at home. We will have a final period on Wednesday in class. 

I.  Objective 1:  to share information about an animal you read about in class, including any of the following: (In general, this is factual information and things that can surprise us.  Guideline: Create about 10 slides for this objective, covering a breadth of the areas below (5 or more). At the very least a student is expected to create 5+  content slides - not counting images & the title slide.  For a higher mark, it is expected that the students enter into depth in 1-3 areas.  Teams should create a presentation with more slides than individual presentations, and go into depth in more areas as well.  

A.  Physical Features of the Animal  

B.  Special physical adaptations  

C.  Descriptions of how the animal feeds or hunts and what it eats.  

D.  Explanation of the geographical locations of the animal.  

E.  Description of the habit the animal thrives in  

F.   Discuss how human development affects the animal.   

G.  Discuss how pollution or global warming affects the animal.  

H.  Discuss actions people have taken to help the animal population be healthy. 

I.   Description of Predators

J.  Life cycle

K. Human uses of the animal. 

II.  Objective II: to include slides showing that you have used these non-fiction reading skills to read and think about your animal including:

1.  Questions about your animal - or a F.A.Q.  

2.  One deep question - something that leads people to think deeply about the animal or its condition. 

3.  One or more speculations you have about your animal or its future. 

4.  Connections about the situation or condition of this animal and other animals, or a personal one. 

5.  New Vocabulary - (2) or more words. 


Monday, October 17, 2016

Academic Calendar & Connections Week 8 Beginning October 17

Monday, October 17

For Science we began our plant experiment as a basis for learning the Scientific Method.  Students planted seeds in soil and added differing amounts of fertilizer pellets and/or additional substances to see how these could influence the growth of Wisconsin Fast Plants - scientific name: Brassicas. This is a month long project.

For Math, we reviewed the key skills in Unit 2, lessons 1-2 and did additional practice problems. We are learning efficient methods of rounding factors for larger multiplication problems and estimating products.  

For Reading Students have been asked to bring in a flash memory drive on Tuesday and for use this week for their PowerPoint projects they will be working on this week.  I have bought flash drives enough  for half of the class - or one for each project team for those who don't have their own. 

Regarding Homework: Students were not given HW packets on Monday and there is no specific HW beyond reading, however students may wisely work toward their book report completion due October 28. We reviewed the expectation of the report today.   The 5th grade team is regrouping around the Unit Math Test, the wrapping up of the Non-fiction Science Reading this week, and the Start of the new Science Unit today. HW packets may vary this week between classes for this reason.  Once again, a copy of the Book Report Information Sheet for the book report on a fictional novel may be found at Mr. Arthur's connect site: here 


Tuesday, October 18

Reading and Writing: 

     Students will have computer time to work on their Powerpoint Non-Fiction Science Reading Projects.

     Students have worked intensively on their Non-Fiction Science Reading Powerpoint and in many cases have checked out classroom USB Flash Memory Disks with their in-progress report.  I am confirming that, excepting special requests, that the students turn in their completed work on Thursday.  

     We reviewed a book report example today.  Students will bring in their rough draft, completed work, or - at a minimum - an outline of their book report that is due October 28.  

     There is no math homework on Tuesday night. 


Wednesday, October 19

Reading; Book Report progress check in.  
Reading & Writing: non-fiction science book PowerPoint Progress Check-off Sheet completed to help guide students to project completion. 
Math Unit 2, Lesson 3.  There are two pages of homework, pp. 53-54 

Thursday, October 20


Animal Powerpoints due first thing on a usb flash memory stick or disc.  Students may download these on a class desktop so they can take keep their flash drives for personal use.  These will be shared on-line and evaluated by the students.  I have not decided the web sharing format yet. TBA  

Mathematics:  We are working on Eureka Math Unit 2 Lesson 4 and students were assigned pages 66 & 68 for Friday.   Students had short one-on-one conferences with the teacher on their tests; about half the students know their scores. Students will bring their tests home on Friday. 

Language Arts:  Book Report Check in Number 2 is tomorrow.  Students may bring in annotation notes, a rough draft, outline for paper, or final copy.  The report is due in one week - October 28, though I would prefer it Thursday, October 27.    Today we closely at the Book Report Scoring Rubric, which, can be found under Literacy in Helpful Links at the top of the blog. 

Animal Power points due first thing on a USB flash memory stick or disc.  Students may download these on a class desktop so they can take keep their flash drives for personal use.  These will be shared on-line and evaluated by the students.  I have not decided the web sharing format yet. TBA 

Science:  Our WI Fast Plants are growing and students began observations, drawing, notes, and thinking about our Experiment and it's relation to the Scientific Method. 

Friday, October 21

5th Grade Fundraising Goal Reward Pizza Party at 2:00.  Sorry, this is not Gluten-Free.

Book Report Check-in #2.  Students bring in notes, rough draft, outline, or draft in progress.

Mathematics: Students will return home with their Math Unit 1 Tests tomorrow.  

Thank you!

Mr. Hagstrom

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Academic Calendar & Connections for Week 7, Starting October 11

Tuesday, October 11

Mathematics:  

As with last Friday, we reviewed for tomorrow's Unit 1 Math Test. 

     There is one double-sided math homework sheet (3 problems in total) in this week's homework     packet for tonight's homework. 

Non-Fiction Science Reading:

     Students selected independent or partner projects for creating presentations to summarize their learning about one animal from our science readings. Students will be creating a PowerPoint with a few required elements, but the majority of the information will arise from student interest and choice. More to follow on the timeline. 

Computer Lab:


      Students completed their Reader's Response for reading through the last weekend.  Students then either worked on elective material in Zearn or finished their Foreshadowing Art Work. 

ART: 

      Students finished their Foreshortening art works last Friday and today.  In a few cases, students took their art work home to finish tonight.  Mrs. Hackney will be hanging these in the 5th grade hallway tomorrow. 

Wednesday, October 12

 Music

      Please remember that there are try outs for the Musical after school

Thursday, October 13



Reading, Writing and Science: A PowerPoint or other Presentation/Project

    Students continued to take notes from their non-fiction science books, choosing information for a presentation (normally a PowerPoint slideshow) from some designated categories as well as student elective material.  Students are pulling a mixture of factual, unique, and surprising information about their animals, what they eat, how they survive, etc.  Where possible and useful, I have asked students to focus part of their reading on interactions with humans, development, and climate change, as well as thoughts about the place of their organism in the food chain.  

    At this point, on average, (and with wide variability) student groups have pulled together information for about 10+ slides. Students will have one opportunity to pull in graphic imagery for their project in class, and another opportunity to create slides, but will need to invest additional time at home.  The PowerPoint presentation was chosen by students as an alternative to a traditional report or essay, however, both of the later can be chosen to fulfill the assignment's expectations.  Additionally, some students petitioned and were permitted to use alternative ways to show their learning, such as creating a mini-documentary, or writing realistic fiction to cover the same information.  
    
     For the next step, on Friday,  students will be asked to incorporate additional elements from their reading instruction into their slides or study:  questions, new vocabulary, connections,  speculations and deep questions.

      The anticipated project completion date is Next Thursday, October 20th. 

Mathematics:  

     Students finished the Unit 1 Test of Eureka math yesterday or this morning.  
We began Unit 2 of Eureka Math today, and some of the problems of Lesson 1 were assigned as Homework.

Science & Art Integration: 

     Students watched a video on how to draw wildflowers and practiced these sketches in preparation for the plant life & growth hands-on science activity they begin on Monday. 

Kona Ice at 2:00






Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Academic Calendar Notes

October 3 - 7

Monday, October 3:  Students were reminded that we have book report no. 1 due Friday, October 28.

Literary Words of the week are: amiable and woe

Tuesday, October 4:

For writing class, second drafts of our expository writing papers are due.

Students had a shortened math session due to a District Opinion Writing Assessment

Math class focused on decimal division using place value charts and discs, and compared this to division using the standard algorithm and results with remainders and decimals. There was no new math homework today. 

In computer class, students were introduced to ZEARN.  See the post below for more information on this digital mathematics learning platform.

For Friday students should bring their completed math packets and complete week 5 Reader's response on Thursday night.  



Internet Based Math Learning with Zearn

Students were given a login and password to Zearn - an online math support program connected with Eureka and national math standards.  This program may be used at home as a math extension, tool for understanding, and enrichment.  I can track the students' progress for the work they do at home as well. 

www.zearn.org



Thursday, September 29, 2016

HIVE5 Connection - Week of September 26

   Autumn is upon us, our weather is beautiful and the leaves turning...

Our group has maintained its lead in the Orange Ruler Fundraiser standings, so I simply commend and thank our students and families for this successful effort. As of Friday, September 30, the second place team is just $67 dollars behind, so we may want to set in for one final effort should that lead be important.  In any case, there is much to be proud of here!  

We had our first art class, with a focus on foreshadowing, led by Mrs. Liz St. Andre (and five other moms -joined our class).  Jamba juice was provided as a reward to the students for their Orange Ruler efforts Mrs. St. Andre gave a wonderful introduction to this zany art approach that the kids thoroughly enjoyed. Drawings are in progress and the plan is to provide brief respite in art over the next two weeks so the artworks can be completed and provide some mental rest at times when the studies may wear on.

Curriculum to Calendar:


HW Packet & Literacy Sheet links for the week: Homework Packets


I. Writing:  


Homework was bent around the Expository or How To writing assignment's First Draft, which was due today, Thursday, for sharing in small groups in class.  Tomorrow, Friday, the groups reconvene to focus on the constructive feedback process.  We have emphasized that writing is a process and that we are more concerned about editing and revising than final copy.  Nevertheless, students will have a chance to choose a piece of their own from the four assignments thus far for further editing. 

II.  Mathematics:


To confirm what you may have read in your child's planner this week, no math homework was given on Tuesday to provide additional student time for their writing. The weekly homework packets were collected, selected math problems checked in teams, and assignments checked off for completion.  A double-sided sheet for lesson 13 was the only sheet sent for homework on Thursday, due Friday. 

Students who had completed all of their work this week were provided extra math enrichment sheets, which may be turned in by Monday. 

Math scores from last Wednesday's District test were entered into into the Gradecam system

Also, On Wednesday students took a multi-lesson quiz and practiced reporting corrected problems as objective-based scores, and tabulated these into Standards' based forms.

III. Reading.  


We continue on our Journey with Wonder.  It's a great glue for the classroom community.

In our non-fiction science reading, students practiced and discussed cause and effect, and the connections between questions and speculations.  

All students also took their District reading pretest, and students with higher reading needs were given the more heavily diagnostic Fountas and Pinnell reading comprehension assessment on Wednesday and Thursday. Both tests have been uploaded into digital tracking systems. 



There is a lot of extra interest and love for threatened animals being generated by some really healthy group discussions on the topics.  Saskia and Lauren spontaneously created  a sign up sheet, which already has approximately 25 signatures from students in class (plus their teacher's), with the goal of expressing interest and support for threatened species.  On Thursday I gave the girl's space in our community time to begin discussion on the theme and encouraged them to carry this farther.  They also elected this subject of study in the elective part of their computer lab time this week. Let's see where this leads us...

Just 1/3 of students completed last week's Reader's Response homework, and for a number of reasons, I'm going to revise this procedure to widen the response time window and it have it more usefully connected to learning by providing opportunities for sharing, and making the writing about the books we read connected to our classroom culture.  Therefore, there is no reading response homework Thursday.  Current plans are to reintroduce the activity when we have whole class computer access next Tuesday. 


IV.  Connections

Here's some helpful topics for conversation with your fifth grader this week:

A. Connecting with our U.S. Geography focus this week, talk about the physical features of our area and country in geographical terms like tributary, bay, estuary, and gulf.  

B.  Does reading Wonder have an impact on how we are relating to our classmates this year? 

C.  What animals and animal habitats have you been reading this week? 

D.  For math, create opportunities to try questions like:  About how many offices do you think are in this building anyway? How did you calculate that?  From the garden boxes with yellow roses, how many small bouquets of flowers do you think you could make?

E.  How does the Bohemian folk dance or electric slide go?

F.  What are you reading personally this week?  

F.   What home studies is your child pursing of their own interest? Can these be shared at school? We discussed Ben A's interest and knowledge of wildlife this week and he brought in a blue-jay's feather.

Have a wonderful weekend!

Bradley Hagstrom 






Friday, September 23, 2016

Class Highlights for Week ending 9/23

\

Monday

A. Our class had the Orange Ruler for the day as they raced into first place and won a piggy entry for the pig derby, which is all swell, really!  Proud of their efforts.  

We read our 6th Dimitri Martin story: "F.A.Q. Genie."  It serves as the fourth model for our upcoming fiction writing activity. 

Tuesday


As of Tuesday, our class kept their amazing lead in the Orange Ruler Fundraiser Games. Looks like there's a yummy purple beverage we can stick 27 straws in soon...................kidding. Tuesday update:  they've won individual Jamba Juices  for their high rate of invitations. 

Wednesday:  

Students took their District Math Pre-Assessment to gauge their Math preparedness.  Students had up to 90 minutes to complete the assessment, which will be used to guide instructional decisions. 

Thursday:  

Students shared their fiction writing in small groups. A subset of student selected stories were shared with the class.  We had some good first drafts, and Isaiah did an excellent job on his multiple perspectives story and had the whole class in knots for his engaging reading presentation! 


Dancing Classrooms: Students began learning their third dance -La Rumba de Cuba

Friday: 

Lucas's family brought in birthday snacks in the afternoon community time for Lucas's birthday. Happy Birthday tomorrow Lucas!

Students followed an imaginary trip based on coordinate points through three continents and had to find places based upon geographical clues.  Then they invented a travel itinerary as a group, identified coordinates, and charted travel plans. 


Students won a snow cone treat in the Orange Ruler Competition for their high participation and they remained school fundraising leaders all week.  Additionally they won a pizza party with the principal for a date TBA.   We look forward to these days, but especially an entry into the pig races!  Thank you to all the students and families who contributed to our school. 


Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Fiction Writing Assignment Based Upon Demitri Martin Story Models

Mr. Arthur, my fifth grade colleague, introduced me to writer Demitri Martin who wrote This is a Book. We have done several read aloud sessions as examples of fictional humor and for story writing examples.  

Our current fiction writing assignment, draft 1 due Thursday (some students completed in class), asks students to make up stories following one of  four story models as presented in four of Martin's stories. 



The four choices, based on stories the teacher is modeling in class, include the following:

1.  Tell a simple story from 5 points of view, as in “The Bee Sting”;

2.  Tell a series of small stories that all end with the same sentence, as in “Freak Accidents With Acapella Groups”;

3.  Tell a series of small stories that involve the same three very different characters, as is “Optimist, Pessimist, Contortionist”;4. Create a “F.A.Q.” guide about some topic, as in “Genie.”

This writing will be further developed in a workshop format, so we all need our stories to take advantage sharing, editing, and improvement steps. They need their short story (it could be a light page or two) by Thursday. Thank you




Tuesday, September 20, 2016

HIVE5 Connection - Week of September 19

I Calendar - 


Monday - Week 4 homework packets handed out; due Friday.   
District Attendance policy form handed out to students; they are due with parent signatures on Friday.
Letter writing homework for Ms. Chantell, the dance teacher,  explained in the Appendix at the foot of this post. The letter is due Tuesday to me and I give it Thursday to Ms. Chantell. 

Wednesday - There wasn't new math instruction today and there is no math homework, unless the previously assigned pages of 38-39 and 42-43 were not completed on Monday and Tuesday. 

Homework change:  If students did not complete in class their fictional writing piece following one of the four style options given to them and modeled after Demitri Martin example stories, then they should complete their story today in their black and white composition journals. 

Thursday-  Students should have finished their fiction writing piece yesterday.  If there story was unfinished, they should finish it tonight in their composition books. 
As a reminder, students should complete the Reader's Response for the week this evening. There is link in the link menu at the top right side of the blog. 
Thursday evening is also the last day for Orange Ruler Run invitations. 

Friday - Did your student answer the Reader's Response questions for Week 4 yet?  The link is under the "Helpful Links" at the top right of the Blog. If not, these should be completed by Saturday. 


II.  Content & Connections


In Reading we are working on Annotating text, particularly focusing on connections and speculations, as well as confusions and connections.  Students continue to read non-fiction science texts on animal species and conservation.  Ask  your child about their present animal.

We also began selected Reading Comprehension (Fountas & Pinnell) Testing and Conferring in the reading workshop.

In particular this week we have been focusing on annotating text with questions and wondering.

In Social Studies we are still putting together the basis of coordinate points of the GPS by developing our knowledge of how latitude and longitude are read and work together. You could talk about far away places you have been to in relationship to the equator and talk about patterns between location and weather that you may see, or ask those questions about a place you've always wanted to visit together. 

In Mathematics there is a new rounding technique.  It's not much loved yet, but it does make place value central to the practice. We are also continuing to develop our knowledge of the metric system and adding decimals in word problems.  There is also this business of adding tenths and hundredths and stuff, with idea of becoming familiar with bundling and decomposing values, and thinking and talking about  decimal fractions fluently.

In writing students have heard four model stories by Demitri Martin equivalent to four writing formats for fictional writing.  Students will be writing a fictional piece based upon one of these models and began brainstorming Tuesday.   Ask your child what format they are using and what story model it follows.

Appendix


A.  Informal Letter Writing Assignment

Letter to Ms. Chantell due to Mr. Hagstrom Tuesday.  The letters themselves are to be given to Ms. Chantell Thursday.  They may be hand-written or typed.  



The letter should include:

Student Name & Date  ( You may leave out your address, which is normally included).

A salutation (greeting): "Dear Ms. Chantell,"

Three paragraphs with the following content (feel free to use these sentence starters):  When I first heard about the program...  2.  After two classes in the program...  3.  My goal for the end of dance class is...

A closing:  "Sincerely,"  "All the best,"   "Thank you!"  etc.  

And a signature:

If you need help with formatting, try: Writing a Friendly or Personal Letter

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Eureka Math Tip Sheets and General Information for Families

Dear Families, 

Please fine below the links to the Roadmap for Eureka for 5th Grade and the "Parent Tip Sheets" for current Unit. 

Parent Roadmap to Eureka




Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Earth as an Orange - Peeled

Hi Families,

We have some samples of our Earth as an Orange Dissection...Here's the first....


Remy's !

Awesome, eh? 


Reidar prepping for dissection. 


Good try, Colin!

 Andrew M's - The butterfly


Madelyn's Good & Glossy


Snack time, Reidar!


Precise work, Maysa!


Orange Toad, Nice Will!


Great Map, Marika!


Nice idea, Ben M!


Orange Cardiogram - Intricate layout idea - Isiah's

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Orange as the Earth Project

Students learned new vocabulary of geography and maps and refreshed old concepts in drawing the 2 dimensional map of the earth on the 3D Orange Globe Model.  I've asked the students to dissect the orange at home, peeling the peel from fruit flesh and laying the peel onto a flat surface to see how closely their maps came out.  This is definitely an experiment, but they can see if the orange is edible and refresh their day's learning as they try this orange dissection.  Then they can ingeniously bring their orange peel maps back to class on a presentation material of their choice to class on Wednesday or email me images of the finished product.  This takes the place of Tuesday's Math HW as well. 

Monday, September 12, 2016

A note on homework



Note, in order to develop student responsibility and organizational skills, that the primary mode of homework communication will be via the student planner and students have the responsibility to complete and use these. 

Additionally, I will provide occasional homework information to aid in clarifications, to support student projects,  and to give suggestions on how homework support could look like at home through, for example, the Connections section of the outlook newsletters. 

Please note however, there are not current plans for daily homework specifics to be posted online. 

HIVE5 Connection - Week of September 12

Posts for the week will be organized by these sections: 

I. Calendar, II. Content & III. Connections.

*Please look for updates on this same page throughout the week* 

 


    Monday :  

Ballroom Dancing Begins! - and will be on Mondays and Thursdays from 12:55 - 1:40.

Bring an orange to school for class tomorrow. Mr, Hagstrom and others will bring in extra oranges for anybody who doesn't have time to run out for an orange. Feel free to bring along an extra to be shared. Thank you! 

Homework Packets were sent home for the week.  There are two pages of math homework on Monday. For an electronic copy of the packet, please click here. 

Tuesday:  Earth modeled on an Orange. See related post on Tuesday.

Wednesday:  Began our non-fiction science and conservation reading.  Students brought in flattened orange peel representations of the earth or had sent in images of their dissection at home.  See the Peel Post.  Tuesday and Wednesday nights' math homework was assigned to be completed for Thursday's class. 

Thursday:  The Reader's Response link has been updated for week 3'(this week). 
Thursday's math homework has been cancelled.   In substitution there is a homework letter writing assignment for Dancing Classroom's.   That homework is to be given to Ms. Chantel next Thursday, and collected by me by Tuesday, but my suggestion is that they finish it tonight if possible.  Here are Dancing Letter.

Thursday:  Curriculum night. 

II.  Content

In math we are working on linear measurement in the metric system from millimeters to kilometers, including examples for each unit of measurement.  ( A pinky finger for a centimeter...) Then we are making conversions in metric units and writing expressions of this with exponents. 

In reading we began the science non-fiction reader's workshop unit.  We will be reading about wildlife and habitat studies and conservation efforts for various organisms.  Some reading areas we will focus on are annotations, asking "thick questions", note-taking, and vocabulary. 

We are also continuing with the reading aloud of Wonder and students will be reading their social science texts.

In social studies we will continue to explore basic geography focusing on the finding locations with longitude and latitude, as well as basic map features: compass rose, equator, prime meridian, the poles, continents, and oceans. Our orange as a globe explored the relationship between the 3D earth and a two-dimensional earth relating land forms to the hemispheres.  

At present moment, writing is being integrated into the reading unit through written responses to read alouds and thinking on paper about our community building topics (getting to know each other).

III. Connections

Ask your student about their thoughts of the read aloud, Wonder, and "The Bee Sting" or "Optimist, Pessimist, Contortionist";  how  they felt they were leaning about the first dance steps; and questions that involve knowledge or practice in identifying or measuring linear metric distance:  how many kilometers is it to Seattle? How many centimeters is your foot? your bed? What fruit in your house is about the size of a decimeter? (quite possibly an orange). 

With the Earth as an Orange project, ask questions about the 4 oceans and 7 continents, the Prime Meridian and equator.  Does your child remember the approximate latitude of Washington?  How is latitude part of the information that a G.P.S. provides? 

Come to Thursday's  IVE Curriculum Night Thu, Sep 15, 2016,5:30 PM to 7:45 PM

This week we will begin organizing the Art Docents for our class; and I will be providing a way to sign up for 
volunteering in class/ school...more to follow. 

Thank you


Saturday, September 10, 2016

HIVE5 Connection - Week of September 5





Dear Families,

    In the first 6 days of the 2106-17 school year, we have been building community, learning expectations and routines, working as a team, and began to learn our subject matter.  We are off to a solid start and the students present themselves respectfully and are engaged and I think content.  It's good to note we are sharing laughter and the class environment is positive.
     In math we have begun the new Eureka curriculum are working with place value, exponents, decimal numbers, efficient problem solving, and applying concepts to word problems.  We focus especially on problem set up, cooperative work, and sharing our problem solving strategies.
    In reading and writing students experienced read alouds, including from Wonder, and edited stories from Demetri Martin's This is a Book.  There were class and partner discussions, and journal writing entries connected with our reading material.  One focus has been on reading fiction embedded with multiple perspective, including Martin's "Bee Sting," which students found was very humorous and unique.  Today, Friday, students tried their hand at writing their own multiple perspective stories, and this was really more difficult than it at first appears.
  Students also read Japanese Tanka poetry and thought about the special qualities and features of our area that they could share with people from other far away places. And last week we shared a childhood story called Guillermo Jorge Manual Jose in Spanish and English as a springboard to connect with how objects and events, and memory interconnect and relate us back to our families.
     We have also begun a social studies unit on U.S. geography focusing on hemispheres, continents, oceans, and describing location with latitude and longitude.
     Finally we began to explore and organize the class library together and students began checking out class reading materials. Students have begun taking their agendas home and I'm having them begin to write readings in them as this may be a starting point for conversations at home.

     Note also that we had a class meeting with our Dancing Classrooms Teacher.  We also set the schedule for dance lesson program and we actually will begin Monday at 12:55, and our class will meet in the music portable building for approximately 40 minutes.  The students were not privy to the Monday start up time since a meeting to determine the schedule was after school today, Friday.

     In sum everything is going very nicely and I feel really good about our start.  Please continue to encourage your child to read 20 - 30 minutes a night, and hopefully considerably more at times, depending on homework, home schedules, and everything else our children immerse themselves into...
    I have decided to begin my web presence with Blogger given it's ease of use and access, but I may need to use connect for some communications, documents, and privacy.  I'll inform you as a useful structure develops. The name of the Blog is HIVE5G, based on Hagstrom IVE 5th Grade and is accessible currently with public access at http://hive5g.blogspot.com/.   Next on my list to set up is the Reading Homework on-line Reporting access, which a couple of families have already asked about.  Thanks for your patience as I continue to set-up systems in a step-wise manner consistent with instructional priorities.

    Additionally, keep an eye out for communications on Curriculum Night, Art Docent Volunteers, and Classroom Volunteers.  Several of you have offered help and this is much appreciated.

    Have a wonderful weekend!

     Mr. Hagstrom





Friday, September 9, 2016

Daily Schedule

Daily Schedule for 5th Grade w/Mr. Hagstrom - 
Fixed Times & Guide Times

 8:40    Math
 9:10    Hagstrom and Garlisch have specialists, then resume math
 9:45    Math
 10:20  Writing
 11:00  Recess
 11:25  Lunch
 11:45  Word work
 12:05  Reading
 1:20    “Community meeting Time, Special projects, and Extension” 
 1:40    Recess
 2:00    Social studies/Science  - Tuesday Computer Lab
 2:45ish  Clean up, 2:48 Safety Patrol Squad & Kindergarter Escorts Leave
 2:55    Dismissal

Specials Schedule:  Mr. Hagstrom, 5th Grade

Monday:            Library:                9:12 - 9:42
Tuesday:            Music:                  9:12 - 9:42
                                                                           Computers          2:00 - 2:30
Wednesday:        PE:                       9:12 - 9:42
Thursday:           Music:                  9:12 - 9:42
Friday:                PE:                       9:12 - 9:42

Art Docent:   TBA
Dance:Mondays and Thursdays 12:55 - 1:40



About Bradley Hagstrom