Sunday, December 1, 2013
Tuesday Tasting: Special Guest
Recently, we had a special guest presenter for a Tuesday
Tasting. Lisa A.’s friend, who is a nutritionist, came and taught us how to
make a delicious and nutritious snack: the perfect parfait! She led a
discussion about the nutrients found in various foods and how we can combine
them for optimal energy. We learned about some new foods, like chia seeds and
hemp seeds, and some surprising things that we could add to our parfaits, like
cinnamon and fresh mint. We got to build our own parfaits with fresh fruit,
yogurt, granola, nuts, and lots of other delicious and healthy toppings. It was
fun to try adding new things to a favorite treat! Yum!
Circle of Power and Respect/CPR/Morning Meeting
Each morning, we start our day by gathering together on the
rug to greet each other, review our day, and enjoy a community-building
activity or discussion. What’s special about CPR in fifth grade is that the
students take turns leading it. Below, the leader chose and ran a challenging
team building activity that we learned at camp.
Vocabulary and Review
Some weeks, the fifth graders will read a short essay and
learn new vocabulary words. Every few weeks, they will review the past few
lessons in order to reinforce their new words. The review activities are
interactive, which makes them good practice for the student who made them
(writing a story, making cards, or creating a crossword puzzle) as well as the
students who experience them. Here the fifth graders are sharing their
activities: reading each other’s stories and cards and doing each other’s
crossword puzzles.
Sharing Book Projects
Throughout the year, independent book projects encourage the
fifth graders to explore a variety of genres and practice choosing “good-fit”
books for themselves, and provide the opportunity for creative engagement with
literature. Sharing projects is just one of the many ways that students
practice their presentation skills. The evaluation process for the projects is student-driven:
after sharing their projects with each other, students receive written feedback
from each other. Peer-to-peer compliments and constructive criticism require
the evaluator to think critically and specifically about others’ work. It also allows
the project author to hear relevant feedback from an authentic audience. For
fifth graders, who are developmentally very in-tune with their peers, it is
appropriate for them to get feedback from each other, rather than just their
teachers.
Decorating Pumpkins!
Fall Festival is a highlight of the year, and the fifth
graders loved decorating pumpkins for the Pumpkin Walk! Using the skills they
practiced at camp, they were in charge of directing the entire process. I
stepped back, and they, as a group, figured out how to decide what they wanted
their pumpkins to look like, how many pumpkins they wanted, how to integrate a
multitude of divergent ideas, who would work on each pumpkin, where they would
get their supplies, and how they would either avert or clean up that inevitable
painty, glittery mess! It was exciting to see how well they were able to take
charge of this project from beginning to end with minimal guidance.
Encounters: European Explorers and Native Americans
Another major area of study this fall focused on the
encounters between European explorers and Native Americans. The fifth graders
looked at these encounters critically and wondered about the positive outcomes
as well as the negative.
We learned that the Columbian Exchange is the term used to
describe the exchange of agricultural goods, slave labor, diseases, and ideas
between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres that began happening after
Columbus’s first trip to the Americas in 1492.
Did you know that Italians got tomatoes from the New World,
and the Spanish were the first to introduce horses to the Native Americans? A
lot of the foods we love were first shared because of the Columbian Exchange.
During our Tuesday Tasting Time, we all brought in and tasted a variety of familiar
and not-so-familiar foods that were traded because of the Columbian Exchange.
At the beginning of October, some people observed Columbus
Day. Usually, the story of European arrival in the New World is told from the
European point of view. As a class, we read a short story called Encounter that gave us a new
understanding by describing the arrival of Columbus from the perspective of a
Taino boy who lived on an island in what is now the Bahamas. In addition, one
of our texts this year is Howard Zinn’s A
Young People’s History of the United States. This wonderful book provides
alternate perspectives to those generally found in history books, which deepens
our understanding of historical events. The chapter on Columbus and the Indians
offered facts and stories that broadened our understanding of the encounter
from both Columbus’s and the Native Americans’ points of view and gave us
information with which to make our own critical evaluation.
We learned about the good and the bad parts of the Columbian
Exchange, and that made us wonder whether or not Columbus Day should be
celebrated. Jesse taught us how to use Google docs, so we made a chart where we
could all contribute our thoughts throughout our study. Then, we used our ideas
to write critical 5-paragraph essays about the upsides and downsides of
celebrating Columbus Day.
Each fifth grader also chose an explorer to study for a
research project. We wondered about the facts of their exploration, and we were
also curious about how their exploration affected others and the world. After
reading a variety of sources and taking notes, the fifth graders created
Explorer Scrapbooks, which included a five-paragraph essay, visual elements, a
map of the explorer’s travels, and a timeline of their life.
The fifth graders practiced so many skills during the course
of this project, including collaboration of ideas, critical thinking, using
technology for real-world applications, nonfiction reading skills, research
skills, and writing an essay. My favorite, though, was watching every student
interact with our world map in a meaningful way. Because it was integral to
their research, each student had to look closely at the map in ways they hadn’t
before in order to find places that they may have never heard of (“Where IS the
Strait of Gibraltar?”). Spending time looking at the map was not something I
“assigned”; rather, it was learning that happened because of genuine curiosity
and a desire for understanding. There was lots of collaboration between
students, and there were many conversations about where places were around the
world: just the kind of learning that sticks!
Family Heritage Project and Feast
Our family heritage project was a long-term project that we
worked on since September. Because the fifth graders study the history of the
United States, which is a land of immigrants, they wanted to find out where
their own families came from and how they ended up in the United States. This
project was multifaceted and allowed the students to practice skills in many
curricular areas, including writing, research, technology, and social studies.
We started by reading the story, The Matchbox Diaries. It is about a grandfather who is telling his
granddaughter his immigration story using special items that he collected
during his childhood and on his journey from Italy to the United States. Each
fifth grader made their own shoebox diary with an important family item in it,
and they also wrote the story of the object.
Each fifth grader also made a family tree that went back
five generations (or as far as possible). They found out interesting facts and
stories about their ancestors and enjoyed sharing them with each other. Typing
up the names for the family trees and the family immigration stories were a
chance to practice keyboarding skills and how to format Word documents.
Writing narratives and essays is a main focus of fifth grade
language arts, so the students wrote an immigration story about a relative who
immigrated to the United States, retelling their story with historical details.
As always, they went through all the writing steps: planning/organizing, rough
draft, self edit, peer and teacher edits, revision, and final draft.
During technology time, Jesse helped us create a multimedia
presentation using Google Earth to show the route someone in our family took to
come to the United States. We’ve had lots of fun exploring all of the things
that Google Earth can help us do and see.
Right before Thanksgiving Break, we celebrated with a Family
Heritage Feast, where the fifth graders shared all of their projects and
learning with family members and each other. We enjoyed a delicious buffet of
favorite family recipes that the students had found and wrote about: what the
food is, where it’s from, why it’s important to their family, and if there’s a
special time of year when they make or eat it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)