September 12th, 2025

Week ending 09.12.25

Week ending 09.12.25



◼︎ Mo’ PBs!

Remarkably, the PBs — Personal Bests — for our 10 minutes of Extreme Writing (almost) every morning just keep rolling in!

And on a Monday too!



When most of us can’t write more than our PBs for the 10-minute writing period, we’ll up the time for writing to 15 minutes.


◼︎ Building Vocabulary

You may recall from our Parent Orientation that education researchers have noted a persistent “fourth grade slump” in reading achievement.



This slump arises due, in part, to the increased complexity of texts — less concrete, more abstract — and the press to increase students’ vocabularies.

In addition to reviewing vocabulary in our assigned reading books and texts — our science and social studies texts are full of challenging new words — we use Wordly Wise.



While not as popular as Holes, Wordly Wise is good brain food for 5G students.


◼︎ Art

Such fun to sit in Art and just watch!



◼︎ Personal Narrative #2

5G worked hard Monday afternoon, running through the whole narrative writing process.

Students (1) selected — either from their previous list of 6 narrative possibilities, or an idea that popped up after Personal Narrative #1 — their story seed, (2) planned by jotting down 4 narrative “scenes” (5 minutes), then (3) dived into an Extreme-Writing-inspired zero draft (20 minutes!).



◼︎ Brain Break!

Before (4) writing their final drafts, 5G needed a mental breather — and some fresh air, sunshine, and exercise!



Another remarkable writing event: 5G students wrote their hearts out!

Needless to say, they’re already asking when they can read their second personal narratives to the class!



We remain awed at the writing quality, stamina and enthusiasm shown by everyone!



◼︎ All Thrusters At Maximum!

Remarkably, we continue to score PBs (Personal Bests) during our 10 minutes of Extreme Writing.

And we do this first thing in the morning — many of us without a big cup of coffee!


◼︎ Mo’ Math Assessing

With our right brains warmed up, it was time to warm up our left brains!

5G students reviewed the first 5G-level Basic Math Numbers & Operations.

Then they dived into the second assessment in the Numbers & Operations series!



◼︎ Can’t get enough of Holes!

As the rest of the nation slides into reading less and less, 5G is grooving on Holes. They just can’t get enough of it, and often walk away from the Reading group still reading Holes!



◼︎ Feel the Rhythm!

Always fun to sit in a Music class with 5G and… feel the rhythm!



◼︎ Mindfulness

If you have yet to glimpse Ms. Sakiko’s new space, here’s your chance (see pix below). The 5G class is small enough that they can enjoy Mindfulness in that new space, rather than in our classroom.



◼︎ Innovation & Robotics

Ms. Keiburtz kicked off our joint Innovation & Robotics adventure with 6G, sharing with the teams what robotic “brains” we had, what materials were available for constructing robots, and where online instructions could be found for building a variety of simple robots.



After that, 6G took the teaching reigns in the Robots Room (5G) which Ms. Kieburtz facilitated more research in the Innovation Room (6G).

We’re making progress!

In time, problems in need of solutions — those problems selected by 5G and 6G — will roll over into the building of robots to “solve” those very problems.




◼︎ The Sky’s the Limit!

Another remarkable morning of Extreme Writing! Just take a look at our class averages per session:


• y axis: number of words in 10 minutes / x-axis: session


And who could resist calculating the cumulative number of words per session?


• y axis: number of words in 10 minutes / x-axis: session

As of today, as a class, we’ve written over 44,000 words — just in the first 10 minutes of most days so far!

And if you’ve ever wondered what our Extreme Writing books look like:



◼︎ Math Operations & Algebra

Today we reviewed the first 5G Operations & Algebra assessment (which students had already completed) as a mental warm-up to taking the second 5G Operations and Algebra assessment.


• A few sample question from the first assessment


A huge part of doing well on assessments and text is… learning how to take assessments and tests.

“About” means the answer isn’t exact. Sometimes the answer isn’t the solution to the problem presented, but a question about the process you must go through to answer it. I know the answer is “3",” but 3 dogs, 3 friends or 3 walks?

Learning to look at the answers first, then reading the question carefully to understand what is being asked of you are critically important.

We want our 5G students to demonstrate what they really do understand and know how to do, and not shine because the wording of a question is throwing them off, or the choice of A?-B?-C? answers is confusing.

that said, 5G students did well! Measurement tomorrow!


◼︎ Will Stanley & Zero Survive?

it such a joy to watch students really get into a book, so much so they don’t want to put it down.



We just hope 5G will like the next 4 or 5 books in our assigned-reading line-up!


◼︎ It’s a Book Buddies Week!

Such a wonderful opportunity — every other week — for 5G students to be role models and leaders in the HNS community.


• 1G students love their 5G student Book Buddies!


◼︎ 5G Community Meetings

Dr. Cat has promised 5G that when he’s frustrated with goings ons, he’ll not sit on those frustrations lest they grow. Instead, he’ll call a meeting and we’ll discuss what’s up.

Today necessitated such a meeting.

We discussed:

  • The importance of letting Dr. Cat or Ms. Cunningham know if we are dashing out of sight somewhere (e.g., bathroom, water, Student Council meetings, etc.) — this is a safety issue, not a Mean Dr. Cat / Ms. Cunningham issue!

  • The importance of crossing Nenue Place safely, as many cars are hell bent on getting to Foodland before all the raspberries run out, or to the light onto the highway before it turns red. (5G learned, if they didn’t know it already, that Dr. Cat & Ms. Cunningham are Safety Nuts.)

  • Basic rules Dr. Cat & Ms. Cunningham thought we could take for granted: no throwing in the classroom, no running in the classroom, no art on whiteboards when we’re doing math, etc.

  • What happens when teachers ask students over and over again to stop/start something, but there’s no change in behavior. (Emotional Intelligence training!)

  • The importance of not following the less-than-desirable behavior of other students, especially if we think there are bennies for copying them, as in, “You’re so cool, dude. You’re one of us now.”

  • What trust is. What a good (and less good) reputation is. Why a good reputation is important in life. Why being trustworthy is a good thing.

5G students maturely considered all discussion points.

You’d have been proud of them!


◼︎ Religion

It’s a joy watching Rev. Jenn in action!



◼︎ End of Day

So great to have the green a few steps outside our sliding glass doors!




◼︎ Thursday Morning Chapel Singers

5G again swelled the ranks of the “Thursday Morning Chapel Singers”!



After 1.5 hours of chapels — everyone knows a lot about Jacob and his brothers — and singing, 5G got a much needed break!




◼︎ Extreme Writing update

As a class, we’ve now written in excess of 47,000 words! Again, this is just what we write for 10-minutes (almost) every morning.

And while we usually don’t do Extreme Writing on Thursday, 5G asked to do it this morning, with several classmates reaching new PBs!

Some students are having fun with our story cubes. Shake 3 up, line them up, let the images suggest a story, or random sentences which, of course, satisfy the write-as-many-words-as-you-possible-can Extreme Writing mandate.



◼︎ Personal Narratives (#2)

If every there was a writing class, 5G 2025-2026 is it!

Not only have students excelled writing their second personal narratives, but more now have writing journals for their own writing.

Enjoy a glimpse of students reading their narratives.

What didn’t get filmed is the “5 Likes” feedback each story received. (The Basket of Randomness selects 5 students, each of whom shares something they liked about the narrative they just heard.)



◼︎ Growing Bodies & Brains need…

Rest, reading and writing!



◼︎ A Library Request

“Can we go to the library today (Thursday) since we cannot go tomorrow (Friday)?”

If our 5G students are enthusiastic about reading, writing, math and more… who are we to stand in their way?

Before nipping off to the library we finished up the remaining two personal narrative readings, then students assessed themselves on the Executive Function scales to be shared with parents on Friday.

In the library, we have two pairs interested in magic trick…




◼︎ No School Until Monday!

For students.

For parents and teachers there’s Friday’s Parent-Teacher Conference






◼︎ Friday, September 19th


• Details in calendar


September 5th, 2025

Week ending 09.05.25

Week ending 09.05.25





◼︎ Back in the Academic Groove!

After the 3-day Labor Day Weekend, 5G wasted no time getting back in the academic groove:

  • Extreme Writing — one personal best achieved

  • Holes — 2 chapters

  • Math — 15-question equivalent fractions quiz


◼︎ New Rubric Metrics

Take a look at (a fake page from) Dr. Cat’s all-subjects Reading/Writing gradebook.

It’s impressive how much work 5G has achieved since the beginning of school year 2025-2026.



Given that students are reading and writing well, the time has come to raise the bar!

Enter… “minus” metrics!


  • Capitalization — We reviewed when, in English, capitalizing letters is a must. Minus one point for missed capitalizations!

  • Misspelled words found in the text — If words written in answers are in the text—be that text a Wordly Wise text, a science article or the Holes questions—students should be able to spell them with 100% accuracy. All that’s required is attention. Minus one for every misspelled word which could have been spelled correctly by looking at the text!

  • (A joke exam question from Dr. Cat’s past: “How do you spell Rhododendron?”)

  • Punctuation — right now we’re focused on missing periods, question marks and exclamation marks. Minus one for every “obvious” missing ., ? or !


◼︎ Jumping Spiders!

After a 10-minute nap and 15-minutes D.E.A.R. or D.E.W., 5G dived into a little zoology + brain science!

If you think brain size automatically relates to intelligence, consider the Poertia jumping spider!



These little gals and guys can problem solve, plan ahead, strategize and return their taxes on time. Amazing.



Students worked in three groups of three. ‘Twas a pleasure watching them work together, watch the videos and read the text together, and help each other to an A or A+ for their afternoon of hard work!



If you’re interested in the phenomenal brain power of the Portia jumping spider, check out the Texts+ text here!



◼︎ Rubber Hits Road at 8am!


While 1/9th our members enjoyed yet another media appearance as an important player in a winning baseball team, the remaining 8/9ths of the class dived into:

  • Extreme writing — yet more personal bests!

  • Challenging chapters in Holes

  • Equivalent fractions

  • A difficult fractions challenge



◼︎ The Fractions Challenge

While the Reading groups read two chapters of Holes…



… the math groups shored up their equivalent-fractions competencies



… and then dived into a fractions challenge:



Students worked in pairs. They were to develop their own methodology, carry it out, and produce two fractions at the end!



◼︎ Personal Narratives

After Reading and Math we dived into one of the main writing forms at the core of the 5G Language Arts curriculum: the Personal Narrative.

We tackled Brainstorming first:



Then, after lunch came planning.

Then we tackled the rough draft — aka the zero-, first-, scratch- draft — as an Extreme Writing exercise.



We were most impressed with what our 5G writers accomplished.

We look forward to the final drafts: homework tonight; to be read aloud tomorrow !


◼︎ Religion with Rev. Jenn


Rev. Jenn had 5G write responses to Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night while listening to a cover of Don McClean’s Vincent:

Starry, starry night
Paint your palette blue and gray
Look out on a summer's day
With eyes that know the darkness in my soul

Shadows on the hills
Sketch the trees and the daffodils
Catch the breeze and the winter chills
In colors on the snowy linen land



If only we’d had video cameras rolling we could have captured some of the truly side-splitting responses!



◼︎ A Gift for Ms. McGraw

5G completed and delivered to the gym a sign for Ms. McGraw’s office door!




◼︎ Exhausted!

For the second week in a row, all of 5G volunteered for the “Thursday Morning Chapel Singers.” Together with singers from 3G and 4G, they sang their hearts out!

So after 3 chapels — PreK & K, !G-3G, and their own, 4G-6G — 5G was too tired to run out any “energy” on the makai playground!


• “Let’s see you sing for an hour and a half!”

• “Joseph in Egypt. I think we’ve got this. Sold into slavery by his brothers. He interprets the pharaoh’s dream…”


◼︎ Reading Personal Narratives

On Wednesday, 5G students brainstormed personal narrative ideas, planned their narratives, and wrote a “zero draft.” For homework they wrote up their final drafts.

(You can find details about the process and all final drafts here.)

Today, students read their personal narratives aloud to their teachers and classmates.



◼︎ GaGa Ball’s Back!

Mr. Skye and Mr. Reyn removed the roots from the GaGa Ball pit, so it was back in the arena!



5G students rescued a gecko from the pit and made sure no one kicked or stepped on her as she clung to the outside boards of the GaGa Ball pit!


◼︎ Reading Personal Narratives, continued

Remarkable stories all around, and this is just our first “outing.”



Imagine what 5G will be writing come May 2026!

Again, the process and personal narratives can be found here.


◼︎ If we’ve not mentioned this before…

This is a happy class.



◼︎ Innovation & Robotics

Thursday finished up with 5G & 6G working on their innovation research and continuing to master the complexities of getting small robots to do what you want them to do, all in preparation for having them simulate solutions to the research issues.





◼︎ “Slow Down!”

Our Friday began with a Road Safety turnout on Nenue Place. Mahalo to the HPD for supporting us!



◼︎ Reading & Math

5G students are SO into Holes they almost can’t put the book down!

We are asking students not to read ahead, not to listen ahead with audiobooks, and not to find the film and watch it!

We will watch the movie after we finish the text!

In one group, they had to prove how Zero (one of the characters) knew there were 45 days between May 24 and July 8.

Out came the calenedars!



Then came the question: How did Zero know there were 45 days between May 24 and July 8 without a calendar to look at?


◼︎ Expectations

What are expectations?

What expectations do teachers and admin have of 5G students — 5G leaders?

After our traditional 10 minutes of “body stillness & mental silence” — aka, a “nap”! — we had a heartfelt and productive class discussion about what we expect of our young people, our “upper classfolk” so to speak.

Dr. Cat shared a set of Executive Function scales he and Ms. Cunningham will share with parents a week today.


• A few of the scales


Next week, students will have the opportunity to indicate where they feel they fall on the various scales. Dr. Cat and Ms. Cunningham will share where they feel things are.

And if our amazing afternoon discussion is anything to go by, a productive conversation will ensue!


◼︎ Library

Research suggests regular library visits promotes literacy — as though this 5G class needs any literacy promotion! They love the library!



Some of our 5G students just can’t stop writing!



◼︎ The Olmec Civilization

We finished up the day with our fist (of three) deep dives into the Olmec civilization, learning how archeologists at first thought they were contemporary with the Mayans, only to discover that the Olme civilization preceded the Mayan civilization by thousands of years.



Students also learned that it was the Olmec who first brought chocolate to the world!

At the end of the day, a quick test as to what our mneumonic “OM A.I.!” tells us.



Dr. Cat: “What does the O stand for?”

Student: “Omelette!”

So, it seems, we are learning now about the ancient Omelette Civilization. It seems they brought us not only eggs, but chickens too!

: )



Be aware of where Hurricane Kiko may, or may not wander, and when!

If we’re lucky, Pele will push destructive winds to the north, but simultaneously-miraculously ensure we get much needed rain!


Our first Parent-Teacher conference is Friday, September 12th.

If you’ve not yet signed up or need to change your time, the link is in the 5G calendar.

Don’t forget, HNS Family Kickball is on the same day! 6pm.


August 29th, 2025

Week ending 08.29.25

Week ending 08.29.25



◼︎ Extreme Writing

Extreme Writing is a great way to wake up the Weekend Brain!

Several of us even hit new writing fluency heights!


◼︎ Math: Fractions

Today we concluded our review of adding and subtracting fraction. 5G’s got it!

What’s more, 5G enjoyed difficult fraction challenges!



◼︎ D.E.A.R.

D.E.A.R. = Drop Everying And Read — and 5G loves to read! We’re gently moving away from “read anything” to “read a chapter book.”

Please remember Fridays are our Library Day. If students wish to check books out, they’ll need their library cards.



◼︎ Of Megaquakes & Tsunami

Why wasn’t the July 2025 tsunami bigger? After all, the quake that produced it reached 8.8 on the Richter Scale.

In 3 pairs and 1 trio, 5G dived into this question. If you’re curious to learn about tectonic plate subduction, how fast tsunami waves travel in the open ocean, and the reasons why a megaquake might not produce a dangerous tidal wave, check out our text!



◼︎ Brain Break!

In some Scandinavian countries, law requires students get a 10-minute break every 45 minutes of (hard academic) class time.

Rest assured, 5G earned their Megaquake/Tsunami Brain Break on Monday!



Brains refreshed, students finished up their Megaquake/Tsunami studies and—we discussed what they’d learned!



◼︎ 5G continues to inspire —

— MICROSCOPE MANIA among visitors from other classes!



◼︎ Scavenger Hunt & Mo’ Microscope Mania!

Word seems to have spread about our Day 1 Scavenger Hunt.



This morning Tati sent volunteer scavenger hunters hunting!



And interest in our microscopes remains strong, visitors almost as inspired as 5G!


◼︎ Math: Multiplying Fractions


Some years ago now, Liping Ma, a researcher, noted that while Chinese elementary teachers could come up with practical examples of how you might conceive of multiplying fractions, US and European elementary teachers often could not.



If, like Dr. Cat, you grew learned math from such a teacher, you too might find it hard to explain what 1/3 x 2/3 means. You know the algorithm, but what does it mean to multiply one fraction by another?

  • How would you explain this to someone just learning about fractions?

  • What practical examples might you give?

  • Could you illustrate 1/3 x 2/3 so your student could see what you’re talking about?



5G students were challenged with:

  • Illustrating (a non-fraction) equation such as 3 x 4 — in four different ways (e.g., dots, arrays, width x length = area, number lines, etc.)

  • Illustrating 3 x 1/2 so we could see three halves being added together (e.g., three 1/2 pizzas = 1.5 pizzas)

  • Illustrating a half pizza divided into four equal parts (and making sense of 1/2 x 1/4 = 1/8 — each piece is 1/8 of a whole, only half of which we see!)



One of our best fraction multiplication models kicked off homework:



Imagine it’s Pumpkin Festival. Your family wants to set up a HUGE water slide.

You ask Mr. Skye and Mr. Reyn how much of Osco Field you can use.

Mr. Skye says, “You can’t go all the way along that back edge. You go about 3/4 of the way along.”

Mr. Reyn says, “And you can come about about 1/3 of the way along the other fence.”

A friend then asks you, “So how much of Osco Field can you use?”

She wants the answer as a fraction.

Your dad says, “Area is calculated by multiplying the length by the width.”

Your mom says, “The length is 3/4 of the way along the back fence.”

Your older brother says, “And our width is 1/3 along that other fence.”

Your older sister says, “So we multiply 3/4 by 1/3.”

And you say, “3/12 — or, if I reduce it — 1/4.”

Look at the diagram above.

See the 3/12 that is shaded green?

It’s 3/12 of the whole of Osco Field — even though we’re not concerned about the whole, just about the part we can set up the water slide on.


◼︎ Post-Lunch Cool Down

Our family-style lunches are often lively. With the green full of laughter and games soon thereafter, students have requested our afternoons of tough academic work begin… with a cool down.

A quick nap (supported by a wealth of research) and a period of D.E.A.R. (Drop Everything And Read) and…


• Lunch and the green are SO EXCITING!


… 5G is refreshed and ready to roll!


◼︎ Finishing Introduction to Ancient History in the Americas

Having learned about the Nor-che Chico (Caral-Supe) civilization of Peru and about Poverty Point, in what is now Louisiana, today we turned our attention to the Americas civilizations that followed.

We will be focusing on the following civilizations in more detail in the coming weeks:


• “OM A.I!” is our way of remembering these civilization in the order they appeared.



It was a pleasure for us to do a “Texts+” with 5G: first reading the comprehension questions and watching the video, then reading the text together and discussing/answering the questions.

You can learn a lot in 5G!



◼︎ Let There Be Light!

How it came to pass is hard to say, but the press of Microscope Mania resulted in the two “dark” microscopes finally getting plugged into a wall socket, having one one switch switched and two knobs turned, and revealing both ‘scopes worked!



◼︎ School Photos

Our day (really) started with school photos. Always fun!



◼︎ P.E.

Then it was off to P.E. with 6G.



◼︎ 1G-5G Book Buddies (Every Other Week)

5G students are wonderful models for 1G students; great readers too!



◼︎ 5G-6G Innovation & Robotics

Splitting into our two mixed-grade Innovation & Robotics teams, when in the 6G classroom with Ms. Kieburtz students began serious innovation research, while in 5G, student managed to get our big blue box of Sphero robots working!



◼︎ More Fraction Multiplication Mental Melt Down!


Fractions — especially multiplying and diving them — especially attempting to illustrate the multiplication and division of fractions with clear diagrams is not easy.

Even for adults.

While we — students and teachers alike — are fairly comfortable with the algorithms (i.e., how to manipulate numbers)—



— and with one way of illustrating the multiplication of fractions by whole numbers (we are calling this Method 1) —




— Method 2 had us stumped.

Even when we kinda sort understood it, the diagrams resulting from Method 2 did not seem to “lock it in.” We couldn’t SEE the answer, we resorted to the algorithm or Method 1 to SEE what we were doing.

As this conversation spilled over into other classes, 5G students got to see real Math Talk in action!

And— we may have stumbled on a way to SHOW the logic of Method 2!

All it took were four rectangular pizzas to be shared amongst 16 friends!



If you’re interested in having some math fun, check out Wednesday evening’s math homework!



◼︎ 5G Fills the Ranks of the “Thursday Morning Chapel Singers”!

All nine 5G students added their voices to the “Thursday Morning Chapel Singers,” for all three chapesl (PreK & K; 1G, 2G & 3G; 4G, 5G to 6G).


• 3G & 4G singers joined in too!

• Monteiro Chapel

• Two angels


◼︎ “We need a break!”

After 1.5 hours of chapel, 5G students deserved a break! Hello makai playground!



◼︎ The Rest of the Day

A busy day ensued: reading chapters 19 & 20 in Holes, a 10-minute nap, Extreme Writing, and a host of assessments!


• Extreme Writing: Many new PBs (personal bests) today!


5G finished up the day with Rev. Jenn (Religion).




◼︎ YMCA, Wordly Wise & Fractions Activity

The day began with a rendition of YMCA —



— Wordly Wise (our vocabulary-building text) —



— and a fun fraction-problem-creation challenge. (No photos, sorry!)

◼︎ Then back to Camp Green Lake!

Determined to get through our stack of class novels for the year, we kept digging Holes!

Be sure to get an update on what’s up with Stanley and his campmates.



◼︎ Friday is 5G’s Library Day

If any class likes books and reading, it’s this one!



And we solved the mystery of the new, blue cards at the library!

  • Red card are still fine!

  • (Green cards from 50 years ago also still fine!)

  • New cards are blue cards, and you can get one if you want

  • Should you get a new, blue card, you will have a new Library ID number

◼︎ Our Now “Traditional” Nap + DEAR

5G continues to enjoy 10 minutes of genuine downtime, followed by a period of quiet, personal reading.

As we have some budding writers in our midst, in addition to D.E.A.R. (“Drop Everything And Read”) we now have D.E.W. (“Drop Everything — Write!”)!



◼︎ History: First Peoples — Australia

After the success of the PBS special “First Peoples — The Americas,” 5G students asked for “more.” So today we learned how the first peoples of Australia migrated there over 40,000 years ago!



◼︎ And a Brain Break to End the Week!

5G worked hard not only today, but all week.

While Ava and London took down and folded the school flags — a dysfunctional carabiner is making this a long process — Banana Tag was the name of the game on the green.

It brings such joy to see young people running, playing, laughing, rolling — and not eyes stuck to a screen!




Be sure to read HNS’s weekly eBlast to keep up to date with the most accurate information about upcoming events!

We do our best to mirror the eBlast events in our calendar, and we add 5G-specific events. (Scroll down for future events! Hint: Look for the zoo!)

Coming up next week:

Monday, September 1:


• No school!


Friday, September 5:



Please note our daily schedule has been updated to reflect reality!

As always, this can be found on our INFO page.



August 22, 2025

Week ending 08.22.25

Week ending 08.22.25



• Math… and Science!


Our review of adding and subtracting fractions is going well, and 5G students feel ready for a test on this subject later in the week.

 

(As noted in the Parent Orientation, we do not grade while students are learning and/or reviewing subject areas: we want students to feel free to ask for help in areas they don’t understand. Testing comes after competency—even mastery—is achieved!)

 

Our review of graphing led to (a) observing patterns in the data and (b) generating hypotheses to explain the data. (A hypothesis is a fancy work for “guess.”)



Question: If our hypothesis for Hermione’s dip in performance is due to lack of sleep (or the casting of a spell, or trouble with the prompt), how do we go about proving or disproving our hypothesis?

 

Long discussions ensued. Test! Experiment!

 

But how to construct an experiment to prove/disprove each hypothesis. Do the experiments look the same, or different, for testing lack of sleep, spells and prompt difficulty?

 

While some scholars and historians believe the foundation of science is experimentation, others argue that science always begins with hypotheses. If we don’t have a question—a guess—about observed phenomena, what are we creating an experiment for? Also: All hypotheses are based on assumption! (More about that later!)



Students also feel ready for a graphing test, although they’d like us to provide the table of data!

 

• Student Council Elections

 

Our ballot grew and shrank, grew and shrank!

 

We’ll know Thursday who will “show up” to give their pitch re. why s/he would be a great 5G Student Council representative.

 

• Reading/Writing Grades

 

Students saw the Excel spreadsheet that incorporates the scoring rubric they co-created.

 

Students saw, too, how their scores translated into grades.



To a student, all were pleased with their first set of grades! (Lots of As and A+s!)

 

• Adding & Subtracting Fractions TEST


5G students have been great at sharing what they don’t know, aren’t sure of, don’t feel confident with and/or want to go over again.



Monday night’s Math homework is an IXL “quiz” to help students identify what in the Fraction Universe they aren’t yet sure of.


• Social Studies / History — Poverty Point

After learning about the Nor-che Chico (Caral Supe) civilization of Peru (more than 4,500 years ago), today we dived into the history and archeology of colossal mounds constructed at Poverty Point (built about 3,800 years ago).



If, like Dr. Cat and Ms. Cunningham, you too have been unaware of what North American hunter gatherers were capable of at about the same time as the Egyptian middle kingdom, you can learn about Poverty Point here.

• Naptime!

And what would 5G be without naptime?



A nap was requested by 5G! they may have heard 6G wants naps too!

Must be the exhaustion of fast-growing bodies and brains!



• Extreme Writing


In our 10-minutes of start-the-day Extreme Writing, 5G continues to challenge itself to write more words in the time set.



The class has decided that when we all hit our 10-minute ceiling, we’ll extend the Extreme Writing time to 15 minutes!

• Holes – Chapter 10

 5G learned that they could read a chapter (with Ms. Cunningham) and discuss the answers rather than write about them! Joy all ‘round!

• Adding & Subtracting Fractions Review

 Last night’s Math Quiz helped identify our adding and subtracting fractions learning edges!



In our two small math groups we tackled converting improper fractions and mixed numbers, finding least common denominators, and writing fractions in lowest terms.

 Many math “light bulbs” went off!

• Oceanography


After a 10-minute nap, 5G dived into Oceanography (har, har). In two pair and one threesome, students took a good look at the oceanography books available in the classroom, then wrote answers to five “what might oceanography be?” questions.



This early “research” will put 5G in good stead for working with 6G on our upcoming Innovation-&-Coding Projects, which start on Wednesday and Thursday.

 

• PreK Break with Photos!


Brain Breaks on the makai playground have revealed that 5G is quite taken with PreK— and visa versa.

 Today, Ms. Eveland shared a few photographic surprises!



With a little DeNoise, color-correction & scratch-removal magic—PreK Dean, Ava, Tai, Theo & Nicson shine again as PreK’ers! (And gosh darn cute too!)

 

 • Microscope Fever


5G is intrigued by the 3 microscopes (and many microscope slides) we have in the classroom. Students have managed to get one of the microscopes — the only “non-electric” one – working.

 Given the fragility of microscopes and the many glass slides, a Microscope Mini-Lesson was in order!



Back in the (high school) day, Dr. Cat wanted to be a Biologist. He has many happy Microscope Memories — and looks forward to introducing the Wonders of the Microscopic World to 5G!

 

• Homework Test Prep!


Homework Tuesday night focused on preparing for our “Adding 7 Subtracting Fractions” and “Vocabulary” tests!



Students requested a Kahoot! — and got one!



• Microscope Mania!


The 5G microscopes are attracting attention!



We need to get our other two microscopes up and peering into the microscopic world!

• Fractions Review / Test Prep


Our Fractions Review (adding and subtracting) continues, with more ah-ha lightbulbs going off!

From our Parent Orientation:




Our Adding/Subtracting Fractions Test will be on Friday. For Homework Wednesday night, 5G students were able to target their fractions learning edges, with many choices re. what to tackle.For example, those still finding LCD (Lowest Common Denominator) difficult, a review of factors was an option. For those who feel pretty good about where they are, an option to “continue reviewing” was available. For those who feel they’ve nailed it, 6G-level (intro) fractions was on offer!

Note: Knowing your learning edges and making decision about your own learning is important students in 5G and for the rest of their educational careers.

 

• Spelling Pre-Test

 

There’s nothing like a pre-test to focus the mind!

Our Kahoot! identified 25 words 5G students want to use — they were all found in sentences students chose to use — but find challenging. Today they took a pre-test to identify those words that were still on their learning edges.



Students can study their words tonight. Tomorrow, Thursday, is the test!

• Innovation & Robotics with 6G

Wednesday afternoon 5G & 6G kicked off their joint “Innovation & Robotics” initiative!

With two teams, each comprised of 5G & 6G students, a little team building was the name of the game!

See the video here!

Returning to the classroom, 5G students signed onto the “Innovation & Robotics” Google Classroom set up by Ms. Kieburtz to coordinate our 2-class efforts!




• Thursday Morning Chapel Singers

The “5G Singers” has expanded to the “Thursday Morning Chapel Singers”!



This morning five 4G students joined us. Next week we’ll have new 3G singers too!

With “Peace Like a River” and “Father Abraham” they rocked the three chapels!

• Meanwhile… Hidden Treasure

Those 5G students who chose not to serenade PreK & K, and then 1G, 2G & 3G, “The Parable of Hidden Treasure” awaited them!



Dr. Cat remembers his Religion classes in the UK.

 Great Britain had a state religion — the Anglican (Episcopalian) tradition, thanks to Henry VIII — and so there was no separation between state and religion!

 So, in school, Religion was an academic subject!

 It’s good to know the core stories!

 

• Our First Spelling Test!

 

After Chapel / World Religion — and the first Fire Drill of the year — 5G dived into their first spelling test — and did great!

• 5G & 6G Religion


5G joined 6G for Religion with Rev. Jenn this afternoon — and so enjoyed it they asked to do it again next week!



• Innovation & Robotics


5G continued collaborating with 6G as everyone transitioned from Religion to Innovation & Robotics!

 We split into our two mixed-grade working groups, with both working groups (a) beginning their innovation research and (b) beginning to get a handle on both the Lego robots as well as the “sphere”!



5G & 6G look forward to finding real-world problems, innovating possible solutions, and programming our Lego and Sphere robots to prototype those solutions.

 

• 5G Student Council Elections


The Big Day arrived!

 With three students running for two open slots, the speeches were animated, articulate, detailed and inspiring.




Speech Tournament anyone? Toastmasters?

• Reading/Writing Homework: The Atom


As 5G students were curious about atoms — and what the components of atoms might be — tonight’s Reading/Writing homework is about… atoms!



 And may 5G never see atoms — as most of us have — as little solar systems, with electrons orbiting the nucleus.

 Today we see electrons as moving in a cloud, and within clouds of specific shapes (not unlike balloon animals!)



• Student Council Election Results: 5G


The 5G Student Council members this year will be: Avatar & London.



• Math Test! OMG!


Today was the Big Day!



Students worked hard at their first Big Math Test!

 It’s worth remembering, 5G student asked to review fractions!  : )

 

 • Family-Style Lunch

 

Today 6G chose not to join us.



So, the girls sat at one table, the boys at another!

• Library

 

Our first trip to the library was a roaring success!



Nicson and Koa discovered nanobots, and how they might be used one day to target viruses and cancer cells in the human body.

 

• Naptime!

Believe it or not, a 10-minute “nap” is very popular in 5G!



With some students actually falling asleep, and others waking up with “blurry eyes,” we are entertaining requests for 15 minute naps!  : )

 

• Birthday Celebration

And today we celebrated our first 5G birthday! Happy birthday to Dr. England!



With 5G “all sugared up” we moved operations to Osco Field.

5G students ran and ran and ran and ran and ran…

 —       we had never seen our students so active on Osco Field! —

 … and ran and ran and ran…



And finally exhausted themselves!

“Funny” true story:

Once upon a time when Dr. Cat had teens, on the night before we left as a family for a cruise, one of our boys began having “pain around my heart.” We called an ER nurse friend and said, “Do we need to be worried about this?”

The answer was, “Yes! Get him to an ER! Teens… pop pills sometimes, and don’t know what they’ve taken.”

So off we went to the ER.

And the long and the short of it? Yup. Our boy had been to his first lacrosse practice and, for the first time in his life, experienced upper body muscle strain!

And after our post-birthday celebration run-run-run on Osco Field?

Walking back from Osco Field, several students started talking about how hot they were.

“Why’s that?” Dr. Cat asked.

Well, it was the sun. The air. The lack of clouds. The summer.

“What have you just been doing?”

Hun?

“You’ve all been running and running and running and running — for about 20 minutes. What does all that running do to your body?”

No one was quite sure…

: )



Picture Day!

  • Wednesday, August 27.

  • As this is a PE day too, students will need to bring BOTH PE dress and school uniform!

  • And don’t forget hairbrushes!

Looking further ahead: