Friday, March 28, 2025

Q4W3

  On March 5, 1770, British soldiers fired upon a group of rowdy colonists, killing five and wounding others. “On that night, the foundation of American Independence was laid,” wrote John Adams. “Not the Battle of Lexington or Bunker Hill, not the surrender of Burgoyne or Cornwallis, were more important events in American history than the battle of King Street on the 5th of March, 1770.” -- National Constitution Center on the Boston Massacre




Stanza 12 of PRR is due this Thursday! 

Fourth Grade Homework Expectations

It is the scholar's responsibility to regularly communicate with their parents about any missing assignments. Students receive a daily notification of any late work. This will not happen in 5th grade.

For Quarters 2-4, all late assignments will incur a 10% deduction per day. After 10 school days, missing assignments will be recorded as a zero in the grade book.

NEWS:

Please check the lost and found for lost items, it is overflowing with sweaters and other items. Items will be donated on 4/2.

Testing News:

Dear Parents of 3rd – 5th Grade Students,

Please make note of our state mandated spring testing schedule for AZ Science (5th only) and AASA (Arizona’s Academic Standards Assessment) for 3rd, 4th, 5th grade. To learn more about these assessments, please refer to the following AZ Department of Education resources: · Why Statewide Testing Participation Matters to Students · A Parent Guide to Understanding Arizona's Statewide Assessments (Spanish)

Our testing window begins on Monday, March 24th and runs through April 17th. 

4th Grade Testing:

Practice Days: 3/25 and 3/28

Writing: Friday, April 4th

ELA/Math Part 1: Thursday, April 10th

ELA/Math Part 2: Tuesday, April 15th

Please avoid absences, late arrivals, and early departures on testing days. Please reschedule any appointments that conflict with your child’s testing schedule. Our testing schedule is carefully planned to maximize our computer resources and battery life as well as to support student achievement. State testing includes many restrictions that impact administration of the test. These rules include the inability to stop and resume testing beyond a single school day and the strict guidelines governing students leaving the testing environment, testing breaks, and well as test completion deadlines.

During testing, homework will be eliminated or significantly reduced on the evening prior to the AASA test administration. Parents can best support testing by ensuring that students arrive at school well-rested, on-time, fortified with a healthy protein breakfast and snack, and full of words of encouragement.

Furthermore, parents can additionally enable their scholars by visiting the AASA website and utilizing the sample test resources beforehand. The AASA practice tests mimic the real test portal and provide an advantage of familiarity of the technology and website functionality. Students will be briefly exposed to the sample tests in the classroom. However, any additional time spent exploring the sample tests at home helps to expose students to the format and functionality of the portal along with the types of questions that might be asked. Practicing builds confidence and allows students to display their knowledge without worrying about the computer-based testing format. Invite your student to click all the buttons to avoid that temptation that typically manifests on the day of testing. Please note that students will be using laptops with a trackpad (not a mouse) on campus and are asked to write a rough draft and show their work on scratch paper. 

To visit the sample tests, visit: https://home.testnav.com/. Select Arizona, scroll down, then click on Mic Check and Sample Tests. Select AASA TestNav Sample Tests and your child’s grade level. Select the sample tests provided for Math, Writing or ELA.

Thank you in advance for your support.

Lindsay Tremblay

Dean of Academics & Testing Coordinator

NEWS:

To visit the sample tests, visit: https://az.testnav.com/client/index.html/ Select Arizona, scroll down, then click on Mic Check and Sample Tests. Select AASA TestNav Sample Tests and your child’s grade level. Select the sample tests provided for Math, Writing or ELA 

Friday, April 4th is the AASA 5-Paragraph Essay writing test.  Please use this link to review scored essays of 4th graders in Arizona.


https://www.azed.gov/sites/default/files/2022/11/Annotated%20Writing%20Samples%20Guide_Grade%204.pdf



Dress Code Notes:

Only school logo sweaters are allowed to be worn in the building. Non-dress code sweaters/fleeces/jackets can be worn at recess only and must be in their backpack/cubby while in the building. Now that the weather is getting cooler, remember that long sleeve shirts worn underneath a polo can be white, maroon, navy, or black. Black or blue leggings are allowed under skirts, but they should reach the sock line (not capri length).CURRICULUM:

ELA:

     POETRY  "Paul Revere's Ride" stanza 12 is due this Thursday, April 3rd.  This poem spans 13 weeks (into Q4) and culminates in a grade-wide reciting of the poem in entirety for the parents. 

This Poem is a behemoth of a memorization task for scholars.  It should be taken seriously and can be enjoyable to accomplish such a task.  In Fourth Grade, we do not have any "at-home" projects per se. Consider the memorization and recitation of this work a 13 week-long project endeavor.  It can even become a family practice to memorize the weekly stanza. 

Helpful Practices for Memorization:

-Listen to the poem in it's entirety, daily

-Scholars should write out the stanza memorization for the week (hang it on the bathroom mirror)

-Illustrate or act out the stanza

-Look up unfamiliar words or phrases to understand the meaning

-Re-write that section in your own words (modern language)

-Perform a word while another person says every other word until scholar can say it independently

-Practice reciting in the mirror

-Make up body or hand motions to certain lines and phraes

-Write the stanza out on a whiteboard and erase a word or phrase

-Tell yourself everyday, "I can memorize this, and so did the Fourth Graders before me!"

   LITERATURE   We will begin reading Chapters 4-6 of "Carry On, Mr. Bowditch" in W3.

  In the COMPOSITION program for the week we will finish writing and submit an intro and body paragraph for articles on Tide Tracking for a grade. Then we will write a graded summary about the Bride of Robin Hood. On Friday, scholars will spend the majority of the day writing the 5-Paragraph Essay for the AASA test.  If they are absent, they will miss content to do a make-up test, so please ensure they are present for testing days.

 In GRAMMAR, we will utilize the time to work on elements of the 5-Paragraph essay as well as AASA preparation. We will resume in our WOL books after the AASA testing period.

 In LATIN AND GREEK ROOTS we have 3 roots this week, the test is Thursday, April 3rd:

manus (n) – hand (L) 

 man u al (n) handbook, operated by the hands, of or relating to hard physical work 

man i cure (n) a treatment for the care of the hands and fingernails 

ma neu ver (v) to handily or skillfully go around something 

man ag er (n) a person who is in charge of someone or something; one who handles employees 

ma nip u late (v) to skillfully operate by hand 

 

caput/capitis (n) head (L) 

 cap i tal (n) the head city of a country or state 

cap tain (n) head of a group of soldiers 

ca pit u late (v) to give up; to cease resisting  

cap i tal ize (v) to write with a beginning capital letter; to gain by turning something into an advantage 

 

digitus (n) finger, toe, inch (L) 

 dig it (n) finger, numerals from 0 to 9, unit of measure the width of a finger (3/4 of an inch) 

dig i tal (adj) data in the form of numerical digits 

pres ti dig i ta tion (n) (praesto – at hand, prompt) – a fast-fingered or sleight-of-hand performance of magic  

 

Math:

In Math, we will continue the final chapter of our texts, chapter 10.  Our focus is on time conversions and solving word problems involving measurement. We have quizzes on converting customary units and also a quiz knowing all standard units of conversion before W4's Chapter Test. The blue book will also be collected at this time.  Corrections in the blue book should be made before this time.

  This is a challenging unit for many scholars and at-home study of notes and supplementary aids may be necessary.  Please look to the graded Open Note Classwork Quizzes to help dictate the amount of help your scholar may need.

Khan Academy Elapsed Time Unit 3rd Grade

Khan Academy Time Unit 4th Grade

Khan Academy Measurement Unit Lessons

History:

In History in W3 we read the textbook chapters 8 and 9 in class.   In Q4, scholars will take a deeper look at the "Big Question" at the beginning of each chapter.  They will create notecards for each chapter with the "BQ" and notes with the section headings.  This is to help prepare scholars for the nightly "BQ" homework assignments in Fifth Grade. 

Scholars will have a mini "Comprehension Check" on Thursday in which they will be able to use their 9 BQ cards to aide them.

W3

Boston Massacre- Story of Us

Crispus Attucks and Boston Massacre

Committees of Correspondence

W2

Stamp Act

Proclamation of 1763

Townshend Acts

Prelude to Revolution


W1

13 Colonies Song

The 13 Colonies

The Original 13 Colonies for Kids

The Founding of the 13 Colonies

The French and Indian War Explained

Science:

 Scholars will continue to look at the structures of the heart, blood and blood vessels.

W3

Capillaries in the Lungs

What are Capillaries

Capillary Exchange

W2

Human Heart for Kids

W1

The Heart and Circulatory System

Heart 101

Remember, the blog is updated weekly. Be sure to come back frequently to see any upcoming events or changes in fourth grade.