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FOURTH GRADE CURRICULUM NIGHT 2014 - 2015 Teachers Mrs. Meade Mr. Tinker Miss O’Connor Miss Nolan.

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Presentation on theme: "FOURTH GRADE CURRICULUM NIGHT 2014 - 2015 Teachers Mrs. Meade Mr. Tinker Miss O’Connor Miss Nolan."— Presentation transcript:

1 FOURTH GRADE CURRICULUM NIGHT 2014 - 2015 Teachers Mrs. Meade Mr. Tinker Miss O’Connor Miss Nolan

2 ELA & Reading Teaching and learning implemented through the district wide Common Core Curriculum Maps Sixteen power standards incorporating reading, writing and speaking, listening and language Supporting standards included throughout the Five ELA units

3 ELA: Reading, Speaking, Listening and Writing ● Power standards and supporting standards enable learners to meet the rigor of the MA Curriculum Frameworks ● — Five Curriculum Maps with 16 overarching power standards and many supporting standards in each unit to teach to mastery ● — Examples: Unit 1 : 7-8 weeks ● — Power Standard: Students will proficiently read and comprehend literature including stories, drama and poetry

4 Supporting Standards ● — Unit 1 Examples( there are 14 in all) ● —Describe in depth the setting drawing on specific details in the text(RL3) ● —Refer to details and examples in the text when explaining what the text says explicitly and when drawing inferences from the text(RL1& RI 1)

5 Writing Power Standards: ●—Students will produce clear and coherent writing in which the development and organization are appropriate to task, purpose, and audience. ●—Opinion pieces: write, develop, and support opinion pieces on topics or texts. ●—Informative/Explanatory pieces: write, develop, and clearly explain topic or idea to inform the reader. ●—Narrative piece: write narratives to develop real or imagined experiences using effective technique, descriptive details, and clear event sequences. ●—Students will report on a topic or text, tell a story, or recount an experience in an organized manner, using appropriate facts and relevant, descriptive details to support main ideas or themes; speak clearly at an understandable pace.

6 Common Writing Assessments —Routine Writing: Builds content knowledge and provide opportunities for reflection on a specific aspect of a text/texts. Routine written responses to such text-dependent questions allows students to build sophisticated understandings of vocabulary, text structure and content and to develop skills in analysis. —Analysis Writing: Should put a premium on using evidence, as well as on crafting works that display some logical integration and coherence. These responses can vary in length based on questions asked and performed, from answering brief questions to crafting longer responses, allowing teachers to assess students’ ability to paraphrase, infer, and ultimately integrate the ideas they have gleaned for what they have read. —Narrative Writing: Offers students opportunities to express personal ideas and experiences; craft their own stories and descriptions; and deepen their understandings of literary concepts, structures, and genres (e.g. short stories, anecdotes, poetry, drama) through purposeful initiation.

7 Writing Across the Curriculum Project Read: Framing Your Thoughts The Written Expression curriculum focuses on the art of sentence and paragraph development, using multisensory activities and sequential instruction to develop the basic skills of writing. 1. Direct instruction of the concepts and skills of language 2. Presentation of concepts and skills in their dependent order, from simplest to most complex 3. Multisensory strategies and materials created specifically for each concept and skill

8 Writing Across the Curriculum John —Collins Writing Program as a resourceCollins Writing Program —TYPE I: WRITING GETS IDEAS ON PAPER TYPE II: RESPOND CORRECTLY TYPE III: STUDENT EDIT FOR FOCUS CORRECTION AREAS —TYPE IV: EDIT FOR FOCUS CORRECTION AREAS (Student and adult collaboration: not co-authoring) —TYPE V: PUBLISH/Portfolio Work

9 Fourth Grade Word Study ● Syllabication (syllable types) ● Prefixes/suffixes ● Use combined knowledge of all letter/sound correspondences, syllable types, syllable patterns, and morphology to accurately read unfamiliar multi- syllabic words in and out of context.

10 Math, The Common Core and Envision Students will... Mathematics Power Standards: Unit 1 (What they will do) ●Students will understand and apply knowledge of place value to 1,000,000. ●Students will use place value understanding and properties of operations to perform multi-digit arithmetic. ●Students will understand factors and multiples to generate and analyze patterns. Mathematical Practices: Unit 1 (“How they will do it) 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. 2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively. 3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. 4. Model with mathematics. 5. Use appropriate tools strategically. 6. Attend to precision. 7. Look for and make use of structure. 8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning.

11 Math, The Common Core and ENVISION ● Make Sense of problem solving and Persevere ● Aligned with the Common Core ● Balanced Instruction ● Eight Standards for Mathematical Practice ● Home/School Connection ● Appropriate Use of Technology ● Some assignments can be printed at home

12 Math Fluency 4.NBT.4 Students fluently add and subtract multi-digit whole numbers using the standard algorithm. As defined by the Common Core, fluency in mathematics means quickly and accurately. FALL (NOVEMBER) o 5 mixed problems add/subtract whole numbers within 1000. “Quickly” is defined as within 25 - 30 minutes and includes checks WINTER (FEBRUARY) o 5 mixed problems add/subtract within 10,000. “Quickly” is defined as within 25 - 30 minutes and includes checks SPRING (APRIL) o 5 mixed problems add/subtract within 100,000. “Quickly” is defined as within 25 - 30 minutes and includes checks END OF YEAR (JUNE) o 5 mixed problems add/subtract within 1,000,000. “Quickly” is defined as within 25 - 30 minutes and includes checks

13 Xtra Math ● Free web-based math fact fluency program that helps students master addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division facts ● Fluency is essential for success with higher level math problems ● Can be used in the classroom and at home ● Parents and teachers regularly receive student progress reports in e-mail ● Students simply need a parent e-mail address and login code (given by teacher) and it’s free!

14 Science StrandsCurriculum Structure Concepts and Skills LifeOverarching Guiding questions Identifying and conceptualizing key vocabulary EarthEssential questionsTargeting skills to process knowledge PhysicalDirected InquiryExperiments and discoveries TechnologyStudy GuidesApplying knowledge through written language

15 Science Topics of Study Life science Classification of plants Energy from plants Adaptations and reproduction of plants Earth Science Water cycle and weather Physical Science Properties of Matter Heat Electricity and Magnetism Sound and Light Simple Machines

16 Social Studies Five Themes of Geography 1. Movement 2. Regions 3. Human / Environment Interaction 4. Location 5. Place ●Geography ● Map reading and interpretation ● Regions of the United States ● Fifty States and Capitals ● Landmarks, Landforms, Natural Resources etc.

17 Social Studies Immigration and Citizenship ● Primary Sources ● Contributions from other cultures to our own ●Canada and Mexico ●Based around the Five Themes ●Ancient Civilization ● China

18 Responsive Classroom Guiding Principles: The social curriculum is as important as the academic curriculum. How children learn is as important as what they learn: process and content go hand in hand. Knowing the children we teach individually, culturally and developmentally is as important as knowing the content we teach. Teaching Practices: -Morning Meeting -Rules & Logical Consequences -Classroom Organization -Guided Discovery -Academic Choice -Reaching out to Parents/Guardians -Give Me “5” -Hopes and Dreams -CARES

19 HOMEWORK/ AGENDA ● The District-Wide Homework Policy for the fourth grade is assigning 40 minutes of meaningful homework a night ● Homework is given to have students review skills and concepts taught throughout the day and instill a sense of responsibility, independence and time management ● It must be recorded in the daily agenda

20 Got Grit? Angela L. Duckworth describes grit as follows: “Grit is the tendency to sustain interest in and effort toward very long-term goals.” Drive & Passion Persevere: Sometimes it is uncomfortable. What does this look like in a classroom?

21 Thank you! Ms. Nolan Rm. 15 (First Floor) Mrs. Meade: Rm. 24 Mr. Tinker Rm. 25 Ms. O’Connor Rm. 26


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