February 6th - 10th

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We had a busy but fun Catholic Schools Week! My favorite was the Jessie White Tumblers! The fifth graders will be starting Chapter 16 on Perimeter and Area. They will need to bring graph paper next week.

The sixth graders will be reading the story "The Chimpanzees I Love". They will be having their Spelling test on Wed. and Reading test on Friday. We are back to our weekly schedules!!! They did a great job on their Cereal Box Book reports and commercials. Accelerated Reading was due today. Their next Accelerated Reading tests are due March 2nd. Please encourage your child not to wait until the LAST week! They have a Historical Fiction Book report due on Feb. 2nd. It needs to be done on note cards and they were given specific directions to follow.
\Thanks for all that you do! Enjoy the weekend!

January 23rd-27th

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I hope everyone has looked over their progress reports. We are half way through the second trimester so there is plenty of time for improvement if needed. The fifth graders will have their Chapter 7 Division Test on Tuesday and will move onto graphing. They all like to graph! Please look over their Math Homework assignment that will be returned on Monday. They were instructed to complete each question with 2 equations. It is important for your child to be able to complete many word problems this way. Standardized testing requires many of these questions to be answered in this format.
The sixth graders will be having their Unit 3 Reading Test on Tuesday and Wednesday. They will be allowed sufficient time to complete the test. I have discovered that many are not completing their essay questions for their weekly reading tests. They are waiting for me to give the answers. I will now check that their essays are complete on Tuesday so that Thursday we will be able to have a group discussion. I am looking forward to Monday when their Cereal Box Book Reports are due! This class is VERY creative!!!

Happy Shoveling!

January 16th - 20th

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Hope everyone is enjoying their three day weekend! The sixth graders will be reading a short play about a woman named Elizabeth Blackwell who became a doctor despite many obstacles in her life. They will have their spelling test on Thursday and comprehension test on Friday. Hopefully everyone has started their cereal box book reports. We have many artistic/creative sixth graders!!! Just a reminder that this project is due Monday, January 23rd. They will be on display for all to see at our Open House on Sunday, 29th.
The fifth graders will begin dividing decimals this week and their Math project is due this Wednesday, Jan. 18th. These projects will also be on display at the Open House. There will be a Math quiz on Thursday, 19th.

Enjoy your weekend!

January 9th - 13th

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Welcome Back! Happy New Year 2012!

The sixth graders have received information on how to complete the Cereal Box Fiction Book Report. They are due Monday, Jan. 23rd. Their 2 Accelerated Book reports are due Fri. Jan. 3rd. Please remind your child not to wait until the last day. The library is quite busy at the end of the month. They will read the story "Juan Verdates" next week. The spelling test will be on Wed. Jan. 11th and the test will be on Fri. Jan. 13th.

The fifth graders will be busy working on division. They will be given a Math project on Monday and it will be due on Wed. Jan. 18th. This project will be graded on neatness and creativity using geometric figures. They may not use markers! I am encouraging them to use their rulers to make straight lines. Have your child review Chapter 13 to refresh geometric shapes. On Tuesday there will be a Math quiz on division.

Enjoy our fabulous weather!!!

December 19th - January 6th

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We have finished our last full week of school for the year 2011! The kids had a great time celebrating Polar Express. For some reason we all like coming to school in our jammies! We enjoyed the band concert on Tuesday and today we had the pleasure of listening to the Mother McAuley choir. Their performance was breathtaking! I would like to wish all of you a wonderful and blessed holiday and I am looking forward to an exciting New Year!

Reminder to Sixth Graders: The December Accelerated Reading Tests are due January 6th. Start reading your fiction book for the book report due on January 23rd. Save those cereal boxes and start gathering ideas for your cereal box book report!

December 12th -16th

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The spirit of Christmas is approaching!!! We can feel the magic in the halls and in the classrooms!! The fifth graders are doing great with decimal multiplication and will have a quiz on Monday. They will have the Chapter 5 test on Tuesday. We then begin division of whole numbers and decimals. The sixth graders enjoyed the story "Hatchet". Their spelling test will be on Wednesday and Friday will be their comprehension test on the story "When Marian Sang". This story is an autobiography of an African American girl who made her debut with the Metropolitan Opera. It is noted in their book "that in order to address the era in which this story took place; the author has, with the greatest respect, stayed true to the references to African Americans as colored or Negro. Marian Anderson referred to herself and others of her race in this manner in the entirety of her autobiography". I am sure the children will enjoy the story. Keep warm and happy shopping to those who have not started yet!!!

December 5th - 9th

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This past week the sixth graders completed their second Reading Unit test and the fifth graders were busy multiplying decimals. The highlight of the week was going to Navy Pier and seeing Happy Feet Two. I was so proud of their behavior!!! The fifth graders will continue to multiply decimals and will be given a homework assignment on Monday which will be graded. They will also have a Math Quiz on Friday. The sixth graders will read the story "Hatchet". Their Spelling test will be on Wednesday and their reading test on Friday. Please go over their Unit Reading Test. The grammar and vocabulary skills were reviewed together in their reading workbooks. Many of the questions were based on alphabetical order and knowing which sentence was grammatically correct. These skills are also reinforced in their English classes. Their Christmas book report may also count as one of their Accelerated Tests.

Wednesday is Special Lunch (McDonalds) and Thursday the entire school will have mass at 10:00. Enjoy your week!

November 21st- 25th

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We have just finished our first week into the 2nd Trimester with a FRESH START!! Next week will be one of our shortest weeks of the school year. The sixth graders will be having their Unit 2 Reading test on Monday, Nov.28th. Although they can not study for the comprehension part of this test I suggest that they look over some of the skills taught in their Reading workbook. They did a great job on their mystery book reports. The fifth graders have begun to multiply decimals. They know how to multiply but the placement of that DECIMAL POINT sure is hard to grasp!! We will be working very hard after Thanksgiving! I am looking forward to parent teacher conferences. I came across the following (LONG) article but I thought you might enjoy it.
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

Six Things We Can Learn from the Pilgrims
A THANKSGIVING MESSAGE FROM BILLY GRAHAM
November 18, 2011 - It is appropriate at this season that we honor "a few stout and earnest" Englishmen--the Pilgrims--who left their native land in search of freedom to worship God.

The Mayflower's voyage to the new world was a "survival test" on a huge scale. The passengers had sold their possessions and had to work for years to pay for their passage. The ship had no heat or plumbing. Storms raged, and a main beam cracked in mid-ocean.

But after more than two months on the Atlantic Ocean, this band of 102 people arrived before Christmas, 1620. William Bradford wrote in his journal, "Being thus arrived at a good harbor, and brought safely to land, they fell on their knees and blessed the God of heaven who had brought them over the vast and furious ocean and delivered them from all the perils and miseries thereof." What a celebration that must have been!

But just after Christmas a serious sickness broke out, and in the next three months nearly half the Pilgrims died. Hunger and illness stalked them, but they never wavered in their purpose.

Today, if these Pilgrims could observe our troubled world with its disillusioned outlook, its rebelliousness and its erosion of traditional values, they would be not only dismayed but also shocked. However, since their time, certain things have not changed. There is still lust, greed, hatred and prejudice in the human heart. There is still persecution and war in the world.

With all of the world's churches and universities, we would do well to go back to the church and the school of early Plymouth to see what those pioneers can teach us.

(1.) Be Strong in Your Faith
First, the Pilgrims have left us an example of their deep, unwavering religious convictions. What were these convictions? They believed in Christ and in His Kingdom. They found fulfillment in Him. They had purpose in their lives. They had encountered the living Christ and they knew it. They feared neither monarch nor people, only God.

Because they belonged to God, they had a deep faith and confidence in themselves. They believed in their own dignity, were confident that their cause was just, and walked with an uprightness that only fearless and free people can display.

In our day agnosticism, anxiety, emptiness, meaninglessness, have gripped much of our world--and even the Church. People are broad but shallow. Our youth are desperately searching for purpose and meaning and fulfillment in their lives.

By contrast, these Pilgrim forebears stand as shining examples of people who were narrow but deep, certain of what they believed, unswerving in their loyalty, and passionately dedicated to God whom they trusted and for whom they willingly would have died. I sincerely believe that a return to biblical faith and conviction would have a great impact at this hour.

(2.) Practice Discipline
Second, the Pilgrims left us an example of disciplined living. They were Puritans who were ready to order everything--personal life, worship, the church, business affairs, political views, and even recreation--according to the commandments of God. The word "Puritan" itself in the contemporary mind identifies those who followed a strict and closely regulated life.

The ethic of self-mastery and spiritual discipline falls strangely on the ears of today's generation. What a contrast between the conduct of the Pilgrims and the permissiveness and hedonism of today!

(3.) Enjoy Freedom Under the Law
Third, the Pilgrims have left us the example of freedom under law. The Mayflower Compact forged before the Pilgrims left the ship was the wedge that opened the door to a government controlled by the people, a government that has endured in the United States for centuries. Most historians agree that the Mayflower Compact was the forerunner of the Constitution of the United States.

This little band of people searched for an equitable manner of earning a living and for a way of survival. They tried living a communal lifestyle, but, according to Governor Bradford: "This communal system conceived by Plato was found to breed much confusion." When communal living failed, they assigned a parcel of land to every family; with individual enterprise, prosperity came to the colony.

In some parts of the world rebellious young people live, enjoying what they call "absolute freedom." They are free to take narcotics, free to experiment with sex, free to go unwashed, free to dress as they please and do what they like.

They remind me of a man in a hospital who had to be fed through a tube. Having tired of the tube with its discomfort, the man tore the tube from his body and declared that he was free. Free? He was free only to die, because he had removed himself from his hope of life.

The freedom exercised by the Pilgrims didn't degenerate into license. Theirs was a liberty under law. The lawbreakers, malcontents, dissidents and criminals of our day would have been rejected by the Pilgrims. To them freedom under the law meant judgment for the lawless.

(4.) Care about Others
Fourth, the Pilgrims left us an example of a people who had keen social concern. They believed that every person was made in the image of God, that each one was of infinite value and worth in the sight of God. They lived with Native Americans who had a different religion, a different skin color and a different culture.

In March of 1621 Chief Samoset visited the Pilgrims' village and signed a peace treaty that lasted for many years. It was a treaty with high social and ethical content, showing a deep concern for the social, political and spiritual needs of neighbors.

Though the Pilgrims knew that they were citizens of another world, they sought to improve the world they were passing through. The Pilgrims made their new world better, not by tearing down the old, but by constructive toil and fair dealings with their neighbors.

(5.) Share Your Faith
Fifth, the Pilgrims were evangelists who set us an example in sharing their spiritual and material blessings with others. In the Mayflower Compact the Pilgrims committed themselves to the "advancement of the Christian faith."

The Pilgrims at Plymouth were followed by the Puritans at Massachusetts Bay. Together they built churches and schools. In 1636 Harvard College was founded to train men for the ministry. By 1663 the first Bible was printed (the Algonquin Bible) for the Native Americans in their own tongue.

These settlers came to the new world not only to find freedom for themselves but also to tell others of their faith.

(6.) Dream Great Dreams
For "where there is no vision, the people perish," says the Bible. The Pilgrims dreamed great dreams. They dreamed of a haven for themselves and for their children. They dreamed of religious freedom. They dreamed of a world where God would rule the hearts of men.

They lived and died with these hopes. The Pilgrims' strength of spirit was forged by a personal faith in Christ, by tough discipline and by regular habits of devotion.

Today it seems that many of us have neither vision nor hope. But if we so chose, we too could become like the Pilgrims. We could regain hope. We could recover the spiritual and the moral strength that we have lost.

But we would have to be willing to take up the same cross of Christ that they bore. We would have to put our faith in the same Christ that they did. We would have to make the same kind of lifetime commitments that they made. We would have to discipline ourselves as they did.

And, like the Pilgrims, we need to dream great dreams, embrace great principles, renew our hope, and above all, believe in the Christ who alone can give total meaning and an ultimate goal to our lives: "For in him we live, and move, and have our being."

November 14th -18th

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We have officially ended the first trimester! This week has been busy but full of excitement! Yesterday our floor was buzzing with so much enthusiasm for the pep rally!!!! Today we had a prayer service in remembrance of all the veterans.
Next week the fifth graders will be working on multiplication of whole numbers and decimals. The sixth graders will have their Spelling test on Wednesday and their Reading test on Friday. They will be reading "Egypt: Land of the Pharaohs." Their mystery book reports were due today. Just a reminder that Accelerated Reading is due on Nov. 30th. The library gets very busy at the end of the month so do not wait until the last day!
Go Falcons!!!! Good Luck!!!!

November 7th - 11th

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Hope everyone is enjoying this beautiful weather. The end of the first trimester is Friday, 11th. I cannot believe that it is over already! The fifth graders did not have their test today. It will be rescheduled for Tuesday, 8th. We will begin Chapter 5 on Multiplication of whole numbers and decimals on Wednesday, 9th. Now is a good time to review your multiplication facts!!! The sixth graders enjoyed going back into the 1800's this week. I believe that many are grateful that they were not born back then. What would they do without electricity? No video's, television, cell phones, or Pappy's!!! They will be reading the story "Goodbye to the Moon". Their Spelling test is Wednesday and their Reading comprehension test will be Friday. Here's to a great FINAL week of the FIRST TRIMESTER!!!!!