Tuesday, April 7, 2015

March 2015




     



4th Graders have been celebrating National Women's History Month! We have been researching, reading and writing about amazing women like Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Marie Curie, Elizabeth Blackwell, Clara Barton, Florence Nightengale, Esther Morris, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Susie King Taylor, Fannie Farmer and more. In the technology lab students have been using Kidspiration to create digital chronological timelines and graphic webs about their famous females. In addition, we have reviewed the proper MLA citation for books, and where to locate the bibliographic information we need.






                                                                                                  
 
iFeliz primavera! Happy Spring! First graders are learning all about Pets! Can your child tell you how to say any pets’ names in Spanish? So far we have learned el perro (the dog), el gato (the cat), el pez (the fish), el hámster (the hamster), la tortuga (the turtle) and el conejo (the bunny)! We have played charades, where students say “Yo soy ______/I am _____” to act out and describe the pet… and we have shared our interests about them as we move around the classroom, using “Me encanta/I love, Me gusta/I like and No me gusta/I don’t like.” Another fun activity was a partner activity in which students had to tell their amigos how to color in the pets on their activity sheet (Example: El gato es rojo/The cat is red). This was a good review of colors, which students should feel comfortable with by now! Each class, first graders review the date, weather and share how they are feeling. We also count from 1-15 and stretch/move different body parts. Please be sure to ask your child







March is Youth Art Month!  We are celebrating this Youth Art Month with a students' art exhibition at the Mendham Public Library.  The art exhibition is held during the month of March until the middle of April.  Due to the limited space, the exhibition holds a sampling of students' artworks, but they are all inspirational and beautiful.  The following students' artworks are displayed: Abby Acevedo, Kristin Ackerman, Sophia Applebaum, Zoya Ayub, Sophia Babits, Kenny Barnacle, Tori Borchard, Ava Caulfield, Ellie Clark, Timmy Cocuzza, Max Dellaratta, Matthew Delvento, Cara Dolan, Charlotte Fourie, Anthony Greco, Sara Hackett, Mary Hall, Declan Higgins, Caitlin, Murphy, Saya Neff, Jeremiah Ng, Lizzie Parker, Skyler Pela, Alex Pyznar, Robert Raimondo, Ryan Raimondo, Raaghav Reddy, Marin Rizzo, PJ Rooney, Kaitl Rostiac, Catherine Rudd, Julia Schoenbrodt, Josh Simonsen, Joey Skuraton, Ally Sparno, Dasha Zubarev, James Zupa, and the entire 4th grade class.  Congratulations!


Kindergarteners have been recognizing and expressing the elements of  the long, cold winter by painting snowmen, cutting and pasting snow kids as well as making collages with such things as newspapers and cotton balls.  In doing this, our kindergarteners are recognizing and applying different materials to create art.  This month, we have been exploring printmaking and have started to make some spring prints.  March came in like a lion(hence, the mask), and will leave us with some beautiful spring prints.

The third graders have been learning how to play the recorder in music.  They can show you the proper way to hold the instrument and can play the pitches B, A, and G.  They have played some fun games on the SMART Board such as Bubble/Circle Game, What’s in the BAG, and St. Patrick’s Day Fun on the Recorder to solidify skills.  They learned the following songs: Queen B, Just A, Just G, Hot Cross Buns, and Frog in the Meadow.  They are developing the ability to read the pitches G A B on the treble clef music staff.  Learning how to read pitches on a music staff is like learning how to read and speak a foreign language.  It will take time and repetition.  We will get comfortable with BAG (or GAB) songs before we move on to E, which will require using fingers of both hands on the recorder.  Here are the three pitches third graders have learned so far:
                             


The weather is getting nicer and nicer.  The snow is starting to disappear.  The Hilltop “Gymsters” are ready to take what they have learned outside.  They can shoot hoops, jog, ride their bikes, go for speed walks, and even set the volleyball to each other in the driveway.

We just completed our unit on Animal Walks and some tag games.  Ask your son or daughter to show you what a seal, dog with a broken leg, or even the inchworm looks like. They are strengthening  their upper and lower bodies.   They also know the muscles they are using.  I bet they can name the muscles in the arms, try it, ask them.



Thursday, February 26, 2015

February 2015


                                                                                                       
 
Second graders are learning all about Familia y Mascotas (Family & Pets)! We have been doing this through games, songs, books, surveys and acting out. Students should feel comfortable naming their immediate family members and common pets in Spanish. We try to practice doing this in phrases, such as Yo tengo (I have) and Yo soy (I am). Please visit the Hilltop Spanish Grade 2 website for more practice as well. We have also been learning the Spanish alphabet! Can your child sing the ABCs to you? As part of our class routines, we sing the Monthly Macarena and do Head, Shoulders, Knees & Toes in Spanish. Ask your child to do this for you at home!



In the beginning half of the year, the first graders have been introduced to different types of pictures:  still life, landscape, portrait, and scene.  During the second trimester, they have been learning about different styles of art:  abstract, textile, indigenous folk art.  And of course, they have been experimenting these styles in their Picasso-esque portraits, Miro-like creatures, heart embroideries, koi nobori’s, and Aboriginal dot paintings.  In doing so, we are learning to appreciate and respect all kinds of art, whether or not we personally like the particular style.  





Since January, fourth graders learned to play and read new pitches on the recorder and treble clef staff: High C, High D, and Low D in addition to the pitches of G A B and E from the beginning of the year.  They have earned two more recorder karate belts - green and purple - for reading and playing songs from treble clef with these pitches: Good King Wenceslas or Seashell for green and Goodnight Ladies or Old MacDonald for purple.  To tie in with their Native America social studies unit, fourth graders learned what a powwow is and why the drum is an important part of it.  They watched three video segments of a traditional powwwow: Wacipi Powwow - Celebration of Life, Regalia and Dance, and Dancing is for Everyone.  While these video segments were from a powwow in the West, the Lenni-Lenape tribe also participates in powwows in the East.  The 2015 Lenni-Lenapi powwow is scheduled for June 14-15, 2015!  Powwows are an important event for Native Americans where they share and pass down their cultural and musical traditions.  Lastly, the fourth graders will experience a drum circle, which has some similarities to a powwow, in the next week. For a basic idea of what a drum circle is, check out this definition/description: Drum Circle







Kindergarteners have been busy in the library!  We have been reading and identifying BIOGRAPHY books, fiction books and reading Dewey call numbers! Ask your kindergartener to share our BIOGRAPHY CHANT with you. Coming Soon...CELEBRATE SEUSS! We will celebrate Dr. Seuss' life and literature through books, activities, and songs.









Physical Education: It sure has been an icy, snowy winter. With days off and delayed openings,the classes are continuing to work on their volleyball skills. They are all developing into some good Volleyball players.  The Big Beach ball will be coming out for the younger grades to use.  They will work together as a class  to keep it up as many times as they can.  Did your son or daughter come home all excited last week. We have been training for the 7 minute challenge and it went off last week with 90% of the Hilltop students grade 1st-4th making it without walking. They signed a chart which is hanging on the gym wall.   In April, I hope to do a ‘ Go For The Gold”.  This is a 10 min jog without walking.  If they walk after 8 mins, they get a Silver certificate, and if they do less than that they will receive a bronze certificate.  Everyone tries their best.
Jump rope for Heart will be done in school with the 3rd graders on February 13th.  They are really looking forward to this event.  Last year we raised over 5,500.00 Hope Spring arrives soon.  Mrs. Morales

Wednesday, January 28, 2015


                                                                                                        
 



First Graders have been busy in the library!  We have been reading and identifying NONFICTION books, and will soon begin our BIOGRAPHY unit!  In the technology lab students have been using our new PEBBLEGO online database.  Students are becoming experts at logging in, and locating and recording information. They are now on to PowerPoint to share their research through a digital presentation.










 Second grade art program focuses on learning and utilizing the elements of art:  color, line, shape, texture and space.  January’s focus has been COLOR.  The students are not only learning about primary and secondary colors, but also use those colors to create tertiary colors.  They have been introduced to complementary and analogous colors as well as creating tints and shades.  They can also group warm, cool, and neutral colors.  Some of these concepts have been used and displayed in their current project: Pine Tree Paintings:  Winter Landscape.     





Kindergarten students are developing their sense of and ability to recognize and perform steady beat accurately.  They are working combining expressive qualities (tempo: fast/slow, dynamics: loud/quiet, melody: higher pitches/lower pitches) when singing short songs. They are also listening to music so that they can analyze what instruments are playing, who is singing (voice quality), and explain/describe how we know what instruments are playing and/or who is singing.




The gym is being filled with balls being volleyed all over the place. Our unit this month is Volleyball.  The fourth graders are improving on their skills to get ready for the blue and gold volleyball game against teachers and students.  Skills being taught are Setting, Serving and bumping.  For the younger children, a big beach ball is used, as they try to keep it up for as many times as they can.  This is a sport that not many children have an opportunity to play because their are no organized town teams.  We have some really good volleyball players. I have seen alot of growth in them from 1st grade to 4th.
Third grade students just finished up their first unit in Spanish class, “Yo Soy Especial/I am Special.” They did a fabuloso job on their class presentations and just finished reflecting on what they learned. They will be bringing home a “Stamp Sheet” next week… please ask your child to share it with you and see if they can show off their Spanish! They might be able to tell you their birthday, adjectives to describe themselves or even describe their hair and eyes to you! We will be starting our second unit, “Mi Vida Loca/My Crazy Life,” next week. Students will learn to tell time as well as practice phrases and sentences in Spanish to speak about their daily schedule, classes, activities and people in their lives.  

Wednesday, January 14, 2015




In this first marking period, the first graders reviewed the names of and played a wide variety of classroom percussion instruments: rhythm sticks, hand drums, lollipop drums, triangles, glockenspiels, woodblocks, guiros, xylophones, maracas, boomwhackers, tambourines, and rain sticks. Ask them about the unusual instruments - whistle tubes and thunder tubes  - that we used in The Weather Song.  They used  the instruments listed above to highlight texts of poems (called soundscapes) and to accompany songs with a steady beat.  

First graders listened to and identified dynamics (levels of loudness) of short music excerpts with English and Italian terms (piano = quiet, mezzo-forte = medium loud, forte = loud).  They experienced  and verbally identified tempo (speed) of short music selections with English and Italian terms (adagio = slow; moderato = medium; allegro = fast).  

First graders can identify a series of pitches as “mostly high” (not loud) or “mostly low” (not quiet).  They can tell which pitch of 2 pitches is the higher (or lower) one.  We played this game to hone our pitch skills: Piggies High/Low Pitch Game.

They also sang quite a bit as we learned holiday and winter songs for our annual holiday concert on Friday, December 19, 2014.  Click on this link if you need the holiday concert information: Hilltop Holiday Concerts. Happy Holidays!  




OUR HILLTOPERS ARE WORKING HARD ON THEIR EYE-HAND COORDINATION. WE ARE ALL FOCUSING ON USING OUR FINGERTIPS TO DRIBBLE A BALL.  THE FOURTH GRADERS ARE PREPARING TO LEARN HOW TO PLAY AGAINST EACH OTHER IN A 3 ON 3 BASKETBALL GAME. THE YOUNGER GRADES ARE LEARNING HOW TO DRIBBLE, PASS AND EVEN SHOT AT DIFFERENT LEVEL BASKETS.
I ENCOURAGE THE CLASSES TO WORK ON STRETCHING THEIR BODIES INSIDE IF THE WEATHER IS TOO COLD OR RAINY OUT.  I HAVE TOLD THEM TO DO SIT UPS DURING A COMMERCIAL WHEN THEY ARE WATCHING TV. FOR A MOVIE, PICK OUT A WORD THAT EVERYTIME YOU HEAR IT,DO 10 SITUPS, OR EVEN PUSH UPS.
WE WILL BE READY FOR A LITTLE VOLLEYBALL WHEN WE GET BACK FROM WINTER BREAK

I WISH YOU ALL A HAPPY HOLIDAY FROM YOUR P.E. DEPT.












2nd Graders have begun their state research! We started off with the book How To Make An Apple Pie and See the World by Marjorie Priceman.  Then students used the USA Map to locate the state of their choice and their capital city.  Students then learned about the United States Census, and navigated to www.census.gov to locate their state's population.  We also have a better understanding of URLs ending in .com , .gov, and .edu.  Students also located and recorded information from the www.factmonster.com website, and will soon be creating digital presentations. 












As the first marking period comes to an end, the Hilltop students are bringing home their art folders.  Please keep the artworks at home, but sign and return the art folders.  We need it for more artworks to come.  Thank you for your support and happy holidays!

The third graders have been practicing and applying the principles of art:  contrast and emphasis, balance and unity, rhythm,pattern and movement.  This month, they have learned that 1) the visual rhythm is the repetition of lines, shapes and colors and 2) how to create a movement in a picture using the visual rhythm.  We have started by listening and identifying  “rhythm”(repetition of beats) in a piece of music and have correlated that concept to understanding what a “visual rhythm” is in an artwork.  By discussing and comparing Op Art artworks of Bridget Riley and the Fishing Boat prints of Hokusai, the third graders have shown me that they have understood what visual rhythm is.  We are currently creating a beautiful winter landscape using the birch trees to create the visual rhythm.  


Friday, November 21, 2014

November Clipart





Second grade musicians have been working on identifying, arranging, reading, and performing rhythm patterns with eighth notes, quarter notes, and quarter rests.  They can successfully recognize, read, and perform these rhythms in the many songs we’ve sung in class over the past year: Bee, Bee Bumblebee; Rain, Rain, Go Away; Naughty Kitty Cat; Hot Cross Buns; Bounce High, Bounce Low; and Snail, Snail.  They have also been developing the ability to accompany songs and poems on pitched percussion instruments with rhythmic ostinato.  Here are some examples of their rhythm patterns.
                

Lastly, they have been preparing holiday and winter selections for their upcoming holiday concert on Friday, December 19.  Here is the link for the holiday concert information: http://www.mendhamboro.org/Page/3124



Phys Ed: WOW! its getting cold, what can you do outside when its cold? a nice brisk walk, or perhaps a ride on your bike, shooting around in your driveway, or even kicking a ball in the back yard with mom,dad, or even a friend.  It is important to keep exercised.  Inside the gym, the hilltop boys and girls are keeping exercised.  They just finished playing some fun Halloween games which focused on their eye-hand coordination, dodging, aiming and reinforcing cooperation  and sportsmanship.  I am looking forward to bringing Dance their way in November.  With technology and the big screen in the gym, the children will be doing some Wii  Just Dance moves.  



Kindergarten, First and Second grade students are having fun learning about their body parts in Spanish class! Cabeza, Hombros, Rodillas y Pies (Head, Shoulders, Knees & Toes), putting together Sr. Papa (Mr. Potato Head) and Simon Dice (Simon Says) are just some of the activities we have done in class recently to practice body parts. Challenge your child to tell you a body part to touch (Toca…)! Don’t forget to visit the Spanish website and practice 
Quizlet together at home: http://quizlet.com/_ygr7c


Finally, in the spirit of Thanksgiving, what is your child thankful for? Ask them to share this with you in Spanish, as we did an activity with this in class as well! Doy gracias por… (I am thankful for)

iFeliz Dia de Accion de Gracias!












3rd Graders have been listening to The Get Rich Quick Club by Dan Gutman
We, the members of the Get Rich Quick Club, in order to form a more perfect summer, vow that we will figure out a way to make a million dollarsby September. We agree that neither rain nor snow nor gloom of night will prevent us from achieving our stated goal, till death do us part.  Gina Tumolo and her Get Rich Quick Club are determined to make their summer pay off. They're going to make a pact and hatch a scheme, and their small-town life will never be the same again.

Mrs. LeMay has been "book-talking" and "book-trailering" books by the bushel!  This excites readers to experience a diverse range of literature.  

In technology class students recently reviewed graphing using Microsoft Excel.
Students gathered data from their classmates, entered data into a spreadsheets, created a graph, and inserted legends, titles and artwork.  We will be heading back to keyboard practice next week, as well as an introduction to using the Online Public Access Catalog system to locate literary resources. 


November is a very short school month, and before we know it, it’s going to be December!  All of our Hilltop students have been busy making their holiday program props ready for the holiday concert in December.  It’s been fun but surreal to think about and getting ready for the winter holidays already.  

Along with the holiday program props, our fourth grade artists have started a new unit:  Art of the Face.  In this unit, they will be learning about different styles of art that pertains to a human face, and try to create and experiment with three particular styles:  realistic, abstract, and symbolic.  They have started with a history of portraiture that discussed few essential questions:  one, what makes Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci so famou, and two, how is Mona Lisa different from an abstract portrait, such Dora Maar by Pablo Picasso?  Then, they were given a handheld mirror to observe their own image and to draw a realistic self- portrait.  The lesson has focused on learning  about facial proportions and drawing basic shapes of the facial features.