Thursday, November 8, 2018

Good afternoon everyone,

I hope you had a wonderful night! We very much enjoyed our trip to the ROM today. We examined different artifacts and were given a history on the Greeks. Thank you again to our lovely volunteers for joining us.











































A reminder there is no school this Friday. The next Caribou contest is next Wednesday, November 14th. Please ensure students arrive by 7:15 AM with a charged working laptop. Students who arrive late will not be able to write the test.
Aftercare invoices have been sent out and are due Thursday, November 15th, 2018. Beginning November 30th, interest will be applied to outstanding amounts.

Monday is a Day 4 (library and our first curling trip – 9:00-12:00). Please have students dressed in gym clothes and be ready to board the bus for the Acton Curling Club at 9:00 AM. Please ensure students are dressed warmly (coat, warm socks, hats, mitts, slush pants [if wanted]), as we will be on the ice. We will be eating lunch upon our return at 12:00, which will be followed by our math test.

Our second curling trip will be happening on Tuesday, November 20th in the afternoon (12-3). Students are reminded to wear their gym uniform (they will be wearing it all day), as well as to bring warm clothes (hats, mitts and coats) as we will be on the ice and it will be cold. We will eat lunch before we leave on the 20th.

A note from Oakwood Academy: On Tuesday, November 13th, Oakwood Academy is hosting world kindness day, which is a day to recognize global kindness, generous acts and sense of community. For every act of kindness you do, please come and place a handprint on the Oakwood Academy globe and dress down for $2. Let's make this day a day of leadership and unity. 

Don't forget about Polar Expressions Publishing! The poetry deadline is November 16th, 2018 and the short story deadline is November 23rd, 2018.

Oakwood Academy is holding a Poinsettia fundraiser for the holiday season, to raise money for some new sensory items. The Poinsettias are red, pink or white and make a wonderful holiday gift, and are a nice way to spread holiday cheer. Order forms were sent home today. The class that sells the most Poinsettias will win a $50 gift card!! Order between November 1st and November 30th by cash only.

A note from our Librarian, Ms. Hayward:  The book fair is only a month away! All proceeds raised goes towards building library with new books and resources. See flyer below for more information.

Science Fair is taking place Friday, November 16th. Please see flyer below for more information. We welcome all family members to view the projects from 2:30-3:15 PM.

Important dates/items:

Friday, November 9 – No school – PD Day
Monday, November 12 – Curling trip – 9:00-12:00
Tuesday, November 13 – Kindness Day ($2 casual day)
Thursday, November 15 – Aftercare payments are due
Friday, November 16 – Science Fair
Tuesday, November 20 – Curling trip – 12:00-3:00
Thursday, November 22 – Picture re-takes
Tuesday, November 27 – Bake sale
Wednesday, November 28 – Bake sale and casual day
Friday, November 30 – Term One report cards go home

Unit of Inquiry

Today we were at the ROM!

It is hard to believe, but we are nearing the end of our second Unit of Inquiry. For our summative, students will be required to recreate an ancient artifact from one of the three civilization we learned about. An information package and rubric will be sent home sometime next week. We will begin our in-class summative on Monday, November 19th and the due date will be Thursday, November 29th. A kind reminder that all work is to be completed during class time only, unless other wise stated.

HOMEWORK

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Inquiry into Mathematics

Today we continued our second review in preparation for our math test. Please use the two reviews to study, as the math test will be very similar to the reviews. Our math test will take place on Monday, November 12th.

Points to remember:

When using a 24-hour notation, 12:00 AM (midnight) to 12:00 PM (noon) stays the same, but after 12:00 PM it goes to 13:00 for 1:00, 14:00 for 2:00, etc.

1:00 PM – 13:00
2:00 PM – 14:00
3:00 PM – 15:00
4:00 PM  - 16:00
5:00 PM = 17:00
6:00 PM = 18:00
7:00 PM – 19:00
8:00 PM – 20:00
9:00 PM – 21:00
10:00 PM – 22:00
11:00 PM – 23:00
12:00 PM – 00:00

Then we start back at 1:00 AM.

12:00- 11:59 AM is from midnight to noon and 12:00 – 11:59 (12:00-24:00) PM is from noon to midnight.

Rounding rules – 0 – 4 round down
-       5 – 9 round up
Friendly numbers  (a way to round or estimate) - $423.99 would round to $400.00 and $789. 11 would round to $800.00.

Standard amount (eight hundred twenty-two dollars = $822)

Written form ($745.50 = seven hundred forty-five dollars and 50 cents).

To find the surface area of a rectangular prism, multiply each face - length x width (l x w), then add the total area. For rectangular prisms that are congruent (all sides are equal), find the area of all three sides, add them together and then multiply by 2. For example, a rectangular prism with the sides 7 cm height, 15 cm length, and 10 cm width – find the area of front face, 15 x 7 = 105, then find the area of the side face, 10 x 7 = 70, then find the area of the top face, 15 x 10 = 150. Then add up those totals – 105 + 70 + 150 = 325 x 2 = 650 cm squared. When finding the surface area we use units squared (cm squared, m squared, etc.).

Volume = number of cubes in each layer x number of layers. The number of cubes is length x width and the number of layers is the height, so our formula to find the volume is l x w x h. When finding the volume we use units cubed (cm cubed, m cubed, etc.).

A line segment and distance have only one dimension. They can be measured in linear units such as cm, m and km. A flat surface has two dimensions and can be measured using square units, such as square cm or square m. An object has three dimensions and can be measured using cubic units, such as cubic cm and cubic m. For example, a track and field race would be measured in linear units (m or km), a pool cover would measure in square units (m) and a cargo space would measure in cubic units (cubic m). **1 cubic m = 1,000,000 cubic cm.**

Volume measures the space an object occupies (mL or L), while capacity measures the amount of liquid or gas an object holds (cubic cm or cubic m).

A few conversions to remember:
1L = 1000 mL
1 cubic cm = 1 mL
1 cubic m = 1000 L
1000 cubic cm = 1 L

When we add milli to gram (milligram), the milli means thousandths. So, one milligram is one-thousandth of a gram (1 mg = 0.001 g & 1000 mg = 1 g). When we add kilo to gram (kilogram), the kilo means thousands. So, one kilogram is one thousand grams (1 kg = 1000 g & 1 g = 0.001 kg). One tonne is one thousand kilograms (1 t = 1000 kg & 1 kg = 0.001 t). Please see the chart below to help.


/1000

/1000

/1000
Move the decimal 3 spots to the left
mg
-à
g
-à
kg
-à
t

X 1000

X 1000

X 1000
Move the decimal 3 spots to right
t

kg

g

mg

HOMEWORK

-Math test Monday, November 12th

Inquiry into Language

Today we wrote our spelling test for lesson #9. I did not have time to mark them today, so I will send home for you to review on Monday.  

HOMEWORK

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Have a wonderful weekend!


Love Mrs. Hocevar

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