Good
afternoon everyone,
I hope you had a wonderful day.
Tomorrow is a Day 3 (gym – be ready to board the bus for 9:00 AM with your gym
uniform and gym shoes). Friday is our roller skating trip to Scooters. We will
be having an early lunch at 11 and then heading out from there. We will return
to the school around 2:30. Students who are participating in the field trip are
required to wear their SJA gym uniform. Students who are not participating are
expected to wear their school day uniform with house tie. The $15 Wizard of Oz costume money is due on Friday.
Wine and Cheese Social Event - SJA will be
holding a wine and cheese for all parents to attend on Friday, April 26th from
6-8 PM. This will be a great time to socialize and hear about the direction SJA
will be heading.
Important dates/items:
Friday, April 12 –
Spring Fundraiser trip to Scooters (11:30-2:00)
Thursday, April 18
– SITS workshop & Easter Spirit
Friday, April 19-Monday,
April 22 – No School – Easter Weekend
Tuesday, April 23
– Rock climbing, bake sale & summer uniforms begin
Wednesday, April
24 – Bake sale & casual day
Tuesday, April 30
– Silent Dance
Unit of Inquiry
Today
we examined why biodiversity is important to us. We watched a video, did a reading and completed some activities.
Video link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O7PPd_0a9Mw
Biodiversity
is another short unit. We will have roughly 3-3.5 weeks of learning and 1/5-2
weeks for our summative, which will be due sometime during the last full week
of April. More information to come in the upcoming weeks.
Our
final unit of the year will be about coding. All students will be required
to have a working laptop, not device, for this unit. They will be expected
to bring it to school each and every day. Students will also be expected
have their own email account. A Gmail account is preferred, as we can easily
share our projects. Our coding unit begin on Monday, April 29th.
HOMEWORK
-Complete 2 worksheets - debate and benefitting
Thanks to D for sharing with us why flamingos are pink and facts about dragons!
Thanks to V for sharing with us the 8 funkiest fungi, pictures of her trip to England and a picture of where fungus can be found on our bodies!
Thanks to M for sharing with us some information on mammals and climate change, and how climate change is affecting us!
Inquiry into
Mathematics
Today
we took up the review in preparation for our math test tomorrow, Thursday,
April 11th.
Our
next unit will be transformation geometry, which will begin with a
pre-assessment on Monday, April 15th.
Points to remember:
Remember what we do to the denominator we must do to
the numerator. If we multiply the denominator by 3, then we must
multiply the numerator by 3 as well.
Remember to simplify
your fractions and convert improper fractions to mixed numbers.
How to add/subtract
fractions
- if the fractions have the same denominator, we simply add/subtract the
numerators. For example, 1/6 + 4/6 = 5/6 & ¾ - ¼ = 2/4 = 1/2. However, if
the denominators are different our first step is to find the lowest common
denominator. For example, 1/3 + ½ = 2/6 + 3/6 = 5/6 & 5/6 – ½ = 5/6 – 3/6 =
2/6 = 1/3.
Percents
- we want to keep the number 100 in our mind. When
changing a fraction to a percent, we
use the numerator to help us. For example, 23/100 = 23 percent. If we have a
fraction that is over 10, 20 or 25, we need to make it over 100. We will need to
multiply 10 by 10, 20 by 5 and 25 by 4. Remember to do the same to the
numerator. For example, 6/10 = 60/100 (10 x 10 and 6 x 10) = 60 percent.
We also looked at decimals. Remember
if it is out of 100, then there will need to be two spots filled in after the
decimal point. For example 23/100 = 0.23 and 7/100 = 0.07.
Estimating a percent - remember when we
think of percent, we need to think ‘out of 100.’ Here is an example
–>
Sylvie has a collection of 197 sports bobbleheads. About 25 percent of them are
hockey players. Estimate the number of hockey players.
Step
1) Round 197 to 200.
Step
2) Find 25 percent of 200.
Step
3) Find an equivalent fraction with the denominator 200…25/100 = 50/200 (25 x 2
and 100 x 2). Therefore, 25 percent of 200 is 50.
->Of
the 30 students in Larry’s class, 14 of them take the bus. Estimate the percent
of the students who take the school bus.
Step
1) Round 14 to 15, which is ½ of 30. Therefore 14 is almost ½ of 30.
Step
2) ½ = 50/100 (percent is out of 100 – 2 x 50 and 1 x 50)
So,
almost 50 percent of the students take the bus.
A ratio is a comparison of 2
quantities with the same unit. A ratio
can be used to compare a part of a set to another part of the set or to compare
a part of a set to the whole set. For example, there are 9 rabbits; 4 brown and
5 white. The ratio of brown rabbits to white rabbits is 4 to 5. The ratio of 4
to 5 is written as 4:5. This is a part-to-part
ratio. An example of a part-to-whole
ratio is 4 brown rabbits to 9 whole rabbits, or 4:9, or 4/9.
Equivalent ratios - you can find
equivalent ratios by multiplying or dividing the terms of a ratio by the same
non-zero number. For example, Kim is planting a border in her garden. She
plants 5 marigolds for every 3 geraniums. The ratio of marigolds to geraniums
is 5:3. How many geraniums would she need to plant for each number of marigolds
10, 15, and 20? One way to find out is to use a table.
Marigolds
|
Geraniums
|
Ratio of Marigolds to Geraniums
|
5
|
3
|
5:3
|
10
|
6
|
10:6
|
15
|
9
|
15:9
|
20
|
12
|
20:12
|
We
went up by 5s for marigolds and by 3s for geraniums. We multiplied 5 x 2, 5 x
3, and 5 x 4 for the marigolds and for the geraniums we multiplied 3 x 2, 3 x
3, 3 x 4.
Therefore,
5:3, 10:6, 15:9, and 20:12 are all equivalent fractions.
A
rate is a ratio that compares two
items measured in different units. For example, Ramona drew 52 stars in 1
minute. We say that her rate of drawing stars is 52 stars per minute and we
write it like 52 stars/minute. Per means ‘for every’ or ‘in every.’
HOMEWORK
-Study
for math test tomorrow
Thanks to these kids for sharing with us their strategies on solving some of the questions!
A few strategies on how to estimate percents!
Inquiry into Language
Today
we began our third role of our Hatchet literature circle. We also practiced our dance for Arts' Night and rehearsed our first song.
Hatchet Literature Circle - This time we have added two other roles. There will
no be a summariser, connector, literary critic, discussion moderator, and word
wizard. Each week students will individually read the assigned chapters and
complete their role in class. At the end of the week each group will come
together and share with their group.
The groups
(for sharing) – all work will be done independently:
Group 1 – Vishva, Aarnav, Div, Aanika,
and Joshua
Group 2 – Ronit, Emana, Manny, Liliana,
and Himmat
Group 3 – Mitansh, Jasmeet, Munira,
Chesley, and Elina
Group 4 – Eva, Rajan and Willem
Due dates:
Chapters 1-3 due Friday, March 29th
Chapters 4-6 due Friday, April 5th
Chapters 7-9 due Friday, April 12th
Chapters 10-12 due Thursday, April 18th
Chapters 13-15 due Friday, April 26th
Chapters 16-19 will be a culminating
activity with due date to be announced.
HOMEWORK
-French and lesson #26 spelling test on Friday
Working hard on Hatchet!
'If I only had a heart....!"
Have
a wonderful night!
Love
Mrs. Hocevar
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