Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Who Let the Dogs Out?

....................... We did!

In Andrew Clements' book, Dogku, he writes:
An idea knocks:
I open, think, and smile.
And then it's your turn.

            This dog-gone, charming book is written in traditional Japanese haiku form.  Each three line poem has 17 syllables, written in a 5/7/5 syllable count.  
       The girls modeled haiku writing with the inspiration of their favorite furry dogs.  


    Really cute and small

    Big and furry brown eyes
    Soft fur black and white

      






Small tiny pink leash
Dreams of bones and other treats
Good night cute Snowball

Soft grass high trees, cat
Chasing time teasing cats, woof
The cat won, now angry, grrrr

We'd play together
How I helped her and fed her
Because she was old

I am scared, bath time
I rolled in mud, dirty slush
So I am hiding

She looks good with gold
Muffin is the cutest dog
I wish we met once

Sound asleep all day
Playing all night, no rest
I'm a happy dog

Fluffy, old, pretty
I love her, she loves me
Friends forever






  

         We dedicate our dogku writing in loving memory of Honey Webb, Muffin Orlando, & Kelty Rogers.

















Thursday, February 12, 2015

GIRLS ROCK!

        The Lower School Read-A-Thon rocks with our parent readers!



Monday, February 2, 2015

All Dolled Up

Recently, the girls selected to read a biography about someone who has made a positive contribution to the world. 




Ranging from authors to artists and musicians to inventors, this project portion of this report, “All Dolled Up” shows their amazing creativity and an understanding of what they have read. 

    















Tons of Tech

The girls in third grade have been working very hard on a variety of tech skills.  We completed our final project in Scratch Jr.  The girls created a game in the app and used many different buttons and skills.  Next, we learned how to use Edmodo.  They are using this app to ask and answer question in reading language arts.  Finally, we have started to learn the basic of keyboarding through the use of typing.com .  If you would like your daughter to access either of these at home, small strips of paper are coming home with user names and passwords.  The first user name and password is for Google Drive (which we are not using currently), the second is for Edmodo and the last is for Typing.com.  If you have any questions about accessing these from home, please contact me.