May 31

Coming soon to Arno…

May 31

K DRA Day

Middle School Band tour 9:30 Grades 4 and 5

June 1

IEP Meetings- Sbonek

Field Day P.M. per schedule

June 2

Field Day full day per schedule

Principal Meeting 9:00

June 3

Third Grade Metro Parks Presentation

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Arno Vision

Arno Elementary will provide a system of support to empower and inspire students

to become collaborative learners that strive for academic excellence

Coming up…

Building a common schedule on June 6

Class lists on June 14th (they must be complete prior)

Class of 2016–District Building Parade

On Friday, June 3rd, we will initiate a new APPS tradition–a memory walk for our graduating high school seniors.  They will first report to the middle school and then proceed to the elementary they attended around 1:30, in full ceremonial attire.    The idea is similar to the clapping parade of 5th graders we have on their last day, so we will have them enter through the K doors and wind up through the 5th grade doors.  Please have your classes ready to pop out in the hallway around that time, I’ll update.  Once they have departed the area, please return to your classrooms.

 

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Summer Reading Program called Whooo’s Learning will be kicking off by June 1. In summary this is what you need to do:

1. Watch the student tutorial video with your class before June 1st.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q19t41Po4YQ

2. Go to the link below and click on Summer Reading folder.

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B6CO0MyjGmyJRzA0NVVpSmJZSU0

3. Copy and distribute your designated student logins (organized by teacher).

4. Copy and distribute the parent instructions PDF. (You may want to combine both documents to just have one 2-sided flyer to send home. These PDFs are also below.

The videos and passwords for your use are in the Arno news folder, where you find daily announcements- you will see a summer reading folder in there.

Happy Reading!

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Parent videos

Mary Howard Week 4

Please take a few minutes and read an excerpt from Mary Howard’s book on RtI.  Its discusses critical issues that must be in place to be successful with kids.  Todd and Beth have now joined the RtI team for next year, let me know soon if you are interested.

An effective RTI literacy framework meets the following criteria.

• It maintains a healthy balance between explicit skill instruction, guided practice, and independent application. The RTI framework Chapter 1 The Paths Leading to the RTI Crossroads / 15 The intent of RTI is to ensure that students receive rich literacy experiences every year in every setting with every teacher, not merely in some years in some settings with some teachers. Howard  supports varied instructional practices that reflect the gradual release of responsibility (Pearson and Gallagher 1983). Learning occurs through teacher modeling, shared and guided instructional support, and independent practice. Explicit instruction allows teachers to intentionally demonstrate important reading skills and strategies to build a solid foundation. Teachers can than offer a diminishing system of support with shared or guided reading as students apply and practice these skills and gradually transfer their learning to independent use. Independent application is the end goal.

• RTI casts differentiation as integral. RTI makes the classroom teacher the primary provider of thoughtful and well-planned intervention. This is impossible if the predominant form of instruction is whole group. RTI must include flexible grouping that allows teachers to target instructional needs and adjust instruction within and beyond the general curriculum. This includes a wide variety of homogeneous and heterogeneous small-group experiences, such as carefully organized day-to-day guided reading, student conferences, and side-by-side activities. Teachers will need professional development support to effectively orchestrate the varied experiences that avoid a one-size-fits-all mentality. Perhaps the very reason so many children struggle initially is this all-encompassing approach to instruction, where the core reading text is often too difficult.

• It embeds learning in a wide range of authentic literacy experiences. Instruction includes teacher-directed, teacher-supported, and independent activities, such as teacher read-aloud, shared and guided reading, independent reading, and peer collaboration. Learning experiences revolve around meaningful, high-interest resources and active student participation rather than passive learning and trivial paper-and-pencil tasks such as worksheets. Rich learning places students at the center, reading authentically and discussing real books. These experiences illustrate the view that reading is relevant and pleasurable and imparts this message to students.

• It emphasizes quality talk through daily sustained discussions. Teacherand peer-supported discussion revolves around interesting resources that promote high-level thinking. Good teachers use these collaborations as rich springboards to thinking. They value teacher-supported whole-group, smallgroup, and peer activities that make talk central. Unfortunately, the increasing demands that come with teaching to the test have led teachers to abandon effective activities like small-group literature circles in favor of whole-group directed discussions. The stories in basal programs are emphasized, while more authentic and engaging material that promotes higher thinking is ignored. Worse, teachers are often told what questions to ask, discouraging the natural dialogue that arises during authentic discussions.

• RTI emphasizes the thinking process behind successful comprehension. Good teachers purposefully build strategic knowledge into their literature and writing lessons and reinforce a range of effective meaning-making strategies such as using semantic, structural, and visual cues to figure out text challenges; reading between the lines; using phonetic clues to figure out tricky words; or calling on one’s prior knowledge. They focus on understanding by using every opportunity to promote active reading through thinkalouds and other demonstrations; and teacher-supported, peer-supported, and independent learning. They capitalize on the reading-writing connection, engaging students in writing short, simple texts that students can then use to practice reading. They purposefully reinforce knowledge or reteach to bring about understanding.

• It is rooted in an environment that reinforces and extends learning. Students actively participate in a range of meaningful experiences, independently or with peers, that reinforce and extend learning. Management systems exist not to control students, but rather to promote independent engagement in meaningful literacy that continues even when teachers leave the room or meet with a small group of students. Fluency work promotes meaning and builds deeper levels of understanding rather than focusing on speed. Activities that emphasize meaning and celebrate repeated reading, such as readers theater, dramatic reading, and peer sharing, are valued, and blocks of time are dedicated each day for these critical experiences.

• It gives students a prominent role in their own learning. Effective teachers know that learning cannot be about mastery if it remains a mystery. They have high expectations and make these expectations clear as students become co-collaborators. They engage students in generating essential learning goals and rubrics, charts, and other ongoing references to guide reflective conversations. They view student conferences as opportunities to reflect on past and current goals or establish new directions. Effective teachers encourage students to use peer- and self-assessment to celebrate successes and set new goals. They illuminate learning through explanations and carefully planned activities rather than label it with happy faces and red marks. They spend time demonstrating skills and providing support as children acquire new learning through ongoing feedback and guidance.

• It supports the reality that motivation and learning are inseparable. Effective teachers refuse to buy into the misconception that independent reading of self-selected texts is a poor use of time. They enrich these experiences with guidance and feedback and recognize the value of reading easy, interesting texts over dull grade-level ones. They believe a classroom library is essential to a well-balanced learning environment, and teach students how Chapter 1 The Paths Leading to the RTI Crossroads  to access it on their own. They celebrate reading workshop as a way to encourage independent reading, confer with students, and offer immediate feedback. They recognize that the potential for learning increases the more students are motivated to learn, and they create an environment to nurture this motivation.

• It emphasizes resources at appropriate levels of challenge. Students are not subjected to texts and tasks that are frustrating; instructional support and scaffolds are in place to ensure that every experience is pleasurable and meaningful. Massive numbers of interesting narrative and expository texts are available. Instructional activities revolve around slightly challenging enrichment texts and teacher-supported learning, reinforced by texts students can read independently. Teachers don’t give grade-level texts to students who are reading below grade level; they use supplementary resources that acknowledge context, instructional setting, and level of support as essential considerations. In short, teachers ensure that every student has books that they can—and want to—read. Successful reading experiences are paramount.

Court Yard Cleanup

A big thanks to Mrs. Solak’s Class for cleaning up the Arno courtyard!  We appreciate you helping make our school beautiful!

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High School Jazz Band Visit

We recently had a visit from the high school jazz band that rocked the gym with some great music!  Our 4th and 5th graders were treated to an awesome start to their day and we loved seeing some of our former Arno kids!

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Detroit Tiger Safety Outing

It was a great game and great weather that our safeties and chaperones enjoyed this past Wednesday as the Tigers went on to beat the Phillies.  Please enjoy a short video below on our adventure.
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Color Run Forms Due Friday!

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New Food Service System

We are pleased to announce a new Food Service system,MyPaymentsPlus, that will show up-to-date meal balances and will also allow you to make online payments directly to your child’s meal account!

In order to view your child’s meal balance and/or make online payments, parents will need to create a free account at: www.MyPaymentsPlus.com  A link to the site is on the Food Service page of the district website – http://apps.k12.mi.us/about-us/food-services/, and also available through the Allen Park Public Schools Mobile App (Search: Allen Park Schools).  Once you’ve created an account online, you may wish to download the free mobile app (Search: MyPaymentsPlus)

Setting up an account is an easy one-time registration.  You will need your child’s student ID number, which is located in your ParentConnection under the Demographics tab.

Additional information, including program features and free mobile app, is included in the flyers attached.

We hope our families enjoy this new convenience and look forward to a successful program launch!

Thank you

4th Grade State Reports

Mrs. Smalley’s students proudly display their state reports

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Have a great holiday weekend!

May 23

 

Coming soon to Arno…

May 23

504 Plan Meetings

MTSS 4:00

May 24

IEP Meetings Sbonek

1st Grade DRA Day

SIP Meeting 3:45

May 25

Elementary Jazz Band Tour grades 4 & 5 9:00 in the gym

Tiger Ball Game for safeties 11:30

PTSA Council Meeting 6:30

May 26

3rd Grade DRA Day

V.K. Meeting 7:30

APMS Orientation all 5th grade to gym 9:00

May 27

Book Checkout Ends

May PBIS extra recess

PBIS team meeting all day

May 30

No School- Memorial Day

Attention all PTA Members!

The PTA Meeting scheduled for Thursday, June 3rd has been cancelled. On behalf of the new Officers we would like to thank everyone for your support this year! Without your support there would be no PTA or PTA Events! We look forward to working with everyone next school year. Have a fun and safe Summer! We will see everyone in the Fall!

Mary Howard Week 3

“We need to build strategic knowledge, independent problem solving, confidence and competence.  Give them a repertoire of strategies”

Key to Tiered support- A STRONG Core- Please review the concept of guided math below and answer the following questions on your own or comment on the blog…

  1. Do I differentiate now for math?

  2. If not, how do I meet the individual needs for my students?

  3. If this is not my practice, what are ways I can incorporate guided math into my class classroom (with math talk)?

  4. How do I know if students are understanding the content and how to give feedback to them so they can use this in their learning?

Guided Math Best Practices

Guided Math Best Practices combine Guided Math with current Math Best Practice Ideas.
1. Meets individual needs.
2. Diversifies for special education needs.
3. Scaffolds average students to algebra and story problem connections.
4. Challenges high achieving students with algebra and story problem connections along with extension activities.
5. Promotes mathematical thinking using Mathematical Process Skills.
6. Utilizes engaging, concrete, hands-on activities that promote mathematical understanding of concepts.
7. Incorporates daily spiral review.

Angela Bauer uses these Guided Math best practices and trains teachers to use them in a guided math format. Her teacher professional development workshops detail how to use these best practices in math in any classroom. The following video was created by North Shore School District 112 in Highland Park, Illinois after Angela Bauer had trained their Kindergarten through 8th grade staff.

 

 

Guided Math incorporates best practices from Eric Jensen.  His book called Brain-Based Learning details many aspects of best practices to use for optimal student growth.  Page 331 summarizes a list of these ideas.  Guided Math uses many of these ideas. Here are just a few!

  • purposeful and consistent pre-exposure
  • multiple exposure & activation for 1-3 days
  • often rich with talking and activity
  • emphasis on context, meaning & value
  • learning is also action, movement
  • search for questions
  • immediate, dramatic feedback
  • mobility, face each other, partners, groups
Learn more about brain-based learning at www.jensenlearning.com
Guided Math also incorporates best practices from David Sousa and his book, How the Brain Learns Mathematics.  On pages 126-127, David details that “the teacher should monitor the students’ early practice to ensure that it is accurate and to provide timely feedback and correction if it is not.  This guided practice helps eliminate initial errors and alerts students to the critical steps in applying new skills.”  Here are 4 guidelines he thoroughly discusses.
  • limit the amount of material to practice
  • limit the amount of time to practice
  • determine the frequency of practice
  • assess the accuracy of practice
Guided Math Best Practices incorporates math best practice ideas from the leading math and brain experts.
Here is a video after Angela held a follow-up workshop at NSSD 112.   Monica transformed her classroom into a Guided Math class.  Her students were learning at their own pace and at their own level.  The engaging activities promotes thinking and questioning about math concepts.  This thinking promotes mathematical understanding.

 

In conclusion, Guided Math Best Practices are helping to transform teaching because the real results are these practices are transforming students into mathematicians!

RtI Arno Team

If you are interested in the joining the Arno RtI team, which will not meet until fall, please let me know.  I can still get you Mary Howard’s book for the summer.  On the team so far…

Sandy, Michelle, Stella, Cindy, Barb, Todd, and Cathy

 

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Play Ball

Don’t forget to remind your safeties of our Tiger Game that is coming up!  We will be departing the building around 11:30 so please listen for the call down.  Thanks!

New Food Service System

We are pleased to announce a new Food Service system, MyPaymentsPlus, that will show up-to-date meal balances and will also allow you to make online payments directly to your child’s meal account!

In order to view your child’s meal balance and/or make online payments, parents will need to create a free account at:  www.MyPaymentsPlus.com  A link to the site is on the Food Service page of the district website – http://apps.k12.mi.us/about-us/food-services/, and also available through the Allen Park Public Schools Mobile App (Search: Allen Park Schools).  Once you’ve created an account online, you may wish to download the free mobile app (Search: MyPaymentsPlus)

Setting up an account is an easy one-time registration.  You will need your child’s student ID number, which is located in your ParentConnection under the Demographics tab.

Additional information, including program features and free mobile app, is included in the flyers attached.

We hope our families enjoy this new convenience and look forward to a successful program launch!

Thank you

Grade Level Scheduling for next year

I have set aside floaters on Monday, June 6 to help us further along our trek into an MTSS system in which your grade level will work on a common schedule framework for the fall.  I will try and coordinate with Barb, Michelle, Stella, and Cathy to have them available to forecast kids that you will have next year and how that will mix in.  The goals for your schedule should be:

  • Common Language arts block (to accommodate tier work, practices like guided reading could be staggered- or at the same time depending how you view it)

  • Common Math Time

  • Common time for science/SS would help planning for the rest

  • Within your common times, please review your current practices so that we can maximize instructional time.  This would include recess time not exceeding 25 minutes (plus lunch) daily, exception of K,   I don’t mind some initial morning recess, but by week 3- that needs to be over.

  • Review your morning arrival work- valuable on-task time is there for the taking.  We do not have preps until 9:30- What a great time to plan some grade level interventions!

  • Please review the non-negotiables that were agreed to by the grade levels.  I should be able to see these practices going on in your room.  Please let me know what materials and/or training I can provide to get us in the right direction.  Please highlight these items and their times in your schedules- that I would like to have to me by June 17 in whatever format look you wish

  • If your grade needs additional time, please see me for some options, please remember the preps are common so as to offer time to meet among the grade- that can be an option

  • Working with Michelle/Cathy/Barb/Stella should offer insight to build your schedule around instructional time, not when a student is pulled out.

Please understand that this starts to allow us to implement various degrees of tiered intervention in the classroom, grade level, and building.  Please let me know if you have any suggestions as we move forward.  I will have info on classroom placement for students very soon.  I understand that there may unforeseen obstacles that come into scheduling in the process, try and get as close as you can to the above.

K-5 non negotiables

Grade 2

 

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M-STEP Is Done!!!!!!!!!!

Congratulations to 4th grade on wrapping up their testing and the whole building for completion of the M-STEP this year.  It certainly has been a process but I feel that you have all prepared the kids in an exemplary way and have given us the best scores we could ask for.  The state data is supposed to be in by mid August, so I will share what I can, when I can and we will certainly get the data team on this when its time.  Again, great job on test completion, I look forward to our scores!

Great Job 4th and 5th Graders!!

What a great performance by our 4th and 5th graders at Tuesday evening’s concert performance with Mr. Skebo at the helm.  It was a great “Road Trip” theme, perfect for this time of year.  Very impressed as always with our Arno talent!

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Mrs. Kalis’s Book Clubs

Reading a good book and collaborating with partners are some of the best practices we can do in classrooms.  Please enjoy some pics of students in Mrs. Kalis’s class enjoying their book clubs

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Math Groups and Skill Practice in Mrs. Smalley’s Room

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Junior Achievement

Mrs. Hool’s class working on a group activity with their Jr Achievement representative from Ford Motor Company.

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Rover Rap Up

These past couple of weeks, we have showed pics of the 5th grade students getting trained in building “Rover” type vehicles from kits- with instruction from real world engineers.  There was a culminating event between all rooms last week in which their vehicles had to perform distance tasks within team competition.  Team building and collaboration is big college and career skill.

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Map of the Old Northwest Territory: Site of the River Raisin Massacre on January 18 1813.

Off to the River Raisin…

Our second batch of 5th graders recently took a field trip to the River Raisin Battlefield.  A little history of that battlefield area:

From January 18th to January 23rd, 1813, the north bank of the River Raisin became a battleground where the forces of the United States and Great Britain fought each other for the control of all of Michigan and the Lower Great Lakes.  At stake was the destiny not only of the 2 countries (United State and Great Britain), but also the future of Frenchtown, (known today as Monroe Michigan) and of Canada, and of Tecumseh’s alliance of Native-American tribes.

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NWEA TESTING

Our third round of NWEA Spring testing began this week with 3rd grade Reading and math.  Our staff use this assessment to measure the growth that students have achieved in Reading and Math over this school year.  Students will be taking the NWEA assessment on Chromebooks in their classrooms in grades 2-5.

Have a GREAT weekend!

 

 

May 16

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Coming soon to Arno…

May 16

Ad council 9:00

May 17

PTA Calendar meeting 3:00- Sarah, Nicole, Melissa

4/5th grade concert 7:00

May 18

Scholarship night at APHS 7:00

May 19

Kinder screener day

Teacher Eval Committee- Steve, Carrie 4:00

May 20

SIP Team meeting-all day- Sarah, Carrie, Megan

Kids Hope Party 2:00 in cafe

 

Mary Howard Week 2

Voluminous reading is an intervention – struggling readers need to read 200% more and not in books that don’t challenge them.  So with that thought in mind, how many opportunities do you have in your classroom, and push at home,  for struggling students to just be able to read a book?  What kind of opportunities can we create within our classroom walls (or beyond) for this to happen?  

High interest books that make their heart sing are a big component in all grades as  kids can transcend their reading level 2 years when they are interested in reading the content.  Keeping that in mind- how do we go about choosing the books we have available in class?  What kinds of books might reflect that in your classroom?  Are students allowed to participate in choosing at least some of the material they want to read?  

Some Research…

According to Worthy (1996), it is not sufficient to provide books that are geared solely to a child’s instructional reading level. When reading level is solely considered, below level basal readers are generally used for instructing struggling readers. Reading such “baby books” often makes struggling readers feel more defeated. Focusing on student interests in selecting reading materials may be more beneficial in promoting reading success than a focus on level. It turns out that interest is far more significant than readability. When students have strong interest in what they read, they can frequently transcend their reading level (Worthy, 1996). Many educators and researchers consider interest to be an essential factor in all learning (Hidi, 1990; Schiefele, 1991). Students who do not enjoy typical school texts often fail to engage in reading, and may develop a lifelong aversion to reading. Even if they are not initially struggling readers, “reluctant readers tend to gradually lose some academic ground, because wide Journal of Inquiry & Action in Education, 3(2), 2010 32 | Page reading is related to increases in general knowledge and reading comprehension” (Williamson & Williamson, 1988).

RtI Arno Team

If you are interested in the joining the Arno RtI team, which will not meet until fall, please let me know.  I can still get you Mary Howard’s book for the summer.  On the team so far…

Sandy, Michelle, Stella, Cindy, Barb, and Cathy

 

Thank you Teachers

PTA would like to thank all families who contributed with donations for staff appreciation week! It was a fun filled week acknowledging all Arno staff!
The PTA is also very thankful for your assistance on the completion of your child’s superhero notes to their teachers!
Staff enjoyed reading how each child views them as superhero teachers!

Thanks!

Your Arno PTA

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Author Lynne Smyles Pays Arno a Visit

Our upper grades enjoyed listening to another Michigan author on Friday.  Lynne Smyles, former school teacher, has written several books called “Michigan History Nightmares” and shared some of them with the students.  I am ordering 10 copies of each of her books if you wish to use them in group in the future (It will be in the book room Barb is getting together).

In addition, an order form went home today if the students wish to order a copy.  Lynne will be back next Friday to fulfill orders- please be sure that all book order forms are in by next Thursday, May 19

Smyles Book Order Form

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Rover Project

Over the next two weeks, engineers from Bosch will be working with 5th grade teams to produce “Mars Rovers”. Students will learn the value of team work and persistence as we work on this project together. Each of the rovers will be tested for distance and accuracy. On May 12th we will have a school-wide competition of the rovers. Good luck 5th grade Jr. Engineers!

5th grade class testing their Rover engines.

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Map of the Old Northwest Territory: Site of the River Raisin Massacre on January 18 1813.

Off to the River Raisin…

Our 5th graders recently took a field trip to the River Raisin Battlefield.  A little history of that battlefield area:

From January 18th to January 23rd, 1813, the north bank of the River Raisin became a battleground where the forces of the United States and Great Britain fought each other for the control of all of Michigan and the Lower Great Lakes.  At stake was the destiny not only of the 2 countries (United State and Great Britain), but also the future of Frenchtown, (known today as Monroe Michigan) and of Canada, and of Tecumseh’s alliance of Native-American tribes.

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Dr. Hall Guest Reader

Enjoy some pictures of Dr. Hall reading to the 4th grade classes on Tuesday.  She has been coming in monthly this school year to read to our students and they love it!

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1st Grade Butterflies

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5 Questions Educators Must Ask Themselves Daily

Every educator teaches for different reasons, although there is surely overlap. Perhaps they want to change the world or help young people grow into good citizens, but at the heart of it, each educator remains in the teaching profession for a variety of reasons that usually has something to do with being a positive change agent. Early in my career I promised myself that if I ever stopped loving what I do,that I would stop teaching. No student wants to be taught by a person who is counting down the minutes to retirement and doing so, is a great disservice to the profession; they deserve better.

So here are 5 questions, every educator should ask themselves every day in order to ensure they are in it for the “right” reasons.

5 Questions

  1. Am I excited about going to school today? Rather than call my job, work, I look forward to the endless possibility of learning every day. This is not to say there are days where I don’t feel well and that bad feelings make it challenging to get up. I am a human being and therefore bad days happen. However, if a bad day turns into many and for whatever reason it becomes a chore instead of a labor of love, it is time for me to seriously consider a shift in my career. Firmly, I believe that to be a highly effective and motivating teacher, we must invest ourselves completely and with a whole and open heart or else it will read on our faces and students will sense our hesitation. This can have a devastating effect on our own abilities to impact our students. Congruency in what we teach is essential and therefore what we say must match what we do.
  2. Do I still believe that I can learn new stuff about my content? After 13 years of teaching English and Journalism, I’m still excited to learn new things about my content. To me, learning through my students’ experiences and perspectives makes every day full of possibility and learning. This is the journey and it is very exciting. My students offer context that I could have never noticed and in doing so help me to see things differently and together we collaborate to develop new ideas. In addition to this, I can be listening to NPR or watching a movie or listening to music and I’ll get a crazy idea that just may change the way we all see something. Since I’ve developed amazing relationships with my students when I ask them to trust me through my harebrained ideas, they usually go with me on the journey. Sometimes I don’t think my ideas all the way through, but the kids always trust me and we learn together. I take risks. They see me model risk taking and sometimes I fail, but that’s okay because that creates more opportunity for me to problem solve and grow.
  3. Are my students needs at the front of everything I do? Let’s face it, I’m not a teacher for me, I’m a teacher for my students. Having had my time as a high school student, it would be incredibly egotistical to make this experience about me. Instead, students are empowered to make important decisions about their learning and it is my job to listen when they speak and adjust accordingly. They know more about themselves than I know and therefore I need to teach them to trust that inner voice. It starts by allowing myself to trust them when they share. All learning in the space is determined by student need gathered in a number of different ways: one on one conversations and conferences, student reflections, self-assessment surveys and observations throughout our class time.
  4. How do I implement student voice and choice in my decision making for learning?Students have great ideas and I must be open to hearing them. For example, I can’t ask them to share what they think and then shut them down when I don’t like what they say. Once empowered, students will rise to a number of occasions you didn’t think possible. Step out of the way of student awesomeness and cheer them along being a great supporter and facilitator of their learning. Their ideas matter and therefore should factor in to everything we do in the class. So project choices must be purposefully planned with their feedback, considering the use of technology and interest with those choices. Students are allowed to write on blogs to develop their own voice, taught to use social media, to reflect on projects and to collaborate with each other to affect positive change in our learning space.
  5. What risks can I take today that model the growth mindset? I can’t expect students to take risks if I don’t take them myself. This means often standing up against the system to try to improve their learning experiences. Each risk I take runs the risk of failure, but that is okay. Mistakes are beginning of growth and change can only come once we realize that must try and try again until we grow adequately to succeed. Thetenacity and fortitude developed through this process is invaluable in the learning and reflecting cycle, so we must model what we expect.

Each day is a potential for growth, not just as a teacher but as a learner and this must be evident in all that we do. Questions that propel us in this noble profession should not be driven by time off or pensions, but rather the enormous impact we can have to enact change in our world.

Have a Great Week!

 


 

May 9

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Coming soon to Arno…

May 9

Kindergarten Roundup 6:00

May 10

Lock down drill- final drill of the year!

Skebo obs 10:25

May 11

PBIS meeting 3:45

May 12

2nd grade DRA day

Spring Beautification 5:00

May 13

Author Lynne Smyles assembly 8:30 grades 3,4,5

MSTEP

Teacher Appreciation Week

 

MTSS

Last week, I had the great pleasure of attending a conference on Response to Intervention with Dr. Mary Howard.  Usually at a conf, I’m happy to walk away with a couple of good things- this time around I couldn’t type fast enough with all the great strategies and ideas to help us reach all our learners.  Dr. Howard has been on the RtI scene for some time now and published many books on it. Please take a moment to visit her web site when you can.  http://www.drmaryhoward.com/    In the meantime, I will share some things, quotes, info, websites, etc. that she covered that day.  Remember this is a work in progress- we are building the system and are adding two big components, Student Review Meetings to discuss interventions- and a common grade level schedule for the fall.

In addition, I would like to form a building RtI committee to start looking at what defines an Arno student at a tier 1, tier 2, and tier 3- as well as our plan to make parent contact in students in tiers next year.  We will talk at our first staff meeting, then hopefully meet sometime in the end of September for the first time for those interested.  If you are interested right now and would a copy of her book to read over the summer, please let me know.

In speaking of intervention, Dr. Mary Howard said “Increase the level of intensity and sense of urgency- greater frequency, smaller groups. ” 

I am working on a plan now for building the class lists for next year.  I will let you know when that will be.

MiSTAR DNA

Thanks to Brian for training most of our 4-5 teacher on Thursday in DNA, since most staff has some training, please try to use system at least once before the end so you can continue your learning.  Brian is our expert, let him or I know what questions you have.

Also, thank you to Barb Chuby and all of our Arno aides for helping watch all the rooms so this could happen.  We could not have done it without you!

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Daddy/Daughter Dance

What a great time we had at the Daddy/Daughter dance that was held at the Red Fawn recently.  The girls and their dads were treated to a delicious dinner, dessert, and of course, plenty of dancing fun.  Thanks to the PTA, all of the volunteers, and  especially Amy Muse for coordinating all of the festivities.

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New PTA Board

Congratulations to our new PTA Board that was sworn in at last night’s PTA meeting.  Introducing your new board…

Congratulations to 

Jeni Sauve- President

Amy Muse- Vice President of fundraising

Julie Hegedus- Treasurer

Shannon Mihalik Secretary

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We look forward to working with our new Board on all of the exciting things our PTA does for our students!

 

Rover Project

Over the next two weeks, engineers from Bosch will be working with 5th grade teams to produce “Mars Rovers”. Students will learn the value of team work and persistence as we work on this project together. Each of the rovers will be tested for distance and accuracy. On May 12th we will have a school-wide competition of the rovers. Good luck 5th grade Jr. Engineers!

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Junior Achievement

Representatives from Ford Motor Company were in Lisa’s room this past week working with the students on income and expenses.

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Mr. Skebo and company gettin down

Jump with Jill

The whole gym was rocking with good exercise and singing about healthy eating when the Jump with Jill Tour rolled into Arno for our 3rd- 5th graders.  Please be sure to ask your child what they learned about healthy eating and what things (like soda) they should stay away from.  Enjoy some pics below

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You’re invited to Arno Planting Day!

On Thursday, May 12th at 5:00pm we start off the evening with a pizza dinner in the caféteria!  

During dinner, we will have Arno friends/families sign-up for stations around the school to help beautify!

After dinner, everyone will head to their stations with their gardening tools to pull weeds.

After weed-pulling is complete at your station, it will be time to plant, then mulch, your designated area. Please bring your own gardening tools! If possible, please indicate the plants and quantity below that you will be bringing so we can plan ahead the planting stations. If you cannot make it to the event, we will still accept and appreciate any plants you are able to donate.  

Many thanks,

Arno’s Green Team

 

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NWEA TESTING

Our first round of NWEA Spring testing began this week with 4th grade Reading and math.  Our staff use this assessment to measure the growth that students have achieved in Reading and Math over this school year.  Students will be taking the NWEA assessment on Chromebooks in their classrooms in grades 2-5 over the next few weeks.

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M-STEP UPDATE

Way to go, Arno 3rd  Graders!  Over the past two weeks our 3rd grade Cougars completed several segments of state assessments.  Our students were tested in the following categories:

  • ELA Computer Adaptive
  • Math Computer Adaptive & Math Performance Task

I would like to thank our staff and families for working together to prepare our students to be “test ready”.  Our students persevered through the test experience, and thanks to our tech department, our technology continues to handle the test with very few issues!

Initial score reports are beginning to be available online to our administrative staff.  As soon as we are able to share, I will get the information to you!

Fourth graders are up next — beginning the week of May 9th.

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BE SCHOOL SMART NEWS

Please follow this link for some great information that comes to us from Detroit Public Television!  Be School Smart Newsletter

Downriver Parenting Institute

“Helping Children Become Successful Learners”

Please see the flyer for more info

May 10 DPI flyer

Have a great weekend and I hope you enjoyed your teacher week!!!