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Tuesday, December 31, 2013

The Spirit of Music

I have always felt such a connection between music and my spirit.  Prior to vacation, the week was filled with music, and both my spirit and those of others were high!  Thank you to all of the students and teachers who participated in all of these musical adventures.

The Winter Concert occurred at the high scool and was filled with wonderful music by the 6th grade band, the 6th grade chorus, the select chorus, the advanced band, the advanced chorus, the acapella group, and the chime choir. 

6th grade band clip:

6th grade chorus picture:


To add to the musical fun, we had a wonderful Winter Assembly, put on by Team Pegasus, on the day prior to vacation.  The team shared many wonderful reflections about New Year's and resolutions.  During the assembly, we heard from many of our musicians.  Here are a couple of clips, the first from our student-developed acapella group (led by Ms. Prindiville):

Our lovely chime choir also shared music of the season:


In addition, I would be remiss to not mention that there was a lot of music happening around the building in less formal fashion.  Here are some 8th grade boys with their own rendition of Feliz Navidad:


And last but certainly not least, Mrs. Jacobsmeier and Mrs. Guilbert serenaded the 6th grade lunch, inspiring students to sing along:

I hope that your spirits were lifted this holiday season by whatever it is your spirit connects to, as mine was with music!

I very much look forward to seeing all students back on Thursday, January 2 for the year 2014!




Sunday, December 15, 2013

ELA Visits and Technology

Greetings, Coolidge Community!

I am sure many of us have shared a similar range of emotions this weekend.  For me, I felt a great degree of reflection on Saturday, the one year anniversary of the Newtown incident.  Despite the sadness and loss that still fills the hearts of so many surrounding what happened that day, from great loss has arisen many stories of courage, perseverance, and rebuilding.  No matter how directly or indirectly impacted, the event  has changed us all.

One of the gifts of being in my new position is the ability I now have to get into all classrooms at Coolidge and to support teachers to do the best work they can do.  I had the pleasure this week of sitting in on all of the ELA classes at all three levels.  At the 6th grade level, students in one class were dissecting a poem as they applied their learning of similies and metaphors.  In another, they were being challenged to find the deeper meaning in the story Gaston.  And in a third, students were presenting new (impressive!) vocabulary words, acting as teachers, which is the ultimate evidence that material has been learned.  In 7th grade, all classes were doing class reads of the book A Christmas Carol.  The teachers at this level not only spoke with British accents as they narrated, but knew all the right places to pause in the dialogue to probe students to go deeper and to discern what the text truly means.  One class was using iPads to read, and the teacher had embedded questions within the text that students would answer on their screens; they were able to read each other's responses, as was the teacher, who could give them immediate feedback.  It was a lesson that showed technology as a useful tool.  All 7th grade students will see "A Christmas Carol" on Wednesday; thanks to their lessons, they will have a better understanding of what the strory really means.  In 8th grade, students were analyzing the difference between books vs. movies made from books.  They had to draw on evidence from real texts/movies.  In all of these situations, I saw the new ELA Common Core working well.  The new standards challenge teachers to challenge students to go deeper into material, to support their writing with evidence from various texts, and to express their knowledge both with writing and with speaking and presenting.  I truly believe these students who are experiencing these new standards will evolve to be stronger in all aspects of reading, writing, and expression than they would have otherwise.  The teachers have been putting in a great deal of time to prepare thoughtful, new lessons that maintain high standards for all.

Another neat moment this week was to be privvy to Ms. Anderson's classroom on Thursday.  One of her groups presented their use of technology in the classroom to a group of adults who were attending the Blue Ribbon Conference in Orlando, FL.  The Blue Ribbon presentation was being led by our library and technology specialists, Ms. Steinhauser and Ms. Grant, who were attending the conference.  With the use of video streaming, Ms. Anderson's class shared their experience with the group in FL, who we could also see and hear on her SMART board.  A second classroom from the high school was also part of the presentation.  It certainly left an impression on me, and I think it did even more so on the students involved.

In case I don't get the chance again this year, please know I wish you all a wonderful, happy, and restful holiday.  It will be wonderful to see your students back in 2014!

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Busy Holidays

I want to apologize, as this post will be brief tonight.  I have had a busy and spirited family day, but as a result am not in work/blog mode as yet.  I have more of a Coolidge updated with a picture to include tomorrow when I reuturn to work.  Until then, I hope your and your families are having a nice weekend!

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Tossing Turkeys; It All Starts With One

I enjoyed two special experiences in the days prior to our Thanksgiving vacation that I would like to share with parents.

First of all, the annual "Turkey Toss" in Wellness.  What fun!  In pairs, students throw rubber "turkeys" at increasing distances until the turkey is dropped.  Each group had a champion pair.  After school on Tuesday, the championship Turkey Toss was held.  First, all 6th grade winners competed for champion 6th grade spot, followed by 7th and 8th.  Then all three sets of champions competed to determine the final winner.  It was great fun to watch!  Congratulations to:

6th grade champions:  Ben Mason and Jeremy Rosh
7th grade champions:  Devin Forbes and Nick McFarland
8th grade and overall champions: Chris Connery and Justin Stanuil




The second special experience was the Thanksgiving assembly, created by the students of Team Explorer.  They came up with the theme, the script, and the music on their own!  The band and chorus supported them, and their teachers helped them to organize and practice (thank you to Jim Heneberry for his directing and also to Michael Bernard and Andrea Bruno for additional organization!). Their theme focused on the fact that one person can start a movement, and from that one person, great change can happen when the message spreads and when more people get involved!  This was seen visually on the board that included the photos of all of those who donated food for the food drive (starting with one, ending with hundreds), to the creative acting in the assembly, to the visuals about how the couryard was renovated, to the final rap, which got not only the entire team dancing, but also the entire school!  It was powerful and fun, and will be a memory made for all of those involved.  Thank you, Team Explorer!