Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Recreating Glacial Lake Missoula on the north playground

  We had some great play on Friday outside because the kids had fresh snow, about 3 inches at 9:45 a.m. and we able to make snow people and mosh around happily. By afternoon the north playground was a mushy and terrific mess-perfect for reenacting the ginormous Glacial Lake Missoula Flood from 18,000 years ago. 17 total kids participated in this spontaneous fun. First they used the 'dots' to collect the water behind a dam they created. After carefully constructing the ice dam, there was conversation about how to float it to make the ice break into big 'bergs'.
 Once the dam broke apart, the water moved quickly toward the drain where several yelled," Dry Falls!!!!" They dashed to the grate watching the waterfall. Someone spoke up loudly, "Down it goes to the Columbia and out to the Pacific!" They were immensely immersed.


Feeling very pleased with connecting to the content of the expedition!!!


Below is an example of me scribing at the whiteboard as the kids found good choices of quotes from Dr. Alt's book, Glacial Lake Missoula, to support ideas they were writing about in their creative nonfiction narratives. The thinking they did on this work was sent to Mark Buser, the president of the Ice Age Floods Institute because at the end of the month he will be meeting with the the NorthWest Congressional Delegation in D.C. to work on getting funding for the geologic trail that follows the path of the flood through the scablands and to Portland.
Being able to weave text quotes into their own writing was a very effective way for them to express their knowledge about all the have learned.

  Sphere in the Headlights has been a great expedition!!

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Analysis of Mr. Naiman's Writing

Transferring work from Reader's Workshop notebook to individual white board to share.  The 5/6 are deep into critical thinking of analyzing the writing of Coraline by Neil Gaiman because the way he described the house helped them think of a 'nonliving' thing as a character. Besides writing in the voice of a tomato in Writers' Workshop, the thinking about what an author has done in Readers
 Workshop are part of the building skills to the final product which is the creative nonfiction narrative that will be sent to the  Congressional Northwest Delegation by way of the Ice Age Floods Institute President, Mark Buser, as he heads to Washington D.C. at the end of November.

 The book Coraline has been very interesting for the kids to read. We set up a 'T' chart in the Reader's Work shop notebook as a 'notecatcher' of the words and page number of where each found language that was vivid and descriptive about the house and how those words added to each's overall understanding of the house.
An example of text coding, the notes being captured and then the planner--our major form of communication!

The way the kids have been keeping parents up to date in the planner has been just exceptional. This is how good they are doing their jog--the whole field experience to Grand Coulee was planned through them communicating to the families. I am so proud of how hard they work to be responsible learners. 

Have a wonderful week of Thanks!!

P.S. The kids can call into my radio show 'World Waves' on KRFP Moscow 92.5 next Wednesday from 8:30-10 p.m. to request some world music!!! I'll be sure to do a shout out the the 5/6! They have the phone number in their planners!:)





Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Following the path of the Glacial Lake Missoula Flood or learning what J Harlen Bretz figured out by walking the land in the early 1920s


 Ivan, our guide, took us to the very bottom of Grand Coulee Dam. We were able to go to this area which is off limits because of 9/11 to regular tourists. Before all the security measures, the townspeople used this tunnel to exercise in during the cold winter months.  The tunnel runs the full length of the dam- over a mile and we could see the light at the end of the tunnel!
             Seeing Steam Boat Rock on a brisk November morning was spectacular. Ms. Kuhle reminded the students that the reason it remains after a dozen or more floods down the coulee is because of the granite outcrop on the front other wise the basalt rock would have been washed away.
Steam Boat Rock 8:30 a.m. Friday, November 4, 2011. Ms. Kuhle is just beginning to give the narrative and ask questions to the kids.
http://iafi.org/  This is the link for the Ice Age Floods Institute--major source of all our information.
 Inside the dam and feeling the vibration of one of the turbines.

 After we had a delicious authentice mexican meal at La Presa in Grand Coulee, Mr. Moody, President of the local Cheney Chapter of the Ice Age Floods Institute talking to the kids after dinner and showing the original map of the channel scablands drawn by J Harlen Bretz.


DRY FALLS!!!! The whole crew packed was so excited to see the 3.5 mile long ancient waterfall. Their mouths dropped open as soon as they saw the size. Here Mr. Neff, former H.S. Physics Teacher, whose Dad walked this land with Mr. Bretz came to the Interpretive Center to tell the kids first hand stories.

 At Grand Coulee before the 'Hard Hat' tour. We came to get an idea about the volume of water that flowed and to see the coulee that is the grand one of the flood that occurred 18,000 years ago.

The fabulous chapersones-Mr, Jaekel, Ms. Caudill, Ms Berkana, Ms. Kuhle, Ms. Caisely, and Mr. Wulfhorst

Birdie, who helps publicize the Coulee Corridor and Mr. Moody discussing the amazing scablands.

Driving in the coulee on our way to Steamboat Rock.

Ready for the hard hat tour!!!!

Attentive listening and thinking as Ms. Kuhle explains the water direction and our first stop IN the scablands. The kids burst from the cars talking about how much they noticed and how they were following the map and discussing the geologic changes of the lithosphere.

These are a few pictures; more to to come!

Thank you families for supporting such an educational experience. The kids traveled around 400 miles together talking, learning and experiencing great content.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Be the Tomato!

           Writing in a particular voice takes time. The writer must become the source of inspiration.
 The 5/6 took the first steps of writing a creative narrative by first touching, smelling, looking at, and then eating cherry tomatoes from my garden. We spent time creating lists of interesting adjectives to describe this fruit/vegetable. We read books and talked about interesting ways to communicate an idea and think about audience be comparing two children's books.  Two students researched and gathered a handful of 'tomato' facts. Dialogue was analyzed for value and we thought about the strength of problems in short, short stories.
Then the formal writing assignment was given in the 6+1 Writing Traits way-- a R>A>F>T>S. Those letters stand for role, audience, format, topic, and strong verb and provide the structure for the assignment. So, for this writing, the R was to write in first or third voice using dialogue to move the story or/and give setting. The A stands for audience. We decided this first writing assignment would be for us to get to know each other better as writers. The F= format, which was a tiny, short story about the 'T' which is the topic. The strong verb chosen was for us 'to entertain' each other. We wanted to learn what we find funny and to build friendships.

The pictures show the students in the last step of the writing process. The kids self evaluated their final copy after multiple steps of revision and editing. Certain criteria for this assignment was created and the rubric or grading tool and their papers is what the kids are holding in these pictures. After they self assessed their own work, they were randomly given a peer (ask about if they were a blueberry or banana) to review how they graded themselves. Hard work and the level of security has grown exponentially in this group because they shared their thoughts to each other about the writing in Writer's Circle and with each other often over time. Peer review when focused is essential to growth.  They will tell you they have grown and the proof is reading their first rough drafts and comparing it to the final project.





This writing assignment was part of the scaffolding or growth for the final product of our expedition. The kids will write in the voice of the land-the scablands to the Congressional Delegation of WA, MT, ID, and OR. More on that soon-- tomorrow we head out to Grand Coulee by way of Eastern Washington to absorb the lithosphere.