Never mind about the album mistake...I redid the album so that you will find it once you open "Perrien." The album reads, "Patriot Day 2008."
Sorry about the confusion.
Welcome to Mrs. Amy Croel-Perrien's website! I have been working in education since 1995. Most recently I taught in a 4th/5th grade public Montessori program for West Ottawa Schools in Holland, Michigan. My experience also includes charter and private Montessori teaching. I am currently on a leave of absence from WO schools to work on a PhD in Curriculum, Instruction, and Teacher Education at Michigan State University.
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11 September 2008
Patriot Day pictures
All the Patriot Day pictures are loaded but I made a mistake and placed the Patriot Day album within the "First Day 2008" album. I'll see if I can move the albums around to make it easier to access the photos.
Have a great night!
Have a great night!
Classroom Updates
Hope Student
I am excited to tell you that we will have a Hope College education student working in our classroom this fall. Mr. Rodriguez stopped in today to meet the students and observe our class at work. In addition to his work as a teacher-in-training at Hope, Mr. Rodriguez works in an after-school program at Pine Creek Elementary.
T-shirts
Students designed T-shirts that tell about themselves. These T-shirts are hanging in the hallway above our lockers.
PTA Fundraiser
Students have received their PTA fundraiser materials and collection envelopes. Please mark your calendars to be at the Fun Run/Walk on October 3 at 6 p.m. We had a wonderful event last year...I hope we are able to do it again!
Finally...
Patriot Day Pictures
I took several shots of the students placing their flags for Patriot's Day. I will post the photos to our Photobucket account either later tonight or tomorrow afternoon.
I am excited to tell you that we will have a Hope College education student working in our classroom this fall. Mr. Rodriguez stopped in today to meet the students and observe our class at work. In addition to his work as a teacher-in-training at Hope, Mr. Rodriguez works in an after-school program at Pine Creek Elementary.
T-shirts
Students designed T-shirts that tell about themselves. These T-shirts are hanging in the hallway above our lockers.
PTA Fundraiser
Students have received their PTA fundraiser materials and collection envelopes. Please mark your calendars to be at the Fun Run/Walk on October 3 at 6 p.m. We had a wonderful event last year...I hope we are able to do it again!
Finally...
Patriot Day Pictures
I took several shots of the students placing their flags for Patriot's Day. I will post the photos to our Photobucket account either later tonight or tomorrow afternoon.
Student Writing!
I would like to share two wonderful writing samples from recent classroom work! Students were asked to take a situation and paint a snapshot in time of what was happening, to be very descriptive and tell the story in a complete and interesting way. In the story, the main character has gum stuck in his (or her) hair and his bangs are sticking straight up!
The first is from Genevieve:
"Aw-w man!" thought Jeremy as he walked into his room. "I'm never going to be able to get this out." Jeremy got out his little hand mirror and sighed. "I never should have gotten into that contest with Nick, to see who could blow the bigger bubble," he thought.
He thought hopelessly about what to do with his hair. Then all of a sudden it clicked, wash it. He walked into the bathroom, put his head over the sink and turned on the warm water. He got the bottle of shampoo, squirted some on his head, and rubbed. When he was done he looked in the mirror and his hair was pink!
The second is from Emeline:
"Hide me! I look terrible, I'll have to get it cut off!" My friend sobbed when she looked in the mirror. "I know, but you shouldn't feel so bad, cause it'll come out soon," I told her. I don't think it made her feel any better. "the gum is orangy-pink and my hair is changing color!" My friend yelled at me. The gum was orangy-pink. It was a very bright orangy-pink, and her hair was turning pink, too. It also was sticky and felt gross. It was stinky, it smelled like tropical twist. I told her not to feel it!
The students have been hard at work at snapshot writing; both of these student writers painted a vivid picture in my mind!
The first is from Genevieve:
"Aw-w man!" thought Jeremy as he walked into his room. "I'm never going to be able to get this out." Jeremy got out his little hand mirror and sighed. "I never should have gotten into that contest with Nick, to see who could blow the bigger bubble," he thought.
He thought hopelessly about what to do with his hair. Then all of a sudden it clicked, wash it. He walked into the bathroom, put his head over the sink and turned on the warm water. He got the bottle of shampoo, squirted some on his head, and rubbed. When he was done he looked in the mirror and his hair was pink!
The second is from Emeline:
"Hide me! I look terrible, I'll have to get it cut off!" My friend sobbed when she looked in the mirror. "I know, but you shouldn't feel so bad, cause it'll come out soon," I told her. I don't think it made her feel any better. "the gum is orangy-pink and my hair is changing color!" My friend yelled at me. The gum was orangy-pink. It was a very bright orangy-pink, and her hair was turning pink, too. It also was sticky and felt gross. It was stinky, it smelled like tropical twist. I told her not to feel it!
The students have been hard at work at snapshot writing; both of these student writers painted a vivid picture in my mind!
Homework Project--Family Flag
(all students will receive a paper copy of this assignment)
After learning about the parts of the flag, a history of flags, and seeing lots of flags in class, we will be designing a family flag! Students have received a large sheet of heavy white paper for their flag. Flags should be in color; please make sure they use crayons or colored pencils (but NOT markers); I have extra sets of each (crayons and colored pencils) if you need them to complete the project.
Ideas for the flag include:
Family’s historical coat of arms
Symbols representing each family member
Symbols representing what the family likes to do together
Favorite family foods, books, etc.
Colors representing your family (i.e., if your family is Scottish like mine, you could use red)
Symbols representing your family beliefs
A banner with a family slogan
Flags are due on Tuesday, September 16th. We will be putting our flags on display in the classroom. Please let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks,
Amy Croel-Perrien
After learning about the parts of the flag, a history of flags, and seeing lots of flags in class, we will be designing a family flag! Students have received a large sheet of heavy white paper for their flag. Flags should be in color; please make sure they use crayons or colored pencils (but NOT markers); I have extra sets of each (crayons and colored pencils) if you need them to complete the project.
Ideas for the flag include:
Family’s historical coat of arms
Symbols representing each family member
Symbols representing what the family likes to do together
Favorite family foods, books, etc.
Colors representing your family (i.e., if your family is Scottish like mine, you could use red)
Symbols representing your family beliefs
A banner with a family slogan
Flags are due on Tuesday, September 16th. We will be putting our flags on display in the classroom. Please let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks,
Amy Croel-Perrien
06 September 2008
Homework Tips
Parents frequently ask me for homework help. Here are just a few tips for making homework time easier!
- Establish a routine—this involves a regular time for homework each night. In the past parents have commented that times right after school or right after dinner have been good times to complete homework.
- Create a work space—Ideally, a flat, uncluttered surface that is well-lit with few distractions.
- Provide homework tools—Good to have on hard are pencils and pens, notebook paper, highlighters, glue sticks, colored pencils (preferable to markers), a calculator and a dictionary.
- Organization—this involves setting up a space at home where notes and papers go for mom and dad, a place to hang the backpack, and a work space for completing homework. Review the "getting home from school" routine to make sure that kids understand where papers and belongings should go as well as where and when to work on homework.
- Be available—Stay nearby to answers questions or provide help as needed. Please offer guidance without giving the answer. They may need time to discuss
- (Yes…despite what your kids may tell you, it is okay for you to correct and review completed work!)
- Break Time! Kids' attention often wanders after 20-30 minutes. Taking a few minutes break to walk around, get a drink or snack will often help kids recharge and making completing homework easier.
- Let Mrs. Perrien know if the homework assignment is especially difficult.
04 September 2008
Preparing for fall testing
For the next four weeks upper elementary Montessori students will be participating in targeted reading and writing lessons that will help us prepare to take the MEAP assessments in October. These lessons are simply times where we work together on improving our writing skills and practice different reading strategies.
Students will be learning the difference between writing themes and topics. They will practice responding to writing prompts as well as how to score their own writing and the writing of their peers. We will be focus on developing strong central ideas, adding relevant and interesting details, using interesting words and varying our sentence structure.
We will also be practicing several key reading strategies by using each strategy with different stories—both fiction and non-fiction. At parent night, I will point out how you can tell which strategy we have recently learned.
To make these lessons specific for the different grade levels, I will be focused on teaching the 4th and 5th graders. 3rd graders will be working with Mrs. LeClair, while the 1st and 2nd graders will be going to Mrs. Klinger’s and Mrs. Sale’s classes. This is a great way for us to prepare for the MEAP because these state standardized assessments are grade-level specific. Students will only be in these grade level lessons for one hour per day and only during the month of September.
I am excited about these lessons because they will also be the starting point for our writing and reading studies for the school year. Reading and writing don’t begin or end with the MEAP but the timing of the MEAP is why we do these lessons during the month of September. The MEAP is meant to test knowledge learned the previous school year; however, being out of school all summer necessitates September review.
As we complete our math placements students will also jump into the Montessori math curriculum. Beginning next week you will see math worksheets as occasional homework. These worksheets, combined with our daily classroom work, will also be a way that we prepare for the MEAP assessments.
We are having a great week in school; thanks for all you are doing at home to make the transition back to a school schedule.
Students will be learning the difference between writing themes and topics. They will practice responding to writing prompts as well as how to score their own writing and the writing of their peers. We will be focus on developing strong central ideas, adding relevant and interesting details, using interesting words and varying our sentence structure.
We will also be practicing several key reading strategies by using each strategy with different stories—both fiction and non-fiction. At parent night, I will point out how you can tell which strategy we have recently learned.
To make these lessons specific for the different grade levels, I will be focused on teaching the 4th and 5th graders. 3rd graders will be working with Mrs. LeClair, while the 1st and 2nd graders will be going to Mrs. Klinger’s and Mrs. Sale’s classes. This is a great way for us to prepare for the MEAP because these state standardized assessments are grade-level specific. Students will only be in these grade level lessons for one hour per day and only during the month of September.
I am excited about these lessons because they will also be the starting point for our writing and reading studies for the school year. Reading and writing don’t begin or end with the MEAP but the timing of the MEAP is why we do these lessons during the month of September. The MEAP is meant to test knowledge learned the previous school year; however, being out of school all summer necessitates September review.
As we complete our math placements students will also jump into the Montessori math curriculum. Beginning next week you will see math worksheets as occasional homework. These worksheets, combined with our daily classroom work, will also be a way that we prepare for the MEAP assessments.
We are having a great week in school; thanks for all you are doing at home to make the transition back to a school schedule.
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