"Life begins at the end of your comfort zone"

Fifth grade at St. James always looks forward to the overnight field trip to the Arkansas Outdoor School…or better known as 4-H. Anticipation builds weeks before the actual trip with picking activities, going over the packing list, travel plans,and permission slips.

Then…the day of departure finally arrives. Fifth grade was able to experience team building, archery, canoeing, orienteering (using a map and compass), fishing, and rock climbing.

Field trips provide authentic, hands-on, experiential learning opportunities where students connect what they are learning in the classroom in a real-world context.

Erin Hobson
Literally, Figurative Language Is So Fabulously Fun!

By Susie Rogers, ELA, 5th-8th

For the past week, my fifth graders have had the absolutely best time of their lives by digging deep into the figurative language. They were detectives as they found words and phrases that shouted, “Don’t take me literally!” Today, the students were as busy as bees trying to escape the St. Patrick’s Day Escape Room by using their knowledge of alliteration, similes, metaphors, onomatopoeias, hyperboles, idioms, and personification. Though some will remain locked away forever because of the quick as a wink time limit, most students simply soared like eagles and were successful with their excellent and exciting escape!

Susie Rogers
Clouds

According to Merriam-Webster, a cloud is a visible mass of particles of condensed vapor (such as water or ice) suspended in the atmosphere of a planet (such as the earth) or moon. Fifth grade is currently investigating the water cycle. As a lab demonstration, students set up a model of a cloud (shaving cream), and slowly filled the “cloud” with water to visualize how clouds fill up with water vapor and create precipitation. Students were able to see the connection between the model created in the lab and the real world.

“Clouds are the sky’s imagination.”

Erin Hobson
Colonial Living

After lots of research and preparation, the 5th grade Historians hosted a walk-through Colonial Village. Each of the six locations was set in a different colony and represented lifestyles from the tip of New England all the way into the deep rural south of Georgia. Visitors were treated to a demonstration of horse-shoeing, by a real blacksmith (and mom). Following that demonstration they walked through a Massachusetts general store, a Rhode Island home, a Blacksmith shop in New Jersey, the bedroom of a sick Pennsylvania boy, and a kitchen in Georgia and farmhouse in South Carolina.

Erin Hobson
Latin Interaction (yes, that's a Latin derivative!)

by Jennifer Jordan

Fifth graders have learned 9 chapters of Latin vocabulary and grammar concepts so far, with a fair number of quizzes under their belts. Basic individual review is an essential study skill, and I encourage students to test their knowledge on their own. However, group review offers a variety of benefits— the opportunity to challenge yourself against your classmates, show what you know and figure out what you might not know, and of course, move around the room. We enjoy a few different review games— old-fashioned flyswatter which pits students against each other at the board to “swat” the board with the correct Latin term; the digital Blooket game in which students answer vocabulary questions to collect points, toys, or another token and amass as much as possible within a time limit, and vocabulary match up, wherein students receive a few Latin words on paper and have to find the classmate who holds the correct English translation (an interactive “I Have, Who Has?” game). Students really enjoy these interactive games; I believe that it helps to cement knowledge that they apply not only on assessments but also in our daily instruction. They also practice collaborating with partners and enjoy the experience of proving their knowledge to their teacher and to themselves. Interactive games for the win!

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