MEMORIAL SCHOOL NEWSLETTER
April 4, 2014
Upcoming Events
4/4
Father/Daughter Dance

4/9

5th Grade Bake Sale

4/10
2nd Grade Concert @ 6:30 PM @ Memorial

4/10
PTO Meeting, Library @ 7:00 PM

4/17
CARES Assembly @ 2:00 PM, Gym

4/17
3rd Grade Concert @ 6:30 PM @ Memorial

4/21 - 4/25
NO SCHOOL -
Spring Break

4/28
School Resumes

5/8
PTO Meeting, Library @ 7:00 PM

5/14
EARLY RELEASE
1:10 PM

5/16
Mother/Son Event

5/22

Celebration of Learning @ 6:00 PM

5/23
Memorial Day Concert
@ 1:45 PM

5/26
NO SCHOOL
Memorial Day

6/12
PTO Meeting, Library @
7:00 PM 



31 West Main Street Newton, NH  03858
603-382-5251
Principal, Jonathan G. Vander Els
Assistant Principal, Donna B. Johnson
Principal's Message
Jonathan G. Vander Els

Good afternoon,

Thank you to everyone for their attendance and support during last Thursday's Parent Teacher Conferences and PTO Spaghetti Dinner.  This evening is one of my very favorite events of the school year, as we welcome so many people from our community together to support our school and the wonderful students who attend.  Our PTO worked incredibly hard to make this event successful, and I would like to pass on our thanks to them for their hard work.



We had the opportunity to welcome next year's kindergarten parents last night, as well.  It was nice to see some familiar, returning parents join us, as well as meet parents who had children coming to Memorial for the first time.  Our kindergarten screenings are next week, and we are very excited about meeting next year's class, the Sanborn Regional High School Class of 2027!

We will head into the second week of our Jimmy Fund Penny Drive next week.  The drive ends on Monday, April 14th.  The outpouring of support has once again been overwhelming.  Our student council and members of our paraprofessional staff are spearheading this drive to support the Jimmy Fund.  This organization was chosen for its work assisting children and families who have been affected by cancer.  Students are also selling orange ribbons representing leukemia awareness during the school store on Mondays.  These are also available in the main office.  We thank you for your continued support.

Check out our "commercial" below, created by our Memorial Media Club under the direction of Ms. Jodi Tamayoshi.

Penny Drive
Penny Drive

Well-done, students!

 
                                                        Jonathan G. Vander Els
                                                        Principal

                   
Physical Education News: 
Written By:  Mr. Kevin McKenney, PE Teacher

Throughout the cold winter we have been staying very active in PE. We are anxiously waiting for the snow to melt away so we can get back outside and start enjoying some spring activities. It can be difficult to have motivation to be active when it is so cold outside. The best strategy is to embrace the weather and take advantage of the last few weeks of winter. Bundle up and go sledding, snowshoeing, skiing, or skating. Even building a snow fort can be good exercise while having lots of fun!

 

We have recently been working on basketball, gymnastics, volleyball and fitness activities. Coming up in April we have the Circus Smirkus program coming to Memorial School. This will be a week-long program for all grades, culminating with a performance by some 3rd, 4th and 5th grade students on Friday, May 2nd. We are very excited to welcome this program to our school to create a unique and fun experience for our classes.

 

            Please help your student be prepared for PE days. Make sure your child has sneakers and breathable clothes for PE day. Coming unprepared hinders their experience and puts them at risk for injury. We look forward to an active month with your children. Always encourage kids to be active; it is the best way to maintain physical health!      

 

Jump Rope for Heart Update!

 

We raised the highest amount every in Memorial history!  In 2008, when Ms. Briggs started at Memorial, the school raised $2,590.00.  This year we raised $9,130.20.  Wow!  Each year over the past six years we have raised more than the year before.  Our highest fundraiser was Sydney Vose, who raised $480.00.  Our runner up was Dominic Castellano, who raised $435.00.  Sydney and Dominic were awarded Celtics tickets for this great achievement.  Thank you to all 156 participants in this year's fundraiser.

 

This event is done each year during PE classes.  We had a number of students participate in the "tricks competition", as well.  Congratulations to Jaime Simes (below) for completing 403 jumps in a row with no mistakes.  Our long jump winner was Grace Kunysz with 112, and our team jump winners (Catalina Miller, Jordyn LeMay, Nathan Talarico, AJ Viveiros, and Kaitlyn Real) jumped 281 times in 2 minutes.  Congrats, students! 

 

 

    

Preschool Applications

APPLICATIONS ARE NOW BEING ACCEPTED

FOR SANBORN REGIONAL INTEGRATED PRESCHOOL PROGRAM

2014-2015 

 

 

 

The Sanborn Regional Integrated Preschool Program is currently accepting applications for the 2014- 2015 school year. Eligible children must be at least three years old by September 30, 2014 and be residents of Kingston or Newton, New Hampshire.

 
The 2014-2015 school year programs currently have openings in the three year old class which will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays and the four year old class which meets on Monday - Thursday.

 

The tuition for the three year program is $130 per month and the four year old program is $200 per month. A tuition agreement form must be completed and returned in order to participate in the program. Enrollment is limited, and the deadline for submitting an application is Friday, February 28, 2014.

 

Click here for  the Preschool Program Lottery Application Form.

 

All applicants must participate in a developmental screening process. Please note that this is not a Child Find. You may call to schedule a Child Check Appointment if you are questioning a possible educational issue. For more information, or to register your child for the lottery, please call Robin Baker at 642-5272 or email at: [email protected].

 

 

CURRENT PRESCHOOL OPENINGS  

 

The Sanborn Regional IntegratedPreschool Program is currently accepting applications for the remainder of this school year. Eligible children must be at least four years old by September 30, 2013 and be residents of Newton, New Hampshire.

 
The 2013-2014 school year program currently has openings in the four year old class which meets Monday - Thursday mornings.

 

The tuition for this four year old program is $200 per month. A tuition agreement form must be completed and returned in order to participate in the program.

 

All applicants must participate in a developmental screening process first. Please note that this is not a Child Find. You may call to schedule a Child Check Appointment if you are questioning any possible educational issues. For more information, or to register your child for the opening, please call Robin Baker at 642-5272 or email at: [email protected]. 

 

 

Kindergarten Registration

MEMORIAL SCHOOL KINDERGARTEN REGISTRATION

 Kindergarten registration has begun. If your child will be five years old by

September 30, 2014 and you are a resident of Newton, New Hampshire, he or she is eligible for kindergarten in September of 2014.

 

Please call Memorial School at 603-382-5251603-382-5251 as soon as possible to pre-register your child for the 2014-2015 school year and to schedule a mandatory kindergarten screening.   Screening appointments are scheduled for Thursday, April 10th and Friday, April 11thand fill quickly so call soon to get your desired date and time.

 

Registration materials are available now at the Memorial School office and can be picked up any school day between 9:00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Please bring your child's original birth certificate when registering your child.

 

If you have any questions, please feel free to contact the main office at 603-382-5251603-382-5251
School Nurse
Written by: Ms. O'Sullivan

     HELP NEEDED

We are looking for help to bring this program, End 68 Hours of Hunger, to our district. The 68 hours refers to the time when a child receives school lunch on Friday to the time they have school breakfast on Monday morning. For many children and families, the weekends are difficult to get through with little to no food at home. This program gives children in need a backpack of food each week on Fridays to feed them through the weekend. This program is run 100% by volunteers- which is why I am writing this, we are looking for volunteers. I cannot state enough how much this program could help the lives of children in this district.

 

To bring this to our district we need at least two people to volunteer to be program coordinators. This would entail finding a space to keep the food and backpacks, stuffing the backpacks, and coordinating fundraising. The organization estimates this to be about 10hours a week if there are no other volunteers. Many teams that are already established average 3-5 hour time commitment weekly from volunteers.

 

If you are willing to volunteer please call or email your school nurse. If it does not fit in your schedule please spread the word to help us find people who can help.

 

For more information on End 68 hours of hunger go to: www.end68hoursofhunger.org 


                                                

 

Immunization Requirements for Fifth grade students:    

 

Please be advised that when your child is age 11 years or older, and it has been 5 years or longer since their last Tetanus toxoid-containing immunization, they must receive a booster dose of tetanus, diphtheria, and acellular pertussis (Tdap) vaccine. If your child has a documented medical contraindication to pertussis vaccine, a Td booster is acceptable. In addition, every child entering grade 6 must have had (2) doses of Varicella vaccine (chicken pox).
If your child had the disease of chicken pox, this must be listed with the date of the disease on a recent physical history and exam form completed by your child's health care provider. If your
child is 11 years old, and has already received
these immunizations, please provide a copy of the latest physical exam and updated immunization record to the health office as soon as possible. This may be faxed to the school nurse at 603-382-1466.  603-382-146
 
If your child has a well-child visit scheduled within this school year, please discuss these requirements with the doctor at the time of the visit, and provide a copy of this physical and updated immunization record to the school nurse. Thank you.
 

Thank you,

Sheila O'Sullivan, RN  

UA
Written By:  Ms. Jodi Tamayoshi
 
Memorial School Library News
Written By: Ms. Mulcahy

  

 

Vote next week

 

 at Memorial Library M C, April 9, 10 & 11

or

at Gale Library all next week

--if you have read 2 of the titles--

for the book you like best on the list!

 

Although the vote usually takes place every April during National Library Week, there is a date conflict with the Conference that announces the winners, so the voting date has been changed at short notice. 

 

Go to this link to see the complete list of this year's titles :

 http://www.dover.lib.nh.us/childrens%27room/childrenpages/gsf.htm  

 

The Great Stone Face Book Award is sponsored by the Children's Librarians of New Hampshire (CHILIS) and is given each year to an author whose book receives the most votes from fourth through sixth graders throughout the state! The winner is announced in May. The purpose of the award is to promote reading enjoyment, to increase awareness of contemporary writing, and to allow children to honor their favorite author.

 

MEMORIAL PTO  

 

Our next PTO meeting is scheduled for Thursday, April 10th at 7:30 pm in the library. We are hoping to have a meet and greet for parents of Pre-K and Kindergarten students, so please mark your calendars and join us for a bit of socializing (and pizza) prior to the meeting.

 

 

 

 

Gale Library News 
Busy April at the Gale Library

  

Celebrate National Library Week at the Gale Library with Art done by Middle School 8th Grade students displayed during the month of April. Come see the works of some very talented Sanborn students . If you have artwork that you would like to display, contact the library at 382-4691.

April 14-19 will also be an Amnesty Fine Free Week.  If you have overdue books, don't miss this chance to return them and have your fines canceled.

Our Rainbow Loom Workshop was such a fun night that children requested to do it again. Don't miss the Monday, April 7th workshop at 6:30 PM. Bring your loom, materials, and ideas. We will have some looms and materials available.

On Saturday we will host DEAR time where you can drop in and read to friends or read on your own. We are trying to fill each 15 min. slot with a new reader.

Craft Nite, Mon. April 14 at 6:30 PM , will feature Easter crafts, bunnies, and chicks.

The Friends of the Gale Library will be hosting an O'Neill Cinema Ticket Fundraiser. A Movie Pack can be purchased for $40 which includes 4 free movie passes,, 2 buy 1, get 1 movie passes, 1 free small popcorn, 1 small drink, and 1 Scratch and Win. Scratch tickets  are all winners and could possibly include free movie tickets, free concessions, $10 gift cards, $25 gift card or a free year movie seasons pass. Ticket orders start April 20 and end May 3 at the Gale Library or from a Friend of the Library.

Wii and Family Game Night  will be held on Wed. April 16 at 6:00. Super Mario, Just Dance, board and card games- Bring a buddy for lots of fun, games and plenty of exercise.   
Children can join in the Gardening Fun on Monday, April 28 at 6:30 PM. Come get your Growums gardening kits containing starter supplies for ingredients to kid-themed meals and healthy eating. Watch planting plugs grow before your eyes, plant seeds, and get tips to grow your own vegetables at home. Time to start your seeds to be ready for outside planting.

Our new cute and cuddly Puppy Puppet is ready to travel with you this summer with his journal BUT- he needs a name. Come visit him or her in the Children's Room and drop in your suggestion for a name, then sign up to take her on a trip this summer.

Movie Matinee will be held on Wednesday, April  23 starting at 2 PM.  A new release will be shown. We'll supply the popcorn but bring your own beverage.

It's time for the Great Stone Face Reading Program again in New Hampshire! The purpose of the Great Stone Face Award is to promote recreational reading for 4th,5th, and 6th graders, to increase awareness of quality  writing, and to allow students to choose a favorite author.

Newton's Gale Library and Memorial School Library have teamed up to present the 25 recommended Great Stone Face books and invite students to read and vote for their favorite. Memorial School children will be able to vote at the school library. The Gale Library is offering an incentive prize for children who read or have read any of the books on the list, and then vote, starting  April 1st and ending Wed. April 15th. Prizes will be awarded to the children whose names are drawn at random for participating.

  Technology Fun Night
Technology Fun Night
Friday, April 11, 2014
6:00 PM - 8:30PM

Place: Seacoast School of Technology
Who: Grade 5 - 9 boys and girls

Cost: Voluntary donation of 3 cans of food for local food bank per person.
If you would like to bring more cans, all donations will gladly be accepted.

Why: This school year, the Seacoast School of Technology is offering a series of events for students to show just how much fun learning about technology can be.



How to sign up: Call SST (775.8461) to register.
Registration deadline is April 10, 2014. Limited to 40 students on a first come first served basis.

This month we will be learning about Visual Programming with Alice and Scratch. There will be door prizes.




Any questions, contact Mr. Messa at [email protected]
or 775.8623

Come join in the fun!!!!

Public Notice

Sanborn Regional Fine Arts Summer Program
The Sanborn Regional School District is offering a Fine Arts Summer 2014 Enrichment Program.  These programs are being offered to students in 4th & 5th grade as well as Middle & High School.

If you have a child who is interested please click here for the complete Summer 2014 Program guide as well as sign up sheets.
Sanborn Youth Soccer
Registration is now open for Sanborn Youth Soccer's spring, 2014 recreational soccer program.  Boys and girls aged 4-13 may play. Registration deadline is April 5. Please visit our website for more info about the program and how to register. www.SanbornYouthSoccer.org

 

 

Not Sponsored by the Sanborn Regional School District.
Rockingham County Cougars News
Be part of the tradition of Pop Warner Football & Cheer

Click here for registration information and dates 

 

Girl Scouts News

Easter Egg Hunt

Boys & Girls Club

Sanborn Junior Indians (Football & Cheerleading)

NH Renaissance Faire



 
Safe Kids New Hampshire - CHAD
Click here for the Safe Kids NH Newsletter.
New Hampshire Fire Marshal's News
 
Attached is the March edition of the Safety Educator. We can not stress enough our need for your support in getting this newsletter distributed into the homes within the State of New Hampshire. All topics that are discussed are child/family appropriate including one that has become an urgent issue in 2014. This Sunday, March 9th, is the day we move our clocks ahead. The fire service also uses this day to remind families to take a moment to not only change their clocks but to make sure all smoke and carbon monoxide alarms are properly working. 

 

 

When it comes to smoke and carbon monoxide alarms, NH State Fire Marshal, J. William Degnan, has these important reminders:

* Residents are urged to have working smoke and carbon monoxide alarms on each level of their homes immediately outside of sleeping areas. 

* Smoke alarms should also be placed inside bedrooms and interconnected so that if one alarm sounds then all alarms sound. 

* Smoke alarms that are 10 years or older should be replaced because they lose their effectiveness and may not alert you to a fire. 

* Every residence should have at least two exit routes cleared of storage and snow to assure that you can escape a fire. 

 

Fire Marshal Degnan reports that the State of NH alone has had 12 lives lost so far this year due to fires and carbon monoxide. All of these tragedies are preventable. We truly appreciate your support in seeing that children and their families are kept safe. Please distribute as you see fit (paper, electronic, social media, website) Should you have any questions regarding this newsletter please do not hesitate to contact [email protected].


 Click here for the Safety Educator Newsletter 


Another Brick in "The Wall"
 Mr. Vander Els's Latest Blog Post

This article was co-authored by Jonathan Vander Els and his colleague Ellen Hume-Howard, the Director of Curriculum, at the Sanborn Regional School District.

 

 

Looking closely together at student work can unveil a treasure trove of insights to guide a school as they reflect on their purpose, assess their progress, and plan strategies for reaching all students more successfully. Their experiences are enhanced when teachers develop an awareness of where a student falls along a continuum of learning. Writing for instance is a content area that lends itself well to studying student work within a continuum, and has been the focal point in guiding our teachers at Memorial School as we align our work not only within each grade level, but vertically within all grade levels in our school.  However, getting to this point was a three-year journey that continues to evolve as we learn more about not only our students' skills and needs, but also our own needs as a staff related to instruction and aligning our assessment of student work.

 

A visitor checking out classrooms at the Memorial Elementary School might be surprised at how traditional everything looks. But it's the little things that might catch your eye:  the charts and graphs on the walls depicting student learning targets, the student work displayed with the standards identifying the learning outcomes, and the conversations students have identifying precisely what they are working on.  But one artifact stands out. It's what we like to refer to as "The Wall."  The Wall is actually a writing wall that represents the writing analysis that the entire faculty engaged in and has been reviewing over the course of the school year.  The writing wall is an example of blending working with the standards and reviewing students' work.

 

The Wall was a way that we have found success not only analyzing writing, but also developing a greater understanding as a staff, K-5, about our vertical alignment.  This was the next "step" in our journey as a Professional Learning Community.  We felt like our individual team structures were quite solid; there was a level of interdependence among the members of our grade level teams.  We wanted to expand this vertically, so that a student's experience from grade to grade was not only consistent, but the content built upon each student's previous learning and experiences to the highest degree possible.

 

Three years ago we chose writing as our common area of focus for a few reasons.  First, it was an overall area of need for the students in our school.  Our students had made great gains in reading and mathematics, but were still struggling to write critically.  We knew that our focus had been so intense in reading and mathematics that we had not been able to focus on writing to the extent we would have liked.  We also felt like student's ability to write more effectively would translate across all subject areas.

 

Once we had formally identified writing as a "school goal" we went about establishing a baseline.  We decided to do this through a school-wide writing prompt.  The first year, we realized very quickly that we were comparing "apples to oranges", so to speak.  Each team had built a rubric to assess their grade level's writing.  What we found was that the rubrics were very different, so it was difficult to compare writing from grade level to grade level.  One of the other outcomes was that the expectations across grade levels were inconsistent.  In some cases, expectations at lower grade levels were more rigorous than at higher grade levels.

We found our solution to these issues by utilizing a multi-grade continuum developed by Lucy Calkins.  Through this lens, our whole staff would be analyzing writing by the same criteria.  This would result in more consistency not only within grade levels but from grade to grade. 

 

But we were searching for a way to put all of the pieces together to analyze our writing as a staff.  Our team leaders, consisting of the assistant principal, representatives from each teaching team, and myself, along with the continued guidance and consultation of our Director of Curriculum, Ms. Ellen Hume-Howard, decided that the best way would be to display the writing on our wall.  This writing wall would allow us to visually analyze the writing we had done from kindergarten through fifth grade.  Of course, we had to consider how we would represent 350 pieces of writing.  We decided to make a large table, with the vertical axis representing each particular grade level, and the horizontal axis representing the level on the continuum.  To account for how many students were at each particular level within the continuum, we used small stars to represent each student at each level.  In this way, we could immediately see where each grade level fell overall, but also dissect where specific clusters of students were and how far away they were from where a "typical" student would be at the end of the year at each grade level.

 

   

Because it was a developmental continuum, we had to remind ourselves that it was not based upon "grade level expectations", but rather each individual child's growth.  We had guidance regarding where a "typical" student would be at each grade level, but the individual growth was also of great importance.  An additional step in our teams' process was to complete a "data cycle" (this is a forthcoming blog article in itself).  The data cycle process requires a team of teachers to analyze the data-specifically, where each student is on the continuum-and develop a plan for instruction that will help students to develop the skills necessary for them to progress.  We are then able to look at the grade level data as well as the individual classroom data.  This is crucial, as it allows for discussions related to instruction and remediation to occur, as teams identify the practices that are assisting students in being successful in their writing.

 

After the data analysis is complete, we take the time to debrief as an entire staff.  We have established vertical teams in our school, and we take advantage of these teams to offer different perspectives on the work we are doing.  For example, our vertical teams (consisting of one teacher per grade level, special educators, and reading specialists), follow a protocol which asks them to debrief using the following questions/directions to guide the conversation:

 

1.)           What are your observations related to writing across all grade levels?

 

2.)           Please share areas of strength from your grade level writing.

 

3.)           Please share your grade level's plan to assist students in realizing growth in their writing based upon the results of this assessment.

 

4.)           What do you notice in relation to writing at this point last year? (this allows for the very important task of comparing data from year to year)

 

I remember clearly during our first vertical analysis, that teachers identified that there were differences in writing at the same level on the continuum.  We had a great discussion as a staff around the notion that a "five is a five is a five".  That is, it shouldn't matter what grade level a student's writing was from.  If it was placed as a "5" on the continuum, it should be very similar to the other "5s" that were up there.  We found that it really was irrelevant what the writing "physically" looked like (because depending upon the grade level and the student, the appearances in writing are going to be visually quite different, as would be expected.)  What was within the writing was what was important.  This really helped to establish "inter-rater reliability" within our staff members, to the point that when we look at a "5" now, we can agree upon why a particular piece of writing was given a particular score, regardless of the grade level the piece comes from.

 

 

The work we have been undertaking has truly helped to develop us professionally.  It is imbedded within the work our teachers are involved in as part of their daily practice, and it allows our school to have the conversations necessary to make lasting systemic changes.  "The Wall" is but a microcosm of the larger work we are doing as a school and as a district, but is has allowed us the foundation to build upon as we engage in similar work in other curricular areas, or said in another way, as we add additional bricks.

 

Mr. Vander Els is currently a contributing author to two national educational blog sites:   www.connectedprincipals.com and www.competencyworks.org 


Contact
Jonathan G. Vander Els, Principal
[email protected]


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