Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Principal's Epistle



www.stmarksmilford.org            http://stmarksmilford.blogspot.com            
Calendar                   
28 Chapel at 9:15AM, Special Martial Arts Club 3:30 – 4PM
29 Science Club & Dancing Club until 4:15PM
1 St. Mark’s has worship services at 8AM, 10:30AM, and 6PM with Sunday Sch. at 9:15AM
3 Science Olympiad until 4:30, Dance Club until 4:15PM
4 Chapel at 9:15 AM, Martial Arts Club 3:30-4PM, staff mt. 3:30 PM
5 Science Club until 4:15, Dance Club until 4:15, School Board 7PM
Prayer Families
Lily R. (P3), Chloe S. (P3), Mason W. (P3), Colby W. (P2)
Saint Salute
·        A big Saint Salute to all those students singing at last Sunday’s service.  The members and parents loved it.       
Notes
If you had to name one characteristic of a child with the strongest connection to future success, what would it be?  IQ?  Early Reading?  Technology?  Aside from the spiritual answer of faith in God, I believe that the correct answer is delaying gratification.  I have mentioned this topic before on my blog and in this setting.  One researcher (over 45 years ago) tested young children on their ability to wait for 15 minutes for a marshmallow.  When he revisited these same children 18 years later, he found that those that were able to wait when they were young were more successful in school, had happier friendships, had higher SAT scores, were more likely to be college-bound, and were less likely to be in trouble in school.  In school, the children wait for attention, for recess, for  that purple marker, or for the best swing.  Later as children are required to organize their time and set their own goals, those with more practice in delaying gratification will be better able to stick to goals and ignore temptations.  Delaying gratification is not something simply learned at one age: it is a skill practiced over a lifetime.  Don’t wait to start!
Important Dates to Know
Feb. 3 Science Olympiad practice starts dismissing at 4:30
14 Parent’s Night Out 5-9 PM
13 & 16 No School
Calendar Changes for 15-16 School Year
St. Mark’s will not have Teacher’s Conference Oct. 19-20, 2015 as the published calendar stated last Wednesday.  It will be October 15-16.  No school will be held on Oct. 15-16, 2015.
Enrollment for 15-16
If you haven’t turned in your enrollment form for the 15-16 school year, you are encouraged to do so.  The enrollment fee increases March 1.
National Lutheran School Week
St. Mark’s will be celebrating National Lutheran Schools Week March 8 – 13 this year.  If any parent wishes to help plan that weeklong event, please see Mr. Reisenbichler.
Camp Lakeview
    Camp Lakeview, a Lutheran camp in Indiana, is mailing brochures about their summer programs and will start accepting registrations this year on Feb. 2nd.  Students who have completed second grade through eighth grade may attend a week-long session.  Weekend sessions with parents are available for younger campers.  Campers can request cabin mates on their forms, so you may want to discuss with classmates which week your campers want to attend.
    For campers who wish to attend in the same week as their friends, the camp suggests mailing registration forms and deposits together, and to ensure a first choice, it is recommended that these be postmarked on Feb 2nd.  Registration forms can be printed from the website, if you have not yet received a brochure (www.camplakeview.com). 
        To facilitate mailing registration forms together, you may send your completed form and deposit (payable to Camp Lakeview) with your child to school.  Please mark the envelope “Camp Lakeview Registration – Attn: Mrs. Schepmann” by the end of the school day on Wednesday, January 28th, if you would like your form to be included in the group packet.  (Thank you to Michelle Huhn who has agreed to mail the packet to ensure the February 2nd postmark.)  If you would like to mail your registration forms directly to the camp, that is perfectly acceptable – just do not postmark before February 2nd, or it will be held until after registrations with on-time postmarks are reviewed.
    If you have questions about Camp Lakeview, Paula Schepmann (Schepmann@gmail.com or 513-314-9957), Michelle Huhn (osufan1031@yahoo.com or 513-805-6282), or Rebecca Scholl (thescholls@zoomtown.com) are willing to answer to the best of their ability.  Happy camping!
Babysitter needed for 15-16
One family has expressed to me the need to have child care for one child for next school year.  If you or someone you know that is able 31           Isaac W. (1)nd willing to watch a 4-year-old while not at St. Mark’s, please contact the office and we will give you their information for contact.
Happy Birthday
31        Isaac W. (1)
1          Griffin M. (P4), Thomas C. (P4)

Classroom information
Mrs. Schulte (Pre-2)
We are excited to continue this month's theme, "At the Zoo" with a study of "Excellent Elephants".  We worked on our Letter J for Jesus, used our fine motor skills to feed some hungry elephants peanuts at our Sensory Table.  We shared the book, Nancy Knows by Cybele Young.  We made an elephant watercolor silhouette during Art.  At Bible Time, we shared the story of "Joshua and the Battle of Jericho" where we made our own trumpets and marched around the walls until they came tumbling down. 
Mrs. Frey (Pre-3,4)
Preschool is studying letter Q for Queens and Kings. Both classes will create different castles and crowns. On Queen and King dress up day students will imagine what life would be like if they were the Queens and Kings for a day. We will discuss elements of a fairy tale and read various fairy tales. In Bible Time 3’s will hear the account of Jairus’s daughter raised from the dead in which Jesus will show His power over death to Jairus. 4’s will hear the parable of the Good Samaritan. Jesus made an example of this foreigner to show an expert in the law how to show mercy.
Mrs. Reynolds (PK)
This week Pre-K is learning about the letter D and dinosaurs! I am excited about this week because kids just love learning about dinosaurs! We will be constructing our own dinosaurs from different shapes, making dinosaur fossil cookies, digging up dino bones in our sensory bins and even doing the dino-pokey. We will discuss different types of dinosaurs and how some of them are herbivores while others are carnivores and what those words mean. In Bible we will be looking how Jesus chose his disciples and how he called them to be fishers of men. We will talk about what it means to be fishers of men and we too are called to also.
Mrs. Sherman (K)
Jesus calms the storm is the Kindergarten Bible lesson this week.  They will learn that Jesus is always in control and cares about them.  The class will begin a new literacy unit called Appreciating Differences. During science, Kindergarten will identify and sort states of matter.  They will conduct an edible demonstration to better understand solids, liquids and gases. They will read 2 digit numbers and represent them with manipulatives and work with number bonds at math time.   The week will end with a celebration of the 100th day of school!  The full day students will conduct a book study of Snowmen At Night, build numbers with 10's and 1's, identify numbers before and after and practice popcorn words. 
Mrs. Reisenbichler (1-2)
Woo hoo!  We made it to the 100th day of school.  Friday was the 100th day and we celebrated being 100 days smarter.  This week we also walked with Jesus to His baptism.  We talked about the special blessing our baptism is to us.  The children performed surgery on words this week and made contractions.  The first graders finished sewing their pigs and read to the kindergarten class.  The children also wrote letters of encouragement to Benjamin Helge, a missionary to people in the Czech Republic.  Second graders made a lot of progress on their fairy tale and are close to completion and publication.
Mrs. Mayo (3-4)
In religion we learned about Gideon and his leadership.  In reading, we've learned more and more about medieval times while reading The Whipping Boy.  The more we read, the more we're glad we live in modern times!  In social studies we learned about the Revolutionary War and the Declaration of Independence.  In science we continued to learn about the moon and eclipses.  In math, the 3rd graders worked with fractions - making equivalent fractions and comparing fractions.   The 4th graders worked with angles and coordinate grids while reviewing long division.  In Spanish we continued to work with face and body words.  We celebrated the 100th day of school by having a pajama day where we spent the whole day in our pajamas while doing work on the floor in our sleeping bags.  We did many activities in history, math, and language arts revolving around 100.
Mr. Postenrieder (5-6)
In our Bible time this week we looked at how Jesus is manifest in our lives as well as is our discipleship passive or active. In 5th grade math we took our Unit 6 test. We are now working with exponential notation. In 6th grade math we took our 11th test.  We also reviewed fractions and basic algebra. In our Language Arts time we completed our story about a young man displaying heroic qualities. We began to look at bullying through the eyes of a character in our next story. In Social Studies we worked with the countries of Central Africa. In Science we continued our study of plants by reading and noting a section of our textbook dealing with plant response and growth.  In Spelling we added suffixes to words and looked at the change in the sounds of the syllables.
Mr. Mayo (7-8)
We’re moving along with A Separate Peace. We’re starting to draw parallels between the relationships in the book and our own. History is moving apace.  We’re learning  more about immigration of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  We wonder if our country would be as great NOW if the immigration policies had been different THEN.  We continue to be amazed at God’s rich blessings given to our country throughout its history.
Mr. Reisenbichler (7-8)
In religion we will study what God’s Word says about decision making.  In 7th grade math the students are studying volume of prisms, fractional word problems, and algebraic equations.  In 8th grade math we are studying direct variation and scale factor.  In science we are learning about elements, compounds, and molecules.  The students are building and testing a ski lift in STEM.

No comments: