Kindergarten Contact Information:
carley.stuckeman@gcisd.net
wendi.alonzomacmahon@gcisd.net
jayne.williky@gcisd.net
Glenhope Elementary School
6600 Glenhope Circle N.
Colleyville, Texas 76034
phone: 817.251.5720
On Monday, Grapevine High School’s FFA (Future Farmers of America) students will be visiting Glenhope! They’ll be bringing a few animals for our kindergators to see up close, connecting perfectly with the animals we learned about in class.
Please have your child wear his/her light blue Glenhope Gators field trip shirt (pictures to the left) that our amazing and generous PTA purchased for us.
We’re looking forward to a fun experience!
Did someone say contest? Let's go, kindergators!
Meet Mrs. Williky's student of the week, Judah. Judah lives with his mom, dad and his brother Zion. Judah likes to eat steak and corn and his favorite color is blue. Judah's favorite book is Never Let a Dinosaur Scribble and he likes to watch Grizzly & the Lemmings on t.v. Judah's favorite sport is soccer. When Judah grows up, he wants to be a famous football player. Judah says he is special because, “I am gentle and kind” His friend Alex says, "Judah is a good friend because he is always kind and nice, and he is my friend."
November Character Trait
How appropriate that the character trait for the month of November is gratitude. Gratitude is "Choosing to appreciate the people and things in our lives." You can help your child reflect on what they appreciate and are thankful for with these gratitude prompts:
Borrowed from: Kelly McFarland @ http://www.engaginglittles.com/
WHAT A BUSY WEEK!
We continued to work on listening for beginning and ending sounds in words and finding words that begin and/or end with the same sound. Listening for the same ending sounds has been a little tricky for some students. In math, the students worked on addition to 10 and subtraction from 10, as well as, counting backwards from 20 to 1 and counting from 1 – 100. In social studies we learned about symbols that represent Texas. Ask your child to tell you about them.
BOOK BAGS
On Friday, ALL students brought home their reading bag with four books in it. Please have your child read each of these books daily. These books are on your child’s independent reading level, which s/he should be able to read with 90% accuracy. Some books may seem too easy for your child, but we want them to practice reading the books fluently (reading like they talk) with few errors. Reading independent level books also helps build your child’s confidence.
Some of the reading strategies for students to use:
Point to each word (very important for beginning readers)
Use the pictures for clues
Go back and re-read
Look at the beginning letter(s)
Here are some additional ways to use these books after reading them:
· Read the pictures to tell the story
· Look for word wall words
· Retell the story – what happened in the beginning, middle and end
· Ask how this story relates to real life; can they make any connections
Your child will need to return the bag every Friday and s/he will get four new books. Please have your child keep the reading bag in their backpacks when they are not reading them. If we need to switch out books on a different day, their bag will be here. This will also help minimize the chance of any books getting lost, as there is a $10.00 fee for each lost book. Thank you for your continued support. We look forward to watching our readers grow.
A note From Mrs Canafax, our school counselor:
Food Assistance or Other Needs
As the school counselor, one of my most important roles is to help ensure that every student has what they need to learn and thrive. If your family is ever experiencing financial challenges or needs support with food, school supplies, or other basic resources, please don’t hesitate to reach out. I am here to help, and all conversations will remain confidential. My email address is: lauren.canafax@gcisd.net
LETTER ID and SOUNDS
Your child should be able to confidently identify (within 3 seconds, in random order)
at least 20 upper case letters, at least 20 lower case letters & at least 20 letter sounds.
AT HOME LITERACY ACTIVITIES
The link below contains some fun activities for your child to enjoy and practice different reading skills!
mCLASS® Home Connect®
https://www.mclass.amplify.com/homeconnect/
SIGHT WORDS
Below are the kindergarten sight words for the entire year. We may not cover them all and we may add in some of our own. Knowing our sight words will help your child tremendously in reading and writing. Each week we will learn two or three new words. Please review these words with your child. Students are expected to read, write and spell these words.
These are the sight words we learned this week:
said we
These are the sight words we have previously learned:
said we did in and like can it at
go am to by my I see a the
READING and WRITING SKILLS WE WILL LEARN in KINDERGARTEN
By the end of Kindergarten, students should be able to:
Recognize and produce rhyming words
Segment words in an oral sentence
Segment words into syllables
Segment and pronounce initial, medial and final phonemes in spoken CVC words
Manipulate phonemes with additions or substitutions in one-syllable words
Name all letters of the alphabet
Write all manuscript letters in lowercase and uppercase
Sequence letters of the alphabet
Fluently produce sounds of consonants and short vowels when given the letter
Fluently produce sounds for basic digraphs (wh, sh, ch, th, ck)
Name and write corresponding letter(s) when given sounds for consonants, consonant digraphs, and short vowels
Distinguish long and short vowel sounds within words
Read and spell approximately 200 CVC words
Spell other words phonetically, drawing on knowledge of sound-letter relationships
Read and write our sight words
Identify and name correct punctuation at end of sentence
Capitalize words at beginning of sentences and names of people
Name the author and illustrator of a story and define their roles
Explain narrative story structure including character, setting and main events
Use a combination of drawing and dictating to narrate linked events to tell about a story in sequence
Re-tell key details of narrative and informational text, using pictures or prompts as a guide
Identify characters, settings and main events in a story, with pictures or other prompts
Describe what happened in a story when given a specific illustration
With prompts, compare and contrast the experiences of characters in two stories
Explain difference between narrative and informational text
Echo-read a passage with correct phrasing and expression
Identify and explain new meanings for familiar words and newly taught words
Produce and expand complete sentences in shared language activities
Curriculum Objectives
Language Arts:
I can identify upper and lowercase letters of the alphabet and the sounds they make.
I can identify the beginning and ending sounds of words and identify what letter makes that sound.
I can write my name with only the first letter capitalized, followed by all the other letters lower case.
Math:
I can add and subtract numbers to/from 10.
Science:
I can identify, describe, and predict the patterns of day and night and their observable characteristics.
Social Studies:
I can identify patriotic objects and explain what patriotism means.
I can show respect when I recite the Pledge of Allegiance to the United States flag.
I can identify American/patriotic symbols, such as, the Statue of Liberty, the White House, the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial.
I can be a good citizen and follow the Gator Way.
Nov. 17th ~ GCISD FFA Farm Visit
Nov. 20th ~ 67th Day of School
Nov. 24th - 28th ~ Thanksgiving Break - No School
Dec. 2nd ~ Fall Gallery Walk / Hatching Choir Performance @ 6:30 - 7:30
Dec. 4th ~ Grapevine Holiday Parade @ 7:00 p.m.
Dec. 6th ~ PTA Holiday Breakfast @ 8:00 - 10:00 a.m.
Dec. 17th ~ Holiday Party @ 1:30 - 2:30
Dec. 18th ~ Early Dismissal
Dec. 19th - Jan. 6th ~ No School Holiday Break
Jan. 5th & Jan.6th ~ Professional Development
for teachers
Jan. 7th ~ Students Return to School