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Welcome to Kindergarten Curriculum Night!! Mrs. Hemric, Mrs. Hodges, Ms. LaVergne, Ms. Drayton.

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome to Kindergarten Curriculum Night!! Mrs. Hemric, Mrs. Hodges, Ms. LaVergne, Ms. Drayton."— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome to Kindergarten Curriculum Night!! Mrs. Hemric, Mrs. Hodges, Ms. LaVergne, Ms. Drayton

2 Behavior Expectations ~ Croft uses a school wide behavior plan Outstanding Great Job Good Day Ready to Learn Think About It Teacher's Choice Parent Contact

3 Homework READING SHOULD BE DONE NIGHTLY AND RECORDED IN AGENDA READING: Students should read or be read to for a minimum of 20 minutes per night. This can include using RAZ- KIDS. HOMEWORK WILL BEGIN September 28th In addition to Reading, homework will include one Science/Social Studies activity, one Math activity, one Phonics activity, and Sight Word activities. These will be reinforcing concepts we are learning in class. **ALL HOMEWORK IS DUE ON FRIDAY**

4 Parent Communication Great forms of communication: - -Email: will be checked within 24 hours of receipt --Phone: 980-343-0370 --Agendas Te achers will communicate with you in the following ways: - -Monthly Newsletters --Weekly Update Emails --Thursday Folders -- Daily Agendas -- Phone Calls

5 Kindergarten Curriculum ( Common Core Standards) * Speaking & Listening: Children should be able to ask and answer questions related to a story. *Reading: Kindergarten children should be reading a minimum of 30 words per minute by June. This includes text with varied sentence patterns. In RAZ KIDS this is a level "D". Students will complete a reading assessment to find their reading level. In Kindergarten, students may dictate answers to the teacher. After a Level F in First Grade, students must write their answer. *Writing: Kindergarten children should be able to write several detailed sentences related to a specific, single topic. These should be sequenced correctly. *Math: Kindergarten children should be able to count to 100 from any given number, compose and decompose numbers to 20. Children focus on understanding of numbers. *Social Studies: Kindergarten students discuss self, family, school, and the larger community. We also learn about family traditions and holidays of ourselves and others. *Science: Kindergarten students learn about animals, habitats, weather, properties of matter, and the five senses. This all revolves on how things change over time.

6 Math Investigations ~ Hands on math curriculum ~ Students are encouraged to explain their thinking through manipulatives and playing a variety of math games ~Counting and number recognition ~Place value ~Add and Subtract within 5 ~Geometry and shapes ~Measurement and data

7 Words Their Way * Students are placed in groups based on their writing and knowledge of spelling patterns. *Students work with a letter or word sort focusing on one or more sounds or letter patterns. * Students do a variety of activities to learn the pattern (sorts, magnet letters, stamps, games, etc.). *These spelling patterns should transfer into their writing over time.

8 Reader's Workshop & Guided Reading ~ Children build reading stamina by reading independently or with a partner. While reading they focus on various reading skills and strategies such as print concepts, making connections, and retelling. ~ Small groups are led by the teacher to model reading strategies and comprehension skills.

9 Thank you for coming to Kindergarten Curriculum Night! If you have any questions, please fill out a note card with your child's name and teacher, and leave it on the table.


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