February 19-23

Upcoming Important Dates:

February 19- No School

February 23 – 3rd Grade Parent Lunch

February 28 – Early Release @ 11:30am

March 11-15 – Spring Break

TEKS: MATH

3.6A – (R)- Classify and sort two- and three-dimensional figures, including cones, cylinders, spheres, triangular and rectangular prisms, and cubes, based on attributes using formal geometric language

3.6B – (S)- Use attributes to recognize rhombuses, parallelograms, trapezoids, rectangles, and squares as examples of quadrilaterals and draw examples of quadrilaterals that do not belong to any of these subcategories

3.6E- (S)- decompose two congruent two‐dimensional figures into parts with equal areas and express the area of each part as a unit fraction of the whole and recognize that equal shares of identical wholes need not have the same shape

STUDENT FRIENDLY LEARNING OBJECTIVES

I can classify and sort two-dimensional figures based on their attributes.

I can classify and sort three-dimensional figures based on their attributes.

I can use attributes to recognize quadrilaterals and triangles.

I can draw nonexamples of quadrilaterals and triangles.

I can decompose a shape into parts with equal areas.

I can explain that equal parts do not have to be the same shape.

TEKS: SCIENCE

3.8B (S) –  describe and illustrate the Sun as a star composed of gases that provides light and thermal energy;

3.8C (R) – construct models that demonstrate the relationship of the Sun, Earth, and Moon, including orbits and positions; and

3.8D (S – 5th grade) –  identify the planets in Earth’s solar system and their position in relation to the Sun.

STUDENT FRIENDLY LEARNING OBJECTIVES

I can describe the Sun as a star composed of gases that provides light and thermal energy.

I can illustrate the Sun as a star composed of gases that provides light and thermal energy.

I can construct models that demonstrate the relationship of the Sun, Earth, and Moon, including orbits and positions.

I can identify the planets in our solar system.

I can identify the planets in their position in relation to the Sun.

 


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