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 SYNTHIA.HOLDER  
   
 North Bay Elementary  
 Room F-3  
 1825 Popps Ferry Rd.  
 Biloxi, MS  39532  
   
 Principal  
 Laurie Pitre  
   
 Phone: (228) 435-6166  
 Office Hours  
Mrs. Sindy Holder

5th grade teacher
North Bay Elementary
 
 News in Our Classroom
First term went by so fast. I really have enjoyed getting to know all of my students. We still have lots more to learn in 5th grade, so help me out please!!!!! Make sure that your child is at school everyday, unless they are sick. We cover so much material in just a day. Also, check your child's planner and homework assignments daily and don't forget to initial it. That let's me know that you are aware of everything going on at school. :) If you have any questions email me or call 435-6166, ext.237. Let's get started.
 
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 Course Objective
Biloxi Public Schools enter school name

 

 

2012-2013 Syllabus for Fifth Grade    Term 3

Teacher: Synthia Holder

 

E-mail: synthia.holder@biloxischools.net                        Telephone(228) 435-6166 ext. 237

Teacher’s Web Site: www.biloxischools.net/schools/northbay/faculty/synthia.holder/

 

Important Dates:

Midterm progress report: February 7th

Common Term Assessments: March 11 - 15

Report cards: March 27th

 

Grading Scale

A=90-100 B=80-89 C=70-79 D=65-69 F=below 64 I=Incomplete

Grading follows the policies of Biloxi Public Schools.  A mid-term progress report and a report card following the end of each term are issued.  The student’s current grades are available via Internet IOD. (http://iiod.ssts.com/Home.asp?state=MS)

 

 

 

Math

Objectives:

 

3 Develop mathematical arguments about geometric relationships and

describe spatial relationships using coordinate geometry.

   3a Analyze and describe the characteristics of symmetry relative to classes

        of polygons (parallelograms, triangles, etc.).

   3b Explain the relationships between coordinates in each quadrant of the

        coordinate plane.

   3c Describe the characteristics, including the relationship of the pre-image

       and the image, of each type of transformation (rotations [turns], reflections

       [flips], and translations [slides]) of two-dimensional figures.  

   3d Construct and analyze two- and three-dimensional shapes to solve

       problems involving congruence and symmetry.

   3e Label ordered pairs in the coordinate plane.

4 Develop concepts and apply appropriate tools and techniques to

   determine units of measure.

   4a1 Estimate and measure length to nearest millimeter in the metric system.

   4b1 Convert units within the metric system to include length, weight/mass,

         and volume.  

   4d1 Select and apply appropriate units for measuring length, mass, volume,

         and temperature in the metric system.

   4a2 Estimate and measure length to nearest one-sixteenth inch in the English system.

   4b2 Convert units within the English system to include length, weight/mass,

         and volume.

   4c Develop, compare, and use formulas to estimate and calculate the

        perimeter and area of rectangles, triangles, and parallelograms.

   4d2 Select and apply appropriate units for measuring length, mass, volume,

         and temperature in the English system.

5 Interpret and analyze data and make predictions.

   5b Compare data and interpret quantities represented on tables and graphs,

       including line graphs, stem-and-leaf plots, histograms, and box-and-whisker

     plots to make predictions, and solve problems based on the information.

 

Assessments: Vocabulary quizes, activities, chapter tests, Mid-chapter check ups.

 

Homework/Assignments/Projects: Homework due the following day unless otherwise specified; assignments not accepted late except for absence from school.

 

Course Requirements: Final grade will be broken down as follows:  60% tests, 35% activities, and 5% common term assessment

 

Reteaching and Retesting:  PROCEDURE WHEN A STUDENT FAILS A TEST

 

A student who fails a test will be offered an opportunity for re-teaching and retesting within 10 days by the classroom teacher.  In that instance the teacher will send home a written notice.  Communication will take place between the teacher and the parent as to the re-teaching times and the date of the retest.  The student must attend the re-teaching sessions to be eligible to retest.  The higher grade of the two tests will be placed in the grading program in the computer.

 

PROCEDURE WHEN A STUDENT DOES NOT FAIL A TEST BUT THE PARENT/STUDENT WOULD LIKE TO REQUEST A RETEST

 

In accordance with our BPS District Re-teach/Re-test policy, a parent and/or student may initiate a request to the teacher for any test to be retaken (failing or not failing).  The parent should write a note to the teacher, preferably in the student planner or a note attached to the student planner requesting that the specific test be given again to the student.  The teacher will then notify the parent of the re-teaching assignment to be completed AT HOME by the student under the direction and assistance of the parent, the date the assignment is due to the teacher, and the date of the retest.  The assignment will be reviewed by the teacher prior to administering the retest to the student.

Re-testing requests must be made within 10 days of receiving the test grade.

 

 

Additional Comments: Instant recall of Multiplication facts is essential to each child’s success in multiple step-problem solving. Students should continue to review facts daily to ensure that they meet the national standard for recall at 3 seconds per fact.


 


Language Arts

Objectives:

3. The student will express, communicate, evaluate, or exchange ideas effectively.

3a. The student will use and reflect on an appropriate composing process (e.g., planning, drafting, revising, editing, publishing) to express, communicate, evaluate, or exchange ideas with a focus on text of increasing complexity and length. [Note: Editing will be tested as a part of competency four.]

1) Planning

• Plan for composing using a variety of strategies (e.g., brainstorming, drawing, graphic organizers, peer discussion, reading, viewing).

2) Drafting

• Draft with increasing fluency.

3) Revising

• Revise selected drafts by adding, elaborating, deleting, and rearranging text based on feedback on teacher/peer feedback, writer’s checklist, or rubric.

4) Editing

• Edit/proofread drafts to ensure standard usage, mechanics, spelling, and varied sentence structure.

5) Publishing/Sharing

• Share writing with others formally and informally using a variety of media.

3b. The student will compose descriptive texts using specific details and vivid language.  

3c. The student will compose narrative text relating an event with a clear beginning, middle, and end using specific details.  

1) Stories or retellings

2) Narrative poems

3) PowerPoint presentations

4) Plays

5) Biographies or autobiographies

6) Video narratives

3d. The student will compose informational text clearly expressing a main idea with supporting details, including but not limited to the following: texts containing chronological order; procedural; cause and effect; comparison and contrast; order of importance; problem/solution.  

1) Reports

2) Letters

3) Functional texts

4) Presentations

5) Poems

6) Essays

3e. The student will compose simple persuasive text clearly expressing a main idea with supporting details for a specific purpose and audience.

1) Letters

2) Speeches

3) Advertisements

3f. The student will compose text of a variety of modes based on inquiry and research.  

1) Generate questions.

2) Locate sources (e.g., books, interviews, Internet) and gather relevant information.

3) Identify and paraphrase important information from sources.

4) Present the results.

4. The student will apply Standard English to communicate.

4a. The student will apply Standard English grammar to compose or edit.  

1) Nouns (e.g., singular; plural [including irregular forms]; common; proper; singular possessive; plural possessive; appositives; concrete; abstract; compound [one word: bookcase; two or more words: prime number/Yellowstone National Park/George

Washington; hyphenated words: editor-in-chief]; predicate nominatives)

2) Verbs (e.g., helping verbs, irregular verbs, linking verbs)

3) Verb tense (conjugation and purpose for present, past, future; present perfect and past perfect)

4) Subject-verb agreement

5) Articles and coordinating/subordinating conjunctions

6) Adjectives (e.g., descriptive, comparative, superlative; predicate adjectives)

7) Prepositions

8) Pronouns (e.g., subject, object, reflexive, singular, singular possessive, plural, plural possessive, demonstrative, and interrogative)

9) Pronoun-antecedent agreement (number and gender)

10) Adverbs (e.g., comparative forms; avoiding double negatives)

11) Interjections

4b. The student will apply Standard English mechanics to compose or edit.  

1) End punctuation (e.g., period, question mark, exclamation point)

2) Periods in common abbreviations (e.g., titles of address, days of the week, months of the year)

3) Commas (e.g., dates, series, addresses, greetings and closings of friendly letters, quotations, introductory prepositional phrases, nonessential appositive phrases, and interrupters)

4) Apostrophes (possessives; contractions)

5) Semicolons (compound sentences)

6) Quotation marks (e.g., quotations, titles of poems, titles of songs, titles of short stories, titles of chapters, titles of magazine articles)

7) Underlining/Italics (titles of books and movies)

8) Colons (e.g., time, before lists introduced by independent clauses, business letters)

9) Capitalization (e.g., first word in a sentence, proper nouns, days of the week, months of the year, holidays, titles, initials, the pronoun “I,” first word in greetings and closings of friendly letters, proper adjectives)

10) Spell words commonly found in fifth grade level text.

11) Produce legible text.

4c. The student will apply knowledge of sentence structure in composing or editing.  

1) Analyze the structure of sentences (e.g., simple sentences including those with compound subjects and/or compound predicates; compound sentences including those with compound subjects and/or compound predicates; and complex sentences, including independent and dependent clauses).

2) Compose simple sentences with compound subjects and/or compound predicates; compound sentences including those with compound subjects and/or compound predicates; and complex sentences, including independent and dependent clauses.

3) Avoid sentence fragments, run-on sentences, and comma splices.

4) Analyze sentences containing descriptive adjectives, adverbs, prepositional phrases (functioning as adjectives or adverbs), and appositive phrases.

5) Compose sentences containing descriptive adjectives, adverbs, prepositional phrases (functioning as adjectives or adverbs), and appositive phrases.

 

 

Assessments: Sentence checks, skills tests, term tests, writing assignments, and spelling tests.

 

Homework/Assignments/Projects: Homework due the following day unless otherwise specified; assignments not accepted late except for absence from school.

 

Course Requirements: Final grade will be broken down as follows:  45% English, 35% Writing, 15% Spelling, and 5% Common Term Assessment

 

Reteaching and Retesting:  Same as above

 

 

Reading

Objectives:

1. The student will use word recognition and vocabulary (word meaning) skills to communicate.

a. The student will apply knowledge of roots and affixes (e.g., non-, trans-, over-, anti-, inter-, super-, semi-, –tion, -or, -ion, -ity, -ment, -ic, -ian, -ist, -ous, -eous, -ious) in multi-syllabic words.  

b. The student will develop and apply expansive knowledge of words and word meanings to communicate.  

c. The student will identify and produce grade level appropriate synonyms, antonyms, and homonyms.  

d. The student will use definitional, synonym, antonym, or example clues to infer the meanings of unfamiliar words.  

e. The student will apply knowledge of simple figurative language (e.g., simile, metaphor, personification, hyperbole, idiom) to determine the meaning of text and to communicate.

f. The student will select the appropriate reference materials (e.g., dictionary, glossary, teacher or peer [as a resource], thesaurus, electronic dictionary) to understand or gain information from text regarding the meaning, pronunciation, syllabication, synonyms, antonyms, and parts of speech for words. [Note: These reference materials are not available during the administration of state tests.]  

g. The student will communicate using vocabulary that is appropriate for the context, purpose, and situation (e.g., formal and informal language).  

 

2. The student will apply strategies and skills to comprehend, respond to, interpret, or evaluate a variety of texts of increasing of length, difficulty, and complexity.

2a. The student will apply knowledge of text features, parts of a book, text structures, and genres to understand, interpret, or analyze text.

1) Text features - titles, headings, captions, illustrations, graphs, charts, diagrams, bold-faced print, italics, headings, subheadings, numberings, captions, illustrations, graphs, diagrams, maps, icons, pull down menus, key word searches, etc.

2) Parts of a book - title page, table of contents, glossary, index, appendix, footnotes, etc.

3) Text structures - sequential order, description, simple cause and effect, procedure, compare/contrast, order and importance, problem/solution

4) Genres – Fiction, nonfiction, poetry,

2b. The student will analyze text to understand, infer, draw conclusions, or synthesize information.

1) Identify and infer the main idea or topic in literary text, literary nonfiction, and informational text of increasing length and difficulty, citing text-based evidence.

2) Apply knowledge of transitions and cue words to identify and sequence events in narrative text including text containing flashbacks and events not in time order.

3) Identify and infer cause and effect in texts.

4) Synthesize information stated in the text with prior knowledge and experience to draw valid conclusions with supporting evidence including text-based evidence.

5) Predict a logical outcome based upon information stated in a text and confirm or revise based upon subsequent text.

2c. The student will recognize or generate a summary or paraphrase of the events or ideas in literary text, literary nonfiction, and informational text of increasing length and difficulty, citing text

based evidence.  

2d. The student will respond to or interpret increasingly complex literary text, literary nonfiction, and informational text to compare and contrast information, citing text-based evidence.  

1) Story elements (e.g., setting, characters, character traits, plot, resolution, point of view)

2) Literary devices (e.g., imagery, exaggeration, dialogue)

3) Sound devices (e.g., rhyme, rhythm, alliteration, onomatopoeia, assonance)

4) Author’s purpose (e.g., inform, entertain, persuade)

2e. The student will identify and interpret facts, opinions, or tools of persuasion

in texts.  

1) Distinguish between fact and opinion.

2) Identify tools of persuasion (e.g. name calling, endorsement, repetition, air and rebut the other side’s point of view, association, stereotypes, bandwagon).

 

 

Assessments: Selection tests, Fresh Read tests, and application of objectives.

 

Homework/Assignments/Projects: Homework due the following day unless otherwise specified; assignments not accepted late except for absence from school.

 

Course Requirements: Final grade will be broken down as follows:  60% tests, 35% activities, and 5% common term assessment

 

Reteaching and Retesting:  Same as above

 

 

 

Science

Objectives:

 

1 Develop and demonstrate an understanding of scientific inquiry using process skills.

   a Form a hypothesis, predict outcomes, and conduct a fair investigation that includes

     manipulating variables and using experimental controls.

   b Distinguish between observations and inferences.

   c Use precise measurement in conjunction with simple tools and technology to perform

      tests and collect data.

   c1 Tools (English rulers [to the nearest one-sixteenth of an inch], metric rulers [to the nearest

      millimeter], thermometers, scales, hand lenses, microscopes, balances, clocks,

      calculators, anemometers, rain gauges, barometers, hygrometers)

   c2 Types of data (height, mass, volume, temperature, length, time, distance, volume,

     perimeter, area)

   d Organize and interpret data in tables and graphs to construct explanations and draw

     conclusions.

   e Use drawings, tables, graphs, and written and oral language to describe objects and

     explain ideas and actions.

   f Make and compare different proposals when designing a solution or product.

   g Evaluate results of different data (whether trivial or significant).

   h Infer and describe alternate explanations and predictions.

3 Predict characteristics, structures, life cycles, environments, evolution, and diversity of organisms.

   a Compare and contrast the diversity of organisms due to adaptations to show how

     organisms have evolved as a result of environmental changes.

   a1 Diversity based on kingdoms, phyla, and classes (e.g., internal/external structure, body

     temperature, size, shape)

   b Research and classify the organization of living things.

   b1 Differences between plant and animal cells

   b3 Examples of organisms as single-celled or multi-celled

 

Assessments: Chapter tests, labs, quizzes, and projects.

 

Homework/Assignments/Projects: Homework due the following day unless otherwise specified; assignments not accepted late except for absence from school.

 

Course Requirements: Final grade will be broken down as follows:  60% Tests and 40% Activities

 

Reteaching and Retesting:  Same as above

 

Additional Comments: A Mississippi Science State Assessment will be given May 1st.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Social Studies

Objectives:

 

2.  Discover how democratic values were established and have been exemplified by people, events, and symbols. (C, H)

            a. Determine how democratic principles developed (e.g., women’s suffrage, civil rights, etc.).

            c. Research/analyze how democratic events and symbols have evolved (e.g., flag, voting,   

                inaugurations, etc.).

 

3.  Analyze spatial and ecological relationships between people, places, and environments utilizing social 

     studies tools (e.g., timelines, mental and physical maps, globes, resources, graphs, a compass rose,  

     political cartoons, charts, primary and secondary sources, technology, and other geographical

     representations). (C, H, G, E)

 

            j.  Identify continents and place the United States appropriately.

            k. Using social studies tools, identify and compare the characteristics of the five regions of the

                United States (e.g., soil, landforms, vegetation, wildlife, climate, etc.).

 

5.  Analyze the ideals, principles, and practices of citizenship in a democratic society. (C, H)

           a.  Explain the meaning of American citizenship (e.g., change in definition of citizen over time, the

                process of becoming a citizen, etc.).

 

Assessments: Participation, chapter tests, and fresh reads.

 

Homework/Assignments/Projects: Homework due the following day unless otherwise specified; assignments not accepted late except for absence from school.

 

Course Requirements: Final grade will be broken down as follows:  60% Tests and 40% Activities

 

Reteaching and Retesting:  Same as above.

 

 
 Qualifications
I recieved my bachelors degree in Elementary Education(K-8)from the University of Southern Mississippi. I have been a teacher at North Bay for 12 years.Nine of these years I taught 2nd grade and this is my third year to teach 5th. Previous to that, I taught first and second grade at DuKate Elementary School.
 
  1. Act Responsibly
  2. Come Prepared
  3. Have Respect
  4. Show Self Control
 
 
  1. Verbal Warning
  2. Time Away
  3. Behavior Reflection
  4. Call Parent
  5. Office Referral
 
 
  1. Praise/Recognitiion
  2. North Bay Bucks
  3. Treasure Chest
  4. Stickers
  5. Healthy Snack Treats
 
   

Last Updated: Tuesday, May 28, 2013