Curriculum Guide
Transcription
Curriculum Guide
CURRICULUM GUIDE 74 South San Gabriel Boulevard • Pasadena, California 91107 • Tel: 626 792 6166 • Fax: 626.792.1335 • www.waldenschool.net Teaching that we all have stewardship for the world in which we live. TABLE OF CONTENTS I OVERVIEW Letter from the Director of Studies 6 The Walden Mission Statement 7 The Walden Philosophy Statement 7 The Walden Learning Outcomes 8 The Walden Agreements 9 Core Groups 10 Multi-Age Classrooms 11 Teaching Methodologies 12 DEVELOPING VOICE 14 15 Partners in Learning II COREGROUPS A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON NATURAL WONDER Lower Core Skills and Concepts 19 20 A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON CHILD LED-INQUIRY Middle Core Skills and Concepts 23 24 A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON LEARNING THROUGH EXPERIENCE Upper Core Skills and Concepts 27 28 III SPECIALTY CLASSES IV THE “SPECIAL”IST RELATIONSHIP 33 Music 34 Visual Arts 36 Physical Education 38 Dance 39 THE IMPORTANCE OF READING ALOUD 41 Library 42 Storytelling 43 Spanish 46 Technology and Science 48 Appen d i x Learning Math at Walden School 55 Writers Workshop at Walden School 59 Reading Workshop at Walden School 62 | 4 D ear Walden Families, At Walden School we believe that everybody has a story, that this story has meaning, and that it needs to be told. We are pleased to share with you the work that we do with this story in the Walden classrooms through our curriculum guide. Our guide, developed through the collective work of our faculty, is a fluid document that exists to highlight the distinctive qualities of a Walden education from Pre-K to 6th grades. The work presented here helps to illustrate a value we hold dear in the Walden community, using the story of our past to inform, develop, and change the story of our future. An education at Walden enables students to examine the world and question in an informed and reflective manner. Through studies in the traditional academic disciplines,Walden students develop skills not to maintain society , but to better the human condition and make progress. It is a deliberate intention of the faculty at Walden not to simply have our students merge into society at large, but to develop skills and a disposition to actually improve the world in which we live. This commitment to improvement is reflected in the partnerships and choices we make when developing and implementing curriculum. Considering the child’s social, emotional, and academic growth, we have adopted programs that reflect our mission and values like Columbia University’s Teachers College Reading and Writing Project (TCRWP), Singapore Math, Responsive Classroom, and the Orff Schulwerk. Also guiding our practice are the interests, talents, and skills of each child, as deep understandings and connections are key attributes in a progressive environment. Based on John Dewey’s philosophy that education begins with the curiosity of the learner, we utilize a spiral path of inquiry: asking questions, investigating solutions, creating new knowledge as we gather information, discussing our discoveries and experiences, and reflecting on our newfound knowledge. We deliver our program in multi-year groups called “cores” that offer children the opportunity to grow and develop at their own pace without being held to a specific age or grade level. There are four core groups that make up the Walden experience: Lower, Middle, Upper, and Specialty. Each core’s focus, skills, an dconcepts are highlighted throughout this guide, combined with narrative descriptions of student life. It is our goal that this guide provides a framework for conversation, access to underst anding, and an invitation to the Walden story. Terra Toscano Director of Studies 6 | THE WALDEN MISSION THE WALDEN PHILOSOPHY STATEMENT | 7 THE WALDEN LEARNING OUTCOMES As a result of mission-consistent practices and expectations, the faculty, administration, and Board of Trustees have established the following school-wide learning outcomes: A Walden graduate will be: 8 | THE WALDEN AGREEMENTS The student body and faculty wrote the nine agreements below collectively during the beginning years of Walden School. They are found throughout the school and provide a daily context for our whole community on guiding the quality of relationships we expect at school. The faculty and staff revisit, explore, and explicitly teach them each year and use these as a foundation to work on community and conflict resolution with students. 1. I cooperate with all of the adults at school. 2. If I get mad, I solve it without hurting anyone or anything. 3. I stay with my group unless my teachers give me permission to be somewhere else. 4. I try to keep myself and others safe. 5. I give my best effort and attention to my school work. 6. I respect other people’s rights. 7. I respect my environment and all the living things in it. 8. I’m responsible for my own feelings, my own actions, my own learning, and for using my Wise Mind to help me do my best. 9. I try to help others keep these agreements by setting a good example. | 9 CORE GROUPS 10 | MULTI-AGE CLASSROOMS | 11 TEACHING METHODOLOGIES 12 | | 13 DEVELOPING VOICE IN THE WALDEN CLASSROOM 14 | PARTNERS IN LEARNING—PARENT/TEACHER COMMUNICATIONS | 15 CORE GROUPS | CURRICULUM GUIDE 17 Nurturing a child’s natural wonder and personal dignity A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON | CURRICULUM GUIDE 19 LOWER CORE SKILLS AND CONCEPTS—PRE-K THROUGH K/1 CLASSES “A WALDEN EDUCATION IS BASED ON BALANCE” As READERS and WRITERS, Lower Core students will: • Demonstrate an understanding and organization of the basic features of print • Recognize and understand rhyming words • I d e n t i fy and write upper and lowercase letters of the alphabet • Practice inventive spelling using phonic skills • Strengthen decoding and reading comprehension skills • Participate in daily silent, guided, or partner reading • Work on fine motor skills (tracing, cutting, pencil grip, and left-to-right orientation) • Use tri-pod grip independently • Dictate, draw, and represent personal stories • Develop basic sight-word vocabulary • Demonstrate mastery of letter -sound correspondence • Differentiate between consonants and vowels • Write and recognize first and last names • Write for meaning and clarity while becoming published authors • Identify elements of a book such as title, author, and illustrator • Actively participate in the writing process multiple times (generating,drafting, revising, editing, including work with writing partners and conferencing, and publishing) • Build reading fluency and the development of expressive language • Use proper sentence structure, syntax, and grammar • Identify plot, character, and setting in a story PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, and RITES OF PASSAGE • Establishing life-long identity as a reader through integrated reading units using books with repetitive patterns, an emphasis on phonological awareness, and work with leveled emergent texts (A-1). - Personal and family reading logs, guided reading groups, reading buddies and nooks, author studies, an exploration of chapter books and morning messages. • - Up” days, Individual and shared writing experiences, “Small Moment” stories from personal narrative, inquiry-driven non-fiction research and “All About” writing, persuasive and opini 20 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As LISTENERS and SPEAKERS, Lower Core Students will: • Follow simple one- and two-step oral directions As MATHEMATICIANS, Lower Core students will: • Participate in collaborative conversations about diverse Lower Core topics Explore Numbers and Operations in Base ten by: • Sustain a conversation focused on one idea • Practice and use eye contact • Using concrete and pictorial models to create a set with a given number of objects (Up to 100) • Ask and answer questions in order to seek help, get information, or clarify something that is not understood • Practice and use explicitly taught conflict-resolution skills • Learning to recognize and write numbers 0–100 • Studying multiplication by learning to count by 1s, 2s, 5s, and 10s forward and backward to 100 • Understanding1-to-1correspondence • Explore presentation skills • Comparing and ordering whole numbers • Speak audibly to express thoughts, feelings, and ideas clearly • Understanding and working with addition and subtraction equations by exploring number bonds • Describe personal strengths and abilities • Understanding place value • Understanding and creating addition and subtraction number stories In SOCIAL STUDIES, Lower Core students will: • Learning and using developmentally appropriate mental math strategies to add and subtract • Explore concepts of citizenship (interpersonal, social, self-awareness, community, service learning, and environmental stewardship) • Explore and discuss the Walden Agreements as a community norm Explore Algebra by: • Develop the classroom community by creating rules together as a class • Understanding the relationship between numbers in fact families • Engage in cultural exchange and empathy though personal stories • Modeling and writing number sentences • Identifying even and odd numbers • Understanding the difference between equality and inequality • Understand and develop emotional vocabularies • Participate in mindfulness activities • Understand geography (continents, landforms, landscape, climate, lifestyle, and maps) Explore Geometry by: • Explore individual and classroom topics according to student interest • Developing an initial understanding of symmetry and congruence • Reasoning with shapes and their attributes PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, and RITES OF PASSAGE • Class/Endangered Animal Study • Core-wide study of the Universal Concepts of Patterns and Relationships • Introduction to the icons of Depth and Complexity • Lower Core Book Drive Explore Measurement and Data by: • Measuring lengths indirectly and seasons of the school year • Introducing the clock and concepts of time As • Collecting and organizing data through interdisciplinary units | CURRICULUM GUIDE 21 A developmentally appropriate program that encourages responsibility, initiative and child-led inquiry A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON CHILD- | CURRICULUM GUIDE 23 MIDDLE CORE SKILLS AND CONCEPTS As READERS and WRITERS, Middle Core students will: • Keep a reading log and practice fluency in their daily independent reading • Remain active participants in the writing process multiple times (generating, drafting, revising, editing, including work with writing partners and conferencing, and publishing) • Set personal reading goals using a predictable structure • Investigate how published writers use English language conventions and begin using them in personal writing (e.g., nouns, verbs, pronouns, adjectives, and adverbs) • Read, comprehend, interpret, make connections, and reflect on a series of ideas within a text • Generate book reviews by developing ideas and referring to text to support ideas and opinions • Participate in their first literature circle/book clubs • Intentionally explore character development and plot through shared reading and writing experiences • Distinguish different literature genres through author study • Develop reading for information skills using context clues • Choose “just-right” books for themselves • Follow written directions • Develop a beginning understanding of how purpose, audience, and context can influence the substance of writing • Begin work on the Developmental Spelling Continuum to construct and deconstruct words using common phonograms, prefixes, suffixes, and word origins • Know and use periods, commas, question marks, exclamation points, and quotation marks to communicate ideas • Construct a paragraph through the development of a topic sentence, supporting details, and a closing sentence • Practice dictionary skills and alphabetical ordering using personal dictionaries • Practice printing and be introduced to cursive PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, AND RITES OF PASSAGE: • : Reinforcing reading habits and life -long identity as a reader, emphasis on reading with fluency and automaticity, transition from picture books to chapter books, reading for information, independent work with leveled texts (D-P), personal reading logs, author and genre studies through guided reading groups, partner reading, and reader’s theatre activities • “Lessons from the Masters” personal narrative study, inquiry-driven information writing, writing , about reading, developing opinion pieces to change the world, and personal expression 24 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As LISTENERS AND SPEAKERS, Middle Core students will: • Follow multi-step oral directions As MATHEMATICIANS, Middle Core Students will: • Follow agreed-upon guidelines for discussions (e.g., getting attention in respectful ways, listening to others with care, and speaking one at a time about Middle Core topics) Explore Numbers and Operations in Base Ten by: • Participate in organizing, planning, making decisions, and taking action in a group • Practice and deliver an oral presentation at the conclusion of each year • Use explicitly taught conflict-resolution skills with a focus on persuasion, compromising, debating, and negotiation • Explore the give and take of peer editing and partner work • Developing simple mental math strategies and learning the habits of a mathematician • Using concrete and pictorial models to create a set with a given number of objects (Up to 10 0,000) • Recognizing, writing, and learning equivalent forms of numbers (0–100,000) • Understanding place value to 100,000 • Modeling and understanding regrouping in addition and subtraction • Practicing estimation and mental calculations up to 10,000 In SOCIAL STUDIES, Middle Core students will: • Solving real-world problems involving all four operations while identifying and explaining patterns in arithmetic • Interpret and discuss the Walden Agreements as a community norm • Continue character and social development, emphasizing independence, emotional regulation in groups, considering multiple perspectives, and etiquette • Identify examples for freedoms, rights, and responsibilities of a community • Developing an understanding of fractions as numbers through modeling, comparing, and making equivalents • Practicing word problems and problem solving using a bar model Explore Operations and Algebra by: • Engage in focused study of cultures and traditions • Participate and lead mindfulness activities • Think critically, make inferences, and draw conclusions to explore individual and classroom topics and ideas • Modeling, representing, and solving problems involving multiplication and division within 100 • Understanding the properties of multiplication • Read, label, and interpret charts, maps, and graphs • Studying, examining, and applying the inverse relationships in all four operations • Understand and engage in the research process (find resources, take notes, outline and write) for self-directed inquiry Explore Geometry by: PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, and RITES OF PASSAGE • The Learning Adventure • Core-wide study of the Universal Concept of Structures • Cultivating Walden Garden beds • Service Learning Project using Garden materials • Full-day field trip to the Flower Fields • 3rd grade overnight camping in Joshua Tree • Reasoning with 2D and 3D shapes and their attributes AS MA T HEM ATICI ANS, Midd le Core stud As • Developing a foundation for the understanding of area and its relationship to multiplication and addition Explore Measurement and Data by: • Selecting appropriate tools and units to estimate, measure, and record length, intervals of time, liquid volumes, and masses of objects • Journaling about mathematical ideas and observations | CURRICULUM GUIDE 25 Learning academic skills through experience and Socratic discussion A TEACHER’S PERSPECTIVE ON LEARNING ACADEMIC SKILLS AND CONCEPTS THROUGH EXPERIENCE | CURRICULUM GUIDE 27 UPPER CORE SKILLS AND CONCEPTS Collectively known as “The Ponderers,” the Upper Core consists of the fourth through sixth grade classes. The question of “How is this information useful to me and others?” is central. Upper Core students are forced to wrestle with the knowledge that learning is not just something that happens at school, but every moment of their lives, Emphasis is placed on discovering what type of learner they are, how to grow their strengths, weaknesses, and mindset. Fourth and fifth grade students participate in a workshop approach to teaching and change classrooms based on the subject matter (Language Arts, Math, and Social Studies). This model relies heavily on the involvement of the learner to - small group, and individual explorations with guided practice, and gradual construct knowledge through hands-on, release. The model continues in sixth grade with the homeroom teacher taking over the core subjects. Upon graduation from Walden in sixth grade, students will have been exposed to all of the skills and concepts below. As READERS and WRITERS, Upper Core students will: • Comprehend, interpret, and connect with texts exploring prediction, inference, drawing conclusions, cause/effect, opinion, and summarizing • Compare and contrast fiction and non-fiction texts • Identify elements of a text and author’s point of view (plot, character, setting, theme, mood, and conflict) • Make inter-textual connections (text to text, text to self, text to the world) • Recognize and understand the characteristics of different genres of literature • Receive explicit instruction to nurture independent, life-long reading habits • Become active members of literature circles/book clubs that provide opportunities to examine, read, write, and talk about books • Use topic, supporting, and closing sentences in paragraphs • Construct, understand, and write a structured essay (personal, literary, and research) • Become practiced and independent with the writing process: • Study and use pre-writing strategies to organize ideas in writing • Develop purpose in writing for an audience Write with stamina and fluency within the genre being studied • Work within the context of a normed writing community to give and receive feedback • Proofread, revise, and edit written work for content, organization, style, word choice, spelling, and mechanics • Publish and share work with an audience • Focus on root words and study vocabulary • Continue work on the Developmental Spelling Continuum, and learn to consult references, as needed • Identify parts of speech and study grammar • Develop consistent, legible penmanship PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, AND RITES OF PASSAGE: • : Focus on life-long identity as a reader, reading for information and analysis, independent work with leveled texts, strategy and “thinking” post-its, independent reading logs and reading inventories, author and genre studies in literature circles • Emphasis on living life as a writer, writer’s notebooks as resources, narrative craft study, realistic fiction “Boxes and Bullets” personal essay study, information writing through a historical lens, literary essay writing, inquirydriven research-based -argument essays, poetry study memoir writing for the Walden 6th grade speech 28 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As LISTENERS AND SPEAKERS, Upper Core students will: • Refine oral presentation skills and develop an awareness of audience, voice, emphasis, articulation, body posture, and eye contact • Follow and create agreed-upon guidelines for discussions (e.g., getting attention in respectful ways, listening to others with care, and speaking one at a time about Upper Core topics) • Practice asking thoughtful questions, making relevant remarks, and building on shared ideas in a group • Practice coming to a discussion prepared, having read or studied required material • Report on a topic, sequencing ideas logically, and using relevant facts or ideas to support themes or the main idea • Understand and give multi-step oral directions • Use explicitly taught conflict-resolution skills with a focus on active listening, empathy, perspective, compromise, and choice In Social Studies, Upper Core students will: • Study local, national, and global history and geography • Read and discuss current events • Read, interpret, and label: maps; charts; graphs; diagrams; images; and primary source documents • Read material, highlight key terms,and apply note-taking and outlining skills • Extract, summarize, predict, and organize information from non-fiction resources • Prepare a bibliography • Continue to engage in the spiral of inquiry (find resources, take notes, outline, and create a product to represent learning) • Discuss and analyze media influence and bias • Analyze topics from multiple perspectives • Develop self-awareness skills to understand how we fit in the global society PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, and RITES OF PASSAGE AS MATHEMATICIANS, Upper Core students will Explore the Number System by: • Practicing mental math strategies and developing and applying the habits of mathematician • Recognizing writing and equivalent forms to trillions and thousandths • Understanding place value to trillions and thousandths • Understanding, applying, and extending work with fractions, decimals, percents, , ratios, proportions and their congruent relationship • Applying the previous understanding of numbers to the system of rational numbers Explore Operations and Algebra by: • Using numerical expressions, the basic four arithmetic operations, and converting between base 10, exponential, and repeated factor notations • Computing fluently with factors, primes, multiples, order of operations, and negative numbers • Developing facility with fractions and decimals (add, subtract, multiply,tand divide) • Using mathematical properties in 4 operations to solve equations in estimation and mental math Explore Geometry by: • Understanding area and perimeter • Applying the properties of plane geometry • Working with congruen t and symmetric figures • Plotting points on a coordinate graph Explore Measurement and Data by: • Determining experiential probability of an outcome • Analyzing data sets by finding mean, median, mode, and range • Keeping a math journal to express mathematical ideas and vocabulary • Quests, and The Inquiry Project • Annual Field Studies in Science • Overnight Camping in Malibu • Mentoring younger classes Develop and refine reasoning and problem solving skills by: • Making important decisions about approach, materials and using strategies such as manipulatives • Making connections among patterns to solve problems | CURRICULUM GUIDE 29 SPECIALTY CLASSES | CURRICULUM GUIDE 31 to encourage the Spirit of Renaissance learning | CURRICULUM GUIDE 33 MUSIC—SKILLS AND CONCEPTS Music classes at Walden, though centered in the Orff-Schulwerk philosophy and pedagogy, challenge the status quo by first calling everyone a musician and encouraging every student at each Core level to actively explore all the musical elements through sound, speech, singing, improvisation, and the playing of instruments. Balancing choice with guidance, the coursework is geared toward the student's interest. Over time, a creative and supportive musical community is formed with children learning that, with patience and practice, everyone gets to create something meaningful. Our program builds upon concepts and skills established in Kindergarten, which increase in depth. diversity, and complexity in the higher grades. As MUSICIANS, Lower Core Students will: • Develop basic music literacy (fast/slow, low/high, loud/soft, steady beat, and singing vs. speaking voice) • Work towards finding on - pitch singing • Explore ways to listen and respond to music • Experience a variety of locomotor movements through traditional singing games and dramatizing songs and folk tales • Begin to develop rhythmic dexterity by echoing rhythmic and melodic patterns • Transfer “body percussion” to instruments • Introduce playing on barred and un-pitched percussion instruments • Begin to recognize and demonstrate quarter notes, quarter rests, and eighth notes As MUSICIANS, Middle Core Students will: • Continue to develop basic music literacy (orchestral instrument families, verse/chorus, AB form, and rhythmic notation) • Work towards on - pitch singing voice through the use of two-part rounds • Transfer text to “body percussion” to un-pitched percussion using pentatonic patterns • Create instrumental accompaniments with pitched and un-pitched instruments • Explore meters, rhythmic, and melodic patterns through songs and musical games • Compare and contrast music from different cultures • Read simple songs and exercises to play the recorder 34 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As MUSICIANS, Upper Core Students will: • Continue to develop music literacy (exploring the give elements of music: beat/rhythm; melody; form; and expression) • Continue exploration of rhythmic notation • Distinguish treble clef pitch notation, question and answer phrases, and form (ostinato, canon, and rondo) • Differentiate singing canons in two, three, and four parts • Develop an appreciation for multi-cultural music styles (folk music world music, classical, folk, pop, and jazz) • Explore ways to set poetry to music and create instrumental pieces with a group • Play pitched and un-pitched percussion instruments in instrumental and ensemble pieces • Review and enhance recorder technique • Receive introductory guitar instruction as part of the music curriculum PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, and RITES OF PASSAGE • LOWER CORE - Students participate as an active audience member at the Walden Winter Sing and practice and perform with their class at the Spring Sing at the Lanterman Theatre in March or April and on Grandparents/Grand Friends’ Day. • MIDDLE CORE - Bands and ensembles are often formed with students self-selecting instruments that they want to become more proficient at. Both formal and informal performances are created as a concerted effort between teacher and students during assemblies and lunchtime. Students also practice and perform with their classes at the Spring Sing and on Grandparents/Grand Friends’ Day. • UPPER CORE - Bands and ensembles are continued, and students are offered extra practice time as a recess option. All Upper Core students participate in the Ponderer’s Choir and collaborate to produce and perform at the Walden Winter Sing, Grandparents/Grand Friends’ Day, and Spring Sing. | CURRICULUM GUIDE 35 VISUAL ARTS-SKILLS AND CONCEPTS In the Art Studio, each student is considered to be an artist and an treated with respect for his or her talents. The program r is designed to provide i manydopportunities for personal proficiency and self-expression. Through a- developmentally appropriate structured program, students are afforded the opportunity to experience mastery in art at their age level. Students learn that the responsibility of the artist is to push oneself towards execellence. The creative experience is a time for exploration and for the child to celebrate his or her imagination and individuality. As ARTISTS, Lower Core Students will: • Understand that artists gather ideas from personal expreiences, resources, other artists’ work , and art materials. • Understand that art making requires effort and planning • Understand that artists show respect for materials and tools by cleaning up • Be introduced to self-reflection about work created through dictation and documentation • Differentiate between 2-D and 3-D - representations • Work in gradually released, choice - based art centers throughout the school year, including Drawing, Painting, Clay, Collage, 3-D construction and Fiber Arts As ARTISTS, Middle Core Students will: • Select and use subject matter, symbols, and ideas to communicate meaning and follow a line of thought overtime • Know the differences between materials, ideas, and processes • Understand that artists show respect for materials and tools by cleaning up • Continue to practice self-reflection and introduce feedback • Be introduced to relevant art vocabulary • Be given multiple opportunities to revisit media techniques or materials to refine their skills • Further their work in gradually released, choice-based art centers throughout the school year, including Drawing, Painting, Clay, Collage, 3-D construction, and Fiber Arts • Invite artists within our diverse community to present their work • Understand artistic presence and influence in the world 36 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As ARTISTS, Upper Core Students will: • Continue to select and use subject matter, symbols, and ideas to communicate meaning, follow a line of thought over time, and go deeper with a preferred medium or technique • Improve facility with various materials, techniques, and processes • Expect studio safety and responsibility for materials and care of art work • Develop preparatory sketching, drafting, and preplanning skills • Further investigate observational drawing skills with a focus on persepctive, proportion, contour, positive and negative space, shadow, and shading • Study artists and movements to understand artistic presence and influence in the world • Continue to practice self-reflection and introduce collaborative feedback and constructive critique • Refine their work in gradually released, choice -based art centers throughout the school year, including Drawing, Painting, Clay, Collage, 3-D construction and Fiber Arts • Collaborate as 6th graders to design the yearly Walden t-shirt, Yearbook cover, and Mural • Identify themselves as artists that present their work as a contribution to the global art community • Visit museums and galleries | CURRICULUM GUIDE 37 PHYSICAL EDUCATION—SKILLS AND CONCEPTS Physical education and play are integral parts of students’ learning and development at Walden. Our program offers activities for play, recreation, and a balanced outlook on an active life. Students’ physical capabilities grow as they develop in age and maturity. The P.E. curriculum is developmentally appropriate and streses execellence and ethical behavior. Underlying all games, ideas, concepts, and activities is an understanding of respect, trust, and cooperation. Positive conflict-resolution skills are practiced in a safe environment in which competition is deemphasized. This highly structured physical education program promotes lifelong healthy habits and facilitates the joy of games and activities. As ATHLETES, Lower Core Students will: • Warm-up with simple stretches • Practice basic motor skills, including running, kicking, throwing, and catching • Demonstrate developmentally appropriate body control, spatial awareness, balance, motor planning, and sequencing • Use sports equipment and vocabulary for individual play and exploration • Begin to participate in noncompetitive partner and group games • Introduce benefits of physical play (strong muscles, healthy heart, and personal enjoyment) • Understand the roles of respect, trust, and cooperation within a group or game setting As ATHLETES, Middle Core Students will: • Practice basic motor skills, including stretching, jogging, ,running, kicking, throwing, , and catching • Focus on appropriate body control, spatial awareness, balance, motor planning, and sequencing • Move from single-skill-based instruction to multiple-skill instruction for organized games • Play sports games using basic rules and skills (kickball, basketball, soccer, etc.) • Practice cooperation and sharing, as well as recognizing and accepting personal differences • Continue practice in coordination, balance, speed, flexibility and accuracy • Develop knowledge, skills, and attitudes that encourage lifelong habits of physical fitness • Understand the roles of respect, trust, and cooperation within a group or game setting 38 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As ATHLETES, Upper Core Students will: • Use personal warm-up and cool-down activities, including running and stretching, to improve mobility and protect from injury • Continue to refine multiple skills used in diverse organized games: football; basketball; volleyball; cricket; lacrosse; and kickball • Improve on coordination, balance, speed, flexibility, and accuracy • Focus on structure of game and game play in organized sports and activities • Develop facility with working cooperatively and taking responsibility for rules andprocedures • Practice positive conflict-resolution skills and celebrate personal successes and those of others DANCE—SKILLS AND CONCEPTS Walden’s dance program lays the foundation for an appreciation and understanding of the art form, as well as instilling in each child the numerous benefits of moving rhythmically and expressiely to music. Children are encouraged to freely experience the joy of movement and awaken their personal expression while introducing classical, percussive, folk, and jazz music to their musical awareness. Increasing coordination, dexterity, flexibility, balance, knowledge of left and right, rhythm, and ability to remember a sequence of movements are also emphasized. Dance empowers children to become self-reliant, grounded, and integrated movers and learners. As DANCERS, Lower Core Students will: • Warm up with a “Brain Dance” • Learn to move to a steady beat • Learn about body awareness, balance, control, and coordination • Dance to songs, poems, music, and sounds • Relate to a central theme: the cycle of seasons • Be introduced to dancing with a partner • Participate in group and community dances • Learn a dance with up to four steps • Explore performance opportunities in class | CURRICULUM GUIDE 39 As DANCERS, Middle Core Students will: • Warm up with a more complex “Brain Dance” and stretching regimen • Continue development of coordination, control, balance, flexibility, and sequencing • Be introduced to various dance forms (e.g. folk , colonial, story, and modern adapted dance forms) • Work with guest dancers and community members • Study advanced dance vocabulary • Practice universal dance steps • Develop the imaginative perspective to create movement interpretations • Continue to practice presentation skills in assemblies and school-wide performances • Reinforce partner and group etiquette As DANCERS, Upper Core Students will: • Create a warm-up routine and discuss how it prepares the body and mind • Apply kinesthetic awareness in development of movement skills and dance techniques • Combine the elements of space, time, and energy to create dance sequences with a variety of themes and concepts • Demonstrate the following partner skills: copying; leading and following; and mirroring • Demonstrate the reproduction of dance sequences from verbal and visual cues • Identify and use improvisational techniques in dance sequences • Demonstrate the ability to work alone and cooperatively • Observe and describe the various elements of dance using appropriate dance vocabulary • Define and explain the role of an audience and a performer • Explain aspects of dance in various cultures and historical periods • Engage with guest teachers • Participate in the Los Angeles Children’s Festival at the Music Center 40 CURRICULUM GUIDE | child to THE IMPORTANCE OF READING ALOUD | CURRICULUM GUIDE 41 LIBRARY—SKILLS AND CONCEPTS The Library program is designed to teach students how to effectively and independently use the library for research and to find books for pleasure reading. The program provides developmentally appropriate challenges to students at each Core level, teaching skills of increasing difficulty. Students are encouraged to become mature borrowers through a series of steps with increments in both privilege and responsibility. Each year’s skill set and concepts are coordinated with the classroom curricula,so that the content the students are learning in the classroom is supported by what they learn in the Library. As RESEARCHERS, Lower Core Students will: • Explore and pursue books of interest • Borrow and return Library books • Practice Library etiquette • Read aloud weekly and participate in book discussions • Learn library terminology (checkout desk, book return, browsing, return cart, browsing stick, and fiction/nonfiction) • Discuss the parts of a book (cover, back, spine, title, illustrator, and author) • Be introduced to literary genres • Read American and world folktales • Read and vote for California Young Reader Medal nominees • Read and identify Caldecott Medal winners 42 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As RESEARCHERS, Middle Core Students will: • Be introduced to the online Library catalog • Develop dictionary and research skills and introduce encyclopedias • Practice Library etiquette • Differentiate literary genres • Discuss parts of a book (table of contents, title page – full and half – index, and glossary) • Browse and practice using the Dewey Decimal System for independent book selection • Identify story elements (plot, setting, and characters) • Discuss Junior Great Books as a study in third grade • Read and vote for California Young Reader Medal nominees • Read Caldecott Medal winners RITES OF PASSAGE • Upper Core Students do not participate in weekly Library classes but have the freedom to use the Library as independent researchers and to find books for pleasure reading. Students also rotate through monthly book shares with the Librarian to learn about new books and vote for the California Young Reader Medal nominees. • Students in the Upper Core may also check out as many books as they can reasonably care for and use. | CURRICULUM GUIDE 43 STORYTELLING — SKILLS AND CONCEPTS As STORYTELLERS, Lower Core Students will: • Increase listening skills • Explore the passage of oral traditions through nursery rhymes, folktales, myths, and legends • Learn about different worlds, countries, cultures, and value systems composed of • Explore sequencing through recounting stories and tales • Dramatize narrative text to explore words, plot, and intention 44 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As STORYTELLERS, Middle Core Students will: • Acknowledge and understand differences and similarities in diverse cultures and value systems • Increase awareness of personal values, principles, and ideas through the telling and reflection of stories • Relate information heard to personal experiences • Participate in discussions by alternating roles of speaker and listener • Retell stories from writing, reading ,and books with greater detail • Explore problem solving through a unit on how-to stories • Learn about the creation and negotiation of boundaries, healthy competition, and fairness through unit on urban legends • Explore story structure, interpretation, plot development, characterization, and authorial intention As STORYTELLERS, Upper Core Students will: • Share personal thoughts, values, and world views with confidence • Provide peers with constructive feedback and praise • Acknowledge differences between themselves and others including peers and classmates • Study cultural philosophies in stories that emerge from the human condition • Discover a level of expertise in the understanding of story structure and character analysis • Select, use, and adjust listening strategies based on the purpose of the conversation • Consider purpose, audience, and format when preparing a conversation • Demonstrate creativity and originality in speaking presentations • Speak clearly and loudly enough to be heard in both large and small groups • Recognize the kind of listener interaction that is appropriate for different purposes | CURRICULUM GUIDE 45 SPANISH — SKILLS AND CONCEPTS planted at this stage and will continue to grow as students continue their Walden studies. Focus is placed on the language of the discipline of Spanish and the details that encompass traditions in Latin American and Spain. As LINGUISTS, Lower Core Students will: • Be introduced and practice Spanish vocabulary related to classroom interests and topics (e.g., colors, shapes, numbers1–20, clothing, animals, calendar, body parts, classroom objects, family and food) • Be introduced to pronunciation to listen and develop accent • Share songs, poetry, and picture books to support and reinforce concepts being studied • Listen to and recite simple conversational phrases and exchange essential information • Begin to write words, phrases, and short sentences • Observe seasonal celebrations • Participate in a school or community-wide presentation 46 CURRICULUM GUIDE | The Middle Core is our “puente” (bridge), and students have the opportunity to expand on previously learned vocabulary. During the spring, a traditional field trip is made on public transportation to Olvera Street, La Plaza de Cultura y Artes and downtown Los Angeles. By the time students leave this Core, they should have a comfortable accent developed and a deeper understanding of the patterns and rules found in the language. As LINGUISTS, Middle Core Students will: • Practice using definite and indefinite articles • Practice reading and writing vocabulary and basic phrases • Practice advanced nouns, articles (singular and plural), adjectives, verbs, and pronouns • Read stories and picture books with appropriate expression • Learn numbers (1–100) in both verbal and written language • Introduce simple readings and present basic biographical information about self and others • Identify parts of the world where Spanish is spoken and compare cultural differences • Observe seasonal celebrations Los Consideradores (The Ponderers) best demonstrate the culmination of Spanish instruction at Walden. In this Core, students study the etymology and impact of Spanish in our history and what it means for our future. Students take local community field trips and study murals to develop a deeper and complex understanding of the Spanish language, how it surrounds them, and how they can best use it in their future endeavors. As LINGUISTS, Upper Core Students will: • Develop grammatical foundation (subject/noun agreement and adjectives) • Conjugate verbs (-ar, -er, and -ir) in present tense • Conjugate the verbs -ser and -estar in present tense • Use a bilingual dictionary to write dialogues and descriptions • Recognize that words are borrowed from one language to another by exploring origins • Research and present a topic related to class studies • Follow simple written instructions and complete assignments independently • Continue to develop personal proficiency with reading, listening, and speaking with an emphasis on good speaking and writing skills • Compare and contrast a variety of Spanish art forms (e.g., visual arts, music, dance, and drama) • Observe seasonal celebrations | CURRICULUM GUIDE 47 TECHNOLOGY — SKILLS AND CONCEPTS The goal of the Walden School Technology program is to provide students with instruction and experiences that promote learning, intellectual stimulation, empowerment, and Socratic dialogue. Technology is and will continue to be an integral part of our students’ future. Digital technology, in particular, is a powerful research and presentation tool that students must be proficient using. Students at Walden School learn to use technology in a responsible, critical manner to research information in a variety of academic areas. They learn to locate, critically evaluate, and use information from a variety of resources. Students also learn to use a variety of software application store cord, create, and present child-led inquiry. In the Technology Lab, Lower Core Students will: • Work with input and output devices (mouse, keyboard, monitor, printer, etc.) • Use a variety of media and technology resources for direct and independent activities • Work cooperatively and collaboratively with peers when using technology • Practice responsible use of technology and software • Speak using correct technology terms • Introduce use of technology resources for problem solving, illustrations, thoughts, ideas, and stories In the Technology Lab, Middle Core Students w ill: • Work cooperatively and collaboratively with peers when using technology • Practice responsible use of technology and software • Begin to practice word-processing skills within the context of project-based learning • Continue development of technology resources for problem solving, illustrations, thoughts, ideas, and stories • Speak using correct technology terms • Discuss media literacy and basic issues related to responsible use of technology and information on the Internet 48 CURRICULUM GUIDE | In the Technology Lab, Upper Core Students will: • Continue discussion on basic issues related to responsible use of technology and information on the Internet • Practice responsible use of technology and software • Work cooperatively and collaboratively with peers when using technology • Use technology resources as a tool to help enhance self-directed learning and extended-learning activities, including child-led inquiry projects • Evaluate bias, relevance, and source information • Become more efficient in word-processing skills within the context of project-based learning | CURRICULUM GUIDE 49 SCIENCE — SKILLS AND CONCEPTS At Walden, we focus on science literacy rather than a curriculum emphasizing rote remorization of facts, terms, algorithms, and generalizations. Science is not only an intellectual endeavor, but a social one as well. Students using their science intellect to understand how natural and designed worlds work are learning to think critically and consider multiple explanations. They are learning to apply themselves methodically and thoughtfully to problems requiring patterns, logic, uncertainty, evidence, and empirical data. They are also developing a natural sense of wonder that causes them to have the impulse to ask why and how about their observations of the world around them. As SCIENTISTS, Lower Core Students will: • Explore lab safety and develop an awareness of different scientific materials • Develop an understanding of the steps of the scientific method • Construct and organize data in charts and tables • Conduct inquiry and student-driven experiments • Engage in careful, targeted observation • Record and share findings in their science notebooks • Record observations and data with pictures, numbers, or written statements Units of Study: Field Study: Walden Garden and Pond, Campus Observation As SCIENTISTS, Middle Core Students will: • Explore lab safety and develop an awareness of different scientific materials • Explore approaches to background research and the steps of the scientific method • Differentiate evidence from opinion • Use numerical data in describing and comparing objects, events, and measurements • Engage in careful, targeted observation • Construct and write lab reports • Repeat observations to improve accuracy and understand the need for multiple experiments Units of Study: Habits of a Scientist, Biology-Life Cycles, Simple Machines, Renewable Energy, Urban Ecosystems Field Study: 2-day study of desert ecology, biology, and geology at Joshua Tree National Park 50 CURRICULUM GUIDE | As SCIENTISTS, Upper Core Students will: • Become proficient in lab skills and safety • Conduct a scientific investigation based on a student-developed question • Gather background knowledge and relate research to the global scientific community • Conduct experiments in an organized way using the steps of the scientific method • Record findings in science journal Units of Study: Ecological Relationships, and Bio-Diversity Field Studies: AstroCamp in Idyllwild, CA, Catalina Island Marine Institute, Teton Science School in Jackson Hole, Wyoming FIELD STUDIES Field Studies guide and compliment our science instruction with a progression of overnight outdoor education trips arranged each year beginning in third grade. These trips are experiential in nature, underscore content imperatives at each grade level, and provide opportunities for leadership and risk taking. We are also intentional partners with organizations that share our values in promoting environmental sustainability . • To culminate their study on habitat and biomes, in May of each school year, third graders and one of their parents travel to Joshua Tree National Park for two days. The Boojum Institute for Experiential Education hosts this study. Students and parents camp in tents at the base of amazing rock formations in Joshua Tree. All participants learn about desert ecology, biology, and geology through activities like studying native plants, examining the local ecosystem, and tracking animals. They also participate in adventure-based activities, such as rock climbing and scrambling. • After a 3-month study of astronomy, in early February, Walden fourth grade students travel by bus to AstroCamp in Idyllwild, California, for a three -day/two-night n study of Physical Science and Astronomy. Students stay in dorm rooms in groups of three or four. The program is run by Guided Discoveries, a nonprofit founded in 1978 with the goal of making a difference in children's lives through science. Through the varied use of materials and unique educational settings, students will experience rocketry, rope courses, telescopes, electricity, and magnetism. • Marine Biology is an emphasis in fifth grade. In late April, usually after Spring Break, the fifth grade students travel by ferryboat to Catalina Island, Cherry Cove, for a five-day/four-night marine science study. The students stay in permanent tents on the CIMI campus. This program is also directed by Guided Discoveries. The program focuses on experiential science utilizing hands-on labs and equipment, expert instructors, and the natural land and sea environments of Catalina Island. A few of the activities the students participate in are snorkeling, dissection of a squid, evening hikes, kayaking, classification of vertebrates and invertebrates, and Island ecology. • In January, our sixth grade students fly to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, to attend the Teton Science School for a full six days. The Teton Science School was founded in 1967 as a non-profti educational organization with the goal of teaching students from all over the United States about natural and cultural history, while exploring the Greater Yellowstone Geo-ecosystem. Walden students stay in modern, dormitory-style buildings on the Jackson Campus. Each day, they travel throughout the Jackson area to hike, ski, and snowshoe in Grand Teton National Park and Bridger-Teton National Forest. The students have hands-on experiences in field ecology, including animal tracking, wildlife observation, ecological field research, alpine ecology, field journaling and sketching, and leave-no-trace backcountry ethics. | CURRICULUM GUIDE 51 APPENDIX | CURRICULUM GUIDE 53 LEARNING MATH IN THE WALDEN CLASSROOM | CURRICULUM GUIDE 55 56 CURRICULUM GUIDE | | CURRICULUM GUIDE 57 What about fact fluency and repeated practice? Fact fluency is carefully crafted into lesson structure. The expectation for Walden students is that automaticity will not only be developed with facts but also a deep understanding of number properties. An understanding of key number relationships provides students with strategies to quickly learning facts based on unknown ones. Mental math is practiced at every grade level systematically. With that said it is not new nor is it a result of any mathematics program that some children have trouble learning basic facts. This is always been the case. If your child struggles with basic facts, their teacher can help provide additional opportunities to learn through games and activities or other resources. Adapted from the Singapore Math Research Base by Marshall Cavendish 58 CURRICULUM GUIDE | WRITERS WORKSHOP AT WALDEN | CURRICULUM GUIDE 59 60 CURRICULUM GUIDE | WRITERS WORKSHOP AT WALDEN SCHOOL | CURRICULUM GUIDE 61 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT READING WORKSHOP AT WALDEN Q. Why change reading instruction? What was wrong with the old model? A. In a traditional model, teachers taught literature. Envision a classroom in which students sat in rows. Everyone was reading the same book, and the teacher was explaining the plot of the book. Are students all engaged in books that are challenging, but not too challenging? Are they taking responsibility for their won study of literature? Are they developing confidence as readers? Research indicates that reading for pleasure begins to decline among children towards the end of elementary school and continues to decline until the age of 17. Similarly, we know that what was once considered “basic reading competence” isn’t sufficient for 21st Century demands. Students need to be able to navigate difficult texts, to think critically, and to evaluate what they are reading. In a differentiated reading workshop model, children are reading books at their independent level so they gain confidence and independence as readers. The emphasis is on skills and strategies for reading, not the content of the book. Q. Where does the instruction happen in a workshop model? A. Every workshop begins with explicit instruction of a strategy or skill. Often teachers gather students on the floor in a meeting area in the room. The goal is for maximum engagement during the teaching time with a minimum of distractions. Teachers may also read aloud to students and “think out loud” to demonstrate how proficient readers think. During independent reading time, students are practicing their reading strategies through silent reading or by writing reading responses. Teachers circulate among students Conferring with them about their reading. As teachers identify specific needs in groups of children, they hold small group instructional sessions called strategy groups. The instruction is more strategic in meeting the needs of individuals learners than in a traditional model of teaching reading. Q. Do students discuss their books? A. Most children do not automatically know how to have a book discussion other than to say whether they like or disliked it. During the first quarter of the year, teachers build a community of readers where it is safe to discuss ideas. They begin small with reading partners who are at about the same stage on the developmental continuum. As the year progresses students learn how to move their literary discussions from their reading logs to book clubs. While teachers will conduct mini-lessons on how to conduct a book club, they do not “run” the book clubs. This is another place where children develop confidence and independence as readers. The teacher “coaches in,” but ownership belongs to the participants. Q. Why do children choose their own books? Isn’t that the teacher’s role? A. It is a joint responsibility. The research indicates that choice is a key component in whether children develop the habit of reading (and whether they become competent readers), but it should be guided choice. Teachers begin every year by teaching students how to choose books. If students don’t choose books that are within their reading level, the teacher will intervene. Similarly, as teachers come to know their readers, they recommend books that match the students’ interests. As the year progresses, they may suggest students to explore other authors, topics, or genres to build a varied reading life. 62 CURRICULUM GUIDE | Q. I see that there seems to be a lot of assessment at the beginning of the year. How is it used? A. In the beginning of the school year, it is important that we get to know your child as a reader... what are their strengths, what kinds of skills and strategies are they using to problem-solve tricky parts, how are they comprehending when they read, what challenges are they facing that they need support to overcome...? We use a variety of tools to gather this information including observations during whole group instruction, 1:1 conferences, listening to them read from unfamiliar text, reviewing their reading logs and journals, etc. Knowing your child well helps us plan the most effective instruction for him or her individually, as well as the whole class. Q. I see that this book has a letter level on it. What does that mean? A. The classroom library is organized in many ways. You will find categories for genre, author, topic, series, nonfiction, etc. Leveling is one other way we organize books. Leveling can help readers at the beginning of the year with finding just-right books until they have learned more sophisticated ways of finding books over the year. At any one time, a child may be reading books from a range of levels based on the instructional purpose and their background knowledge of a topic. Ÿ Books are leveled along a continuum. Each level is characterized by a set of challenges that the reader may have to tackle in books at that level. Each challenge in a level helps to prepare a reader for the challenges that will be faced in another level. Some readers will have strengths in particular skills, such as making predictions or reading with fluency and expression, but struggle with others such as synthesizing ideas or evaluating character motives. The needs of each child are always considered and teachers and students work together to match him or her to just-right books for building those skills. Ÿ Each child is different. If we were to all run a race, we would not all finish at the same time, but we would all likely follow the same overall path, perhaps stopping for a time to take a breath or sprinting faster at points to try to gain more ground. We don’t compare students to each other. Instead, we look at where each child is along the path and together, set goals for making progress over time. There may be places in a student’s reading work where they need to spend more time and others that we can quickly work through and move forward. Q. What are “just-right” books? A. We define “just-right” books as those the child can read with about 96% accuracy, with good fluency and strong comprehension. We teach students over the course of the year many ways to choose just-right books. Q. What can I expect my child to be bringing home for reading homework? A. We believe independent, purposeful reading is extremely valuable for developing reading abilities. Therefore, we spend at least 30 minutes a day reading with little interruption. During that time, teachers meet with small groups for strategy instruction or 1:1 to conference with kids. At night, your child should be bringing home his or her book to continue reading. Nothing more. | CURRICULUM GUIDE 63