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Timberwolf Tidbits January 2017
Upcoming Kindergarteners for the 2017-2018 school year
We are now gathering names of children that will attend Grand Star as a
Kindergartener in the fall of 2017. If you have a child or know of a neighbor or
friend that will be in Kindergarten next year, please have them visit our website
and fill out the Kindergarten Survey or contact our office at
913-856-3750. Thank you for your help!
GRAND STAR ATTENDANCE LINE & POLICIES
If your child is going to be absent, please contact our attendance line by 9:00 am.
After this time , the answering machine is not checked until the following day.
If we do not receive a call from you about your child’s absence, they will be marked as unexcused.
913-856-3799
We do call to check on students if you do not contact us. Please return our calls to ensure student safety.
Encourage independence during your child’s homework time It usually starts with a simple question: “How do you spell Illinois?” And before you realize it, you’ve spent the next 20 minutes answering all your child’s homework questions.
Your child will often be asked to find and learn facts for homework. It’s important for you to encourage him to do this on his own. Here’s how:
First, tell your child that he has to try to answer all homework questions by himself. He should start with the questions he knows the answers to, skipping over any that give him problems. Then have him go back and think about the questions he couldn’t answer the first time around.
Then, and only then, should your child ask you for help. And when he does, keep your goal in mind: You don’t just want your child to get the right answer. You want him to learn how to get the right answer—by himself.
Suppose your child asks you to spell Illinois. Instead of rattling off the spelling, you might ask, “Where could you find that?” Then get out the dictionary or a map and have your child find Illinois. This way, your child learns about the silent s at the end of the word, and he also learns how to use a dictionary and a map.
Showing your child how to find information by himself is the most effective way to help him learn facts now and be prepared to learn more in the future.
Library News It’s time for NOVEL NAVIGATORS! Teams and coaches have been working hard since September, reading books and quizzing each other about them.
Fourth grade will be competing on Wednesday, January 25. Our fourth grade coaches have been Nicole Beaver, Angie Irwin, and Melanie Landau. Fourth grade Novel Navigators this year are Ellie Beaver, Aubrey Blanton, Nathan Cruz, Alexis Fiedler, Cheyenne Foster, Dakota Francq, Cole Higgins, Violet Hotle, Blake Hunt, Hannah Irwin, Carter Landau, Ryen Louderback, Israel Martinez Ramos, Ellie Rhea, and Spencer Wu.
A Huge “thank you” goes to all of our coaches and our parent supporters!
Remember that Schlitterbahn Reading Logs are due on January 10th!
Start looking forward to Read Across America Week. From February 27 to March 3, we’ll be celebrating the fun of reading with schools across the entire country. We’ll have contests, prizes, and lots of Dr. Seuss-themed activities during library time. Look for an informational letter and a TV-Turn-Off sheet in your child’s backpack in the next few weeks.
Happy Reading!
From The Nurse A friendly reminder to keep
the districts exclusion policies in mind throughout the cold and
flu season. These can be found on our website www.usd231.com. Thank you for helping to keep our student body as healthy as possible! Also, please
remind your students not to share or borrow brushes, coats, hats, hair ties, head bands etc. as head lice is spread
through close contact. If you are cleaning out closets, please keep the health room in mind! We are currently short on small, medium, and
large sweatpants, and boys medium and large underwear. Thank you to all of you
who have provided donations in the past!
Thank you for your continued support!
Counseling Corner
In the month of January during counseling lessons we focus on some goals for 2017 and then careers. The
students will hear about many different jobs and post-secondary opportunities. Feel free to have these conversations continue at home about future careers
1-16 NO SCHOOL 1-17 Site Council Meeting 6:00-7:00 pm
1-20 Family Movie Night 6:30 1-24 3rd Grade Novel Navigators Competition 3:45 pm 1-25 4th Grade Novel Navigators Competition 3:45 pm
1-27 Spirit Day– Mismatch Day 1-27 Morning with Mom 7:30
Shoparoo
Did you know that you can earn money for
Grand Star Elementary just by doing your own,
everyday shopping? The Shoparoo App gives
our school money back based on points for
every dollar of your receipts that are scanned
into the app. It doesn’t matter if it’s for
groceries, general merchandise or where you
shop. It is the easiest school fundraiser ever and
takes seconds to complete! All you have to do is
download the App, and scan your receipts, so
Grand Star can start receiving FREE MONEY!!
We have already collected over
$200.00 this school year!
CODE:
sneb4821
Focus on your child’s self-control to improve behavior at school
Everyone wants kids to be well-behaved in school. But today, parents and teachers are often concerned about a lack of self-discipline in students. When classroom instruction is continually interrupted by students who misbehave, no learning can take place. Students need a quiet, orderly environment in which to learn. Remember: Positive habits begin at home. To help your child develop self-control:
1. Review the school rules and regulations. Talk to your child
about them and be sure to support them.
2. Let your child experience the consequences of her actions.
Don’t always rush to bail her out.
3. Talk to your child’s teachers about how she behaves in school.
4. Talk to your child about the importance of self-discipline at
home and at school.
5. Show respect for your child. She will be more likely to respect
herself and others.
6. Encourage independence. Allow your child to take part in
making the decisions that affect her life. Reprinted with permission from the January 2017 issue of Parents make the difference!® (Elementary School