December 7

The SAN Script, Wednesday December 7

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Robotics workshop run by Probots Ottawa for our juniors with Denis. Great to finally have this started!

Robotics workshop run by Probots Ottawa for our juniors with Denis. Great to finally have this started!

The secret of getting ahead is getting started.

Mark Twain

St. Anthony Today

Wastefree Wednesday

Paul away all day – CLL

Rosary visits today – please let me know of any permanent schedule changes so I can update the visit schedule for the remainder of the year.

Teresa to run EQAO Cognitive Lab with Grade 3 class- Maria/Kirsten to cover Teresa’s class

Goodlife Gymnastics – Grade 3

 

December 6

The San Script – Tuesday, December 6

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I think having land and not ruining it is the most beautiful art that anybody could ever want. 

– Andy Warhol

St. Anthony Today

IPRC – Teresa and Paul – 8:30

Lunch Lady in today

Tiffany Drummont from Algonquin College in for visit

Robotics workshop for Junior Students (PM) – Denis with Richard Seniuk ProBots Ottawa

Design, Build, Program Robots

 

Teresa at System Class Networking at CEC- PM only

Goodlife – Ms Troccoli – 12:50

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Discovery Educators-

‘Tis the season to reflect on where we’ve been and begin to map where we’re heading next.  Each year, our team resolves to bring you programs and resources that are timely and meaningful to your professional goals. In order for us to accomplish this, we need your help in understanding what YOU value in our Community and need from Discovery Education events, content, and experiences.

Please take a few minutes to complete the Community Survey and provide input on the future of your personal and professional Discovery Education learning community.

We appreciate your input and all the ways you make this world a better place to teach, learn, and live .

~Your Discovery Education Team

December 4

The SAN Script – The week of December 5 – 9

If one gives answer before hearing,
it is folly and shame.

– Proverbs 18:13

2016 Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar

This picture, taken by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3, shows NGC 4696, the largest galaxy in the Centaurus Cluster. The new images taken with Hubble show the dusty filaments surrounding the center of this huge galaxy in greater detail than ever before. These filaments loop and curl inwards in an intriguing spiral shape, swirling around the supermassive black hole at such a distance that they are dragged into and eventually consumed by the black hole itself. #

This picture, taken by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3, shows NGC 4696, the largest galaxy in the Centaurus Cluster. The new images taken with Hubble show the dusty filaments surrounding the center of this huge galaxy in greater detail than ever before. These filaments loop and curl inwards in an intriguing spiral shape, swirling around the supermassive black hole at such a distance that they are dragged into and eventually consumed by the black hole itself. #

St. Anthony This Week

Monday, December 5

Office Hours Rec Link Mondays 9:00 – 3:00PM

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Karen Morin (Behaviour consultant) to observe in grade 3 class

Starr Gymnastics

Monday, December 5th
9:00 to 10:00 – Group 1 (50 Kids)
Grade 3 Solymar (16 students)
10:30 to 11:30 – Group 2 (50 Kids)
Kindergarten (46 students)
46 Students

Tuesday, December 6

SAN- IPRC St.Elizabeth (Paul and Teresa) in the Learning Commons

Teresa at System Class Networking at CEC- PM only

Tiffany Drummont from Algonquin College in for visit

Lunch Lady in

Goodlife – Ms Troccoli – 12:50

Wednesday, December 7

Wastefree Wednesdays

Paul away – CLL

Rosary Visit Schedule

JK 8:30-8:50
SK 8:50-9:10
grade 1/2 12:15-12:40
grade 2/3 12:45-1:15
grade 3 9:15-9:45
grade 4/5 10:00-10:40
grade 5 10:40-11:15

Teresa to run EQAO Cognitive Lab with Grade 3 class- Maria/Kirsten to cover Teresa’s class

Goodlife Gymnastics – Grade 3 – 2:00 PM

Thursday, December 8

In-school collaborative team – 7:45

Advent Week 2 – 1:00 PM

Children Support School Meeting, Hub #3 at Prince of Peace – Paul away (PM)

Parent Council Meeting – 6:30 PM

Friday, December 9

Pizza Day

Paul away

Goodlife Fitness M Chartrand’s class – 2:20 PM

St. Anthony Super Stars – 3:00 PM

Poinsettias at Christmas

A Poinsettia flower

Poinsettia plants are native to Central America, especially an area of southern Mexico known as ‘Taxco del Alarcon’ where they flower during the winter. The ancient Aztecs called them ‘cuetlaxochitl’. The Aztecs had many uses for them including using the flowers (actually special types of leaves known as bracts rather than being flowers) to make a purple dye for clothes and cosmetics and the milky white sap was made into a medicine to treat fevers. (Today we call the sap latex!)

The poinsettia was made widely known because of a man called Joel Roberts Poinsett (that’s why we call them Poinsettia!). He was the first Ambassador from the USA to Mexico in 1825. Poinsett had some greenhouses on his plantations in South Carolina, and while visiting the Taco area in 1828, he became very interested in the plants. He immediately sent some of the plants back to South Carolina, where he began growing the plants and sending them to friends and botanical gardens.

One of the friends he sent plants to was John Barroom of Philadelphia, who gave the plant to his friend, Robert Buist, a plants-man from Pennsylvania. Robert Buist was probably the first person to have sold the poinsettias under their botanical, or latin name, name ‘Euphorbia pulcherrima’ (it means, ‘the most beautiful Euphorbia’). It is thought that they became known as Poinsettia in the mid 1830’s when people found out who had first brought them to America from Mexico.

There is an old Mexican legend about how Poinsettias and Christmas come together, it goes like this:

There was once a poor Mexican girl called Pepita who had no present to give the the baby Jesus at the Christmas Eve Services. As Pepita walked to the chapel, sadly, her cousin Pedro tried to cheer her up.
‘Pepita’, he said “I’m sure that even the smallest gift, given by someone who loves him will make Jesus Happy.”

Pepita didn’t know what she could give, so she picked a small handful of weeds from the roadside and made them into a a small bouquet. She felt embarrassed because she could only give this small present to Jesus. As she walked through the chapel to the altar, she remembered what Pedro had said. She began to feel better, knelt down and put the bouquet at the bottom of the nativity scene. Suddenly, the bouquet of weeds burst into bright red flowers, and everyone who saw them were sure they had seen a miracle. From that day on, the bright red flowers were known as the ‘Flores de Noche Buena’, or ‘Flowers of the Holy Night’.

The shape of the poinsettia flower and leaves are sometimes thought as a symbol of the Star of Bethlehem which led the Wise Men to Jesus. The red colored leaves symbolize the blood of Christ. The white leaves represent his purity.

The Poinsettia is also the national emblem of Madagascar.

To learn about caring for Poinsettia plants, visit the Poinsettia profile on the Royal Horticultural Society’s website.

December 2

The SAN Script Friday, December 2

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The best way to find yourself is to lose yourself in the service of others.

Mahatma Gandhi

St. Anthony Today

Pizza Day!!

Goodlife Fitness M Chartrand’s class

St. Anthony Superstars I Have Ideas!!

Christmas Traditions & Customs

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It’s time again for one of my favorite holiday traditions: the ninth annual Hubble Space Telescope Advent Calendar. Every day until Sunday, December 25, this page will present one new image of our universe from NASA’s Hubble telescope. Be sure to bookmark this calendar and come back every day until the 25th, or follow on Twitter (@TheAtlPhoto), Facebook, or Tumblr for daily updates. I hope you enjoy these amazing and awe-inspiring images and the efforts of the science teams who have brought them to Earth. I also must say how fortunate I feel to have been able to share photo stories with you all year, and I wish a Merry Christmas to those who celebrate it, and peace on Earth to all.

The Antennae galaxies, viewed in the sharpest-yet image of this merging pair of galaxies. During the course of their collision, billions of stars will be formed. The two spiral galaxies, about 45 million light-years from our solar system, started to interact a few hundred million years ago, making the Antennae galaxies one of the nearest and youngest examples of a pair of colliding galaxies. Nearly half of the faint objects in the Antennae image are young clusters containing tens of thousands of stars. The orange blobs are the two cores of the original galaxies and consist mainly of old stars criss-crossed by filaments of dust, which appears brown in the image. The two galaxies are dotted with brilliant blue star-forming regions surrounded by glowing hydrogen gas, appearing in the image in pink. #

The Antennae galaxies, viewed in the sharpest-yet image of this merging pair of galaxies. During the course of their collision, billions of stars will be formed. The two spiral galaxies, about 45 million light-years from our solar system, started to interact a few hundred million years ago, making the Antennae galaxies one of the nearest and youngest examples of a pair of colliding galaxies. Nearly half of the faint objects in the Antennae image are young clusters containing tens of thousands of stars. The orange blobs are the two cores of the original galaxies and consist mainly of old stars criss-crossed by filaments of dust, which appears brown in the image. The two galaxies are dotted with brilliant blue star-forming regions surrounded by glowing hydrogen gas, appearing in the image in pink. #

December 1

The SAN Script Thursday, December 1

Trouble is one of the ways we discover the complexities
Of the soul.

Terrance Hayes

AIR is an incredible book of breathtaking high-altitude aerial photographs taken over 10 of the world’s most iconic cities by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Vincent Laforet. The 228-page hardcover book features jaw-dropping aerials over New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Berlin, London, Miami, San Francisco, Barcelona, and Sydney. Laforet says he has wanted to do this project for a long time but only recent advances in technology have allowed him to realize his dream of capturing cities at night in such astonishing detail and clarity. Laforet was kind enough to let us share some of the incredible night time images from AIR. If you’re interested in the book or individual lithographs be sure to visit laforetair.com For more photography from Vincent, follow him at the links below.   All images below © Vincent Laforet, Courtesy Fahey/Klein, Los Angeles

AIR is an incredible book of breathtaking high-altitude aerial photographs taken over 10 of the world’s most iconic cities by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Vincent Laforet.
The 228-page hardcover book features jaw-dropping aerials over New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Berlin, London, Miami, San Francisco, Barcelona, and Sydney. Laforet says he has wanted to do this project for a long time but only recent advances in technology have allowed him to realize his dream of capturing cities at night in such astonishing detail and clarity.
Laforet was kind enough to let us share some of the incredible night time images from AIR. If you’re interested in the book or individual lithographs be sure to visit laforetair.com
For more photography from Vincent, follow him at the links below.
All images below © Vincent Laforet, Courtesy Fahey/Klein, Los Angeles

St. Anthony Today

Cindy Aldrich visiting today

Advent Liturgy – 9:15

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Papa Jack popcorn

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Regester here for this day of learning

November 30

The SAN Script Wednesday, November 30

Develop a passion for learning. If you do, you will never cease to grow.
Anthony J. D’Angelo

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Artwork by Andy Goldsworthy

In this ephemeral artwork by British artist Andy Goldsworthy, we see how carefully arranged leaves appear to make the base of this tree glow. The artwork was completed in 2013 somewhere in the woods of England’s Hampshire county. Both the tree and leaves are Sycamore and the temporary installation—gone physically—lives on in photographic form. This is one of approximately 200 works featured in Goldsworthy’s book, Ephemeral Works which is available through Abrams Books.

St. Anthony Today

Margaret Dempsey will be in from Ottawa U after 10:30 for follow up with student teacher Michelle Henry. 

Y Kids Academy – last time

Celebration of November birthdays

Goodlife Gymnastics – Grade 3 

Brad Moleski in today!

12 Actions to Maximize the Value of a Teacher’s Time

(some really great ideas here!)

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Time. Some teachers never feel like there are enough minutes in the day to teach, and yet some countries, such as Finland, require students spend less time in school while still managing to acquire outstanding results.

What can we learn from those schools to help us to maximize face-to-face time without overloading teachers after hours?  While professionals in other areas, such as lawyers and doctors, can justify time spent with the rates they charge, teachers do not have this luxury.  This means that time is seldom factored in when new demands are placed on educators.  Expectations rise, but the hours in a day remain the same.  This is a systemic problem in many districts all over the world, but there are reasonable and realistic actions that can be taken to eliminate activities that do not honor the value of a teacher’s time.

Take a look at some of the ideas here

November 29

The SAN Script – Tuesday, November 29

I equate ego with trying to figure everything out instead of going with the flow. That closes your heart and your mind to the person or situation that’s right in front of you, and you miss so much.

Pema Chodron

nov-29th

St. Anthony Today

Guest Reader Session in Mrs.Rupnik’s class- AM- Grade 4 student at 9:30 and 12:15-12:30 Ms. Lindsey Barr

Goodlife Gymnastics – Grade 3 Ms Solymar

What’s For Lunch:  A Global Collaborative Project (a Global Collaborative project you can do with your students!)

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No matter if they live on a farm or in the middle of a city, every day millions of students take a break during their school day from feeding their minds to nourish their bodies. Join classes around the globe as they reveal what’s in their lunch bag.

In this collaborative global project, students will share the contents of their lunch, look for similarities and differences of their lunch to their global peers, and examine the distribution of the main food groups to create a well balanced meal.

Download the printable What’s for Lunch project guide.

Build Background Knowledge

Use the strategies and resources below to prepare for your discussions and data collection.

  • Engage students in the concept of food groups, by displaying Discovery Education images of a variety of foods around the room, using the Spotlight on Strategy Visual Walkabout (Canadian Subscribers) to allow students to make connections and ask questions.
  • Introduce the MyPlate dietary guidelines produced by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) by playing the segment 5 Food Groups (Canadian Subscribers) which highlights the five food groups and reveals how grains, vegetables, fruits, protein, and dairy products contribute to growth and overall health. Have students demonstrate their understanding of a healthy plate by using the Spotlight on StrategyJournals (Canadian Subscribers)
  • Allow students to develop a broader understanding of food and nutrition by exploring the Content Collection Food (Canadian Subscribers). Have students share what they learned from the resources using the Spotlight on Strategy 25 Things You Didn’t Know(Canadian Subscribers).

Investigation

Goal

Data Collection and Analysis

Review the Report Form questions to prepare students to collect relevant data. You can print the form for field use.

Students collect data, then use the Report Form to submit their findings and results. Then, review Findings data to compare their observations with other students around the globe.

Note: you can return to Findings any time to review as more data is collected from other classrooms.

Extend Learning

Extend the experience after examining your findings and global results.

  • Have students create a new food item. They will need to research food chemistry, develop the recipe for the new food, design the packaging, and plan a well balanced meal in which their item is featured.
  • Explain to your students the importance of food sustainability. After watching Social Studies: World Food Day (Canadian Subscribers), have students work in groups to discuss ideas of how they can decrease food waste and increase eating foods that are in season. Students should use the Spotlight on Strategy PMI (Canadian Subscribers) to explain the advantages and disadvantages of each idea. Allow time for students to share their results with the whole class.
  • Challenge students to watch the segment United States: Update on Food Labels(Canadian Subscribers) with their families and to open their kitchen cupboards and examine the nutrition labels. Use the Spotlight on Strategy A-E-I-O-U (Canadian Subscribers) to have students share their findings.
  • Share your healthy choices through social media with the hashtag #CelebratewithDE

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November 27

The SAN Script The Week of November 28 – December 2

How often have we heard stories on how books have restored or saved people?  We heard it at Christian Community Day this year, we see it in our own students.  Here is another story that shows the power and the importance of our Learning Commons as the heart of our school.

Paul

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Maya Angelou on How a Library Saved Her Life

“A library is a rainbow in the clouds.”

Maya Angelou on How a Library Saved Her Life

“You never know what troubled little girl needs a book,”Nikki Giovanni wrote in one of her poems celebrating libraries and librarians. “Knowledge sets us free, art sets us free. A great library is freedom,” Ursula K. Le Guin asserted in her beautiful essay on the sacredness of public libraries. “When a library is open, no matter its size or shape,” Bill Moyers wrote in his introduction to this photographic love letter to public libraries, “democracy is open, too.”

But no one has articulated, nor lived, this liberating and salvational function of libraries more fully than Maya Angelou (April 4, 1928–May 28, 2014).

In the autumn of 2010, shortly before Dr. Angelou received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Harlem’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture — a research division of the New York Public Library — acquired her papers. She visited NYPL for a public event celebrating the occasion, during which she broke into song to illustrate the life-saving role libraries have always played in the lives of the people during the darkest of times. She went on to share the story of how a library had saved her own life as a child.

Published on Oct 10, 2012
October, 2010 – The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture’s Director, Howard Dodson, and New York Public Library President Paul LeClerc announce the acquisition of the personal and professional papers of Dr. Maya Angelou.

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St. Anthony This week

Monday, November 28

Rec LINK Office Hours

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Nahima Mohamed,
Family Coordinator
OCH Foundation for Healthy Communities
Office: (613) 422-1555
Mobile: (613) 857- 5677
Fax: (613) 422-4556
Email: recLINKcoordinator@OCHFoundation.ca
Dalhousie Community Centre
755 Somerset Street West, 3rd Floor, Ottawa, Ontario K1R 6R1

starr-gymnastics

Monday, November 28th
9:00 to 10:00 – Group 1 (50 Kids)
Grade 3 Ms Solymar  (16 students)
16 Students
10:30 to 11:30 – Group 2 (50 Kids)
Grade ⅘ Troccoli (23)
Grade ⅚ Colaiacovo (26)
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Tuesday, November 29

lunch-lady

Lunch Lady in today order here

Gym closed, Advent songs practice

Goodlife – Ms Troccoli 12:50 – 1:50

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Wednesday, November 30

Wastefree Wednesdays

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Y Kids Academy – Final session

Celebration of November birthdays

Guest Reader Session in Mrs.Rupnik’s class- AM- Grade 4 student at 9:30 and 12:15-12:30 Ms. Lindsey Barr

Goodlife Gymnastics – Grade 3 Ms Solymar

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Thursday, December 1

Papa Jack popcorn

Our 5/6 class will be selling Papa Jack popcorn every 2nd Thursday until the end of the year. $1.00 per bag.

Advent Celebration – 9:15

Cindy Aldrich in 9:00 am – 

Friday, December 2

Pizza Day today!

Goodlife Fitness M Chartrand’s class

St. Anthony Super Stars

 

November 25

The SAN Script – Friday, November 25

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The best and most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or even touched – they must be felt with the heart.

Helen Keller

St. Anthony Today

Pizza Today!

Dairy Presentations today:

Friday, November 25
8:45-9:30 (17 students)
Grade 3
topic “From Moo to You: Processing”

10:05-10:50 (23 students)
Grade 4/5
topic “Dairy Goodness: Making the Most of Milk”

12:20-1:05 (10 students)
PLC PM Class
topic is “Dairy Farming”

1:15-2:00 (23 students)
Kindergarten Classes
topic “Dairy Farming”

Goodlife Fitness M Chartrand’s class

Swimming at Plant Bath grade 5/6 class

St. Anthony Superstars

Storytelling with Esri: Oh, the places you can go

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Good article to read if you would like to follow my climb to Kilimanjaro this spring

November 24

The SAN Script – Thursday, November 24

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Lego Challenge in the Learning Commons yesterday

voice of the day

There is a really deep well inside of me. And in it dwells God. Sometimes I am there, too. But more often stones and grit block the well, and God is buried beneath. Then he must be dug out again.

Etty Hillesum

Located on the Isle of Skye is Fairy Glen (sometimes spelt Faerie Glen), a unique and otherworldly, miniature landscape of grassy, cone-shaped hills with ponds in between. Situated between the two small villages of Sheader and Balnacnoc on the Trotternish Penisula in the North end of the island; Fairy Glen is a popular tourist destination for hikers, and one of the top-rated attractions on the entire island. Photographer Robert Lukeman took this beautiful shot at sunset

Located on the Isle of Skye is Fairy Glen (sometimes spelt Faerie Glen), a unique and otherworldly, miniature landscape of grassy, cone-shaped hills with ponds in between.
Situated between the two small villages of Sheader and Balnacnoc on the Trotternish Penisula in the North end of the island; Fairy Glen is a popular tourist destination for hikers, and one of the top-rated attractions on the entire island.
Photographer Robert Lukeman took this beautiful shot at sunset

St. Anthony Today

Dairy Presentations all day

Thursday, November 24, 2016
8:45-9:30 (29 students)
PLC AM and Grade One/Two Class
topic is “Dairy Farming”

10:05-10:50 (26 students)
Grade 5/6
topic “Dairy Goodness: Making the Most of Milk”

12:20-1:05 (17 students)
Grade 2/3
topic “From Moo to You: Processing”

1:15-2:00 (23 students)
Kindergarten Classes
topic “Dairy Farming”

 

Thanks Teresa for organizing these sessions!

Supportive Teacher Centered Professional Development

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1kraft

 Teachers improve at different rates, and the key driver of the disparity is the school environment. Join us as we discuss the elements of a supportive school culture.

Follow: @coolcatteacher @MatthewAKraft  @bloomzapp

#edtechchat #edchat #edtech