My Favorite Dessert
Monday, October 15, 2012
Most people, at least at one time or another, are capable of getting excited about their favorite dessert. Therefore it makes a good topic for learning to write an essay. Try to decide if the writer below was excited about his favorite dessert. Do you hear the voice of a robot or does it, in fact, make you hungry as you read it?
My favorite
dessert is blackberry pie with vanilla ice cream. The cold ice cream slides
down my throat while the berries crunch beneath my teeth. If the crust is just
right you can taste a hint of cinnamon at the tail end. The joy lasts a long
time.
The first time
I tasted blackberry pie with vanilla ice cream was at my grandmother’s house a
very long time ago. It must have been my birthday or some other special
occasion. Otherwise, there probably would not have been any form of dessert
after dinner. Dessert is uncommon in my family.
Besides the
cold of the ice cream, the crunch of the berries, and the final hint of
cinnamon, the appearance of this fine dessert is a thing to behold. It looks a
bit like Mount Rainier if the light and the mood are just right. With the
vanilla ice cream on top of jagged pie crust and blackberries, you can imagine
the majestic mountain right before devouring it.
Much more
could be said in praise of blackberry pie with vanilla ice cream, but the experience
of eating it should not be delayed any longer. Don’t spend too much time
deciding which brand of ice cream to use. Instead get down to the business and
joy of actually eating this fine dessert.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Come to Open House tomorrow night in Room 17 at Franklin Elementary School. We'll talk about the new school year, parent/teacher conferences, upcoming projects, and study habits. You can also meet me, if you haven't already, and ask me nearly any question--there are only a few I won't answer!
Meanwhile, encourage your student to read for fifteen minutes each night as part of their homework, and try to capture a news item or current event, either from the newspaper, radio, television or internet. It doesn't have to be a clipping, but it can instead be a short summary of an event heard on the news from television, radio, internet news sites, and news magazines. Cards are available in the classroom for taking notes and writing summaries. Your student knows about these things! See you tomorrow night.
Meanwhile, encourage your student to read for fifteen minutes each night as part of their homework, and try to capture a news item or current event, either from the newspaper, radio, television or internet. It doesn't have to be a clipping, but it can instead be a short summary of an event heard on the news from television, radio, internet news sites, and news magazines. Cards are available in the classroom for taking notes and writing summaries. Your student knows about these things! See you tomorrow night.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Room 17 Report
Mr.
Burnett's Class Franklin
School
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
August
28, 2012,
Dear Fourth Grade Student and Parents/Guardian:
I
want to welcome you to the fourth grade and let you know that I am looking
forward to having you in my class this year.
You will have an enjoyable and productive year in our room!
You
will need to have a book for silent reading at 8:10 each day. You may bring a book from home or find one
in our classroom collection.
Since we believe that education is serious business, please do not bring
any toys to school because they interfere with learning. Here are other rules you will be expected to
follow:
1. Follow directions the first time they
are given.
2. Stay in your seat unless given
permission to leave
it.
3. Raise your hand and wait to be called
on before
speaking.
4. Turn in all assignments on time.
HOMEWORK:
Students are responsible for handing their homework in on time. Homework
is due the following day and needs to be placed in the correct assignment box
before the second bell when school starts. Homework generally consists of unfinished
daily assignments, and I ask the students to read for at least fifteen minutes
each evening. Occasionally, there will be homework projects that require more
than one day to complete, and for these assignments I will give the students a
due date.
WHEN
ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE: Assignments are usually due the morning after
they are assigned. If the assignment is not handed in, the student receives a 0
in the grade book for that assignment, so it is very important that all
assignments are completed and turned in on time. Nothing lowers a report card
grade faster than missing assignments. If a student is absent, he/ she will
have at least two days to make up the assignments after checking with me to see
which assignments to make up.
GRADING: No student will receive failing marks on their report card if their
assignments are turned in on time and they are trying to do the assignments to
the best of their ability. I will present more details on the new report card
as they become available to me.
You
will earn good grades as long as you listen well in class, follow directions
the first time, and complete and turn in assignments on time.
HANDING
ASSIGNMENTS BACK: Assignments and papers are returned to the
student’s “mail box.” Students are responsible for getting their “mail” and
taking it home to show their parents/ guardians. I encourage you to keep
assignments rather than throw them away, at least through the end of the
trimester. The projects, like the “Family History Report,” you will probably want
to keep forever.
I hope some of your questions and concerns
about this year have been answered in this letter. You can also check our Franklin website by
accessing the Port Angeles
School District website.
Good communication will help each student succeed in fourth grade. Please
contact me with any other questions and concerns.
Sincerely,
Mr. Burnett (565-1853)
Thursday, June 7, 2012
How many fourth graders fit in the back of a Honda Element? Students pondered that question for awhile until they made predictions ranging from five to seventeen. In Math we call that estimation, and with a range that wide, only one thing remained to do. That's right, pop that hatch and climb in one after another until the car fills up. Now, just to be clear, no actual ride was taken since seat belts were lacking, and a ticket or an unsafe trip with nine and ten year olds was not part of the lesson plan. At least not in their teacher's plan. Some did, in fact, think a trip to McDonalds or Hollywood Beach was in order. We stayed in the Franklin parking lot, however.
We managed to cram ten fourth graders in the back of the Honda when all was said and done. Probably a few more would have fit, but this is fourth grade and not the college days of yesteryear when some scholars thought it a good idea to see how many freshman would fit in a phone booth or Volkswagon Beetle. These students will have to wait awhile for that experience.
We managed to cram ten fourth graders in the back of the Honda when all was said and done. Probably a few more would have fit, but this is fourth grade and not the college days of yesteryear when some scholars thought it a good idea to see how many freshman would fit in a phone booth or Volkswagon Beetle. These students will have to wait awhile for that experience.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
A perfect day for a field trip! Our class walked to and from the Vern Burton Center in Port Angeles last Friday to attend the children's show at the Juan de Fuca Festival. Despite our preparations for inclement weather, the sun insisted on shining for the duration of our mile long walk. After the show we took time for a picnic lunch on the manicured grounds outside the city council chambers. Passing motorists on both legs of the journey gave us wide birth to cross streets safely. On another note, Room 17 will keep its goldfish who have inhabited our classroom for at least five or six years!
Thursday, May 17, 2012
The Crayfish and Snails have arrived! Living organisms in the classroom--and not simply goldfish--welcome the sunny weather in Room 17. The kids are learning about body structures, care and feeding, and the behaviors of crayfish and snails in Science. As they learned from sprouting seeds, animals, too, need food and water to survive, and the means of locomotion to get to it differ from one animal to the next. This kind of diversity in the animal world is one of the reasons this unit is one the students look forward to since the beginning of each year.
Thursday, May 10, 2012

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