Thank you, Mrs. McNeill, for a wonderful holiday sing-along!
Friday, December 20, 2013
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Believe
South Street School students wrote letters to Santa as part of the Macy's Believe campaign. For every letter received, Macy's donated $1.00 to the Make-A-Wish Foundation.These are students from Mrs. Bobal/Mr. Edwards' class.
Friday, December 6, 2013
Ringing the Bell
Students from Mrs. Jordan's first grade class rang the bell for the Salvation Army at the King Kullen in Eastport on Friday evening. The children had learned about homelessness and the importance of doing good things for people in need.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Gooney Bird Greene and the Thanksgiving Pageant
Mrs. Austin's second grade class performed "Gooney Bird Greene and the Thanksgiving Pageant" on November 26 for the entire school. It was a wonderful performance about the first Thanksgiving and incorporated many new vocabulary words. Special thanks to Miss Schoelermann and Mrs. McNeill for their assistance in making this show a success. Bravo!
Dr. King's Visit
Dr. John King, the New York State Commissioner of Education, visited South Street School on Tuesday, November 26. He had the opportunity to see Mrs. Austin's class play and spent some time in our kindergarten classrooms.
Monday, November 25, 2013
Newsday FutureCorps Project:Bags of Hope
Mrs. Legaz and Mrs. Omisore's kindergarten classes took part in a service learning project, which will be featured as part of Newsday's FutureCorps. Bags of Hope were assembled for children battling leukemia. Students cheerfully decorated bags and made encouraging pictures to brighten spirits.The bags were filled with toys, books, crayons, friendship bracelets, tissues, markers and journals. Next week, the teachers will deliver the bags to Stony Brook Hospital Children's Cancer Center. The project was initiated because a sibling of one of our students is a cancer surviver. The thankful family joined us today for this service project.
Friday, November 22, 2013
LEGO Build to Express
Fall Fun in PE
Our fall-themed obstacle course was a lot of fun. It incorporated many movements that the children practiced in their physical education classes such as jumping, rolling, crawling, balancing and scootering. There was even a "spooky house" at the end of the obstacle course.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Top Hats and Tiaras
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Holiday Mail for Heroes
Mrs. Capobianco/Mrs. Hayton's kindergarten class made cards for the Holiday Mail for Heroes program. The Red Cross will distribute these cards at military installations, veteran's hospitals and other locations. The class listened to the book, Hero Mom, by Melinda Hardin to learn about the heroic things our soldiers do.
Junior Achievement
Junior Achievement is a global not-for-profit organization. Their purpose is to inspire and prepare young people to succeed in a global economy. This is accomplished through the dedication of volunteers from businesses and the community, who volunteer their time to teach the JA programs. All programs are age-appropriate and regularly evaluated. They range from a kindergarten program with colorful read-alouds and piggy banks to high school programs that teach budgeting, investment basics and wise credit usage. Volunteers from HSBC, trained by JA staff, taught first grade classes today at South Street School. The "Our Familes" program supported our first grade social studies curriculum.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Colonial Days
Second grade classes visited the Smithtown Historical Society to learn about life during the colonial days.
Dream
Dream by Susan V. Bosak is a book about the hopes and dreams that we all have from the time we're children to when we're all grown up. It's about the special and important wishes you make on the stars at night...wishes for yourself and others. Fifty children and their parents gathered at SSS to hear the story and engage in related crafts. Children decorated wooden dream chests, which represented the magical portal between reality and dreams.."what is" and "what can be." They also made dream catchers, which is a tradition of Native Americans. Dream catchers protect sleeping children. Positive dreams slip through the hole in the center of the dream catcher and glide down the feathers. Negative dreams get caught in the web and expire when the sun rises. Sweet dreams, everyone!
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