Viewing: Class Updates
August 31, 2016
Parent Surveys for the New School Year
Hello, families! Our first day is off to a terrific start, and I’m excited to get to know your kids better. Would you please take a few moments to complete TWO surveys for me? These help me to better target instruction to meet your child’s needs and to best address your goals. The first survey is a general survey that helps me to learn about your child. The second survey focuses on technology and will help me to understand more about your child’s access to and comfort with different forms of technology. Thank you for completing these at your earliest convenience. (I’d love to have them by Friday, if possible.) If you prefer to complete them on paper, please email me or send in a note, and I’ll print them for you.) The surveys are embedded below this paragraph. You do not need to complete both of them at once.
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
August 30, 2016
Welcome to Room 209!
Hello! Welcome to the online home of PGS Room 209. During the school year, I will update this web site regularly with information about activities happening in Room 209, bulletins and news items, current events related to what we’re studying in social studies, online assignments, and much more.
It’s going to be a great year in fourth grade. There are so many new things to learn, and there are some really interesting activities coming up!
About Me
I asked my son (who is starting first grade) what I should tell you about myself. Here’s his report:
- I have two kids: Charlie and Caroline
- I help Charlie to bike.
- I like to build stuff with Charlie, like a wooden bank.
- I like to cook hot dogs for them. (I didn’t know this was a special stand out!)
- I love Star Trek!
- I watch SeaQuest DSV with Charlie and Caroline. (Bonus points to anyone who has heard of this obscure 1990’s science fiction show.
- I like to ride the CT FastTrack bus to visit the Connecticut Science Center with Charlie and Caroline.
- I take Charlie and Caroline to the dentist.
Caroline (age 3) would also like you to know that she had her birthday recently.
I live locally with my wife, my son (Charlie), our daughter (Caroline), and our dog (Rimley). In my spare time, I like working on home improvement projects, making things in my woodworking shop, especially using my new lathe, finding “good eats” at local farmers’ markets, or just relaxing by cooking, listening to old time radio shows from the 1940s and 50s, reading comic books, or watching the news. I collect old reel to-reel tapes of music, antique or unusual telephones, submarine paraphernalia, and all things related to Star Trek. This summer, I spent a lot of time working at a local summer camp, setting up my classroom, and traveling with my family.
I enjoy tinkering with my computer and coming up with interesting ways in which I can use technology in the classroom. (You can definitely expect to use computers a lot in Room 209! I enjoy using Chromebooks, our class’ SMART Board, and other technologies while teaching.) Of course, I also love cheering on my favorite sports teams, the Boston Red Sox (Don’t worry Yankees fans, I promise not to be mean!) and the New Britain Bees!
Click “more” to learn more about me!
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
June 9, 2016
Farewell and Hello!
To the graduating class of newly promoted FIFTH GRADERS:
Thank you so much for a wonderful year. We had a bit of a rushed morning today, so I didn’t get to say all that I usually like to say during our class graduation ceremony. I’m proud to say that our year finished with me continuing to be able to say that I’ve loved each one of my classes. We’ve had so many great experiences this year, filled with so many memories. Your virtual scrapbook reminded me of so many of those: Wassail, Frindle, Dick and Rick Hoyt, Sycamore Day, Number the Stars, light saber duels, and so much more! In addition to the wonderful virtual scrapbook, please also accept my thanks for the awesome pi tie, the Star Trek teacher bag, the generous gift cards, and the individual gifts that some of you kindly gave me! Parents, thank you for entrusting me with your children this year; it’s been an honor and a pleasure. Have a wonderful summer, and good luck at TBS! Please stay in touch!
To the arriving class of newly promoted FOURTH GRADERS:
Wow, you made it to fourth grade! Next year, you get to take the responsibility of being the “seniors” of the school! I can’t wait to meet you (if we haven’t already met), and hope you come to our meet and greet before school starts. I’ll post a more thorough welcome in August, but for now, take plenty of time to relax, have fun, and READ EVERY SINGLE DAY. I’d love for you to email me to introduce yourself! Have a great summer!
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
April 21, 2016
Mindfulness Programs
Several weeks ago, our class welcomed Mrs. Joanna Curry-Sartori to our school. Mrs. Sartori is a family counselor at The Bridge Family Center in Avon. The Bridge is working with Avon Public Schools, and Mrs. Sartori visits all the fourth grade classes at PGS (and several others) twice each week to teach the children about mindfulness. Mindfulness is the idea of being aware of what’s happening within you and around you at a given moment. She comes to our class to teach the kids different exercises that they can use to regain their calmness when stressed, maintain their focus when at ease, and sense how they’re actually feeling at a given moment. Her work fits in so well with our character education goals. This week, to help the kids prepare before SBAC testing, Mrs. Sartori kindly recorded a few short mindfulness videos to help the kids “get ready” and remain at ease for the often stressful testing experience. I know this may sound a little hokey, but you’ll have to trust me on this: I see the IMMEDIATE and LASTING impact that the exercises have on the class. When our room gets loud or stressful, a short break to regain our footing can change the course of the day.
Mrs. Sartori is offering two free programs at Avon Free Public Library over the next few weeks. One is TONIGHT at 6:30pm. (I’m so sorry for the late notice on this. That’s entirely my fault!) The other is on May 5. See the information below:
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
April 18, 2016
My SBAC Talking Points
Tomorrow is our first day of SBAC testing! Tomorrow morning, after specials, we will have our first ELA (English/Language Arts) test. After the practice we’ve done, I’m confident that the kids are ready for their second year of computer-based testing. Here are a few things that I’ve highlighted for kids (whether in whole-class discussions or private conversations), which you might also want to remind them:
- “The SBACs will ___ and will not ____.” You might be surprised what misconceptions kids have about the SBACs. Recently, I was asked if poor performance on these tests will prevent kids from going to fifth grade (no) or if it will keep kids from getting into college (double no). I try to be absolutely direct when telling what effect the SBACs will and will not have. (If you have a question about this, please ask me.)
- “It’s ok to be worried!” I think we have a tendency to try to remove kids fears by saying “Oh, don’t worry!” or “There’s no reason to be nervous!” The truth is, if a child is worried about the test, then clearly they feel that they have a reason to worry. I try to validate their feelings, and I instead focus on helping them to stop feeling worried, not on telling them to stop worrying. It’s absolutely normal for students to feel some anxiety about testing. As much as we try to reassure the kids, they understandably pick up on the importance of the tests, and they sometimes feel pressure, despite our best efforts to the contrary. I encourage you to remind your fourth grader that we ask only that they try their very best as they take the tests and that they think about and use all the strategies they’ve learned in school.
- “Just try your best.” I have been very direct with kids – I ask them just to try their very hardest. If they can honestly tell me that they did, then I’m proud of them. But part of trying your best means taking time to remember the things you have been taught and making yourself think carefully about your choices during an assessment, not just picking the first answer that looks decent so that you can move on to the next item. It also means CHECKING OVER your work. When you give encouragement for your kids, focus on effort (“Try your hardest!”) rather than on outcome (“Get a great score!”) in order to minimize pressure.
- “Sleep.” A sleepy student is predisposed to performing poorly on the SBACs. Please make sure that your child gets PLENTY of sleep the night before a test. (Consider enforcing earlier bedtimes, if you deem it appropriate.)
- “Have a calm morning.” By the same token, please try to minimize morning stress. Coming to school late and/or coming after a chaotic morning will put your child in a bad mind-set for testing.
- “Dress comfortably.” Nobody is worried about fashion during this week of testing. Kids should dress in a comfortable outfit that doesn’t distract them as they work. (Haven’t we all been bothered by an itchy label or a pair of shoes that doesn’t fit quite right?)
- “Eat breakfast.” A filling, nutritious breakfast is also essential to good test performance. (Growling stomachs will distract your child, and, frankly, other students too.) Please try to make sure your child has breakfast at home. Healthy snacks will be provided for students before testing, but there is no substitute for a good breakfast.
Feel free to reach out to me if you have any questions!
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
April 15, 2016
Cub Reporter: Week at a Glance
By Student #6
On Monday we got a new student.We also started a new math unit on geometry. On Tuesday in Spanish we got got down to only 1 letter left! (Moss’s Note: In Spanish class, good class cooperation earns letter, and disappointing choices results in the loss of letters. It’s been a tough few Spanish classes, I hear. Lots of side conversations.) We also got new math rotation groups. On Wednesday we got a little better on are hardest song in music: Dry your tears afrika. Also we did a lot of midwest group work and a classmate sang his favorite song A little song, a little dance, a little seltzer down my pants! (Moss’s Note: Ok, this was FUNNY! I can’t do it justice here, so if you’re curious, ask your fourth grade how the game Alibi works and what was funny about the song!) On Thursday we had checkout day in library and we got through our last math rotation.
Final note from Mr. Moss: I apologize for the lack of updates in recent weeks! More information is coming soon!
Posted in Class Updates, Student News|By Jon Moss
March 24, 2016
Cub Reporter: Acting Out Fractions
By Student #18
In school we are doing lots of things. Here is what they are. We are continuing to do fractions in math. We have a new strategy in which people are acting a problem out. It helps us understand the problems better. Students in our class are also learning about the southeast and are making presentations about them. Also Mr. Moss is teaching us beginning and endings for our Sarah’s House Disaster stories.
Luckily we have a short week this week due to holidays and conferences, so enjoy the warm weather and the long weekend.
Posted in Class Updates, Student News|By Jon Moss
March 2, 2016
Where is your child’s work and grades?
It wasn’t so long ago that parents could open their child’s homework folder and find corrected language arts work coming home on a regular basis. These reading and writing exercises had teacher comments and a grade, and parents could see what their child was working on in school. This year, those same opportunities exist, but it’s all online now. When we met for December parent-teacher conferences, I discussed Google Classroom with many families. With our next round of conferences coming later this month, I thought this would be a good time to remind you of this wonderful resource.
Google Classroom is a core part of Google Apps for Education. Think of it as a learning management system that allows me to share resources, distribute files, assign tasks, and allows students students to complete and submit tasks, receive feedback, discuss ideas with peers, and more. (The short video above, while slightly out of date, does a great job of showing what Google Classroom can do.)
Nearly ALL of your child’s written work is completed on a Chromebook, within Google Classroom. Parents of PGS fourth graders should ALWAYS be able to access their child’s Google Classroom account (using their child’s username and password, which should always be shared with parents). To login, visit classroom.google.com and log in with your child’s username and password. There, you’ll find a lot of your forth grader’s work, along with my feedback and grades. Sometimes grades may be posted in the Google Classroom assignment section, but I often put grades within the student’s document itself. I encourage you to check Google Classroom on a periodic basis, although the one thing I ask is that you NOT make revisions to your child’s work without checking with me. A lot of what you’ll find is a work-in-progress, and it’s important that students have the opportunity to learn by working through a process, rather than having corrections made by an adult at home. (Remember, you’re logging in as your fourth grader, not under some separate parent account. So there’s no way for me to distinguish work your child does from revisions you may make.)
If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me.
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
March 1, 2016
Looking at the Unit 5 Math Assessment

Math tests are no fun, and reviewing work may be dull, but it’s so important that students work carefully in order to be successful.
Hopefully, you’ve had an opportunity to review the unit 5 math assessment that your son or daughter has brought home to correct, have signed by an adult, and return to school. We took our time to review the assessment over several days because, in all candor, I was disappointed by the students’ performance. As I explained to the students, I would never share my disappointment with them if I found that they (as a class) tended to struggle with the content on the assessment. (In cases like that, teachers should recognize that they need to go back and reteach the concepts that were challenging. But no teacher should ever make a student feel bad for having trouble with a skill.) In this case, I did share my disappointment, because I saw something else happening. On this assessment, I found that many of the students lost points because they did not read and follow the directions with care. In several instances, students answered only one part of a question while ignoring others. There were many times in which students ignored the directions to “Show your work” or to express an answer in multiple forms. On one question, students were asked to write a fraction to show how many items of the total are being counted, but many students just listed a number. These mistakes tend to happen when students hurry through an assessment, fail to read whole questions, etc. I also found that assessments were handed in with pages inadvertently left blank, and while I understand that mistakes happen, this shows how quickly and (not) deeply some students reviewed their work before handing it in.
I’m sharing this with you in hopes that together, we can help the students to build more successful work habits. Attention to detail is a careful thing to instill in a fourth grader because, frankly, it’s often not fun to do! Who wants to reread a question if they think they got it right the first time? Who wants to work more slowly if they think they can do a perfectly good job moving through the task quickly. The mistakes I’ve described here were common throughout the class, which is why I’m sharing my concerns in this forum. In some instances, they resulted in the student’s grade being as much as 10% lower (or even lower) than what it should have been based on the student’s apparent mastery of the concepts. Attention to detail becomes only more important in fifth grade and beyond, so this is an excellent time to help the students to become more careful, more diligent workers. Thank you for your help, and please feel free to reach out if you have any thoughts!
Posted in Class Updates|By Jon Moss
February 29, 2016
Cub Reporter Message: Chinese New Year, Composing and Decomposing Fractions, More!
By Student #14
Last week in room 209, we did some very exiting things! Our classmate’s mom came in to teach us about the Chinese New Year, and then in math, we started learning about fractions; decomposing, adding, and subtracting them. (Really cool.) We have almost finished In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson which is a wonderful book about a girl who moved from China to America and I think September (one of the chapters ) is particularly funny . These are the exiting and wonderful things we’ve been doing in room 209!
Posted in Class Updates, Student News|By Jon Moss