More from the Caroling Event
about 7 years ago, Amanda Fjeld
Cheese!
6th graders helped with the kindergarteners during the caroling
Silly Faces
On to the next house
More pictures from the Elementary Caroling Event last Friday, December 14th
about 7 years ago, Amanda Fjeld
Mrs. Holmes, Mrs. Saumer and Mrs. Lindstrom
Caroling
Caroling
Thankful hugs
Kindergarten students continued partner engineering work last week with marshmallow and toothpick structures. Though much trial and error, we discovered the marshmallows were much too fragile. They crumbled and did not hold the weight of our hands when we applied any amount of downward force. We returned to step 5 of our STEM inquiry process multiple times as we revised blueprints and improved our designs. We also invited the 2nd graders to our class to help us problem-solve our marshmallow and toothpick structures. They confirmed our hypotheses--marshmallows are not the ideal building structure. While in the midst of our engineering work this week, our classroom was infiltrated by a mischievous elf! Initially, he was bent on messing up our room. We used our iPads to take pictures of evidence of his misdoings and also conducted some research on suitable traps that would withstand the force of an energetic elf. We decided to use our marshmallow structures to trap him overnight early in the week. We discovered he was nocturnal and had a penchant for sweets--especially candy canes. Our structures were almost exclusively made of squares and rectangles. After testing out multiple designs...and receiving some clues from one of the elf's daily notes, we learned that triangles are much more resilient. Thanks to the elf who supplied us with a few clues, some research, and a bag of new materials, we went back to our drawing board and created structures made with gum drops in the shape of pyramids. This was the key to success and we met his challenge to cooperatively build a trap that measured more than 10 cubes in height! Hooray for our enthusiastic and persistent engineers and one little elf who learned how to be kind in kindergarten!
about 7 years ago, Jen Bartsch
STEM Structures
STEM
STEM
STEM
All elementary students (K-6) caroling in the community today!!
about 7 years ago, Amanda Fjeld
Caroling
At the Riverview Apartments
In the community
Flannel Day and Holiday Sweater Day!! Wednesday and Thursday next week :)
about 7 years ago, Amanda Fjeld
Flannel day and Holiday Sweater Day!
Creativity flowing in Art class!
about 7 years ago, Kellee Young
Creativity flowing in Art class!
The Floodwood SH Band performed for a large crowd of shoppers Tuesday at the Holiday Music Festival at the Mall of America. They did an outstanding job for the holiday shoppers of the twin cities area!! Join us for the same concert on Thursday, December 20th at Floodwood Schools!
about 7 years ago, Laura Saumer
SH Band
The 9th grade enjoying a pizza party after winning the lip-sync contest at Homecoming! Way to go 9th grade!
about 7 years ago, Laura Saumer
9th grade
Pizza
Itasca Public Health will be offering the flu shot to students (& staff) on Monday, December 17th at 9:30AM at Floodwood School. Watch for a permission slip to come home with your student. Contact Sarah Marshall, School Nurse with any questions: smarshall@isd698.org
about 7 years ago, Lois Persons
Flu Season Ahead
STEM Structures with Flat and Solid Shapes: Kindergarten students spent the week planning, testing out, and redesigning a series of structures with flat and solid geometric shapes. On Friday, students worked through this scientific process to visualize effective structures based upon their previous learning, properly identify flat and solid shapes, and collaborate with their team members. Many structures collapsed, yet these engineers persevered and revised their designs to construct sturdier models!
about 7 years ago, Jen Bartsch
STEM
STEM
STEM
STEM
Generations of Generosity! The kindergarten and 6th grade classes worked alongside a host of high school students, parents, staff, and community members this morning and put generosity in action in a BIG way. Teams were hard at work all morning creating a beautiful variety of holiday treats that will be given as gifts during our upcoming Christmas caroling event. What a sweet way to bring generations of people together for a common goal!
about 7 years ago, Jen Bartsch
Sweet Treats
Generations of Generosity
Many hands make light work on a sweet surprise for the community!
about 7 years ago, Kellee Young
Many hands make light work on a community surprise
Please plan on supporting the 5th and 6th grade class Laurentian Fundraiser Basket Raffle at the winter program December 20th at 6 pm. Purchase tickets for $1 each. Donations toward the trip will also be accepted. We appreciate the support.
about 7 years ago, David Tollefson
Junior high band students getting ready for the Holiday Concert. Join us Thursday, December 20th at 6:00 pm in the gym.
about 7 years ago, Laura Saumer
JH Band
Floodwood School is seeking a SUBSTITUTE VAN DRIVER to transport students with school van. Route times vary from 30 to 75 minutes. $25.72 per route ($51.44 if do both AM and PM routes in one day). A valid driver’s license, a clean driving and background check required.
about 7 years ago, Lois Persons
Any temperature greater than 100 degrees F is considered a fever. Children must be fever-free for 24 hours without the use of fever reducing medications (such as Tylenol, Motrin, Advil, etc.) in order to return to school. This applies even if the underlying cause of the fever is non-infectious, such as middle ear infections, etc. Children with a fever do not usually feel well enough to participate and attend school activities. It is recommended that they be given 24 hours to recover from the fever before returning to school. Please note that a child who exhibits symptoms of illness without a fever may be sent home if the nurse feels this is in the best interest of the child or the child’s classmates (with compromised immune systems)
about 7 years ago, Sarah Marshall
8th graders using the floor and their bodies to graph linear equations.
about 7 years ago, Amanda Fjeld
8th grade
Floodwood School library hosted 2 author visits. Floodwood Students had the opportunity to ask these authors about their writing styles, inspirations, and what it takes to be published. This was made possible by Ms. Davidson's attendance at the MN ITEM conference in October.
about 7 years ago, Geraldine Davidson
Author Visits
Jeannine Kellogg
If you'd like to import the game schedule into your own personal Google Calendar use the following steps: Go to Settings; Add Calendar; pick from URL and put the sports URL in there
about 7 years ago, Tara Fierke
STEM Challenges with 3D Structures: Over the course of last week, kindergarten students explored STEM concepts beyond the kitchen and focused on constructing 3D shapes from a specific set of materials--playdough spheres and cylinder coffee stir sticks. The question I posed was this: Can you construct a tower that is at least 10 counting cubes tall, is free-standing (stands without any help from our hands), and uses playdough spheres (balls) and sticks? Students got right to work visualizing their construction and making plans for creation. They shared materials, problem-solved with peers, analyzed their constructions, built, measured, and rebuilt. This initial activity was extremely challenging and intentionally designed to get students to struggle through the process and begin to discover which 3D designs were most effective. This week, we will delve further into the scientific process of inquiry. We will discuss our questions/problems, experiment with a variety of building materials, visualize and plan solutions, construct a free-standing 3D structure, analyze results, and revisit our designs to improve stability and effectiveness. Last week's initial work with structure buildings and our discoveries involving the strongest, most effective 3D shapes will equip us with the background knowledge we need for this STEM challenge of the week. Stay tuned for our discoveries in the days to come!
about 7 years ago, Jen Bartsch
3D
3D
3D
3D