Monclova Primary
Weekly Bulletin
Events for Week of January 23 - 29
Monday, January 23
Tuesday, January 24
Kindergarten Library Program - 9:00 am; 12:45 pm
Wednesday, January 25
Marcos Pizza Night
Fruitraiser pick up - 4:30 to 6:00 pm
Thursday, January 26
Staff Meeting/PBIS Shirts - 7:30 am
Friday, January 27
Last day to sign up for student teacher - use Google Doc
Announcements
Thank you:
Reminders:
Winter benchmarking begins this week. This includes a STAR Reading/Early Literacy, STAR Math and writing assessments. Student growth reports will be run to see mid-year progress.
The RtI winter meeting sign up has been shared with you. If you have a student on tier 3, you will need to sign up for Thursday. Also, please make sure you RtI plans are up to date, many have an intervention interval ending in January.
A Google sheet has been shared with you to complete if interested in hosting a BGSU student next year. Once again a teacher match or interview time will be set up for those teachers interested in hosting a student teacher next year, tentatively set for Thursday, February 16 at 4:00 pm in the Waterville Primary Library . This is a one year commitment and you can earn hours toward your IPDP. Please sign up no later than Jan. 27.
If you or your grade level will be celebrating the 100th day of school, please celebrate on Friday, Jan. 27. This will keep everyone consistent and it is technically the official 100th day.
Please remind parents in your newsletters about President's Day and 2 hour delay that will occur in February.
A Couch to 5K running club will be taking place on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays each week. Meet by the office at 3:50 pm ready to run, it will last about 30 minutes. Running will be on the trail unless weather is bad, then running will be in the hallways.
Dates to Remember:
RtI Days - February 8 and 9
Valentine's Day Celebrations - February 14
President's Day - No School - February 20
Two Hour Delay - Professional Day - February 21
Words of Wisdom and Action..............................
Why Curiosity Enhances Learning
It's no secret that curiosity makes learning more effective and enjoyable. Curious students not only ask questions, but also actively seek out the answers. Without curiosity, Sir Isaac Newton would have never formulated the laws of physics, Alexander Fleming probably wouldn't have discovered penicillin, and Marie Curie's pioneering research on radioactivity may not exist.
Instilling students with a strong desire to know or learn something is what every teacher lives for, and research has even shown that curiosity is just as important as intelligence in determining how well students do in school. But how much do we really know about its role in the learning process?
Your Brain Likes Curiosity
Recently, researchers from the University of California, Davis conducted a series of experiments to discover what exactly goes on in the brain when our curiosity is aroused. For the study, the researchers had participants rate how curious they were to learn the answers to more than 100 trivia questions, such as "What Beatles single lasted longest on the charts, at 19 weeks?" or "What does the term 'dinosaur' actually mean?" At certain points throughout the study, fMRI scans were carried out to see what was happening in the brain when participants felt particularly curious about the answer to a question.
So what did these experiments reveal? Here are two of the most important findings.
1. Curiosity prepares the brain for learning.
While it might be no big surprise that we're more likely to remember what we've learned when the subject matter intrigues us, it turns out that curiosity also helps us learn information we don't consider all that interesting or important.
The researchers found that, once the subjects' curiosity had been piqued by the right question, they were better at learning and remembering completely unrelated information. One of the study’s co-authors, Dr. Matthias Gruber, explains that this is because curiosity puts the brain in a state that allows it to learn and retain any kind of information, like a vortex that sucks in what you are motivated to learn, and also everything around it.
So if a teacher is able to arouse students' curiosity about something they're naturally motivated to learn, they'll be better prepared to learn things that they would normally consider boring or difficult. For instance, if a student struggles with math, personalizing math problems to match their specific interests rather than using generic textbook questions could help them better remember how to go about solving similar math problems in the future.
2. Curiosity makes subsequent learning more rewarding.
Aside from preparing the brain for learning, curiosity can also make learning a more rewarding experience for students.
The researchers found that when the participants' curiosity had been sparked, there was not only increased activity in the hippocampus, which is the region of the brain involved in the creation of memories, but also in the brain circuit that is related to reward and pleasure. This circuit is the same one that lights up when we get something we really like, such as candy or money, and it relies on dopamine, a "feel-good" chemical that relays messages between neurons and gives us a sort of high.
So not only will arousing students' curiosity help them remember lessons that might otherwise go in one ear and out the other, but it can also make the learning experience as pleasurable as ice cream or pocket money. Of course, most teachers already instinctively know the importance of fostering inquisitive minds, but to have science back it up is undeniably satisfying.
Asking the Right Question
Naturally, there are still a few things that remain unclear about curiosity's role in learning. For one thing, scientists have yet to determine its long-term effects. For instance, if a student's curiosity is stimulated at the beginning of a school day, will it help them better absorb information all day long? Another thing the researchers are keen to investigate is why some people are more naturally curious than others, and which factors most influence how curious we are.
For the moment, though, these findings serve as a reminder that there is no such thing as a dumb question, because as cognitive scientist Daniel Willingham notes in his book Why Don't Students Like School?, it's the question that stimulates curiosity -- being told the answer quells curiosity before it can even get going.
So rather than jumping straight into the answers, let's try to start students off with the sort of questions that encourage them to do their own seeking.
What questions tend to spark greater curiosity among your students?