B LOWER SCHOOL
Curriculum and General Information Guide 2020-2021
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Letter from Head of School
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Overview of Programs 1 0
Mission Statement and Core Values
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Creative Arts Lower School Garden Library and Digital Literacy Physical Education Technology World Languages
Guiding Principles
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Grade Level Curriculum
The Lower School Approach
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Early Childhood 14 Pre-Kindergarten 14 Kindergarten 17 Grade 1 20 Middle and Upper Elementary 24 Grade 2 26 Grade 3 29 Grade 4 33 Grade 5 37
Central Questions and Integrated Curriculum Backward Design and Curriculum Planning Global Focus Creative Design Process Authentic Assessment: Exhibitions, Project Based Learning, and Portfolios Learning Beyond the Classroom: Field Trips and Experiential Learning Learning Support Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Equity and Inclusion Community Building and Service Learning
4 4 5 6 6
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7 8 9 9
Signature Programs
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ColLabs 41 Design Lab 41 STEAM 41 Lower School Garden 42 Share Assemblies 42
Enrichment Beyond 42 the School Day Extended Day After School Clubs After School Music Program Interscholastic Sports for Grades 4 and 5 Lower School Learning Spaces
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10 10 11 12 13 13
42 42 43 43 43
LETTER FROM THE HEAD OF SCHOOL
Dear Lower School Families, With an average class size of 12, teachers personalize instruction in a student-centered learning environment. The school day offers a vibrant multinational community of learners in a child-friendly space to grow. In this supportive environment we want our students to appreciate the rewards of hard work and strive for their personal best.
The Lower School curriculum offers students a developmentally appropriate program that helps foster a love of learning. At Brimmer and May, we blend the exploration of creativity with the development of important skills and understanding of core content. Our aim is to prepare all students for the demands of the Middle and Upper School curriculum while nurturing their curiosity and spirit of wonder.
Our state-of-the-art facilities complement our historical, residential atmosphere, making the learning environment dynamic for our younger students on campus. Our media-rich curriculum embraces emerging technologies that are changing the way students work and learn. The 300-seat theater provides students with an inspirational space to explore their creativity, learn the value of performance, and practice public speaking. Likewise, the use of our upper-level labs, during Science ColLab lessons, furthers our focus on the Creative Design Process.
Brimmer’s curriculum expands learning beyond the classrooms. Greater Boston’s performing arts, museum, and science programs enhance many of the classroom programs and content. Because the teachers’ professional development includes study tours to various countries, the social studies curriculum is authentic and inspiring. Our students learn about their neighbors near and far, embrace new languages, and value the rich customs and cultures throughout the world. Students enjoy learning at Brimmer, and when joyful learners grow into confident students, their success follows. Sincerely,
Judith Guild Head of School
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Brimmer and May is a PK - 12 coeducational day school that upholds high academic standards while implementing innovative ideas in a supportive and student-centered community. We develop lifelong learners who are informed, engaged, and ethical citizens and leaders in our diverse world.
Core Values Brimmer’s Core Values serve as the moral guidelines and the foundation for character development throughout the School: Respect | Responsibility | Kindness | Honesty | Equity The Core Values give students clear, understandable guidelines for personal conduct and community engagement and help them create an environment of inclusion and acceptance. In addition, the Core Values promote interactions that are conducive to learning and foster personal growth. The Core Values are purposefully present in the daily life of the Lower School: each classroom prominently features these values for the children to see and to begin to inhabit, and teachers and students use these terms as common language to frame and discuss their many interactions throughout the school day. In order to recognize and highlight interpersonal and community actions that exemplify the Core Values, the weekly Friday morning Share Assemblies include the presentation of Gators to both students and adults. At Share, the Lower School faculty present Gators to students to acknowledge and honor them for actions that go above and beyond in modeling the Core Values during the previous week. The Core Values have provided foundational principles for the Lower School for more than three decades. They reflect the mindful work of the Lower School faculty and administration and our universal human values. These ethical guidelines, originally established in the Lower School, are embedded in the programming and pedagogy of the Middle and Upper Schools as well. They lie at the heart of the educational philosophy and mission of the School and are the moral guideposts for the community.
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OUR GUIDING PRINCIPLES
Inspired to Learn We inspire students to be active learners, confident problemsolvers, and critical thinkers who work both independently and collaboratively.
Encouraged to Explore We encourage students to engage their curiosity, expand their creativity, explore their interests, develop their voices, and strive for their personal best.
Empowered to Lead We empower students to embrace opportunities, develop their intellect with character, and lead in the global community.
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THE LOWER SCHOOL APPROACH
The Lower School has three overarching goals in its approach to the education of young children: inspiring a love of learning, encouraging creative exploration, and empowering young minds. As curriculum and programming are designed and implemented, these goals are pursued vigorously and with a student-centered focus. Inspiring a Love of Learning •
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Blending academic growth and achievement (in reading, writing, arts, math, digital technologies, science, language development, etc.) Offering a hands-on experiential and inquiry-based learning environment Learning about our interconnected and diverse world Providing a relevant and personalized learning environment that stimulates curiosity Offering multimedia resources with rich content for enhancing knowledge Realizing the art and beauty of storytelling and creative expression Creating an interdisciplinary curriculum where thematic focus helps students make sense of their world
Encouraging Creative Exploration •
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Working through the Creative Design Process to solve real-life problems Learning to take risks and using a variety of problem-solving skills Applying the STEAM disciplines for creative problem-solving Exploring the Lower School Garden as an open-ended laboratory Learning with mixed grade levels in ColLabs to study the environment and explore an engineering problem Offering choices and opportunities for individual interests
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Using creative expression to expand possibilities for a deeper learning experience
Empowering Young Minds •
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Developing a global understanding with empathy for others Exhibiting knowledge with an understanding of voice, point of view, and audience awareness Developing reading and research skills for content exploration Learning to be a self-directed learner and a curator of individual portfolios Building authentic relationships between teachers and students and equity in the community Working collaboratively with individuals with diverse views Valuing and celebrating individual strengths and interests Understanding self and responsible decision-making
Central Questions and Integrated Curriculum In the Lower School, teachers take an interdisciplinary approach to curriculum design. This type of approach allows students to develop a deeper understanding of the different disciplines taught. Brimmer teachers create meaningful, relevant, and challenging content that helps students make and create connections to the real world. This allows Lower School students to be more successful and achieve mastery in the classroom. At each grade level a Central Question is presented at the beginning of the school year to frame students’ learning goals throughout the year. The Central Question serves not only as a lens to explore key concepts, themes, and ideas but also as the thread that interweaves multiple disciplines. This question challenges students to think critically and make connections as they discover and explore science,
math, literacy, and history. The Lower School’s approach to learning prompts students to strive for a higher level of learning and academic engagement. Backward Design and Curriculum Planning The curriculum design and planning in the Lower School is grounded in specific educational philosophies and methodologies, is informed by research, and incorporates the experience and expertise of the Lower School faculty. Grant Wiggins’ and Jay McTighe’s “Backward Design” guides the Lower School faculty’s approach to their work. This curriculum, unit, and lesson planning approach requires teachers to 1. identify learning objectives 2. determine acceptable evidence of student understanding 3. plan learning experiences and instructional activities Backward Design promotes student learning from proficiency to mastery. In using Backward Design, Lower School teachers are intentional: they plan lessons and units with clear goals and purposeful actions to achieve sought-after results. Pedagogy and curriculum design are also grounded in and have evolved from the Coalition of Essential Schools 10 Common Principles, specifically by defining roles as “student as worker, teacher as coach,” providing an environment of “unanxious expectation,” and assessing learning through “demonstrations of mastery” (exhibitions and portfolios). Lastly, Lower School teachers and administrators examine and use educational research to inform pedagogy, curriculum development, and programming.
Global Focus The Lower School begins the educational process about the world and seeks to initiate student engagement with it through interdisciplinary study. At each grade level teachers introduce students to geography, history, language, cultures, and customs. Teachers work with students to develop cultural awareness and understanding; to present different perspectives; and to spark imagination, empathy, and curiosity about the greater world they inhabit. The Lower School’s global focus enables students to expand their understanding of what it means to be citizens not only of the School and local community but also of an interdependent world. Some Global Focus Program Highlights Pre-Kindergarten: The Natural World Kindergarten: The 7 Continents; Geography Grade 1: The American Southwest and Mexico; Geography and Maps Grade 2: Boston and Massachusetts; The Pacific Northwest and Alaska; African American History; Brazil and the Amazon Grade 3: Ancient Egypt; Geography; World Continents and Oceans; Current Events Grade 4: Asia; The Silk Road; Japan; World Geography Grade 5: Renaissance; Colonial America and the American Revolution; Maps
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Creative Design Process While foundational skills in literacy and numeracy are central components of the curriculum, so too are habits of mind that encourage critical thinking, collaboration, communication, problem-solving, and creativity. The Lower School develops these skills and habits of mind through the STEAM Program and design work. The Design Process is an iterative one, which includes generating ideas to address a problem, designing and brainstorming solutions, making a plan, testing a prototype, revising one’s plan as needed, and finally, sharing and showcasing the work. Through this iterative approach students learn scientific and engineering principles, as well as the essential skills of problemsolving, persevering, and sitting with the confusion and messiness of deep, generative learning. The STEAM curriculum reflects the Lower School’s educational philosophy and implementation of the whole child learning model. The Lower School’s focus on empathy prompts students to create and to design prototypes with human needs in mind. Students learn that part of the Design Process is to take the user’s needs and desires into consideration. They discover that empathy is what drives innovation forward. It is empathy that propels all to be better designers as well as better people. Students are also asked to be thoughtful about the materials they choose. They are challenged to consider the properties of materials and the purpose they will serve in their prototype. Reflecting on design choices is also a cornerstone of the STEAM Program, and the debriefing session is an essential part of the Design Process. This reflective pro-
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cess fosters the students’ ability to reason with evidence and explain why their prototype worked the way it did, as well as learn about different design ideas from peers. As students grow this skill, they begin to calculate their design choices and learn from their experiences.
Grade 2: Brazil Exhibition, Music Showcase, Portfolio Exhibition Grade 3: Ancient Egypt Exhibition, French Plays, Music Showcase, Portfolio Exhibition
Authentic Assessment: Exhibitions, Project Based Learning, and Portfolios
Grade 5: Mars Colony Exhibition, Music Showcase, Capstone Exhibition: What is Strength of Character?
EXHIBITIONS
Exhibitions are a hallmark of a Brimmer education. Students in the Lower School take part in Exhibitions of Knowledge that allow them to demonstrate what they have learned either in a unit of study or over the course of the school year. In and across their several disciplines, Lower School students learn how to research, prepare, and present what they know with poise and creativity. These exhibitions promote active learning by encouraging students to think and work both independently and collaboratively and to approach learning with enthusiasm and confidence. Exhibitions are an important assessment tool that allow teachers to evaluate how students integrate the skills they have learned and students to demonstrate their understanding of concepts and depth of knowledge. A Brief Listing of Lower School Exhibitions
Pre-Kindergarten: Informance, Portfolio Exhibition Kindergarten: Informance, Portfolio Exhibition Grade 1: Crêpe Party, Portfolio Exhibition
Grade 4: FourthFest – India and Japan Exhibition, Music Showcase, Portfolio Exhibition
Project Based Learning
Project Based Learning Assessment promotes student engagement with learning in more concrete ways and includes both the achievement of content learning objectives and the acquisition and development of core skills. Hands-on and multifaceted projects inspire students to apply what they’ve learned to a deeper exploration of a topic. Throughout each Project Based Learning experience, teachers incorporate formative assessment to guide and develop students in their work. Teachers use multi-dimensional assessment, including providing meaningful feedback, asking guiding questions, and offering coaching assistance to promote student understanding and success. They also encourage student self-reflection to assess progress and to promote student self-assessment as they advance through a project. While completing their project work, students learn to engage risk-taking with excitement and see mistakes as learning opportunities. Throughout the Lower School, teachers engage Project Based Learning Assessment to empower students and support specific and general academic success. Frequently, students demonstrate their understanding and achievement before an authentic audience in
an Exhibition of Knowledge for classmates, Lower School students, faculty, parents, or the larger School community. PORTFOLIOS
Throughout their Lower School years, students choose work in multiple disciplines or interdisciplinary projects that represent their growth, learning, and achievement. They include this work in a portfolio that advances with them from grade to grade as they progress through the Lower School. The portfolio also includes student reflections on individual pieces and year-end reviews. The portfolios are shared annually with the community at end-of-year Portfolio Exhibitions. A dynamic form of assessment, portfolios serve as both documentation and self-evaluation for Lower School students. In addition, portfolios are alternative forms of assessment that teachers use to help them understand student growth and progress throughout the year and from one school year to the next. Learning Beyond the Classroom: Field Trips and Experiential Learning FIELD TRIPS
The Boston area offers numerous educational resources and opportunities for young students to learn about science, history, art, culture, and many other topics. Throughout the school year Lower School teachers plan field trips to a variety of local sites to augment and enhance their students’ classroom learning. A Sample of Recent Field Trips in 2019-2020:
Pre-Kindergarten: Honey Pot Hill Orchards, Chestnut Hill Post Office
Kindergarten: Wheelock Family Theatre Grade 1: Massachusetts Audubon’s Blue Hills Trailside Museum, Museum of SciencePlanetarium Grade 2: Boston State House, Drumlin Farm Grade 3: Metropolitan Waterworks Museum, Museum of Fine Arts, Moose Hill Wildlife Sanctuary Grade 4: Edward M. Kennedy Institute, McMullen Museum of Art (Boston College), Peabody Essex Museum Grade 5: Freedom Trail Tour, Plimoth Grist Mill/Plantation, McMullen Museum of Art (Boston College) EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING
Lower School students have many opportunities to engage in experiential learning through classroom-related activities, field trips, community service, and Signature Programs. Specifically, the Garden, STEAM, and Design Lab Programs and curricula all provide experiential learning opportunities for students. These programs are described in the pages that follow. Learning Support The Lower School provides academic support through a combination of strategies, systems, and dedicated personnel. Academic support is provided through direct instruction; in-classroom observation and feedback; evaluation and recommendations; and consultation about organization, study skills, and strategies.
or small groups in the classroom as a part of the Lower School’s teaching model. If more support is needed, teachers may also solicit the help of the School Nurse, School Counselor, the Lower School Student Support Team (SST), Lower School administrators, and the Director of Academic Services. The Lower School SST is composed of the Lower School Head, Assistant Head of Lower School, Director of Academic Services, the Director of Teaching and Learning, the School Nurse, and the Director of Counseling Services. The Lower School Director of Academic Services works to support student academic progress and provides support to classroom teachers in several ways: observes classes and offers feedback to teachers; lends expertise on learning strategies and insight on appropriate and effective learning resources for instruction; prepares learning profiles for students with educational assessments that indicate a range of learning differences; measures and interprets student progress on and against a variety of standardized testing instruments; teaches sections for specific academic support, e.g., reading literacy as needed; and meets with students individually on an interim basis to help them with organization and study skills, learning strategies, academic goal-setting, and self-reflection.
Teachers, teacher’s assistants, and specialists provide direct support to individual students
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Social and emotional development is an integral part of the Lower School Curriculum. Its approach to Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) aligns with the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning (CASEL), which identifies and promotes SEL core competencies. Early Childhood SEL Skill Development includes becoming responsible friends, developing listening skills, cooperating, sharing, being kind and respectful to others, and building empathy and self-awareness among others. Upper Elementary SEL Skill Development includes continuing to develop Early Childhood SEL Skills, building community, developing independence, finding and using one’s voice, and problemsolving, among others. Students need to feel safe and socially and emotionally comfortable at school in order to achieve their personal best academically. The Lower School focus on the Core Values, Buddy Groups, and the Share Assembly programs are designed to address this need. Under the guidance of the School’s mission, Lower School faculty work to develop social skills, to promote ethical behavior by emphasizing individual responsibility and citizenship, and to inspire a propensity for personal integrity, compassion, and fairness. SEL AND ANTI-BIAS PILOT PROGRAMMING
In 2020-2021 to further develop the use of common language and key practices throughout all grades, the Lower School is piloting two programs. These programs provide a focus for the Lower School faculty’s SEL work and include Anti-Bias education. Both will include some integration with the Lower School social studies curriculum. 8
Source: ©2020 CASEL. All Rights Reserved. www.casel.org
SEL: Choose Love Enrichment Program
Choose Love was founded by Scarlett Lewis, a mother whose son was killed in a school shooting. Lewis worked with educators, child psychologists, and neuroscientists to build a program that is rooted in CASEL’s framework of the five core competencies.
October/November: Courage December/January: Gratitude February/March: Forgiveness April/May: Compassion in Action Anti-Bias Education: Anti-Bias Building Blocks–An Elementary Curriculum for K - 5 Educators
The program is divided into four units--Courage, Gratitude, Forgiveness, and Compassion in Action--spread over approximately 23 lessons. The program offers a great mix of tools and strategies such as journaling, breathing techniques, movement, mindfulness, affirmations, videos, and literature.
With this curriculum the Lower School seeks to • create a safe and comfortable classroom environment • understand individual strengths, skills, and identity • understand bias and discrimination • confront and challenge bias and bullying
The curriculum will be taught throughout the year as follows, with each grade working on the same topics at the same time:
The Anti-Bias Building Blocks curriculum provides “a K - 5 curriculum designed for elementary educators who want to promote anti-bias concepts in order to create safe, inclusive, and respectful classroom and school environments. Each lesson plan helps teachers and children create a safe and comfortable classroom
September: Choosing Love in Our Brave New World (this is designed specifically to address the current social environment)
environment, explore their identity, understand and appreciate differences and analyze and challenge bias.” (from books. google.com/books/about/Anti_ Bias_Building_Blocks)
how to be part of an audience during a performance and how to engage appropriately and successfully with their peers during Buddy Group activities. Equity and Inclusion
Lower School teachers present lessons during a morning meeting time, as an introduction to for a social studies unit, or as part of the SEL curriculum. The activities used are hands-on and meaningful. Each lesson is followed by a debriefing session in which students are asked probing questions to help them understand big ideas and take away key concepts. Buddy Groups Teachers in the Lower School lead Buddy Groups of between six and eight students. Older students are matched with younger students and placed in groups. The Buddy Groups participate in a range of activities, including events and programs in Share Assemblies. Buddy pairs enjoy being together for Buddy Walks and Buddy Reads, for special field trips such as the annual Apple Picking Trip, and for all-School events. Buddies also often interact at exhibitions, performances, and other Lower School events. Overall, Buddy Groups promote personal connections between students and foster the older students’ sense of responsibility. Share Share Assemblies occur most Friday mornings throughout the school year. At Share, Lower School students come together for performances by students and special guests. Buddy Group events are held during Share Assembly time as well. These weekly Lower School gatherings and activities build a feeling of community through shared experience. They also present the opportunity for students to learn
Together with the Director of Equity and Inclusion, the Lower School Diversity Committee, consisting of Lower School faculty and staff, develops and facilitates diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programming that focuses on identity, culture, representation, and experience. DEI programming includes a global curriculum that begins with the study of self and community in Pre-Kindergarten and the world in Kindergarten and culminates with the Grade 5 study of Native Americans during the early colonial period. Throughout the Lower School years, students’ understanding and appreciation of cultures and communities around the globe broadens and deepens with each unit of study.. Beyond the academic curriculum, students are also able to participate in DEI-focused Share Assemblies, lunch groups, and after school clubs (when offered). Lower School faculty participate in ongoing DEI trainings and professional development throughout the year, which equips them with the knowledge, understanding, and language to engage with each student and to create equitable classrooms, where personal identity and self-expression are valued.
populations and organizations beyond the School campus. Community building is important for young learners who need a comfortable, safe, and supportive educational environment in order to have the opportunity to grow and reach their personal best in their academic work. In the Lower School, community service projects play a vital role in the life of students and reflect the School’s mission, which promotes reaching beyond the School community. Having a heart for civic engagement and an awareness of the importance of public responsibility happens over time for children. In addition, service-learning opportunities support the development of social skills and empathy and an understanding of self and others. They also provide an opportunity to learn how to build rewarding relationships with peers, teachers, and other community members. The Lower School celebrates an annual Community Service Day in December when the students gather in the gymnasium to celebrate giving and to learn about each grade’s unique community service project.
Community Building and Service Learning The Lower School engages students in community building at micro and macro levels: in Buddy Groups, in the classroom, in grade-level activities and programming, in Share Assemblies and all-Lower School events, in all-School events, and through community service with
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OVERVIEW OF PROG RAMS
Creative Arts The Creative Arts Program provides students with hands-on activities that explore creativity and encourage self-expression. The art, drama, and music curricula are process oriented. Lessons are designed sequentially to develop literacy and essential skills. Classroom activities focus on students’ enjoying and creating art with one another. Students are introduced to aesthetics, historical context, cultures, and genres using prints, artifacts, music, and literature. The teachers integrate the creative arts curriculum with the academic curriculum and incorporate the use of technology for student learning and enrichment. Opportunities to share and exhibit creative expression occur throughout the year. (A specific description of the creative arts curriculum is presented for each grade level in the pages that follow.)
The Lower School Garden The Lower School Garden is an outdoor classroom where students learn about ecology and connect with nature, learn about healthy eating and where their food comes from, and learn to take care of the environment. The Garden is a special learning environment in which all Lower School students play a role. Each grade level, PK - 5, maintains this green space through various hands-on activities such as planting and tending vegetables and flowers, tilling soil, weeding, watering, pruning, and harvesting. The Lower School Garden is a fully functioning garden where students learn through experience. Much
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of the food grown is served in School lunches. The Garden is fully integrated into the Lower School Curriculum and allows Brimmer students to engage in authentic scientific observation and inquiry in an outdoor setting, right on campus. Inquiry questions are used to frame lessons and to provide opportunities for students to think critically and apply content knowledge to the natural world. The Garden is pesticide- and herbicide-free and features raised vegetable beds, rain-collecting barrels, and compost stations. It also contains a beautiful collection of native perennial plants that supports the native pollinator population.
Early Childhood Garden Curriculum (PK - Grade 1) INQUIRIES: What are the secrets of
eat. Students also explore factors that affect germination (optimal timing, seed depth, moisture and light factors) while making observations over a period of several weeks. Bugs and Insects Students learn about the importance of bugs and insects in establishing a healthy food garden (beneficial vs. harmful insects), and how garden “pests” can be controlled without using chemicals that could harm the soil and environment. Students release ladybugs and praying mantises while learning about safe (non-toxic) pest control.
Middle and Upper Elementary Garden Curriculum (Grades 2 - 5) Grade 2
germination? How and when do we harvest? Which parts of plants are edible? How do some insects act as garden helpers?
INQUIRIES: How does soil quality
Introduction to the Garden Students learn to use tools safely and correctly, understand garden rules, and plant seeds and transplant starters using correct techniques. Students investigate the garden using a scavenger hunt, plant seeds both indoors and outdoors to watch them grow over a period of several months, and explore the parts of the plants that people eat.
As students study soil and soil composition, they use the garden as their outdoor laboratory to investigate the properties of soil and conduct experiments. Students examine the different layers of soil and their components to gain an understanding of the function of each and the macro- and micronutrients found in each layer. They also learn the life cycle of soil as well as the role of decomposers. Students design experiments to test the plant growth in various soil types.
Seeds and Seed Dispersal Students explore what resources seeds need to sprout, and how seeds move around in the world by wind, water, and animals. Students examine the different seeds found in the garden, plant life cycles, and how to save seeds from the fruits and vegetables we
affect plant growth? What is ideal soil for growing healthy plants? How does erosion occur?
Grade 3
Grade 4
INQUIRIES: How are insects both
INQUIRIES: What is the value of
harmful and beneficial in the garden? What is the relationship between pollinators and flowers? How can we create a sustainable water source? Students experience the living world right in the Lower School’s outdoor laboratory. They learn about the life cycles of insects, see these life cycles unfold in real time, and compare the stages exhibited by each species. At the same time, students grow one type of plant from seed and observe it through its life cycle to produce new seeds. They also examine many aspects of the insect life in the garden by
• providing for the needs of living insects
• observing insect mating and egg laying
• comparing structures on
milkweed bugs to other kinds of insects • observing incomplete and complete metamorphosis • comparing plant and animal life cycles • communicating observations of the life cycle of plants and the structure, behavior, and life cycle of insects in words and drawings.
compost and how can it be used as a soil amendment? How does erosion affect the garden? What factors control soil formation and soil erosion? How does the composition of the parent rock and the climate influence the weathering of that rock? Students review the earth’s layers, the spheres of the earth (including hydrosphere, geosphere, etc.), and the basic rock cycle, so that they have a foundational knowledge of these topics. Students will use the outdoor laboratory to investigate different rocks. They conduct experiments that explore erosion and its effect on soil and apply this understanding to real world situations. Grade 5 Inquiry: What is the nutritional value of foods we eat from the garden? Grade 5 students learn the parts of a cell and the important functions each organelle performs. Students will learn what cells do with the different macro- and micronutrients consumed by the body. Specifically, students gain an understanding of the role of fats, carbohydrates, and proteins in the body and how cells utilize these nutrients. They then apply this knowledge to growing vegetables and fruits that contain these important nutrients and understand how to care for them in the outdoor classroom. Students study the composition of the plant and view plant cells under a microscope.
Library and Digital Literacy The Christopher Jones Lower School Library, located in McCoy Hall, serves students in PK - Grade 5. The library program focuses on fostering open-minded, diverse readers, as well as critical thinking and research skills. Library lessons connect to what the students are learning in the classroom and reinforce the Core Values. All students visit the library once a week during a scheduled class that is focused on building information and digital literacy skills, as well as growing their love of reading and literature. Research and information skills are taught in an age-appropriate way with the goal of building a strong foundation for later academic work and research in middle and high school. The Lower School Librarian works closely with classroom teachers to support the work that is happening in the classroom and to collaborate on research projects throughout the year. The Lower School Librarian helps students develop literacy skills that apply directly to the project work students are completing in language arts, science, and social studies. In the library, students learn how to sift through library resources and the vast amount of information that is available, how to evaluate the information they find, and how to use it effectively in their classwork.
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Physical Education Brimmer’s Physical Education (PE) Department seeks to provide all students with a safe and friendly environment so they can develop and enhance their movement skills. Teachers instill the importance of rules, safety, values, and sportsmanship. They prepare students for the future application of skills and encourage regular exercise and sports participation for for health living and enjoyment.
Grades
Sept. Body/Spatial Awareness
Pre-K & K
Locomotor Skills Ball Skills
Oct. Soccer Skills Balloon Activities Throwing & Catching Skills
The PE Department follows the goals and guidelines of the Society of Health and Physical Educators (SHAPE America). According to SHAPE America, the goal of physical education is to develop literate individuals who have the knowledge, skills, and confidence to enjoy a lifetime of healthful physical activity. There are five standards aligned with this goal: 1. The physically literate individual demonstrates competency in a variety of motor skills and movement patterns. 2. The physically literate individual applies knowledge of concepts, principles, strategies, and tactics related to movement and performance.
Nov. Obstacle Course Parachute Activities Indoor Games
Dec. Striking Skills Fitness Skills Rhythms and Dance
1&2
Cooperative Games
Field Hockey Skills
Indoor Games
Playground Games
Throwing & Catching Skills
Fitness Skills
Movement Concepts Soccer Skills
Team Building Challenges
3, 4, & 5
Fitness Skills Soccer Unit
Jump Rope Skills
Field Hockey Unit
Football Skills
Track & Field running events
Rugby Skills Volleyball Skills
Striking Skills Fitness Skills Rhythms and Dance
Badminton Handball Unit Team Building Challenges Basketball Unit Track & Field jumping events
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Jan. Dribbling and Shooting Skills Parachute Activities
Feb. Floor Hockey Skills Tumbling & Yoga Skills
3. The physically literate individual demonstrates the knowledge and skills to achieve and maintain a health-enhancing level of physical activity and fitness. 4. The physically literate individual exhibits responsible personal and social behavior that respects self and others. 5. The physically literate individual recognizes the value of physical activity for health, enjoyment, challenge, self-expression, and/ or social interaction. The overall program and individual class activities emphasize participation, cooperation, teamwork, sportsmanship, and fun.
March Stations Hawaiian Games
Stations
Jump Rope Skills
Handball Skills
Tumbling & Yoga Skills
Hawaiian Games
Basketball Skills
Juggling Skills
Indoor Games
Stations
Floor Hockey Skills
Manipulative Skills
Floor Hockey Unit
Lacrosse Skills
Hawaiian Games
Track & Fieldthrowing events
Badminton Tumbling & Yoga Skills
Bowling Unit
April Throwing, Catching, and Batting Skills Indoor Games
Circus Arts Fitness Skills Batting Skills
Tennis Skills Softball/ Baseball Unit
May Track and Field Skills
June Summer Games
Outdoor Games
Track and Field Skills Outdoor Games
Team Building Challenges
Summer Games
Technology The effective use of technology enriches student learning experiences across the disciplines and promotes higher order thinking skills. Laptop computers, iPads, and 3-D printers are used as learning tools to support classroom curriculum, develop research, writing, design, and presentation skills, and create interdisciplinary projects. Skills from keyboarding to coding to navigating the internet safely are developed at appropriate age levels from PK - Grade 5. Students explore and use a variety of creative content to author, build, and share their final products with classmates and the community. Multimedia projects are designed as interdisciplinary enterprises and targeted use of applications provides greater familiarity and facility with the use of technology for learning.
World Languages The Lower School’s World Languages Program focuses on the importance of beginning instruction at an early age. French is introduced to Lower School students in Pre-Kindergarten and continues through Grade 5. Skills learned in world language classes are integrated into the curriculum at each grade level. For example, Grade 1 students engage annually in a Crêpe Party when they make and share this French culinary treat, sing French songs, and make brief group presentations in French. Grade 3 students also have an annual event, the performance of two French plays based on well-known children’s stories. During the Grade 4 unit on immigration, students take part in a mock citizenship exam. This exercise requires students to listen and respond to questions posed in French so that they can experience, like many immigrants, an oral exam conducted in a language that is not native to them. A variety of language learning techniques are used as students learn a new language. The classes also help students develop a better understanding of French culture (A specific description of the world languages curriculum is presented for each grade level in the pages that follow.)
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Early Childhood (PK - Grade 1) The Early Childhood Program, PK – Grade 1, is designed to cultivate a love of learning in young children. During the early childhood years, students engage with the world using all their senses. They are full of wonder and eager to explore and make sense of the world. Whether building with blocks, listening to stories, reading on their own, engaging in imaginative play, exploring on the playground, learning to code, or forming letters, words, numbers, and mathematical equations, young children are doers, experimenters, and inventors. Through integrated, thematic curricula, teachers build on this natural curiosity and sense of wonder, and at the same time, lay the foundation for early literacy and numeracy. At Brimmer, teacher-guided lessons are balanced with hands-on, multisensory learning activities and imaginative, exploratory play. Students’ academic learning is supported by the explicit teaching of social-emotional skills, including Brimmer’s Core Values of Respect, Responsibility, Kindness, Honesty, and Equity. Intentionally small class sizes allow us to offer a personalized approach that moves fluidly between individual, small group, and whole group instruction. Recognizing that there are distinct social, emotional, physical, and intellectual characteristics that define each stage of a child’s development, the early childhood curriculum is developed with these considerations in mind.
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Pre-Kindergarten
Responsibility, Kindness, Honesty, and Equity.
CENTRAL QUESTION:
Thematic Studies The Pre-Kindergarten curriculum is centered around thematic studies that integrate the different subject areas and incorporate children’s literature, imaginative play, guided lessons, and hands-on exploration. Different themes focus on the young child’s everyday life and begin with an exploration of self, health and wellness, and one’s unique identity. Moving beyond oneself, students explore their families, their communities, and the natural world, particularly animals of interest. Thematic studies integrate reading, writing, science, and STEAM, and they allow students to explore topics of interest and pursue them in greater depth. Language Arts The Pre-Kindergarten language arts curriculum focuses on developing a love of books and reading and introduces students to foundational skills in literacy, including rhyme, alliteration, phonemic awareness, and story elements. Songs and games during circle time and hands-on activities in literacy centers reinforce these skills. High-interest fiction and nonfiction literature fills the classroom and is used to launch thematic studies, teach science and math concepts, build social-emotional skills, and enjoy a wonderful story told. Through shared read-alouds and independent “reading,” students are made familiar with the basic concepts of print.
Who am I in my community? Overview The Pre-Kindergarten Program offers a joyful and inviting entry into school. Each fall, the teachers welcome students into the classroom and work intentionally to build a sense of community among them. Through Drop-ins and Share Assemblies, Pre-Kindergarten teachers establish warm, supportive relationships with students and collaborative partnerships with families. Recognizing that young children learn best when the connection between home and school is strong, teachers take time and care in establishing these relationships. The Pre-Kindergarten Program offers a rich, integrated curriculum that reflects the developmental characteristics of four- and five-year-old children. Teachers establish daily routines and schedules that match the natural rhythms of young learners and provide a sense of predictability. Through teacher-guided lessons, songs and games, and intentionally designed learning centers, children are invited to explore a range of activities across different disciplines. Hands-on learning experiences offer freedom of movement and exploration, as well as opportunities to engage in science and math curricula. Throughout the day, students may work independently, with a friend, in a small group, or with the whole class. While navigating different centers in the classroom, circle activities, and both indoor and outdoor play, students learn to mediate conflict and negotiate with peers. As members of the classroom and School community, Pre-Kindergarten students are guided by Brimmer’s Core Values of Respect,
At the start of the year, teachers introduce students to the names, forms, and sounds of the letters in their own names. Several months into the school year, students begin Lively Letters, a multisensory, story-based phonics curriculum. Through hands-on, sensory activities students build
fine motor skills and continue to explore the forms and sounds of the uppercase alphabet. With daily practice writing their names and free drawing across the curriculum, students refine the accuracy of their letter formation, as well as their representational drawings. Social Studies The social studies curriculum is integrated into the Pre-Kindergarten thematic studies and is focused on the Central Question: What is my role in my community? Through literature, teacher-guided activities, and free, imaginative play, students explore a variety of themes focused on self, family, community, and the natural world. Share Assemblies and inquiry into one’s own identity help students develop an appreciation of the rich diversity that exists among them and an honoring of their differences. Curriculum is developed and materials are selected through a culturally responsive and anti-bias, anti-racist lens. Math The Pre-Kindergarten math curriculum introduces early numeracy through storytelling, nonfiction literature, hands-on activities, exploration of the natural world, and relevant experiences. Pre-Kindergarten students explore concepts such as counting, sorting, comparing and classifying, patterning, sequencing, measuring, and interpreting student-created graphs. Students build number sense through meaningful, real-world experiences and spatial awareness and simple geometric concepts through art and imaginative play, including building with blocks and constructing with 2- and 3-D materials. Engineering design challenges further these skills and students’ critical thinking as they imagine, plan, construct, test, modify, and invent solutions.
Science and STEAM The Pre-Kindergarten science and STEAM curricula build on the natural curiosity and wonder of young children. During teacher-led walks on campus, recess on the newly designed playground, and time spent in the Lower School Garden, students actively explore and develop an appreciation for the natural world. In the classroom, through hands-on experiments, inquiries, and design challenges, students are guided to observe, make predictions, test hypotheses, gather information, and think creatively. Whether collecting bits of nature to create self-portraits, coding KIBO robots to provide locomotion to student-designed transportation systems, or studying the life cycle of different animals, students are actively engaged and exploring scientific concepts using all their senses. World Language: French The Pre-Kindergarten French curriculum helps students become familiar with the sounds and customs of the Francophone world. Using music, games, puppets, structured play, and stories, students become comfortable listening to and using the French language. Ear training is a critical component of language learning, especially for young children. The young child’s brain is programmed to recognize and internalize new systems and structures of language, and the earlier this learning begins, the easier it is for the student to become proficient in a second language. As young students develop familiarity with forms of expression in French, they are more likely to develop fluency in other languages. At Brimmer, teachers build on this window of opportunity, thus offering students an enduring advantage in language acquisition.
Creative Arts: Visual Arts In the art studio the school year begins with cooperative activities that focus on making each artist feel comfortable creating art. Students learn how to share materials and compliment their tablemates’ artwork. Their teachers, classmates, and the community celebrate each artist’s unique expression. The guiding principles of the Pre-Kindergarten Visual Arts Program are exploration, enjoyment, observation, and self-expression. Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and self-expression. Students are guided through an exploratory process with lessons that engage them in learning about the elements of art: color, line, shape, form, texture, and space. In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various historical periods, cultures, and genres. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes. Creative Arts: Drama Pre-Kindergarten drama focuses on developing a student’s understanding of the difference between pretend and reality. The “start” and “stop” impulse is refined through verbal and physical games and activities. Imaginative play builds upon a child’s natural desire to role-play and experience what is seen in the world, while expanding communication skills in language and movement. Pre-Kindergarten
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
students are encouraged to use their senses to explore their world and to describe their experiences verbally. Students explore stories and literature by becoming different characters through physical movement and gesture. The Pre-Kindergarten class also explores their role as respectful audience members. Work reflects and expands upon classroom themes. Integrated lessons include storytelling, story-acting, and several other dramatic activities. Creative Arts: Music Young children respond naturally to music. Each child’s musical potential is honored through exploration of sound. Musical concepts include steady beat, high/low, loud/quiet, and singing voice/speaking voice. These content areas are experienced through singing
PK
Sept. Body/Spatial Awareness
Learning Activities
Locomotor Skills Ball Skills
Oct. Soccer Skills Balloon Activities Throwing & Catching Skills
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games, beat motion activities, expressive movement, and active listening. Songs are chosen to reflect the interests and experiences of young childhood. Traditional children’s songs, folk songs, classical music, and music from a variety of cultures, styles, and time periods are incorporated. The children’s voices and observations are used to improvise songs and chants as students explore their world together. Physical Education The PK Physical Education Program introduces students to movement, physical activity for health and wellness, and the enjoyment of physical activity for oneself and with others. Students are encouraged to have fun while exploring a range of movement activities and games.
Nov. Obstacle Course Parachute Activities Indoor Games
Dec. Striking Skills Fitness Skills Rhythms & Dance
Jan. Dribbling & Shooting Skills Parachute Activities
Feb. Floor Hockey Skills Tumbling & Yoga Skills
Stations
Jump Rope Skills
March Stations Hawaiian Games
April Throwing, Catching & Batting Skills Indoor Games
May Track & Field Skills Outdoor Games
June Summer Games
Kindergarten CENTRAL QUESTION: What can I
learn from world around me how to live well with others? Overview The Kindergarten Program offers a rich, integrated curriculum that reflects the developmental characteristics of five- and sixyear-old children. Students at this age are both imaginative and literal. They learn best in an environment where they are free to explore, and at the same time, know boundaries and expectations. Classroom activities reflect the growing energy and enthusiasm of the emerging six-year-old, while also providing the support and consistency required of the more cautious five-year-old student. As cognitive skills grow, so too do their physical beings, curiosity, and fine and gross motor skills. The Kindergarten curriculum integrates the different content areas into an overarching theme: The World. Subjects are taught interchangeably and without boundaries so that students can explore topics in greater depth and detail. Students can be found practicing math concepts while immersed in the social studies curriculum, building literacy skills using educational technology, or discovering the wonders of science through social studies and STEAM-related design projects. The Kindergarten Program builds on the magical and ambitious thinking of children at this age, while also introducing them to more formal learning. Language Arts The Kindergarten language arts curriculum focuses on developing a love of reading and building foundational skills in reading, writing, speaking, and listening. Throughout each day,
Kindergarten students interact with rich, engaging literature that helps to build vocabulary, knowledge of story elements, and comprehension skills, including sequencing, making inferences, predicting, and connecting with different texts. Explicit, teacherguided instruction using programs such as Reading Street, Lively Letters, and Words Their Way is balanced with shared read-alouds, book discussions, guided reading groups, independent reading, open responses in journals, hands-on activities in literacy centers, and literacyrelated art and drama experiences. Students work on building decoding and encoding skills, including sound-symbol relationships, phonemic awareness, rhyme, and syllabication, while also building knowledge of specific sight words and comfort and ease with inventive spelling and written expression. Fine motor activities throughout the day help to develop hand strength, as well as handwriting skills. Morning meetings, We Care Circle curriculum, read-alouds, and cooperative learning group activities help students become active listeners and build confidence in expressing their ideas. While students participate in daily reading and writing lessons, language arts learning is incorporated into every subject and is prevalent throughout each day. Social Studies The Kindergarten social studies curriculum launches students on a journey to becoming global citizens. The year begins with an exploration of maps, highlighting the continents and the countries where students have personal connections. Through the Kindergarten Where Are We Traveling? and We Care Circle curricula students begin to develop an understanding of
identity, diversity, community, and social activism, as well as early understandings of globalization and interdependence. Through hands-on activities, authentic stories, Share Assemblies, virtual field trips, artifact museums in the classroom, and a variety of design projects, students “travel” the globe learning about each of the seven continents. With an anti-bias, anti-racist approach, students explore family life, language, geography, education, celebrations, and animal habitats. Students simultaneously build social-emotional skills, including self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. Science and STEAM The Kindergarten science and STEAM curricula are designed to foster curiosity, exploration, discovery, and a love of the natural world. Embracing the unique characteristics of five- and sixyear-old learners, science knowledge and skills are built through engaging, hands-on activities across different content areas. The science curriculum incorporates the question, What makes up the Earth? and is integrated into the yearlong study of the continents. As students visit each continent, they learn about its native plants and animals, focusing on endangered species. They also study the states of matter and the life cycle of different flora and fauna. Kindergarten students have an active role in caring for the Lower School Garden. They plant, maintain, and harvest vegetable and herb gardens throughout the year, thus developing an appreciation and care for the plant life of the earth. Across the curriculum Kindergarten students are guided through experiments and STEAM-related design challenges that encourage observation, inquiry, data collection, and
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
analysis. Through the Design Process, they develop problem-solving skills and find increasing comfort with using their own creativity to iterate and solve simple design challenges. Math The Kindergarten math curriculum focuses on building number sense, utilizing multiple approaches to solving mathematical problems, and communicating mathematical reasoning. In Kindergarten students build their knowledge and skills in the following areas: identifying numbers to 100, counting by 1’s, 2’s, 5’s, and 10’s, exploring place value, forming numbers, creating and extending patterns, collecting data, constructing and interpreting graphs, using standard and nonstandard units of measurement, exploring 2-D and 3-D shapes, understanding the concepts of one or two more or less, exploring the concepts of sum and difference, combining and comparing amounts, solving story problems, utilizing manipulatives for problem-solving,
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explaining mathematical thinking, and following multistep directions. Brimmer’s Lower School math curriculum is a hybrid of two programs, Investigations and enVision Math. Investigations emphasizes number sense and building a foundation for mathematical concepts, and enVision Math incorporates technology and problem-solving. The hybrid approach allows us to draw from the best of both programs and differentiate instruction for targeted skill development. World Language: French Ear training is a critical component of language learning, especially for young children. The young child’s brain is programmed to recognize and internalize new systems and structures of language, and the earlier this learning begins, the easier it is for the student to become proficient in a second language. As young students develop familiarity with forms of expression in French, they are more likely to develop fluency in other languages. At Brimmer, teachers build on this window of
opportunity, thus offering students an enduring advantage in language acquisition. The Kindergarten French curriculum emphasizes oral communication. In a fun and positive environment, children develop a love of the Francophone world. Using music, games, puppets, structured play, and stories, students become comfortable listening to and using the French language. Through singing students build their pronunciation, understanding, and memorization of familiar words and expressions. Creative Arts: Visual Arts The guiding principles of the Kindergarten Visual Arts Program are exploration, enjoyment, observation, and self-expression. Each school year begins with cooperative activities that focus on making each artist feel comfortable creating art. Students learn how to share materials and compliment their tablemates’ artwork in celebration of each artist’s unique expression.
Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and self-expression. Students are guided through an exploratory process with lessons that engage them in learning about the elements of art: color, line, shape, form, texture, and space. In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various historical periods, cultures, and genres. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes. Creative Arts: Drama Kindergarten theater education expands students’ communication skills through both language and action. Drama helps young children to develop confidence and creative thinking and provides students with experiences that stress the importance of working cooperatively with one another. In Kindergarten drama, children venture into the world of creative play and experience the freedom to explore physical movement, gesture, and sound. Work reflects
Kinder.
Sept. Body/Spatial Awareness
Learning Activities
Locomotor Skills Ball Skills
Oct. Soccer Skills Balloon Activities Throwing & Catching Skills
and expands upon classroom themes and knowledge. In addition, students listen to stories and bring them to life through role-playing, movement, and sound. Kindergarten children are introduced to the theater concepts of character, setting, and story. Attention is paid to the students’ understanding of the difference between pretend and reality, and their ability to make choices within their pretend play. As the year progresses, students work cooperatively to build skills in problem-solving while creating original theater. Creative Arts: Music Young children respond naturally to music. Invitations for playful and joyful participation with organized sound are offered in each music class. Students energetically interact with music by singing, playing, moving, and listening. Kindergartners develop tuneful singing skills, the ability to feel the steady beat of a song, and sensitivity to the artful nuances of music. Listening examples allow Kindergarten students to aurally analyze and recognize sounds, and improvisation activities lead to the creation of movement and musical compositions. Musical concepts also introduced include steady beat, sound versus silence, singing voice/speaking voice, and expressive movement. The full complement of classroom instruments is available to
Nov. Obstacle Course Parachute Activities Indoor Games
Dec. Striking Skills Fitness Skills Rhythms & Dance
Jan. Dribbling & Shooting Skills Parachute Activities
Feb. Floor Hockey Skills Tumbling & Yoga Skills
Stations
Jump Rope Skills
students including small percussion and barred instruments for sound exploration. Songs are chosen for Kindergartners that reflect the life experiences of childhood within this country and other nations. Traditional children’s songs, folk songs, classical music, and music from a variety of cultures, styles, and time periods compose the classroom repertoire. In Kindergarten, music-making with classmates yields an opportunity to develop the concept of ensemble. Students learn the magic of sharing and cooperating to send musical messages and enjoy creative responses together. Physical Education The Kindergarten Physical Education Program introduces students to movement, physical activity for health and wellness, and the enjoyment of physical activity for oneself and with others. Students are encouraged to have fun while exploring a range of movement activities and games.
March Stations Hawaiian Games
April Throwing, Catching & Batting Skills Indoor Games
May Track & Field Skills
June Summer Games
Outdoor Games
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Grade 1 CENTRAL QUESTION:
What is courage? Overview The Grade 1 curriculum reflects the curiosity, excitement, and growing cognitive abilities of six- and seven-year-old students. While teaching specific academic skills, Grade 1 teachers also focus on the social-emotional learning (SEL) of students through circle activities, SEL-based design projects, and cooperative learning experiences. Because relationships with peers play a vital role in the daily experience and healthy development of early childhood students, teachers work intentionally to develop problem-solving skills, as well as comfort and confidence with navigating conflicts. The Grade 1 curriculum is extensively integrated. This allows students and teachers to delve more deeply into topics and build their understanding of areas of study through explicit, teacher-guided instruction, as well as hands-on experiences in learning centers, the Design Lab, and across a variety of disciplines. The school year is marked by significant development in the areas of literacy and numeracy, as well as in a student’s ability to think more broadly and deeply. Language Arts The Grade 1 Language Arts Program focuses on continuing to build a love of reading, as well as more advanced early reading and literacy skills. Explicit, teacher-guided instruction using programs such as Reading Street and Words Their Way is balanced with shared read-alouds, book discussions, guided reading groups, independent reading, open-response writing
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activities, and hands-on activities in literacy centers. Grade 1 language arts instruction focuses on phonics, reading, and writing skills. Reading Street and Words Their Way are the backbone of our phonics instruction. While systematically introducing sound-symbol relationships, teachers also address specific phonics rules and spelling patterns. With a word study approach, students simultaneously focus on word recognition, vocabulary, phonics, and spelling. Words Their Way provides a developmental progression of building spelling knowledge, and it allows us to differentiate instruction to meet the range of learners in each classroom. In Grade 1 teachers use a variety of texts, including fiction and nonfiction, to meet the needs and interests of individual readers. While following a sequence of specific reading comprehension strategies, teachers also organize smaller, guided reading groups to differentiate instruction and provide each reader with the appropriate level of challenge. Formal and informal assessments are performed throughout the year to respond to students’ strengths and areas of challenge. In Grade 1 teachers use a Writing Workshop approach to help students express their ideas in writing and develop specific writing skills. Students practice writing in complete sentences, and they learn how to write a story with a beginning, middle, and end. Conferencing with their teacher and sharing their writing with peers help students with editing and generating new ideas. Students continue to practice letter formation using the Handwriting Without Tears program.
Social Studies The Grade 1 social studies curriculum focuses on the peoples and the geography of North America, including the United States, Canada, and Mexico. With an integrated and anti-bias, anti-racist approach that incorporates language arts, science, and social studies subjects, students explore the genre of biography and learn about the courageous individuals who demonstrated perseverance and the pursuit of a just, equitable world. Grade 1 students study and design a variety of maps, compare Native American cultures of the Southwest, and explore the geography and customs of Mexico. Math The Grade 1 math curriculum is based on the enVision Math program and focuses on building foundational math skills and concepts. First Grade students build their knowledge and skill in the following areas: working with numbers up to 100, exploring different ways to represent numbers, combining and comparing numbers, writing addition and subtraction number sentences, using a ten frame to add or subtract numbers, using double facts as a tool for adding, solving addition and subtraction story problems, sharing and recording problemsolving strategies, exploring standard and nonstandard units of measurement, investigating fractions, exploring 2-D and 3-D, identifying and describing attributes of various objects, sorting and categorizing objects and data, and learning how to tell time to the nearest hour and half hour. In addition to explicit, teacher-guided lessons, students explore math concepts in daily math centers that address the needs of each learner. Math center activities include interactive math journals, hands-on learning
opportunities, and cooperative games. Brimmer’s Lower School math curriculum is a hybrid of two programs, Investigations and enVision Math. Science and STEAM The Grade 1 science and STEAM curricula are focused on developing skills and knowledge in the areas of physical, earth, and life sciences, as well as scientific inquiry, technology, engineering, and the Design Process. While studying simple machines, first graders learn about force and motion, and they also collaborate with Grade 5 buddies and science “experts.” In their study of the elements of the sky, the sun, the moon, and the stars, they explore a variety of hands-on activities, fiction and nonfiction literature, and art-integrated projects. Moving closer to home and an area of particular interest, Grade 1 scientists study pond ecosystems of the Northeast, as well as the life cycle of frogs. Throughout their studies, including units on coding and Blue-Bot robots, students learn about the scientific process. They make and record observations, hypothesize, make predictions, plan and carry out investigations and experiments, and draw conclusions. Consistent with their experience with the Design Process, students engage in hands-on projects, problemsolving, and iterative practices. This approach is both knowledge and inquiry based. World Language: French The Grade 1 French curriculum is based on the program Story in Action, which uses stories and music to teach French. Based on the story La Poule Maboule, which is about a chicken who thinks the sky is falling, students are guided through a range of motivating language activities that help develop confidence and competence in the French
language. In Grade 1, the teacher and students speak French almost exclusively during lessons, as this helps students acquire the language at a faster pace. Additionally, the “Gesture Approach,” a technique that uses hand signals, helps students learn and remember the important vocabulary found in the plays, songs, and other activities. Each word is associated with a gesture, so that the language is represented visually and kinesthetically for the benefit of all language learners and their learning styles. Activities are varied so that students can work individually, with partners, in small groups, and as a whole class. Creative Arts: Visual Arts The guiding principles of the Grade 1 Visual Arts Program are exploration, enjoyment, observation, and self-expression. The school year begins with activities that set a positive tone in the art studio. Students participate in lessons that highlight the importance of respecting the creative process. They learn that each artist has their own unique way of creating and expressing themselves. Grade 1 artists observe and come to respect that each classmate takes a different amount of time to create their artwork and that there is no prescribed outcome for each student. Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and selfexpression. Students are guided through an exploratory process with lessons that engage them in learning about the elements of art: color, line, shape, form, texture, and space. In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various
historical periods, cultures, and genres. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes. Creative Arts: Drama Grade 1 Drama students develop confidence and creative thinking, while working collaboratively in small and large groups. Drama work expands students’ communication skills through language and action. Grade 1 drama classes are scheduled in the Ruth Corkin Theatre, where students gain comfort in sharing their ideas on the stage. Class discussion incorporates the sets that are built on the stage for various productions and performances throughout the school year. Audience behavior is a focal point as students take turns sharing their dramatic work. Grade 1 students engage in theater activities that further develop listening and communication skills. Through storytelling activities and directed imaginative play, students experience both bringing a story to life and creating original stories. Students explore the importance of action, setting, characters, and story sequence. There is also a focus on cooperation in order to prepare students for ensemble work. Drama activities incorporate and expand on classroom themes and curriculum. Through sharing ideas in the drama classroom, students build a sense of community with their classmates.
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LOWER SCHOOL CURRICULUM
Creative Arts: Music Young children are intrigued with music’s power to send a message and invite a response. Invitations for playful and joyful participation with organized sound are offered in each music class. Students energetically interact with music by singing, playing, moving, and listening. First graders develop tuneful singing skills, the ability to feel the steady beat of a song, and sensitivity to the artful nuances of music. Listening examples allow students to aurally analyze and recognize sounds. Improvisation activities lead to the creation of movement and musical compositions. Musical concepts also include melody, form, dynamics, and timbre (tone quality and character). The full complement of classroom instruments is available including small percussion and barred instruments for sound exploration.
Gr. 1
Learning Activities
Sept.
Oct.
Songs are chosen that reflect the life experiences of childhood within this country and other nations. Traditional children’s songs, folk songs, classical music, and music from a variety of cultures, styles, and time periods compose the classroom repertoire. In Grade 1, music-making with classmates yields an opportunity to develop the concept of ensemble. They learn the magic of sharing and cooperating to send musical messages and enjoy creative responses together. Physical Education Grade 1 Physical Education continues the development of students’ movement skills, an understanding of the health benefits of physical activity, and their introduction to a variety of activities, games, and sports. Students develop both their individual skills and their ability to cooperate with their classmates. They learn, succeed, and have fun as active participants in physical education class.
Nov.
Cooperative Games
Field Hockey Skills
Indoor Games
Playground Games
Throwing & Catching Skills
Fitness Skills
Movement Concepts Soccer Skills
Jump Rope Skills
Dec. Striking Skills Fitness Skills Rhythms & Dance
Jan.
Feb.
March
Handball Skills
Tumbling & Yoga Skills
Hawaiian Games
Basketball Skills
Juggling Skills
Indoor Games
Stations
Floor Hockey Skills
Manipulative Skills
April Circus Arts Fitness Skills Batting Skills
May Track & Field Skills Outdoor Games
June Summer Games
MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
Overview The primary goals for students in the middle and upper elementary grades are for them to love to come to school and to share in the excitement of the learning process. Toward these ends, their teachers work to develop each child’s intellectual, physical, social, and emotional skills. In the classroom, teachers seek to build communities
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in which all children feel accepted and respected. In this atmosphere of trust, teachers focus on building each student’s sense of self-confidence and responsibility. The Lower School offers a diverse environment in which children feel confident about taking risks and experimenting with the world around them.
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MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
Grade 2 CENTRAL QUESTION: How
does the environment around us influence our perspective? Overview Children come to Grade 2 inquisitive about the world around them and stimulated by the wealth of information provided by the written word. In Grade 2, the teachers’ goal is to create a diverse environment in which children feel confident in taking risks and experimenting with the world around them. The curriculum is designed to help students recognize their unique talents and interests and to promote enthusiasm for learning. In Grade 2, as in all of the Lower School, teachers are committed to educating the whole child. Throughout the year, students explore and investigate content through the lens of a Central Question: How does environment influence our perspective? Language Arts The Grade 2 Language Arts Program is a balanced literacy block consisting of fluency, comprehension, writing, and word study. Through the reading workshop model, students are exposed to daily mini lessons that develop and enhance reading strategies. Students engage in small, differentiated literature groups, which focus on decoding, fluency, comprehension, vocabulary, and expression. Grade 2 students are also exposed to a variety of genres in their reading selections. Read-alouds are often utilized to model good reading practices and to connect to and support a unit of study, and independent reading activities allow students to apply learned skills.
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Writing projects in Grade 2 include narratives, poetry, personal journals, opinions, and expository reports. Students engage in writing exercises across all content areas. Students are taught appropriate writing conventions and mechanics as well as encouraged to expand stories with more detail. They begin to learn how to edit for basic punctuation, spelling, and clarity. The Words Their Way spelling program continues to grow the already established spelling and phonics components. This program meets each student where he or she is on the spelling continuum. It allows for flexibility and individualization, and helps children build word knowledge. Social Studies Grade 2 begins the school year with an overview of important terms such as city, state, country, and continent. The Grade 2 Central Question, which ties all the content together, establishes its foundation in the social studies program. During the year, students delve into the question: How does the environment around us influence our perspective? In response to this question, students learn about Massachusetts in comparison to the Pacific Northwest, specifically Alaska, and learn about the various geographic features and cultures in these regions. Students also take a closer look at the Civil Rights Movement in the United States with a focus on the freedom fighters: their perspective and their courage to find a voice for their movement. To continue their development of global citizenship, students end the year with the study of Brazil. Students examine the country’s culture, peoples, history, and geography. To demonstrate mastery, students showcase their knowledge in the Grade 2 Brazil Exhibition to the Brimmer community. Opportunities for verbal and written expression
are presented frequently in the Grade 2 curriculum as students learn about the world around them. Math Kindergarten through Grade 5 use a hybrid of two math programs: Investigations and enVision Math. The Grade 2 content strands include number and numeration, operations and computations, data and analysis, measurement, time, money, geometry, and patterns. Students develop computational fluency, numerical flexibility, and problem-solving strategies through practice, games, and logic problems. In order to create a solid foundation of concepts and skills, students engage in hands-on experiences with a variety of activities using pictorial, numerical, and real-life examples. By understanding and using different representations, Grade 2 students can make the transition to more complex math concepts. Work is often completed in partners, groups, or independently so that instruction can be differentiated to meet the needs of each student. Science and STEAM The Lower School Science and STEAM Programs are dynamic, hands-on curricula that utilize authentic experiences to build skills such as critical thinking, inquiry, collaboration, and empathy. Through the STEAM program students learn to think like innovators and develop problem-solving skills. Grade 2 students engage in engineering tasks that are reflective of their curricular content. For example, students design erosion barriers to prevent a building from collapse during the study of soil. When investigating how bones break and heal, students are tasked to create a cast for a broken animal bone that can withstand weight. Students also engage in coding activities using platforms such as
ScratchJr. and Lego WeDo 2.0. The science program in Grade 2 captures the children’s curiosity in the world around them through hands-on investigation and exploration. Students in each grade level cover the three major science disciplines: life science, physical science, and earth science. Topics covered in Grade 2 include soil, the human body, light and color, and engineering. Using an inquiry-based approach, students learn to ask scientific questions and find answers to these questions as they construct their understanding of scientific concepts. Students have opportunities to investigate a problem, search for solutions, make observations, ask questions, test their ideas, and draw conclusions. Students plan and investigate collaboratively to uncover data that can be used as evidence to answer a question. The science program is rooted in the notion that scientific concepts are best learned when students’ curiosity is heightened and when students feel empowered to take charge of their own learning. In the spring second graders team up with third graders for a month-long engineering ColLab. Students have an opportunity to engage in fun engineering tasks with a mixed cohort. It is also a wonderful opportunity for the students to get to know a future Grade 3 teacher. World Language: French Grade 2 French uses Story in Action, a storytelling program, and music to teach French. This year’s fairy tale, Le Chat et la Lune (The Cat and the Moon), delivers an emotionally charged, humorous story with an important moral. Because one animal believes that the moon has fallen into the water, all the others follow suit in panic; that is, until the king shows them that they
are simply looking at a reflection. Written in the form of a play, the story provides both familiarity and plenty of opportunity for the pleasant repetition of key v ocabulary and structures. It becomes the focus for a range of motivating language activities that help students develop confidence and competence in French. For Grade 2 students, the teacher continues the use of the “Gesture Approach,” a technique that incorporates hand signs to help students learn and remember the important vocabulary found in the plays, songs, and other activities. Each word is associated with a gesture, so that the language is represented visually and kinesthetically for the benefit of all language learners and their learning styles. Activities are varied so that students can work individually, with partners, in small groups, and as a whole class. French classes meet three times per week for 30 minutes in the French library. Teacher and students speak French almost exclusively during lessons, as this helps the students acquire the language at a faster pace. Creative Arts: Visual Arts As independent thinkers, second graders begin to contribute more ideas and become aware of the process of creating and expressing themselves through art. Exploration, enjoyment, observation, and self-expression are the guiding principles that Grade 2 artists experience in visual arts. Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and selfexpression. Students are guided through an exploration process with lessons that engage them in learning about the elements of art: color, line, shape, form, texture, and space.
In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various historical periods, cultures, and genres. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. Second graders begin the year with activities that promote an understanding of the process of making art. Activities are designed to help students to be aware that each of their classmates is unique. Students continue to learn how to be respectful and supportive of one another in order to make the art studio a fun and exciting place to be. Creative Arts: Drama Drama students develop confidence and creative thinking, while working collaboratively in small and large groups. Drama work expands students’ communication skills through language and action. Grade 2 drama classes take place in the Ruth Corkin Theatre. Students continue to gain comfort in sharing their ideas on the stage. Class discussion incorporates the sets that are built on the stage for various productions and performances throughout the school year. Audience behavior is a focal point as students take turns sharing their dramatic work. Grade 2 students engage in theater activities that further develop listening and communication skills. Through storytelling activities and directed
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imaginative play, students experience both bringing a story to life and creating original stories. Students explore the importance of action, setting, characters, and story sequence. There is also a focus on cooperation in order to prepare students for ensemble work. Drama activities incorporate and expand on classroom themes and curriculum. During the year, the students also engage in various forms of assessment and reflection. Through sharing ideas in the drama classroom, students build a sense of community with their classmates. Creative Arts: Music Elementary-age children are intrigued with music’s power to send a message and invite a response. Invitations for playful and joyful participation with organized sound are offered in each music class. Students energetically interact with music by singing, playing, moving, and listening. Second graders develop tuneful singing skills, ability to feel the steady beat in groups of two and three, and sensitivity to the artful nuances of music.
Gr. 2
Sept. Cooperative Games
Learning Activities
Playground Games Movement Concepts
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Oct.
Listening examples allow students to aurally analyze and recognize sounds. Children also learn to aurally decode, read, and write music with traditional notation for quarter note, eighth notes, and solfège syllables mi, re, do. Improvisation activities lead to creation of movement and musical compositions. The full complement of classroom instruments is available including small percussion and barred instruments for sound exploration, improvisation, and composition. Soprano recorders are part of the curriculum for melodic performance and note reading. At the end of the year, instruments of the concert band and symphony orchestra are introduced.
Physical Education Grade 2 Physical Education continues the development of students’ movement skills, an understanding of the health benefits of physical activity, and their introduction to a variety of activities, games, and sports. Students develop both their individual skills and their ability to cooperate with their classmates. They learn, succeed, and have fun as active participants in physical education class.
Songs are chosen that reflect the life experiences of childhood within this country and other nations. Traditional children’s songs, folk songs, classical music, and music from a variety of cultures, styles, and time periods compose the classroom repertoire. In Grade 2, music-making with classmates yields an opportunity to develop the concept of ensemble. Students learn the magic of sharing and cooperating to create and appreciate a variety of musical styles.
Nov.
Soccer Skills Field Hockey Skills
Indoor Games
Throwing & Catching Skills
Jump Rope Skills
Fitness Skills
Dec. Striking Skills Fitness Skills Rhythms & Dance
Jan.
Feb.
March
Handball Skills
Tumbling & Yoga Skills
Hawaiian Games
Basketball Skills
Juggling Skills
Indoor Games
Stations
Floor Hockey Skills
Manipulative Skills
April Circus Arts Fitness Skills Batting Skills
May Track & Field Skills Outdoor Games
June Summer Games
Grade 3 CENTRAL QUESTION: How do
geography, climate, and natural resources affect the way people live and thrive? Overview The Grade 3 program develops each child’s intellectual, physical, social, and emotional skills. In the classroom teachers seek to build communities in which all children feel accepted and respected. In this atmosphere of trust, the focus is on building each child’s sense of confidence and responsibility. Also, in Grade 3, a team system is used to promote social/emotional development and academic success. Students can work with their teams to problem solve in different academic areas with an eye toward the Core Values. Students develop an understanding of the importance of being an individual working as part of a team. In Grade 3, students explore the question: How do geography, climate, and natural resources affect the way people live and thrive? As students navigate the waters of the ancient Nile, explore the unique adaptations of insects and plants, and board a whaling trade ship, they engage in various open discussions, written reflections, scholarly research, and scientific discovery to delve into how communities of peoples, animals, and plants strive to live and thrive in their surroundings. Language Arts The Grade 3 Language Arts Program balances critical thinking, active listening, and meaningful reading and writing activities. In Grade 3 students continue to build on their fluency, decoding, written expression, writing mechanics, and grammar skills. However, this approach is used not only in language arts classes but also in the integration
of the reading and writing programs with other curricular areas, specifically science and social studies curricula (this includes both fiction and nonfiction reading and writing). Teachers focus on whole-class novel reading throughout the year, through which students develop their inference and critical thinking skills as they respond to the literature in writing and by sharing ideas within their Literature Circles. A wide variety of reading experiences are offered in Grade 3. Developmentally, third grade students are transitioning into the concept of “reading to learn.” Third graders learn to summarize information, identify cause-effect, make predictions, compare and contrast information from different sources, and activate prior knowledge and experience from their own lives to information found in a text. Literacy skills such as making inferences or inferring, reading comprehension, vocabulary development, and critical thinking continue to evolve and grow as students work toward independence when responding to the literature through journal entries and sharing ideas in differentiated Literature Circles. They learn to apply strategies to clarify information that does not make sense. Teachers provide opportunities for oral reading and discussion, sustained silent reading, and shared reading. Grade 3 students continue to sharpen their writing skills. Written expression focuses on the craft of writing, which includes organization, idea development, word choice, and writer’s voice. Topics included in writing mechanics instruction are grammar, capitalization, punctuation, and spelling. Students engage in different genres of writing such as narration, opinion, poetry, and exposition to fine-tune their ability to write topic sentences, develop full
paragraphs, summarize and identify main ideas, and express themselves clearly and creatively. The Words Their Way spelling program continues into Grade 3. It is a developmental spelling program that uses word study to find patterns in words. Students work with level-appropriate word sort exercises in order to improve their understanding word patterns. Social Studies Throughout their school year, students focus on the Central Question: How do geography, climate, and natural resources affect the way people live and thrive? As students explore the various units in social studies and science, they develop an understanding of what living things need in order to live and thrive on earth. The social studies program in Grade 3 helps students think inquisitively about the world in which they live. The primary topic students explore is world geography, which includes a focus on the development of atlas-reading skills. Additional topics investigated include surviving and thriving in the New World, Ancient Egypt, and the history of Boston. The Boston unit includes an in-depth study of whales and the whaling industry. Throughout the year students examine different cultures and communities and how their surroundings affect the way they live and how they survive. Much of the social studies content is integrated with the Language Arts program. Relevant novels and primary and secondary resources serve as tools to teach students about perspective and point of view. The students learn note-taking strategies, how to write a three-paragraph expository paper, and how to deliver information in their first public speaking exhibition.
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Math The Grade 3 Math Program reinforces previously learned concepts such as addition and subtraction, fractions, data, measurement, geometry, and pre-algebraic expression, and builds on new concepts such as multiplication and division. Students use their understanding of concrete mathematical knowledge to help grow their understanding of abstract concepts. The goal of the Grade 3 Math Program is to develop math thinkers who can develop strong problem-solving skills that are useful in the students’ daily lives. Grade 3 students continue to strengthen their mathematical flexibility and computational fluency from the previous grade as they develop their mathematical reasoning and problem-solving skills. Students are encouraged to use multiple strategies to solve problems and to explain their thinking in written and oral forms. Real-life examples and authentic mathematical connections to other content areas allow students to truly understand that math is all around them. The goal is to be proficient in multiplication basic facts at the end of Grade 3 so they can enter Grade 4 having confidence in their multiplication skills. The curriculum continues with the use of a hybrid math program comprised of enVision Math and Investigations. These programs provide students with ample problem-solving practice and help them build strong number sense and computational fluency. In addition, students use manipulatives to help them visualize and better understand the concepts being taught. Class exercises and homework assignments reinforce concepts, helping students to retain their knowledge and skills.
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Science and STEAM A hands-on inquiry-based approach is the foundation for the Grade 3 Science and STEAM Programs. Students in each grade level cover the three major science disciplines: life science, physical science, and earth science. Students are encouraged to ask questions, explore concepts, collect data, and develop inferences based on their observations. Students in Grade 3 study insects and plants, the role of water on earth, and mixtures and solutions. Using an inquiry-based approach, students learn to ask scientific questions and find answers to these questions as they construct their own understanding of scientific concepts. Students have opportunities to investigate a problem, search for solutions, make observations, ask questions, test their ideas, and draw conclusions. In the spring third graders team up with second graders for a monthlong engineering ColLab. Students have an opportunity to engage in fun engineering tasks with a mixed cohort. It is also a wonderful opportunity for the students to reconnect with past homeroom teachers and for the second graders to get to know a future Grade 3 teacher. As in all the grades in the Lower School, STEAM projects are integrated into each grade level’s curriculum. Grade 3 students rely on the Design Process thinking routine to build and test the prototypes they create. Students take on the perspective of an entomologist to design an insect trap that allows for the study of a new, imaginary species. In addition, students learn how to code using the Lego WeDo 2.0 by designing their own insect during their study of insects and plants. They test different boat
designs and weight loads on the “Brimmer River” just like the Ancient Egyptians did on the Nile. The third graders are encouraged to approach each new task with empathy and ingenuity. World Languages: French Grade 3 continues the use of Story in Action, a storytelling program, and music to teach French. Classes meet three times per week for 30 minutes with the emphasis of the lessons on songs, rhymes, stories, and role-playing activities based on real communication situations. The vocabulary that is taught in this method has been carefully selected, as it is essential vocabulary for students during the initial stages of their language learning. In Grade 3 the teacher continues the use of the “Gesture Approach,” a technique that uses hand signs to help students learn and remember the important vocabulary found in the plays, songs, and other activities. Each word is associated with a gesture, so that the language is represented visually and kinesthetically for the benefit of all language learners and their learning styles. Activities are varied so that students can work individually, with partners, in small groups, and as a whole class. In addition, students are introduced to reading in French as they read their scripts and practice their lines for the annual French plays. For many students, performing in French serves as the highlight of their language learning experience for the year. The plays are interdisciplinary collaborations among world language, drama, music, and visual arts. In their French classes, third graders will work with the French teacher on pronunciation and comprehension. In drama students work with their teacher to develop their acting, blocking, staging, and movement
skills. In music they explore traditional French folk music, and in the art studio, third graders create scenery, costumes, props, and the production’s printed program. This wonderful event truly celebrates the interdisciplinary approach used at Brimmer. Creative Arts: Visual Arts Observation, abstraction, invention, and expression are the guiding principles Grade 3 artists experience in visual arts. Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and self-expression. Students are guided through an exploration process with lessons that engage them in learning about the elements and principles of design. The elements of art explored are color, line, shape, form, texture, and space, and the principles of art are pattern, space, composition, and balance. Students in Grade 3 demonstrate knowledge of the materials and methods they have learned and begin to refine and self-assess their work. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various historical periods, cultures, and genres. Students explore the role of the arts in their community and in society. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes. Third graders begin the school year with activities that focus on
the process of making art. Students are given a concept for a project and throughout the process of creating their artwork, they are asked to make observations about their classmates’ approach to the lesson. Third graders become aware that some students may stand while they work, some artists like clean surfaces, and others like a messier approach. Students look at the project outcomes as a group and learn that each individual responds in a unique way to the same concept. This awareness helps students to be sensitive to their classmates and encourages them to focus on their own process as they create their works of art. Creative Arts: Drama In Grade 3, drama students develop confidence and creative thinking while working collaboratively in small and large groups. This drama work expands the students’ communication skills through language and action. Grade 3 drama classes take place in the Ruth Corkin Theatre. Students continue to gain comfort in sharing their ideas on the full-sized stage. Class discussion incorporates the sets that are built on the stage for various productions and performances throughout the school year. Audience behavior is a focal point as students take turns sharing their dramatic work. Students hone their problemsolving skills through dramatic activities, and they work collaboratively to create original theater. Scene work focuses on the sequence of events in a story, as well as settings and character development. Students explore improvisation to develop a comfort level with creating theater without direction. In preparation for the Grade 3 French play, students explore
dialogue using scripts. Student ideas are compiled to create a dramatic script in English before it is translated and performed in French. The Grade 3 class participates in the process of putting on a production through rehearsals and formal performances on the stage. Throughout the year, the students engage in artistic forms of assessment and reflection. Through sharing ideas in the drama classroom, students build a sense of community with their classmates. Creative Arts: Music Elementary-age children are intrigued with music’s power to send a message and invite a response. Invitations for creative and joyful participation with organized sound are offered in each music class. Students energetically interact with music by singing, playing, moving, and listening. Third graders develop tuneful singing skills, the ability to feel the steady beat in groups of two and three, and sensitivity to the artful nuances of music. Listening examples allow students to aurally analyze and recognize sounds. Students also learn to aurally decode, read, and write music with traditional notation including rhythmic notation and note recognition on the treble staff. Improvisation activities lead to the creation of movement and musical compositions. The full complement of classroom instruments is available including small percussion and barred instruments for sound exploration. Songs are chosen that reflect the life experiences of childhood within the country and other nations. Traditional children’s songs, folk songs, classical music, and music from a variety of cultures, styles, and time periods compose the classroom repertoire. In Grade 3, music-making with
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MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
classmates yields an opportunity to develop the concept of ensemble. They learn the magic of sharing and cooperating to create and to appreciate a variety of musical styles. Third graders may also elect to participate in Beginning Band. This ensemble, which forms in mid-October, meets weekly during the school day. Beginning Band is a yearlong commitment and is offered to students in Grade 3 who take lessons in piano, brass, percussion, or woodwinds. Students who are not in the ensemble participate in an elective program that occurs in their homeroom during the same meeting time.
Gr. 3
Sept. Team Building Challenges
Learning Activities
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Oct.
Physical Education As students transition into the upper elementary grades, they begin to engage more complex movement skills and more activities, games, and sports that require strategy and teamwork. Students are introduced to and participate in a wider range of fitness and movement activities that help them develop their individual movement skills as well as their understanding and interaction in team play.
Nov.
Field Hockey Unit
Football Skills
Track & Field
Rugby Skills
Soccer Unit
Running Events
Volleyball Skills
Fitness Skills
Dec. Badminton Handball Unit Team Building Challenges
Jan. Basketball Unit Track & Field Jumping Events
Feb. Badminton Tumbling & Yoga Skills Skills
March
April
Floor Hockey Unit
Lacrosse Skills
Hawaiian Games
Track & Field Throwing Events
Bowling Unit
May Tennis Skills Softball & Baseball Unit
June Team Building Challenges
Grade 4
enhance, support, and allow them to share their learning.
CENTRAL QUESTIONS: What is
Language Arts The Grade 4 Language Arts Program is a literature-based curriculum that weaves reading comprehension, research, and writing together. The “reading to learn” concept continues its trajectory in Grade 4. Students become active participants in the integrated theme study by delving into a range of literature throughout the year. Numerous nonfiction and fiction texts are introduced to students as they develop a deeper understanding of culture and identity. Students begin to dissect their readings and dig deeper, moving beyond recall of plot events and main characters. Response journals are utilized to develop and practice written expression. Students are asked to make inferences, interpret imagery and themes, and discuss character analysis. Grade 4 students learn both theme-related and unfamiliar words by actively applying them in their own writing and speaking.
Identity? What is Culture? Overview Grade 4 students immerse themselves in the study of Asia. Two important questions--What is Identity? What is Culture?--help frame the students’ inquiry of the vibrant and unique cultures, traditions, and peoples of this continent. Students achieve a deeper understanding through carefully designed learning experiences that blend multisensory activities, opportunities for trial and error, and individualized instruction to achieve clearly established goals. The substantially integrated curriculum gives students the opportunity to think deeper and wider, to problem solve, and to interpret concepts. With teachers as guides, fourth graders engage in a variety of learning experiences that foster cooperation, respect, independence, and perseverance. Personal responsibility is the cornerstone of the school year; the curriculum instills the tenets of the School’s mission to foster lifelong learning in order to prepare students to be global and ethical citizens. Grade 4 introduces the regular use of the iPad, a tool for students to use more regularly to support them in their research and expression of their knowledge and creativity in dynamic new ways. Fourth Graders have dedicated technology time each week in order to practice new skills that they will then actively apply in their learning. This technology period will also be the entry portal to the development of stronger research and organizational skills. Whether the students are using a laptop or iPad, they will develop the skills needed to master a variety of technological tools that will
Writing plays is an integral role in each child’s development as a lifelong learner. Students begin to look at the material they are reading not just as readers, but as writers. Across the writing-skills spectrum, from the most reluctant writer to an inspiring young author, students are supported and exposed to a multitude of writing genres: folktales, opinions, poetry, and exposition. Mini lessons focus on elaboration, organization, revision, mechanics, and grammar. Students become active proofreaders and editors of their own work as they move toward a deeper understanding of the writing process. Grade 4 students continue their progression in the five stages of the Words Their Way spelling program.
Social Studies Grade 4 students engage in an integrated study of Asia throughout the year. Students consider the various elements that shape culture and identity, and they observe and interpret the connections between these elements. Students use literature, both fiction and nonfiction, to learn about the various people and places that make up the continent of Asia. They engage in a multitude of writing projects and have opportunities for reflection as they move through the timeline of Asian history. Specifically, the study of the Silk Road serves as a portal into Asian geography, environment, and modern cultural practices and influences. Students examine the culture and environment of Pan-Asia through informational readings and integrated projects. The annual FourthFest celebration highlights the history, geography, culture, and traditions of two specific Asian countries. Finally, students end the year exploring the cultural and social contributions of all immigrants to America with a special focus on the AsianAmerican experience. Fourth graders consider the process of becoming a United States citizen through an intensive and interactive simulation of the immigrant experience. Math The Investigations and enVision Math programs are at the core of the Lower School’s approach to teaching mathematics. The emphasis of the curriculum is to increase mathematical thinking and reasoning. Students develop a variety of strategies to solve problems by learning how to describe, compare, and discuss their approaches. This allows students to develop a deeper understanding of the math behind the algorithms. Exploration provides students with the
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opportunities they need to develop efficient strategies, as well as hone their skills as problemsolvers. Alternative strategies are valued, multiple strategies are encouraged, and communication about mathematics is central. The Grade 4 Math Program guides students’ mathematical thinking in the following areas: addition and subtraction, multiplication and division, geometry, measurement, the number system, fractions, andstatistics. Through guided instruction, hands-on learning, and strategic problem-solving all learners work to gain a strong conceptual understanding and mathematical flexibility. Science and STEAM All science investigations require that students become actively engaged in experiments in order to help them better understand the scientific process. Students in each grade level cover the three major science disciplines: life science, physical science, and earth science. Through an inquiry-based approach, students learn to construct their own meaning of scientific concepts. Students have opportunities to investigate a problem, search for solutions, make observations, ask questions, test their ideas, and draw conclusions. At the start of Grade 4, students discover relationships between objects and outcomes through controlled experiments. They learn concepts such as independent and dependent variables. Through the course of the year, students study geology and investigate the characteristics of rocks and minerals as they learn how to identify a plethora of specimens. The electricity and magnetism unit introduces concepts in physical science that relate to energy and change. Through hands-on investigations, students explore
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the concepts of positive and negative charges, circuits, and alternative energy. Fourth graders also study one of the most complex machines ever created: the human body. The students learn the cellular makeup of muscles as well as how muscle filaments make the muscle contract or relax. Equipped with this knowledge, students are challenged to design a prototype of a robotic arm. The year culminates in an Environmental ColLab where Grades 4 and 5 students are intermixed to study a range of environmental concerns and problems that face the global community, and they work to develop solutions for them. By Grade 4 students are well versed in the Design Process. Applying science concepts and content knowledge from other disciplines is automatic. Students design engineering projects to meet challenges, learn the fundamentals of coding, and actively apply technology skills to a variety of theme-based ideas. Spheros are programmed to become tour guides along the Silk Road, alternative energy sources are researched and designed in make-believe Japanese and Indian villages, and robotic arms are built to move objects from one place to another. Much of the STEAM curriculum is integrated with the other elements of the Grade 4 curriculum to develop greater understanding and so that projects are authentic and applicable to the real world. World Language: French Grade 4 continues the use of Story in Action, a program that uses storytelling, songs, and role-playing activities based on real communication situations. The story that is the focus of Grade 4 French is titled Comment y aller? (How do I get there?) It is
based on an experience of a girl from Quebec who decides to visit her friend in Paris. Students continue to increase their vocabulary in French by responding to the “Gesture Approach” and will also review previously learned words with the associated gestures. Throughout the year, there is an equal and strong emphasis on the development of all four language skills--reading, writing, listening, and speaking--through a program that meets the needs of all language learners and their learning styles. Activities are varied so that students can work individually, with partners, in small groups, and as a whole class. Creative Arts: Visual Arts Students in Grade 4 have developed a rich background in the arts from their previous work in the art studio, and they are ready to apply, practically, the skills they have acquired. The visual arts curriculum is designed to encourage students to take an active role in the creative process. During the school year, students will have the opportunity to enhance classroom projects by gathering ideas and inspirations outside of the school day. Occasionally students will have homework assignments such as completing worksheets, writing journal entries, and gathering images for research. This is a great opportunity for families to connect with the activities and art processes in which the students are involved. Observation, abstraction, invention, and expression are the guiding principles of the Grade 4 artist’s experience in visual arts. Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and self-expression. Students are guided through an exploration process with lessons that engage
them in learning about the elements and principles of design. The elements of art are color, line, shape, form, texture, and space, and the principles of art are pattern, space, composition, and balance. Students in Grade 4 demonstrate knowledge of the materials and methods they have learned and begin to refine and self-assess their work. Students apply their knowledge and describe the similarities and differences in works of art. Through informal critiques, they explain the strengths and weaknesses in their own work. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage, and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. Students are encouraged to make their own material choices and to choose processes based on past experiences and knowledge of the processes they have learned. In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various historical periods, cultures, and genres. Students will explore the role of the arts in their community and in society. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes. Creative Arts: Drama Grade 4 drama students develop confidence and creative thinking while working collaboratively in small and large groups. Drama work expands students’ communication skills through language and action. Grade 4 drama classes focus on the importance of cooperation
through ensemble work, as students continue to develop skills as stage artists. Theater concepts and skills such as improvisation, memorization, and playwriting are expanded upon. Students build characters through their bodies and voices and in writing exercises.
including small percussion and barred instruments for sound exploration. Students explore the many ways they can engage with music, from singing games and folk dances to performing in a musical and composing music with modern technology.
Grade 4 creates and performs an original one-act play, while also collaborating with Grade 5 to create a dramatic musical production. Students participate in auditions, rehearsals, and formal performances on the stage. Grade 4 students are introduced to the elements of stagecraft, stage design, and production. Throughout the year, students analyze the successes and challenges of performances and assess their work as thoughtful performers. Through sharing ideas in the drama classroom, students build a sense of community with their classmates.
Songs are chosen that reflect the life experiences of childhood within this country and other nations. Traditional children’s songs, folk songs, classical music, and music from a variety of cultures, styles, and time periods compose the classroom repertoire. In Grade 4, music-making with classmates yields an opportunity to develop the concept of ensemble. They learn the magic of sharing and cooperating to create and appreciate a variety of musical styles.
Creative Arts: Music Elementary-age learners are intrigued with music’s power to send a message and invite a response. Invitations for creative and joyful participation with organized sound are offered in each music class. Students energetically interact with music by singing, playing, moving, and listening. Fourth graders develop tuneful singing skills, an ability to move to the steady beat in groups of two and three, and sensitivity to the artful nuances of music. Listening examples allow students to aurally analyze and recognize sounds in a variety of musical forms. Students also learn to aurally decode, read, and write music with traditional notation including rhythmic notation and note recognition on the treble staff. Improvisation activities lead to the creation of movement and musical compositions. The full complement of classroom instruments is available
Annually in March, students participate in the Grades 4 and 5 Creative Arts Performance. This collaborative presentation highlights the artistry, confidence, and teamwork of the students through visual arts, drama, and music. In addition, the Grades 4 and 5 Chorus performs at the Lower School Chorus and Band Concert and at a Share Assembly each spring. Fourth graders may also elect to participate in the Grades 4 and 5 Band. This ensemble, which forms in mid-October, meets weekly during the school day. Band is a yearlong commitment and is offered to students in Grade 4 who take lessons in piano, brass, percussion, or woodwinds. Students who are not in the ensemble participate in an elective program that occurs in their homeroom during the same meeting time.
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MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
Physical Education Students in Grade 4 are presented more complex movement skills and more activities, games, and sports that require strategy, tactics, and teamwork. Students are introduced to and participate in a wider range of fitness and movement activities that help them develop their individual movement skills as well as their understanding and interaction in team play. Sportsmanship is always emphasized as is making physical activity fun, rewarding, and enjoyable. Gr. 4
Sept. Team Building Challenges
Learning Activities
Fitness Skills Soccer Unit
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Oct.
Interscholastic Athletics Beginning in Grade 4 students have the option to participate in a limited interscholastic athletic program in the fall and winter. Sports offered include coed soccer and boys and girls basketball. Students attend practices for a week or two prior to their two or three scheduled games.
Nov.
Dec.
Jan.
Field Hockey Unit
Football Skills
Handball Unit
Basketball Unit
Track & Field Running Events
Rugby Skills
Team Building Challenges
Track & Field Jumping Events
Volleyball Skills Badminton
Feb. Badminton Tumbling & Yoga Skills Skills
March
April
Floor Hockey Unit
Lacrosse Skills
Hawaiian Games Bowling Unit
Track & Field Throwing Events
May Tennis Skills Softball & Baseball Unit
June Team Building Challenges
Grade 5 CENTRAL QUESTION: What is
strength of character?
Overview The Grade 5 program is robust and highly interdisciplinary; the teachers encourage students to think creatively and challenge themselves to reach new levels of achievement. The comprehensive curriculum is integrated across disciplines, embodying academic rigor and creating innovative approaches to motivate and challenge each child and engage every student’s learning style. Elements of the Grade 5 curriculum are connected by the Central Question: What is strength of character? Over the course of the year students analyze this question as it relates to themselves and to others. The pedagogical approach, termed “Windows and Mirrors,” fosters a thoughtful understanding of oneself and how we connect with people and events in literature, history, math, and science. Through the lens of “strength of character,” students explore the rise of the Renaissance and the path to the United States’ Revolutionary War; they delve deeply into the research and reflect on the qualities of strength of character. In this way, fifth graders practice reading, writing, creative arts, technology, and presentation skills through an interdisciplinary approach in which teachers connect their coursework to these topics and themes: change, community, and character. As leaders of the Lower School, students reflect on these themes, strengthening selfknowledge and taking risks that allow for greater confidence as they transition to Middle School.
Language Arts As in Grade 4, the Grade 5 Language Arts program is a literature-based curriculum that is integrated with the social studies program. Students continue to develop and strengthen their vocabulary, comprehension, and written and oral language skills as they prepare for Middle School. Literature explores the traits and motivations of why and how a character demonstrates strength of character. Students develop strategies to help them understand the written text. A gradual shift toward more advanced text and analytical thinking continues in the Grade 5 program. Students learn to read a text closely and to examine it on many interpretive levels. Reading is practiced both orally and silently. In addition, students enjoy and benefit from having novels read aloud to them by their teachers. The goal of the Language Arts Program is to encourage students to express themselves creatively and to understand the commitment that successful writers must make to their writing. The writing process continues to play an important role in how students engage in writing projects. Organizational structure, idea development, language conventions, and revision of work are elements of the process that students master before leaving the Lower School program. Vocabulary is primarily taken from the literature read, and spelling and grammar lessons are derived from the Patterns of Power and Words Their Way programs.
Social Studies The Grade 5 Social Studies Program is designed to help students develop an understanding of the American past, as well as to promote awareness and reflection of how the country came to be where it is today. The Grade 5 social studies curriculum focuses on the central theme of “strength of character” as students explore the influence of the Renaissance in Europe, early American colonization, the American Revolution, and the formation of a new government. Map skills and research skills are incorporated into the study of the history, geography, and economics of these time periods and events. Critical thinking skills are promoted as students learn to observe, compare, classify, predict, and think reasonably and reflectively when looking at different examples of strength of character throughout history. Students begin to understand the perspective and experiences of the many people who composed and built early America and its impact on today’s world. Students learn to collaborate with others through project-based learning inquiries, using primary and secondary sources. They conduct three research projects during the year with the final project, the Grade 5 Capstone Exhibition, the culmination of the students’ work in the Lower School. Students are assigned a topic and asked to analyze and identify the characteristics of an individual or group who demonstrates strength of character. Students are assigned advisors, and the final product includes a written piece, an oral presentation, and an art/design/ tech project.
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MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
Math Grade 5 students continue their transition from concrete to abstract learning with a strong emphasis on the further development of problem-solving skills. The growth mindset approach to math allows students to develop a deep understanding of math concepts and strategies to solve real-world problems by encouraging them to ask questions and empathizing the process. The mathematics curriculum builds upon the concepts learned in the previous grades and prepares students for the more complex abstract work of Middle School. Students use a combination of the enVision Math and Investigations programs to study the following topics: place value; factors and multiples; multiplication and division strategies; estimation; geometry and measurement; fractions; decimals; percent; probability; data; and statistics. They also begin their introduction to pre-algebra. Science and STEAM Throughout the Lower School science investigations require that students become actively engaged in experiments in order to help them better understand the scientific process. Students in each grade level cover the three major science disciplines: life science, physical science, and earth science. Through an inquiry-based approach, students learn to construct their own meaning of scientific concepts. Students have opportunities to investigate a problem, search for solutions, make observations, ask questions, test their ideas, and draw conclusions.
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Grade 5 students continue to learn the scientific method using a hands-on, inquiry-based approach. The Grade 5 science curriculum is designed with several objectives in mind: to understand that science is all around us, to develop critical thinking skills, to develop the ability to communicate scientific concepts, to develop cooperative and purposeful work habits with peers, and to empower students to be responsible for their own learning. Students explore the concepts of simple machines, astronomy/rockets, and cell biology/nutrition. The year in science culminates in an Environmental ColLab where Grades 4 and 5 students are intermixed to study a range of environmental concerns and problems faced by the global community and work to develop solutions for them. In addition, students in Grade 5 work both independently and collaboratively to create several interdisciplinary STEAM projects throughout the year using the Design Process. Students design engineering projects to meet challenges, learn the fundamentals of coding, and actively apply technology skills to a variety of theme-based ideas. While learning about simple machines, fifth graders are challenged to build a machine that can lift an egg from the ground. Designing and programming a Lego Mindstorms rover to explore the surface of Mars continues the emphasis on the integration of the STEAM program with the academic curriculum.
French Language and Francophone World Cultures The focus of the Grade 5 program in French is the exploration in French of the cultures, traditions, people, and geography of the Francophone world. This educational journey will lead us through North America, Europe, Africa, Oceania, and the Caribbean islands. Students work to reinforce language and concepts they have learned throughout their language study at Brimmer while using online, spoken, and written activities to develop their knowledge and understanding of the Francophone world. This is an exciting year of study, as the language will be learned to explore cultural diversity in greater detail. Creative Arts: Visual Arts Students in Grade 5 have developed a rich background in the arts and are ready to practically apply the skills they have acquired. The Creative Arts Curriculum is designed to encourage students to take an active role in the creative process. During the school year, students can enhance classroom projects by brainstorming ideas and finding inspirations outside of the school day. Students have homework assignments such as completing worksheets, writing journal entries, and gathering of images for research. This is a great opportunity for families to connect with the activities and art processes in which the students are involved. Observation, abstraction, invention, and expression are the guiding principles for Grade 5 artists’ experience in visual arts. Curriculum is designed and presented in a manner that encourages each child’s individual creativity and self-expression. Students are guided through an exploration process with lessons that engage
them in learning about the elements and principles of design. The elements of art are color, line, shape, form, texture, and space, and the principles of art are pattern, space, composition, and balance. Students create artwork using a variety of 2-D materials and processes such as painting, drawing, collage and printmaking and 3-D materials such as wood, cardboard, and clay to create sculptures. Grade 5 artists are encouraged to make their own material choices and to choose approaches based on past experiences and knowledge of the processes they have learned. In May students will plan and execute an artistic component for their Grade 5 Capstone Exhibition. Students in Grade 5 demonstrate knowledge of the materials and methods they have learned and begin to refine and self-assess their work. They apply their knowledge and describe the similarities and differences in various works of art. Through informal critiques they explain the strengths and weaknesses in their own work and share constructive comments with classmates. In addition, lessons introduce students to aesthetics and art history using prints, artifacts, and books that feature works of art from various historical periods, cultures, and genres. Students explore the role of the arts in their community and in society. Art lessons are often planned in collaboration with the classroom, music, and drama teachers in order to complement academic themes.
Creative Arts: Drama Drama students develop confidence and creative thinking, while working collaboratively in small and large groups. Drama work expands students’ communication skills through language and action. Grade 5 drama students continue to hone their creative skills as young performers. Students express their cumulative theatrical knowledge through several performance opportunities. They explore ensemble building, character development, and scene structure through improvisation and script work. The Grades 4 and 5 production is a platform for Grade 5 students to further explore the processes of auditioning, casting, pre-production, rehearsal, and performance skills. As part of the rehearsal process, students keep journals to reinforce character development and reflect on their artistic contributions. Throughout the school year, students assess their work as thoughtful performers. Through sharing ideas in the drama classroom, students build a sense of community with their classmates.
Listening examples allow students to aurally analyze and recognize sounds. Students also learn to aurally decode, read, and write music with traditional notation. Improvisation activities lead to the creation of movement and musical compositions. The full complement of classroom instruments is available including small percussion and barred instruments for sound exploration. Students will explore the many ways they can engage with music, from singing games and folk dances to performing in a musical and composing music with modern technology. Fifth graders may also elect to participate in the Grades 4 and 5 Band. This ensemble, which forms in mid-October, meets weekly during the school day. Band is a yearlong commitment and is offered to students in Grade 5 who take lessons in piano, brass, percussion, or woodwinds. Students who are not in the ensemble participate in an elective program that occurs in their homeroom during the same meeting time.
Creative Arts: Music Elementary-age children are intrigued with music’s power to send a message and invite a response. Invitations for creative and joyful participation with organized sound are offered in each music class. Students energetically interact with music by singing, playing, moving, and listening. Fifth graders develop tuneful singing skills, an ability to move to the steady beat in groups of two and three, and sensitivity to the artful nuances of music.Â
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MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
Physical Education Grade 5 physical education offers students a wide selection of physical movement activities, including fitness regimes, games, and sports to engage in both individually and with teammates. Grade 5 also introduces Lower School students to interscholastic sports team play, which become available to all students throughout the year in Middle School. Sportsmanship is always emphasized as is making physical activity fun, rewarding, and enjoyable. Gr. 5
Sept. Team Building Challenges
Learning Activities
Fitness Skills Soccer Unit
40
Oct.
Interscholastic Athletics In both Grades 4 and 5 students have the option to participate in a limited interscholastic athletic program in the fall and winter. Sports offered include coed soccer and boys and girls basketball. Students attend practices for a week or two prior to their two or three scheduled games.
Nov.
Dec.
Jan.
Field Hockey Unit
Football Skills
Handball Unit
Basketball Unit
Track & Field Running Events
Rugby Skills
Team Building Challenges
Track & Field Jumping Events
Volleyball Skills Badminton
Feb. Badminton Tumbling & Yoga Skills Skills
March
April
Floor Hockey Unit
Lacrosse Skills
Hawaiian Games Bowling Unit
Track & Field Throwing Events
May Tennis Skills Softball & Baseball Unit
June Team Building Challenges
Signature Programs The Lower School Signature Programs enhance the core curriculum and provide students with an opportunity to apply what they have learned to interdisciplinary problem-solving. These programs include project work using the Design Process (see earlier “Lower School Approach” section) with an experiential education component. Teachers encourage students to use their experiences to enhance their learning in the classroom as well. ColLabs Engineering ColLab The Engineering ColLab is designed to promote collaboration among students in Grades 2 and 3. Units are focused, two-week, hands-on experiences that help students develop an understanding of engineering. Units have included the following: Bridge Building, Hot Air Balloons (understanding how they work and building one), Bouncy Balls (making balls that can bounce as high as possible), and Dog Biscuit Carriers (made with recycled materials). STEAM/Environmental ColLab The STEAM/Environmental ColLab is an inquiry-based science program for Grades 4 and 5 that promotes active learning by challenging students to think and work both independently and collaboratively. During this two-year interactive program, students explore eight topics relating to nature and the environment. Topics are Solar Energy, Wind Energy, Climate Change, Gardening, Composting, Water Use, Animal Biomimicry, and Water Filtration. Units are focused, two-week, hands-on experiences that bring the current environmental concerns to life for the students.
Design Lab The Lower School makerspace is a space that allows students to be collaborative, innovative, flexible, persistent, and self-motivated. The students engage in design and STEAM projects using the Design Process. Students build the skills of empathy and apply foundational knowledge learned in the classroom to create and to develop solutions for real-world problems in the Design Lab. Through the STEAM program the students gain a deeper understanding of the world, think creatively and critically, collaborate and share ideas, and apply knowledge to create innovative designs. With all its resources, the Design Lab is another place where students are nurtured and challenged to use their heads and their hands to solve problems. It is a space in the Lower School where a child’s imagination can soar as they explore different low-tech and high-tech tools with the guidance of their teacher. The multitude of materials available allows the students to create, to design, and to construct an understanding of how things work. In the Design Lab, students can share ideas with one another, collaborate on a project, and experience the rewards of persistence. Science and STEAM The science and STEAM curricula at Brimmer are designed to foster the love of learning through curiosity, exploration, and discovery. STEAM is an educational mélange of learning that uses science, technology, engineering, the arts, and mathematics as access points for guiding student inquiry, dialogue, and critical thinking. The design and implementation of the STEAM curriculum in Grades PK – 5 is founded on the understanding that children are inherently inclined to solve problems and seek solutions. This
approach leads to the development of students who are thoughtful risk-takers, who engage in experiential learning, who persist in problem-solving, who embrace collaboration, and who work through the creative process to solve real-world problems. The STEAM program has elements of inquiry-based learning, project-based learning, and responsive teaching approaches, all of which allow learning to be active, student-directed, and integrated across various content areas. All of this is done through the lens of the Design Process. Beginning in PK, students go through the steps of the Design Process when completing an engineering task. Not only are the students developing problem-solving skills, but they are also learning how to reason based on how their prototype works. Metacognition is an important aspect of engineering and a key component of teaching engineering. As students grow and reflect, they develop the capacity to use the data they collect while testing to understand and interpret feedback. They begin to set clear criteria for success through testing their own work and start to make thoughtful, calculated decisions based on these experiences. As developing engineers, they begin to understand what is not working in their own design so they can make design choices to create a successful beta, make improvements, and plan updates for their models.
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MIDDLE AND UPPER ELEMENTARY (G RADES 2-5)
Lower School Garden The Lower School Garden is an outdoor classroom where students learn about ecology, connect with nature, learn about healthy eating and where their food comes from, and learn to take care of the environment. The Garden is a special learning environment in which all Lower School students play a role. Each grade level, PK - 5, maintains this green space through various hands-on activities such as planting and tending vegetables and flowers, tilling soil, weeding, watering, pruning, and harvesting. The Lower School Garden is a fully functioning garden where students learn through experience. Much of the food grown is served in School lunches. The Garden is fully integrated into the Lower School Curriculum and allows Brimmer students to engage in authentic scientific observation and inquiry in an outdoor setting, right on campus. Share Assemblies Share Assemblies occur most Friday mornings throughout the school year. At Share, Lower School students come together for performances by students and special guests. Buddy Group events are held during Share Assembly time as well. These weekly Lower School gatherings and activities build a feeling of community through shared experience. They also present the opportunity for students to learn how to be part of an audience during a performance and how to engage appropriately and successfully with their peers during Buddy Group activities.
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Enrichment Beyond the School Day Extended Day The Extended Day Program provides children with a warm, cheerful, supportive, and relaxed atmosphere that fosters sharing and cooperation. The program provides a supportive play environment, creative activities, and a quiet time for study. The Extended Day Program is a true extension of Brimmer as it follows the School’s mission of promoting collaboration and a sense of personal responsibility. The Extended Day Program begins at the end of the academic day and operates weekdays until 5:30 p.m. from the opening day to the last day of school in June. For children in PK - 2 The daily schedule also includes a snack and supervised playtime either on the playground or inside. Children in Grades 3 – 5 participate in indoor/ outdoor play and a choice of age-appropriate indoor activities. In addition, the schedule includes supervised homework time in a quiet study area. The faculty design the program to offer students choices among a variety of activities. The older students can find the appropriate balance between doing homework and having fun with friends. The students particularly enjoy being in the multiage groups. Throughout the year, after school clubs are offered for an additional fee and generally include chess, community service, cooking, crafts, karate, yoga, a technology club, and a math club. However, new offerings are proposed annually. Students in the Extended Day Program can also take advantage of the After School Music Program as well as attend Middle and Upper School athletic events.
After School Clubs As part of Brimmer’s Extended Day Program, the School hosts after school clubs. These clubs meet once a week for one hour and are open to all students beginning at the end of each semester. Children enrolled in a club may remain at school in the Extended Day Program between dismissal and 3:15 p.m. After school clubs are offered for an additional fee. A variety of clubs are offered with different gradelevel participation (descriptions may be found on our website), including but not limited to: Astronomy Club (Grades 4 – 5) Bots & Bots of Coding (Grades K – 1) Chess (Grades 2 – 5) Cooking Club (Grades 2 – 5) Girls Run (Grades 3 – 5) Joy of Movement (Grades 1 – 3) Laser Cutting (Grades 1 – 3) Little Kids, Big Ideas: Microscopes (Grades K – 1) Mini-Cooks 1 (Grades PK – 1) Mini-Cooks 2 (Grades PK – 1) Newspaper 1 (Grades 3 – 5) Newspaper 1 (Grades 2 – 5) PK Mandarin Club (PK) STEAM: Spheros! Scratch! Oh my! Coding Club (Grades 2 – 5) Yoga is Awesome! (Grades PK – 1)
After School Music Program The study of music increases higher order thinking skills, builds self-esteem, and encourages self-discipline and commitment. Brimmer’s After School Music Program provides quality musical instruction and seeks to strengthen music appreciation and literacy. Throughout this program, students in PK - Grade 12 can take private instrumental and voice lessons on campus. They receive a music education tailored to their individual needs based on their interest, age, and personal goals. In addition, lessons are designed to support students who are committed to participating in the the School’s band ensembles
Interscholastic Sports for Grades 4 and 5 Beginning in Grade 4 students have the option to participate in a limited interscholastic athletic program in the fall and winter. Sports offered include coed soccer and boys and girls basketball. Students attend practices for a week or two prior to their two or three scheduled games. This program offers students an introduction to interscholastic athletics including the organizationand structure of team practices and play, workingwith an athletic coach, understanding game rules, strategies and tactics, game officiating, and sportsmanship.
Lower School Learning Spaces Corkin Art Studio Corkin Theatre Cummings Hall French Library Hastings Innovation Center Jones Library and Design Lab Lower School Garden Lower School Music Studio McCoy Hall The Mugar Family Playground & Outdoor Learning Space Thompson Gymnasium & Campus Athletic Field
At the end of the school year all musicians are encouraged to share their talents with their families at a recital on campus. Each program highlights the accomplishments of emerging Lower School musicians playing onstage with accomplished Upper School musicians. It is an opportunity for families to celebrate the hard work of their own musician and to support the growth of all the enthusiastic musicians in the School community. The After School Music staff, of more than a dozen highly qualified musicians and educators, is hand-selected based on recommendations from the professional music community. Many hold graduate degrees in music performance or music education. Most importantly, the instructors have experience working with children.
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