Elementary School Essay

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    Handwriting everyone uses it, however, some don’t use it very well. Should Elementary schools teach handwriting? Yes, because many people use it today, but some peoples writing is unreadable. There are three main reasons why Elementary schools should teach handwriting. One, you use it in everyday life, secondly you fill out job applications and other legal matters, thirdly people need to be able to read your writing. Elementary schools should teach handwriting because you use it in everyday life. You have

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    Changing the Tide Think back to elementary school, when dividing in math class was hard. Staring at the numbers at the paper and forgetting the order of steps in the dividing process. Even when trying their best, many young students still struggle with not understanding the material. The struggle was normally noticed and, as a result, the teacher would send out extra homework and insist “practice makes perfect.” The thought was that giving students homework would give them the additional practice

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    volunteering at Ruth Fyfe Elementary School. After contacting the school’s administration I was assigned to 3 different classes. My first challenge was to work with 3rd graders, in my first assigned class, and help them with their multiplication. I also had to help two other different 4th grade classes. I had to be extremely outgoing for students to listen. I was a personal tutor for mere minutes because there were many students to give my attention to. Ruth Fyfe is an elementary on W Bonanza Rd, pretty

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    to develop more intricate personalities that we become known to be like. This is the time that we finish our elementary lives, and get ready to begin our middle school and later high school lives. It soon came time for me to begin my final years of elementary school, and after the summer ended it was time for fourth grade. Fourth grade has to be one of the oddest years of elementary school, and that is because my teacher, Mrs. Orlik, was getting close to having a baby. She taught the class for

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    Working with many diverse individuals including but not limited to, elementary students, high school students, and college students has allowed me to socially engage with parents, administrators, teachers, and coworkers. I have found it easier to build relationships with those who come from a similar background and are bilingual in Spanish. On the other hand, it can be a challenge to build relationships with those who do not open up with me. For instance, I currently serve as an AmeriCorps member

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    It is very hard to believe that each year more than a thousand of suspensions are issued to elementary school children throughout the St. Louis area for infractions ranging from throwing a chair to talking back. Among those that are disciplined go as low as preschoolers for misbehaving during nap time. Kindergartners are biting one another and second graders are defiant. This is typical behavior for adolescents, I remember as a young adolescent trying to express myself when my teacher directed

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    Being in elementary school is different from any other schools you will go attend. Being in school at that time will be a different experience. I know it was a completely different experience for me throughout my years when I was in elementary school. My years were simple and easy to deal with. At the time I had a lot of friends as a kid when I was in elementary school but at certain points it was hard to deal with in elementary school. Especially when an accident happened to me when me and my brother

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    below proficient in reading and 65.7% in math. In order to improve educational standards and increase student achievement, Congress passed the No Child Left Behind Act (also known as the Elementary and Secondary Education Act) in 2002. Designed to increase the role of the federal government in education, it holds schools accountable based on how students perform on standardized tests. Statistics show that the average student completes about 110-115 mandatory, standardized tests between pre-kindergarten

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    demographics, Lacy Elementary School is a 60-year-old neighborhood school. Originally built to accommodate 500 students, the school is now over capacity, reaching a high enrollment of 650 students. Located in an urban school district, a majority of the students qualify for the federal breakfast and lunch program. The district has recently experienced a new rezoning, and in result there are buses now bringing 200 students from the surrounding neighborhoods to the school. Lacy Elementary opens its’ doors

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    Maple Hills Elementary School (MHES), a K-8 school in a rural farming community in the Midwest, is facing a changing landscape involving culture, language, and traditional approaches to special education. Historically, the community was predominately White, with German and English heritage, native English speakers, and identify as Protestant Christians dating back generations. However, through two recent waves of immigration influx, the community’s diversity has broadened. The first wave brought

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