Nearly all students from low‑income households
Data about students' economic need comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education.
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My mom always used to say (and still does) that school should be an extension of the home. The families of my kiddos here in Alaska take that to heart. The majority of people believe that a child's primary education should take place at home, in the community, and in nature, with the education they receive at school being a necessary supplement to such learning. That being said, my kiddos spend all their daylight hours (it gets dark early up here in Alaska) in school, in the same classroom, let's help make it a place they want to be!
My sixth-grade students will be spending not just one but three years in my classroom, they deserve a space that feels like home! In small villages such as the one I live and teach in, multi-grade classrooms are the norm. In my class I have sixth through eighth grade students for all subjects. This requires a lot of flexibility and creativity from both me as the teacher and from the 18 kiddos in my class. My kids need a space in which they can work independently and interdependently so that I can be providing the small group and one-on-one instruction that is vital in such an environment.
I am requesting a variety of flexible seating options as well as some fidgets and soft lighting to help make our classroom a home away from home for the 19 of us that will be spending so much of our day there.
About my class
My mom always used to say (and still does) that school should be an extension of the home. The families of my kiddos here in Alaska take that to heart. The majority of people believe that a child's primary education should take place at home, in the community, and in nature, with the education they receive at school being a necessary supplement to such learning. That being said, my kiddos spend all their daylight hours (it gets dark early up here in Alaska) in school, in the same classroom, let's help make it a place they want to be!
My sixth-grade students will be spending not just one but three years in my classroom, they deserve a space that feels like home! In small villages such as the one I live and teach in, multi-grade classrooms are the norm. In my class I have sixth through eighth grade students for all subjects. This requires a lot of flexibility and creativity from both me as the teacher and from the 18 kiddos in my class. My kids need a space in which they can work independently and interdependently so that I can be providing the small group and one-on-one instruction that is vital in such an environment.
I am requesting a variety of flexible seating options as well as some fidgets and soft lighting to help make our classroom a home away from home for the 19 of us that will be spending so much of our day there.