Headlines...News
from David Sullivan
It is official�Breakwater is now a PreK-Middle School. On Monday
the Breakwater Board of Trustees approved a middle level program to
grade 8. I have discovered the germination a Breakwater middle level
program began decades ago and has been a long-time desire of many
parents. I am also happy to announce an anonymous gift of $75,000
which will be used to support the middle program and other
initiatives. This will enable us to renovate the lower level of the
Jessie Building where the middle level program will be housed.
Breakwater has successfully piloted a very innovative middle
level program for the past two years, led by Sari Lindauer, which is
based on the best and latest research about early adolescent
learners. The curriculum has an integrated approach to learning in
which students pursue themes through project-based experiential
learning. The learning expeditions, featured in our E6 pilot
program, encourage inquiry, academic challenge, skill building, and
the development of vital concepts. This curriculum is what inspired
the foundation of the middle program design.
The middle school years are critical developmentally not only for
setting the stage for success in high school, but for the nascent
formation of adulthood from childhood. BWS has done very well
preparing children for middle school, however the clay is still not
dry at the end of fifth grade. A well-designed middle level program,
consistent with Breakwater's mission and philosophy, will carry the
good work begun in pre-kindergarten and developed through the
elementary years through to it's culmination in eighth grade. Given
the tremendous physical, intellectual, emotional, and cognitive
changes young adolescents experience within the few short years of
middle school and the shortage of thoughtful schooling options that
address the needs resulting from such rapid growth, we are well
positioned to offer the gentle and considered hand of BWS to guide
young people through this stage of life. With high academic
expectations, close relationships with adults who understand this
stage of development, a supportive and humane learning environment,
a curriculum that caters to the developmental age of the students,
and opportunities for students to challenge themselves, BWS will
offer an exemplary program for middle level students.
The search for identity is the developmental imperative for
middle level students and completes the construction of a strong
foundation for life-long learning. Eighth graders will leave BWS
with a solid sense of their core identity - who they are as humans,
what their potential is as adults - and with the independence,
courage, and volition to authentically be the person they are.
This is an exciting new chapter in Breakwater�s history and I am
thrilled to be a part of it. Please visit our website and watch for
future updates about the middle program and join me in celebrating
this milestone at Breakwater School.
For more information, click here!
News from the
Middle!
Our second expedition has been all about
water!
For the past six and a half weeks the E6 Middle schoolers have
been immersed in a water study that has included pondering
both the original source of Earth�s water and its atomic
structure. Could it be that water found its way here at a rate of
two gallons a year from thousands of comets and space debris, as one
theory goes? Did the incredible hydrogen bond make life on earth
possible?
Students explored these questions and tested water�s unique
properties including its ability to shrink as it freezes until it is
4 degrees Celsius, when it miraculously begins expanding to make
ice, snow, and frost. We also plotted the transformation of beaches
and tributaries through the action of water, and have been going out
into the community to discover macroinvertebrates in ponds and their
connection to an assessment of water quality. Just this week
students have been learning about the Portland Watershed and our
water delivery infrastructure. We got many answers to the
questions we asked when we visited the Portland Water District
and were given a challenge: help make the public aware of Portland
Water District's greatest and most costly problem. To find out
what this problem is, keep your eyes on the walls near the
library in the weeks ahead. Posters may give a clue. We all need
your help to stop a terrible waste!
Still to come are an exploration of the issues of water
privatization, the bottled water industry, and water as a right and
necessity for all. Student slideshows will be on display in January
for all to see.
In other E6 News...
� In addition to our water theme, our students took on the
task of planting, and helping others plant, 500 tulips to help
support breast cancer research. Straw now covers two tightly planted
beds at the corner of Capisic and Brighton Avenue and right by the
Breakwater sign in front of the Jessie Building.
� Multicultural Week will find the Middle schoolers in classrooms
helping and learning along with the younger students, as well as
taking part in Multicultural Week's evening event.
~ Sari Lindauer
Alumni Feature:
Lilias Bonechi, Class of 1993
"For most kids, this is the first place you spend a lot of time
that's not 'home' " mused Lilias Bonechi over hot chocolate one
afternoon recently. "Breakwater offers a lot of stability for
a lot of kids - it's a very safe place."
Ms. Bonechi, known as Lil to friends and family, graduated from
Breakwater almost 15 years ago. She attended Waynflete
School in Portland during her middle and high school years and
graduated from Bard College with a major in sociology and a focus in
human rights. She earned her master's degree from the
Bard Master of Arts in Teaching program and followed that with
internships for NetAid and 60 Cycle Media, both in New
York City.
Last summer Lil was Camp Director for The Game of Village in New
Boston, New Hampshire. This experience, designed for middle
school-aged students, helps young people learn about human behavior
and how societies are organized by working in teams to create their
own society in a fictional village. In August Lilias moved
back to Maine to work as a legal assistant and recently has applied
to several law schools.
"At Breakwater I was surrounded by people who really wanted
to learn," Lilias said when asked what she remembered about her
experience here, "Teachers learned alongside students and it was
very important to be a part of that. It gave me
self-confidence and helped me learn to communicate well as part of a
team. I learned to have honest, two-way conversations with my
teachers. No one ever talked down to me because I was a kid."
"Once I had experienced Breakwater I didn't want to leave that
environment so I chose schools that shared those
attributes. Small schools, that encouraged and celebrated
differences and valued creativity. Breakwater is a foundation for
all these things."
Most recently this talented BWS graduate has been volunteering
two afternoons a week in our library. Welcome home,
Lilias!
To be added to our mailing list or share your stories call Cheryl
Hart at extension 239 or Kathy Damon at extension 223, or provide
your information here.
Loy Kratong
Celebration
Lights in the foyer outside Breakwater's kindergarten classrooms
were turned off. The subdued lighting created a hush among the
children as they brought their lotus flower kratongs to the river,
stretched out blue and papery down the hallway. The children sat
beside the river, contemplating their thankfulness for clean water
in our lives, just as children and adults halfway around the world,
in Thailand, are doing at this time of year. Candles, sitting in the
center of fresh rose petals on each kratong, were lit. The little
boats were gently placed into the �rivers,� their glow lighting the
faces of the kindergarten students and their guests, the first and
second graders, who had come to share this special celebration. To
close the ceremony, Than Tiparos and his parents, Dtaw and
Katie, spontaneously led us in a song, which the children are
learning in the Thai language. It was a magical moment, sure to be a
highlight in our month-long study of Thailand.
Inside the classrooms, kindergarteners had just finished cooking
Thai soup, which they offered to their guests and enjoyed
themselves. The Loy Kratong Festival takes place at the end of the
rainy season, during the full moon in October or November. Lotus
shaped baskets, made of banana leaves, are set afloat with candles
and incense � and with gratitude for the crucial role of water in
life. Wishes are made for the coming year.
Other signs of Thailand have begun appearing in the classrooms as
we immerse ourselves in a study of this fascinating land. Mr. Jim�s
room is sprouting lush greenery in its new role as a Thai nature
preserve, complete with snakes, tigers, and monkeys � a most popular
place at our morning Choice Time! Lovely artifacts, on loan from
parents, are being displayed in both rooms. Thai flags are
accumulating as children make them, noticing in the process, some
similarity to our own USA flag. Once again, our multicultural study
is transporting us all to new and interesting places while helping
us to appreciate and understand our own corner of the world.
~ Linda Webb and Jim Kingsley
Multicultural
Week is Coming!
Multicultural Travel Week will be happening at Breakwater
Monday-Thursday, December 10-13. This event is part of of
each grade level�s study of a particular country and is a way to
share what we�ve learned with the rest of the school. MC
Week has a long-standing tradition of enthusiastic involvement
by the entire Breakwater community.
Looking for ways to be part of the excitement? Many families help
with tasks that can be done at home or on the run � cutting things
out, food preparation, assembling materials, shopping, etc. or they
volunteer at the school during Multicultural Week itself. Please
check with your child�s teacher, if you aren�t already involved, to
see how you can help. If you have artifacts from the countries we�re
studying and would be willing to lend them, please speak to the
classroom teachers �covering� that country. They are:
Norway and Sweden � Marti Blair and
Cheryl Hart � 5th gr. Brazil � Tom
Fisher, Kelley Jones, Peter Bridgford � 3rd/4th gr.
Kenya � Alex Johnston, Sarah Adams,
Shana Haines, Marjorie Antich � 1st/2nd gr.
Thailand � Linda Webb, Jim Kingsley
�Kindergarten
Please try NOT to schedule any appointments for your child(ren)
Monday-Thursday between 8:30-10:30 a.m. during this special week.
Our MC Week performance will be Thursday, Dec. 13th at 6:00 p.m. in
the Dan, with dress rehearsal the same day at 11:00 a.m., also in
the Dan.
Learning History
by Living It
Learning is most effective when children are actively involved
and invested in what they are studying. Drama, art, music, and
debate have been part of our most recent fifth grade social studies
focus, "American Freedoms and Symbols." Our students have been
learning about life in the American colonies just before and just
after the American Revolution, including what it might have been
like to live in a community divided about remaining loyal to
England. We�ve learned about our country�s Founders and memorized
the beginning of the Declaration of Independence and the Pledge of
Allegiance, which of course came later in our history. We learned
the National Anthem in music class and shared this stirring song
with the entire school at Friday Morning Meeting.
Each student took a role as one of the participants in the
Constitutional Convention and learned about his or her �character.�
Did you know, for example, that Ben Franklin frequently fell asleep
during the Convention or that some of the participants had a bet
going about whether one of them could make George Washington laugh?
Last week we staged our own Convention and debated an issue faced by
the Founders: states' rights vs. a strong national government. We
made posters describing ourselves, complete with a self-portrait
developed in art class, and caucused with like-minded delegates to
prepare for our debate, which included discussion of the Virginia
Plan, the New Jersey Plan, the Hamilton Plan, and the Great
Compromise.
This week we�ve been learning about the Bill of Rights with a
focus on the First Amendment. We�ve studied some landmark cases that
define freedoms protected by the First Amendment and in pairs
presented these cases to our own Supreme Court. With fifth graders
sitting as Justices we�ve listened to and closely questioned the
presenting �attorneys� and then rendered our decisions. In some
cases we were surprised to learn the real Court�s decisions differed
from our own!
~ Marti Blair and Cheryl Hart
A Visit from
Chef Harry
Chef Harry did not begin his professional life with the goal
of becoming a chef and television personality. He graduated from
college with a degree in Economics and a Masters in Accounting.
After being the CEO of a successful scrap metal recycling company,
he sold the company and moved to Florida with his family. While in
Florida, Chef Harry wrote his first cook book, �Easygoing
Entertaining.� With the help of his wife, his second book, �Harry�s
Wild About You Cookbook!� was a big hit! Shortly thereafter, Chef
Harry became a regular on NBC�s Today Show.
On Monday, Chef Harry came to visit 3/4 grade Science at
Breakwater School! Overall, it was a success, with everyone learning
a lot about cooking and eating right!
"I learned that watermelon is 92% water." Henry Coolidge, 3rd
grade "My favorite part was when I got the watermelon ice cream.
It was delicious!" G Hannelius, 3rd grade "I learned the safest
way to use a knife" Pua DeGandis, 4th grade "One day I would
like to be a television chef like you" Eammon Dundon, 4th grade
"I learned that by eating healthy you can be happy" Emily
taylor, 4rd grade "I hope for my future to become a famous
athlete so I will eat healthy" Brandon Ameglio, 3rd
grade
Need a Good
Book?
Come see what's up in the Breakwater School library!
This fall classes, teachers, and parents have been making
good use of the many wonderful books and resources available
in our library.
We have recently added many new books that teachers and
students will use in the next several weeks as they study
cultures from other parts of the world. Books from our library play
an important role in conveying important information during thematic
studies, in this case our preparation for Multicultural Week, a
rich, rewarding experience for all those who participate.
We have had many requests and suggestions for new books that
could be added to our current collection. Students, parents, or
library friend s can contribute to this growth by donating a
book to the library. This gift can be a book of one�s
choosing or one from our school �wish list.�
Currently, we are displaying �caring and sharing� books on our
library display table. This effort is in conjunction with our �Toys
for Tots� project now in progress. By reading books that are related
to this particular topic, we can enrich and make even more
meaningful the experience of helping others.
Please stop by to visit. Our desire is to make the Breakwater
Library a welcoming space for all to enjoy.
~ Connie Smith and Kelley Pratt, Library Coordinators
News Briefs
Science Challenge #2 is just around
the corner! Design and construct a cylinder racer car that
can travel forward at least 1 meter. Can you make the cylinder racer
that will go up or down a 1m hill or complete a 26-meter marathon?
If you have misplaced the instructions for this Challenge that
came home with your child, you can find an extra copy on the
bulletin board outside Ms. Dolan's classroom! Due date is December
5th!
The Breakwater Parent Association Presents: Frogtown
Mountain Puppeteers! - January 5, 2008 at 10:30 in the
Dan (Gymnasium) - Details coming soon!
Community
Happenings
The Breakwater Community includes many talented performing and
visual artists. We are happy to include listings of performances and
arts events in upcoming issues of Newsbreak. If you have a posting,
please send it to community@Breakwaterschool.org.
Open Studio - 33 Brentwood Street, Portland
[around the corner from Pat's Meat market] on Sat Dec. 1st, 3-7 pm
and beyond. All are welcome. There will be small drawings and prints
by Stephen Burt (father of Atticus and Quilla), sterling and gold
jewelry by Martha Whitener and paintings, prints and cards by Roy
Germon and Leticia Plate. Wine, olives, and good cheer will be
abundant so please come!
Art Show - Sean Hathaway (father of Connor) is
having an art show at Elizabeth & Main Gallery (238 Main Street
in Gorham). The opening is Saturday, Dec. 1st, with a
reception from 5pm-7pm. The art show will remain up until Dec. 29th,
so there will be plenty of time to go and enjoy the show!
Music Shows - Stephanie Hayward, our very own
music specialist, will be performing the following dates &
times:
- 12/6 Blue Mermaid (Portsmouth, NH) 8pm
- 12/15 Dogfish (Free St, Portland) 7pm-9pm
- 12/20 North Star Cafe (Portland)
7:30pm-8:15pm
Kudos
Special thanks to Lorie and Tod Dana for
donating new chairs from Asia West for David
Sullivan's office.
Thanks to Maddy Corson, grandmother to Spencer
Barton for donating the book The Little Old Lady Who Was Not
Afraid of Anything by Linda Williams; Amy and Whit
Ford for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by
J. K. Rowling; and Laura Neuman, Portland Trails,
for Last Child in the Woods:Saving our Children from Nature
Deficit Disorder by Richard Louv to the Breakwater Library.
|