
Hózhó Academy Newsletter
September 30th - October 4th, 2024
Weekly Updates
Dear Hózhó families,
Thank you for all your support last week while we worked through the security matters.
As we wind down the first quarter, be sure to sign up for a conference with your child's teacher.
Please see the flyers below regarding picture retake day, homecoming activities and more!
If you have questions, please contact our front office at (505) 722-8922.
Important Dates
- October 3rd - Retake Picture Day
- October 10th - Early Start (7:45)/Early Release (1:15)
- October 11th - No School (Parent Teacher Conferences)
- October 14th - No School (Indigenous Peoples' Day)
- October 15th-19th - Homecoming Week
- October 25th - Hózhó Harvest Festival
Important Links
Art Highlight
Third grade is beginning their project on Roman art. In class, they have been learning about Roman history, Roman architecture, and about Pompeii and the disaster of the Mount Vesuvius eruption. In art class students get the choice of making a paper mosaic of Mount Vesuvius erupting, or of a Roman soldier, or of the aqueducts. This project will take three or four class periods to finish. There are no pictures yet but be on the lookout for pictures of their progress.
Counseling Connection
Click Here for K-8 Weekly Lesson Summary
Third Grade: Growth Mindset & Goal Setting
Your child is learning about the importance of practice and how it changes the brain. Third graders see how trying repeatedly and making mistakes help their brain form and strengthen connections so that their skills improve. Later in the unit, students create their own plans to get better at something they’ve chosen. Their plans describe how they’ll practice, as well as what they can do if they feel like they’re not making progress. For example, your child’s plan might include a different way to practice or the name of someone who could give them advice.
Why is it important? Research shows that children who learn the skills in this unit are more likely to:
Be better learners
Be more adaptable
Seek more challenge
Practice at Home
What to Look For: Notice and praise your child when you see them trying hard and making mistakes as they work on improving their skills for school, a hobby, or a personal interest. Your third grader may work longer than usual, even after making mistakes. They might also try different ways of practicing or ask for help with their learning. You can say, “Way to keep going. You’re helping your brain make connections.”
Practice: When your child has trouble learning a new skill even though they’re trying hard, help them think of ways to adjust their practice. For example, if your child has been using flashcards to learn math facts, you can suggest they make up a song or create a poster.
Discuss: Take turns describing how you learned something new. Focus on things you did to practice and the people and resources that helped you. For example, “I’ve been learning to be a better cook. I watch a video online, and then I try making the dish. It may not come out great, but then I think about what I’ll do differently, and I get a little better each time. Sometimes, I call Grandpa for help—he cooks a lot.”
Classical Corner
The liberal arts is a term you will likely hear circling around classical education. Simply put, they refer to the areas of study, established by ancient Greek and Roman academics that are critical to the formation of the whole student.
The word liberal originates from the Latin word for "free," while arts is also of Latin origin meaning "practiced habits." The liberal arts are studies meant to free its scholars from disorder, training them to build life habits of discipline and virtue, while cultivating their taste for beauty in pursuit of truth and goodness. They emphasize training in how to think and not what to think, so that the scholars can ask quality questions, developing true critical thinking skills and leading them towards knowledge and wisdom.
The liberal arts include...
Grammar
Logic
Rhetoric
Astronomy
Geometry
Music
Arithmetic
All of these arts are intentionally () towards the formation of the whole student; body, mind and soul/spirit. Next week's Classical Corner will dive into what it means to form the whole student!
Music of the Week
Ganz Kleine Nachtmusik/Serenade in C
You may have heard, but German researchers have discovered a "new" composition written by Mozart... over 200 years after his death! This piece of music was likely written in the mid-late 1760s (when Mozart as a teenager.) It has since been hidden in a library in Germany, not heard in nearly 250 years, and now, you can listen to it!
School Calendar
Hózhó Academy Charter School
Principal: Juliane Hillock principal@hozhoacademy.org
Email: office@hozhoacademy.org
Website: https://hozhoacademy.org/
Location: 515 Park Ave, Gallup, NM, USA
Phone: (505) 722-8922
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hozhoacademy
Twitter: @HozhoA