GSIS 10 Year Anniversary Yearbook: Memories | Page 61

1. Jeremi Yoo, Taegyu Brad Uhm, Rikumu Shigeta, and Kevin Youm complete a review set about vectors together. Students in geometry class learned topics ranging from graphing parabolas to calculating the volume of spheres. 2. Jeffer Ward highlights the main points of an article to help him write a succinct summary of it. Lower Secondary English students consistently practiced how to summarize large texts quickly and accurately. 3. Jaime Suh listens to the teacher lecture about the Chinese Communist Revolution. Students were expected to take notes in their individual Google documents during class. 4. Ekagra Tomar completes a worksheet about adding fractions. Students practiced doing basic calculations without relying on a calculator. 5. Mrs. Smith listens to Sally Kwon, Luke Won, and Monica Park reflect on the first couple of chapters of ‘The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle’. Students completed a bell-ringer at the beginning of every class to refresh their memory on the assigned readings. 6. Navodit Maheshwari presents the poster his group made about the term “point of view.” For the bell ringer activity, the students created posters explaining literary concepts such as “plot” and “theme” in their own words. 7. Ghayeon Kim reviews the first chapter of ‘The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle’ to complete the assigned class activity. The objective was to select and analyze quotes from the first and second chapter that foreshadow future events. 8. Ms. Chey shows Ethan Park how to solve an algebra problem. Lower Secondary math students had to write all of their working processes to receive full marks. 7 8 0fr1o6m r 2 5 h 1 p 20 ng MReacteiving helthe teache i 6 5 2013 ry HRiessetaroch 2011 2012 lish ween stories ERneagding Hallo 2010 h Mating each Helper out ienwork oth th hom ma Jeremy Kim and Hansol Lee MYP English 7 GSIS Yearbook-LSS_Part 2.indd 61 English Language and Literature is driven by student growth in a way that extends beyond the improvement of the English language. This course motivates students to develop as a person by learning to work with others and gaining confidence in themselves. For the English Language and Literature 7, many students felt that group projects were most enjoyable in their class. Sana Desai, seventh-grader, said, “I like how we do several activities in this class. We usually do group work.” She felt that presentations were the most fun type of group work “because you get to cooperate with other people and Monag tJuhmp 2014 MaAtskhing s ion quest The L present something we know to the class.” Julie Lee, in seventh grade, explained that students were provided with the opportunity “to present topics” and “think about what we’re actually going to do in the next unit.” Julie also expressed that she liked group presentations, “because we get to get more ideas from it and we also cooperate; we get to learn things we don’t know from other people.” Group presentations are a way for students to learn how to build team chemistry and develop their ability to work with one another. Brendan Hodge, an eighth-grader, explained it as an opportunity to “learn [how] to express ourselves.” Reflecting back on the past 10 years, English has always been a course thriving through various activities. In 2012, seventh-grade y Essa h s i l Eng writ students sat in a circle during the month of October, sharing scary stories in that dark that they had written. The students only had one light to illuminate the room to provide the creepy atmosphere for the reading. In 2013, students divided difficult words to divide their syllables using a clapping exercise. In this exercise, a clap was executed at the end of each syllable as the students spoke the word. During the 2014- 2015 school year, the English classes strongly encouraged reading by cutting out parts of class for silent reading and presenting the Accelerated Reader (AR) award to students who achieved their personal reading goals. In 2016, seventh-graders exercised open-mindedness in the areas of attitude, social beliefs, and point of views through the book, “The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle”. By writing journals while role playing as people of Doyle’s time, students discussed how concepts, like the job availability of men and women, affect daily life today. 61 4/17/16 5:55 PM