Ms. Murrells-Allaway (Ms. M or Mme M) works in the Bastion Library, M, T, W, Th. She invites us to be bold in our daily learning: love your library, love learning, love reading. "History is the stories we tell about the past." Thomas King
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Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Remembrance Day, Poppies at the Tower of London, England
More BBC pictures of ceramic artist Paul Cummins' work
Poppies at The Tower of London, entitled "Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red." The work's title is taken from the first line of a poem by an unknown World War I soldier, which begins: The blood swept lands and seas of red, / Where angels dare to tread / (Source)
How the poppies were made
The poem that inspired the title for Paul Cummins' work:
Written by an unknown soldier poet it reads:
“The blood swept lands and seas of red,
Where angels dare to tread.
As God cried a tear of pain as the angels fell,
Again and again.
As the tears of mine fell to the ground
To sleep with the flowers of red
As any be dead
My children see and work through fields of my
Own with corn and wheat,
Blessed by love so far from pain of my resting
Fields so far from my love.
It be time to put my hand up and end this pain
Of living hell. to see the people around me
Fall someone angel as the mist falls around
And the rain so thick with black thunder I hear
Over the clouds, to sleep forever and kiss
The flower of my people gone before time
To sleep and cry no more
I put my hand up and see the land of red,
This is my time to go over,
I may not come back
So sleep, kiss the boys for me”
Remembrance Day, 2014
Source: www.amlegionauxwi.org |
I'm still adjusting to a k-5 age group and found many of my Diigo bookmarked Remembrance Day online resources too scary and possibly troubling for our young audience. The heartwarming "Halifax Seaport Farmers' Market Flash Mob" (4:42) below, however, is a great spring board for discussion.
For more resources try Veteran's Affairs Canada video gallery
Here are eleven stories by Canadian Aboriginals from The Memory Project

Murray Mackenzie "Chief" Whetung
Teacher Michael McKay, Eaglesham, Northern Alberta, gets students to experience trench building and then sleeping in their dirt hole over night. The below clip is from 2009, but McKay and his school are on their eighth year of this experiential learning Nov., 2014.
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Dewey Decimal Rap by Scooter Hayes, and "Gotta Keep Reading" by Ocoee Middle School
Bastion students have been loving these two songs about loving to read and learning and about the Dewey Decimal System (created by Melvil Dewey). I will list the Youtube clips below, so you can play it over and over (!) without the side bars coming up. Sometimes the clips run an ad that you can skip after 3-5 seconds. As this post gets "older" search for the song names above in the blogger search window to get to them easily in this blog.
Scooter Hayes' Dewey Decimal Rap
Ocoee Middle School, "Gotta Keep Reading"
Scooter Hayes' Dewey Decimal Rap
Ocoee Middle School, "Gotta Keep Reading"
Happy learning to all, Ms. Murrells-Allaway
Thursday, October 30, 2014
Amazing Successes for our Bastion Learning Commons (AKA Library)
Congratulations Bastion! We made over $2100 at the Festival du livre and thus we were able to save $850 towards our $1200 purchase of great French books. A reminder that the English Book Fair is the first week of December. Thank you to parents Ravonne Foulger, Tanja Hamilton, Mae Dodge and son Isaac for their amazing help. We will need more volunteers for the next Book Fair, so please contact me, teacher-librarian Shannon Murrells-Allaway if you can assist.
Family Library Day is up and running every Wed. after school til 2:45pm. Thank you Theda Gyimesi for continuing this great tradition. Families can sign out up to five extra books, read with their children, and continue to build our reading culture.
"200 Nights of Reading" started Oct 28th thank you to the amazing help of parent Ravonne Foulger. Her design adjustment and photocopy hours are much appreciated. Drop off completed sheets to the "200 Nights of Reading" drop box in the learning commons. We will celebrate the first 100 nights with book marks, and 200 nights with a new book choice for your household!
Warm wishes and happy reading to all, Shannon Murrells-Allaway
“The more that you read, the more things you will know. The more you learn, the more places you’ll go.”— Dr. Seuss, “I Can Read With My Eyes Shut!”
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Tuesday, October 21, 2014
Mme Jesse's Class is Studying Sunflowers/Tournesols
Tournesol/sunflower seed germination (0:35):
A teacher's potted tournesol/sunflower growth and bloom (0:44):
The tournesol/sunflower head blooming (1:06):
A teacher's potted tournesol/sunflower growth and bloom (0:44):
The tournesol/sunflower head blooming (1:06):
Monday, October 6, 2014
Roderick Haig-Brown Salmon Run Field Trips Begin ...
Oct 7th, a few classes head west to the Roderick Haig-Brown Park to view the salmon run - a "dominant year."
" Every fourth year is a “dominant” salmon run, with millions of fish to be seen (2014 and 2018 will be dominant runs). The Adams River Salmon Society coordinate the celebration known as the “Salute to the Sockeye” during the dominant years. The following years are “sub-dominant” runs of sockeye: 2015, 2019. These years often have substantial returns of sockeye and offer excellent viewing opportunities. During the last three weeks of October in years where there isn’t a “dominant” or “sub-dominant” return, a small number of salmon begin their spawning cycle. The best place to view spawning salmon will be on the new viewing platform approximatley 300m west of the the parking lot." Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
Video footage by impressed tourists:
" Every fourth year is a “dominant” salmon run, with millions of fish to be seen (2014 and 2018 will be dominant runs). The Adams River Salmon Society coordinate the celebration known as the “Salute to the Sockeye” during the dominant years. The following years are “sub-dominant” runs of sockeye: 2015, 2019. These years often have substantial returns of sockeye and offer excellent viewing opportunities. During the last three weeks of October in years where there isn’t a “dominant” or “sub-dominant” return, a small number of salmon begin their spawning cycle. The best place to view spawning salmon will be on the new viewing platform approximatley 300m west of the the parking lot." Roderick Haig-Brown Provincial Park
Video footage by impressed tourists:
And get more great information from the Adams River Salmon Society
A salmon Haiku for you - as poetry simply makes a day richer!
Source: http://www.fauntleroywatershed.org/education/lessonplans/salmon_activities_haiku.pdf |
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