The Wednesday Weekly - January 31, 2024

Parent and Co-Chair of the Black History Month Planning Committee, Tre Johnson, helps 107 get ready for #BHM2024

Dear PS 107 Families, 

Today is the day that your child’s first report card of the school year will be “distributed” to their New York City Schools Account (NYCSA)! As noted in last week’s Wednesday Weekly, please follow these steps to access your child’s report card (and if you have any difficulty, reach out to Parent Coordinator Nadia Benlarbi at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov): 

  • Go to https://www.schoolsaccount.nyc/ and sign in with your credentials. 

  • Choose the child whose report card you are looking for

  • Click “My Student”

  • Click “Grades”

  • On that page, you will see an icon that says “Report Card”

  • This should take you to another page where you’ll again click “Report Card,” and your child’s report card will download as a PDF. 

Also, as noted in last week’s Wednesday Weekly, the NYCSA system can be glitchy, and it sometimes takes a bit longer than we expect for your child’s report card to migrate to their account. If you don’t see their report card on the 31st, try again 24 hours later. Another common problem we have experienced is report card comments not migrating to NYCSA. If you don’t see comments, that is a glitch. All teachers have written comments that will accompany report cards. If you continue to have problems seeing your child’s complete report card by Friday, February 2nd, please reach out to Nadia Benlarbi. If you need a hard copy of your child’s report card and do not have access to a printer, please also reach out to Nadia, and she will print one out for you. Note that in this digital age, we are not printing report cards schoolwide so that we can save some trees!

Though report cards are coming out today, PS 107 will not hold our next Parent-Teacher Conferences until Thursday, March 7th. It was a deliberate decision by our School Leadership Team (SLT) to separate report card distribution from Parent-Teachers Conferences, as both teachers and parents found that, when they were connected, conferences tended to be mostly about what was on the report card rather than a more comprehensive discussion about student progress. Therefore, unless you have very serious concerns about what you see on your child’s report card, please wait until the March conferences to meet with your child’s teacher. The intention is not to have all parents schedule a third conference when report cards are released. Teacher comments are also quite comprehensive, and we hope that they will provide you with a full picture of how your child is doing at the midpoint of the school year. 

I also encourage you not to get too stuck on number grades. The comments your child’s teacher has written will provide far more information than any number can, though I understand that numbers feel straightforward, and we tend to gravitate towards them. We have a grading policy that is holistic and takes into account multiple measures —  including formal and informal assessments, teacher review of exit tickets and daily student work, and teacher observations — when assigning grades. 

PROMOTION-IN-DOUBT PROCESS

Though we are only halfway through the school year, this is the time of year when schools begin to think about next year. Teachers have been asked to identify students who may be at risk of not meeting promotional criteria by the end of the year and notify parents that their child’s promotion is “in doubt.” If your child’s promotion to the next grade is in doubt, you will hear from your child’s teacher next week, and you can expect a formal letter to come home the week of February 12th with additional details. Please note that this does not mean that your child will automatically be retained in their current grade. Schools are required to provide an early warning that children are at-risk for being retained. We then provide even more support to your child and make the decision about grade retention in collaboration with you in early June. In general, our experience shows that the majority of students who are identified as “promotion-in-doubt” in January make enough progress to be promoted to the next grade by June. 

WELCOME COACH STEPHANIE!

We have a new Asphalt Green Recess Coach! Please welcome Stephanie Rocco to the PS 107 community. Stephanie has extensive experience working with children and is thrilled to join our school. This week, Stephanie has started visiting our classes to introduce herself and get ideas from our students about what kinds of games they would like to see happening at recess. Welcome to PS 107, Coach Stephanie! 

Speaking of recess, our recess partner, Asphalt Green, is bringing Rock’N’Recess to PS 107 this Friday, February 2nd! Several coaches will be joining Coach Stephanie to set up multiple games and activities in the Big Yard that they’ll run during all recess periods. It should be a great time for everyone!

POKEMON + OTHER TRADING CARDS

Please be reminded that Pokemon and other trading cards are not permitted in school. Teachers may make occasional exceptions for special classroom activities, but cards should not be brought to lunch and/or recess. Please see our Parent/Caregiver Handbook, page 18, for this information about this policy. 

NEW YEARS FEEDBACK

Finally, thank you to the many families who responded to our request for New Years’ feedback! I will be addressing the major patterns of feedback in the next issue of the Wednesday Weekly. Items that are a bit more complicated or related to policies that are contractual will be discussed at upcoming School Leadership Team meetings and shared with the community later this year. 

BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Black History Month begins tomorrow, February 1st! Stay tuned for a series of special events and activities organized by our parent and staff DEI Teams. First up, on Friday, February 2nd, we encourage the PS 107 community to wear red, black, and green shirts, hats, bandanas, and flags. These colors represent the pan-African movement (see below for additional details). A BIG thank you in advance to our parent Black History Month planning team: Tre Johnson and Lekan Ayanbule (co-leads) and Ben Saunders, Anais Casimir, Bajun Riddick, and Crystal Park

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna




The Wednesday Weekly - January 24, 2024

Dear PS 107 Families, 

This past week was such a special one at PS 107, showcasing not only the incredible diversity of our school and the many ways in which we identify, but also the connections that we all share. Thank you for joining us for Thursday’s and Friday’s Family Mornings! It was wonderful walking through classrooms and seeing so many families engaged in our schoolwide projects – making identity webs and paper chains with their children. The week was capped off by Saturday’s Heritage Day, which was a beautiful celebration of the many cultures and backgrounds of our school community. Enormous thanks to parent Brad Allen,organizer extraordinaire, as well as the many, many volunteers who hosted rooms and helped with logistics. Our core values of Curiosity, Compassion, and Community were on full display, and I feel so grateful to be part of this amazing school community. 

Coming Soon: Report Cards!

Next Wednesday, January 31st, your child’s first report card will be available on their New York City Schools Account (NYCSA). Please be sure that you know how to log in to your child’s account, and if you need any assistance, please reach out to Nadia Benlarbi at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov. You will follow these steps to find your child’s report card: 

  • Go to https://www.schoolsaccount.nyc/ and sign in with your credentials. 

  • Choose the child whose report card you are looking for

  • Click “My Student”

  • Click “Grades”

  • On that page, you will see an icon that says “Report Card”

  • This should take you to another page where you’ll again click “Report Card,” and your child’s report card will download as a PDF. 

Please be aware that the NYCSA system can be glitchy, and it sometimes takes a bit longer than we expect for your child’s report card to migrate to their account. If you don’t see their report card on the 31st, try again 24 hours later. Another common problem we have experienced is report card comments not migrating to NYCSA. If you don’t see comments, that is a glitch. All teachers have written comments that will accompany report cards. If you continue to have problems seeing your child’s complete report card by Friday, February 2nd, please reach out to Nadia Benlarbi. If you need a hard copy of your child’s report card and do not have access to a printer, please also reach out to Nadia, and she will print one out for you. Note that in this digital age, we are not printing report cards schoolwide so that we can save some trees!

Finally, please take a look at PS 107’s Grading Policy in advance of report cards coming out so that you can better understand how teachers determine grades for your child. 

Reading and Math Screening Assessments Available on NYCSA

As noted in an earlier issue of the Wednesday Weekly, along with all New York City Public Schools, PS 107 administers academic screeners in reading and mathematics three times a year. While we have considered these to be internal documents because educator-specific knowledge about reading and math skills is needed to understand the results, we have recently learned that the overall results are now being shared on your child’s NYCSA, on the “Reading and Math Progress” tab. A few words of caution when you review these results: 

  • These are but one measure of student skills. Your child’s report card grades in reading and math, which take into account multiple data points, are much more accurate measures of their skill levels. 

  • In Kindergarten through grade 2, foundational literacy and math skills are being assessed with Acadience Learning benchmark assessments. These are timed assessments, which can impact student performance. 

  • In grades 3-5, reading and math skills are being assessed with MAP Growth. These assessments are long and labor-intensive, with some children taking a few hours to complete them. They are also computer-based and teachers have reported that children have not yet encountered some of the skills being assessed. In some cases, teachers did not feel that they were accurate reflections of children’s skills. 

Teachers communicate to students that these assessments are low stakes, and they should not feel stress or anxiety about taking them. There is no preparation they can or should be doing before taking them. Once again, they are but one data point that teachers use to measure student progress and adjust teaching to meet student needs. If you have questions about your child’s screener results, please plan to ask them during Parent-Teacher Conferences, which will be held next on March 7th.  

Covid Cases are Up

Last but not least, as you may have noticed, there has been a definite uptick in Covid cases since the holiday break. Per NYCPS policy, we no longer report positive cases to the classroom or to the school community. We also no longer send home Covid tests when we know of a positive case in a class. We do supply free Covid tests to families! There is a large bin of tests in the entryway of PS 107. If you need tests for your family, please feel free to pick some up anytime! In addition to Covid cases being on the rise, so are all other illnesses, including the flu, strep throat, stomach viruses, and the common cold. Please keep your children home when they are sick, especially when they have a fever. Children should be fever-free for 24 hours before returning to school. 

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - January 17, 2024

Dear PS 107 Families, 

It was great to see so many Kindergarten, 1st, and 2nd grade families at 107 this morning for a parent workshop on how we teach math and ways to support your child at home! Next week, on Wednesday, January 24th, 8:45-10 am, in the Cafeteria (in-person only), we’ll have the same workshop, but for parents of 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade students. Please join us if you can. Register here!

We are also looking forward to hosting all of you at our January Family Mornings this week! Fifty percent of families will come on Thursday morning, 1/18, 8:20-9:10 am, and 50% of families will come on Friday morning, 1/19, 8:20-9:10 am. Please plan to enter the building at your child’s usual point of entry with your child. If you are entering without your child, please be prepared to show PS 107 staff your identification. 

Since we returned from the holiday break, PS 107 staff and students have been learning about who they are – what makes up their identity. These can be visible identity markers such as approximate age, gender identity, race; or invisible identity markers such as values, interests, religious identity, national identity, family structure, and more. Our work on identity is based on the Learning for Justice Social Justice Standards, of which there are specific standards about identity. Our staff Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Team put together a series of lessons for all classrooms on this topic.  

We believe strongly in the importance of fostering a positive sense of self, based on students’ multifaceted identities; developing respect and understanding for those who may identify differently; and creating learning environments that are “identity-safe.” According to a recent report entitled Creating Identity Safe Schools and Classrooms by Laura E. Hernandez and Linda Darling Hammond, “In using identity-safe teaching and learning practices, educators promote student achievement and attachments to school by creating a genuine sense of belonging and membership for each student.” 

Whether you visit your child’s classroom on Thursday or Friday morning this week, you will be taking part in a schoolwide activity that will help us to celebrate our students' many different ways of identifying. On both mornings, please also be sure to visit our No Place for Hate Button, Bracelet, and Bake Sale, which is being run by the 3rd and 4th grade members of our Kindness Club along with our parent Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Team. The sale(s) will be located at all entry points to the school and will run from 8:10 to 8:30 am and again from 9:05 to 9:20 am. All proceeds will go to our sister school, PS 124, located on 14th Street and 4th Avenue. A very special thank you to parents Rebecca Cetta and Christine Canedo-Pullan for helping us to put all of the pieces together to make this sale a success!

We look forward to seeing you in the building tomorrow and Friday!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - January 10, 2024

Dear PS 107 Families, 

It’s been a wonderful week here at PS 107, with me and Ms Rinah able to spend lots of time in classrooms. We’ve focused a lot of our classroom visits on observing our new literacy curriculum, Wit + Wisdom, in action, along with ensuring that we’re giving students solid foundational literacy skills with our phonics curriculum, IMSE OG+ (formerly known as Recipe for Reading), and our phonemic awareness curriculum used in grades K and 1, Heggerty

It is truly remarkable how well our teachers have not only been able to learn and understand,  but also make their own, a brand-new curriculum, based on a fundamentally different way of teaching reading and writing than what they were trained for and have been using for the last two decades. I am blown away by the work that I’m seeing in classrooms – from students’ understanding of incredibly rich content and vocabulary to their ability to share what they are learning and how they are connecting it to their own experiences, in classroom discussions and in writing. 

Because of the more explicit focus on writing conventions and structures, student writing has improved by leaps and bounds in just a few months. In fact, the other day, one of our Kindergarten teachers came into my office excitedly to show that her young students had learned to write complete sentences, with capitalization, punctuation, correct spelling, correct letter formation, use of spacing – AND with great ideas! We have never seen Kindergarten writing like this before, and I attribute it wholly to our adoption of evidence-based literacy instruction (and of course, to our amazing teachers). 

Come to our Upcoming Math Workshops!

We have had such a focus on literacy instruction this year, but math remains as important as ever. This year, our teachers are using a new version of Eureka Math2, our longtime math curriculum. The new version provides students even more opportunities to grapple with complex math content, and ensures that they are developing both conceptual and procedural understandings of mathematical principles. If you’d like to learn more about how we teach math now at PS 107, please join us for one of our upcoming workshops, led by 5th grade math teacher and PS 107 math leader, Ed Schulz:

  • Parents of children in Kindergarten, 1st, and 2nd grades: Wednesday, January 17th, 8:45-10 am, Cafeteria (in-person only)

    • Flyer and registration here

  • Parents of children in 3rd, 4th, and 5th grades: Wednesday, January 24th, 8:45-10 am, Cafeteria (in-person only) 

    • Flyer and registration here

What to do about your tweens’ group chats? 

Group text chats are a challenging issue that many parents face once their children have use of a smartphone or other device. This is something that we confront every year at PS 107, with problems mainly arising in late 4th grade and throughout 5th grade. Along with PS 107 parent and Common Sense East Coast Education Director, Tali Horowitz, School Counselor Sarah Green and I are hosting a special lunchtime workshop for parents of 4th and 5th grade students tomorrow, Thursday, January 11th, 12-1 pm on Zoom. Fourth and fifth grade parents: if you can join us, please do! Flyer and registration are here

Your feedback matters!

Finally, thank you to those of you who complete the feedback form for ways that we can make our school even better in 2024! If you did not have a chance to do so and would like to share your feedback, please do so here. It’s completely anonymous and ideas will be discussed at our next School Leadership Team meeting. 

Have a terrific week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - January 3, 2024

Dear PS 107 Families, 

Welcome to 2024! Since I was a child, I have always loved markers – like celebrating the New Year – of the passage of time. (All the while, my armchair-philosopher husband routinely reminds me that time is a human construct and therefore these markers have no real meaning. 🙂) Whether real or imagined, turning the calendar to a new year offers the opportunity to reflect on the 365 days that have just passed, to consider what went well and what we’d like to improve, and to move ourselves, ever so slightly, towards making our lives – and our world – better. 

Over the last several days, I’ve done my own reflecting, both personally and professionally, and I’d love to hear from all of you too! In the new year, what would you like to see happen at PS 107 that would make our school community a better place? Share your feedback with us by filling out a short, anonymous survey here. While we may not be able to make all of your ideas come to life because of budgetary and staffing constraints, you can help us continue on this journey of reflection and improvement. I will report back in this forum on the ideas that were most commonly shared – and what we can do to move towards making them a reality. 

On another note, as I’m sure you’ve all noticed, we are very much in the midst of cold and flu season. This is reflected in our absence numbers – and the many students who are going to the nurse and being sent home sick. We ask that you please keep children home when they are sick and remember the New York City Public Schools guidance that students should stay home until they are fever-free for 24 hours without the aid of medication. 

If your child tests positive for Covid, they must stay home for at least 5 days and should wear a mask upon their return to school until 10 days have passed from the date of their positive test (or symptom onset). If your child has Covid, please reach out to Parent Coordinator Nadia Benlarbi at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov with questions about the current NYCPS isolation protocol. 

You can also help our community stay healthy by reminding your children to wash their hands regularly (with soap!) and cover their coughs. 

Finally, many of you have probably heard that our 2nd floor girls’ bathroom has had two out of three toilets out of commission for some time. They were repaired over the break, so the 2nd floor girls’ bathroom is once again fully operational!

Once again, happy New Year, and thank you so much for all that you do to support this wonderful community!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - December 20, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

The holiday break is upon us, and I’d like to take this opportunity to extend my warmest wishes to the entire PS 107 community. I hope that the coming break allows you to create beautiful memories with your loved ones and rejuvenate for the upcoming year.

The holiday season is a time for reflection and gratitude. On behalf of the PS 107 staff, I want to express our deepest appreciation for your continued support of our community. As I type, all of our staff are enjoying the holiday potluck that was generously organized by parents Diana Gatschet and Meghan Hartley, with contributions from multiple volunteers. Thank you so much! 

As we make the most of this well-deserved break, I would like to gently remind everyone about the importance of maintaining regular school attendance. Consistent attendance is a key factor in your child's success. We have full days of school through Friday, December 22nd, and we return on Tuesday, January 2nd, for a full day of school. While we understand that some travel plans cannot be altered (and children should stay home if they are sick!), we hope to see as many of our students as possible on the days before and after the break. 

Once again, thank you for being an integral part of the PS 107 community. May this holiday break bring you joy, laughter, and moments of connection. We look forward to a 2024 filled with curiosity, community, and compassion, our core values. We are so grateful for the privilege of serving your family.

Wishing you a peaceful and joyful holiday season!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - December 13, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

Happy Hanukkah to everyone in our community who celebrates! May this festival of lights bring a little brightness to all of our lives during this very tumultuous time. 

NYCPS Regulations on Gift-Giving

The season of giving is upon us, and I’d like to take this opportunity to remind our families of New York City Public Schools’ regulations regarding gift-giving to city employees, including PS 107 staff members. The Chancellor’s Regulations are the rules governing the NYC Schools, and regulation C-110 specifically addresses gift-giving. The regulations detail what is permissible for both individual and group gifts: 

  • Gifts from individual to school staff: Individual students, parents and/or guardians may wish to make gifts to officials and employees at the end of the year and at similar occasions, such as holidays, weddings, and the birth of an official’s or employee’s child However, discretion must be used to ensure that officials and employees do not accept gifts of value from individual children, parents, or guardians. Only those gifts that are principally sentimental in nature and of small financial value may be accepted.

  • Gifts from school classes: In addition to individual gifts, sometimes an entire school class may wish to make a gift to officials and employees at the end of the year and at similar occasions, such as holidays, weddings, and the birth of an official’s or employee’s child. Officials and employees may accept gifts from whole classes of students, their parents and/or guardians, provided that each student, parent or guardian in the class has the opportunity to sign the card or note that comes with the gift, whether or not the student, parent or guardian contributed to the cost of the gift. In addition, students, their parents and/or guardians may not be asked to contribute more than a small amount of money toward such class gifts.

PS 107 staff are so grateful for this community’s generosity; however, we do ask that you keep these regulations in mind during the holiday season. 

Kindness Tips from our Kindness Club

As noted in last week’s letter, December is Kindness Month at PS 107! Our student Kindness Club is providing regular morning announcements filled with great ideas for being kind (check out this one that was shared with our school community yesterday). Our Kindness Club also generated lists of ways to be kind that they wanted to share with our parent community. Here are some of their tips: 

  • Say words like thank you, sorry, and please

  • Don’t exclude people from what you are doing (or if you are playing with a new friend, invite your other friends to join because your other friends may feel left out)

  • If someone is being unkind, don’t be mean back because it will make the problem worse

  • Be nice to each other by sharing

  • Believe in yourself

  • Always be an upstander (or don’t stand around and watch people get bullied – get help)

  • Don’t tease people because they are different

  • Don’t interrupt when someone else is speaking

  • Stand up for yourself in a kind way

  • Make people feel welcome in our school

Our caring, kind, compassionate community is what makes PS 107 such a special place! Have a wonderful week. 

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

PS A reminder from Ms Diane: Please sign up to volunteer for your child’s Physical Education class at the Armory! Go to Konstella to sign up, and if you can’t find the sign up form, reach out to your class parent.

The Wednesday Weekly - December 6, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

Yesterday, we had 30 principals from our district visiting PS 107 in order to learn more about our new English language arts curriculum, Wit and Wisdom. The principals, along with our district superintendent and deputy superintendent, toured nine of our classrooms and then attended a panel discussion with several of our teachers to learn best practices for introducing this new curriculum to staff, which they will be doing next school year. They were beyond impressed with what they saw and eager to have their teachers come to visit our classrooms as well. 

I share this with all of you because I am just so proud of the hard work our teachers have been engaged in this year, learning and implementing a new curriculum ahead of the rest of our district. It has been no easy task, shifting the way that we teach reading and writing so dramatically, and I am truly in awe of the countless hours of thoughtful planning that our teachers have been doing. (ICYMI, read more about how we’re teaching reading and writing at PS 107 now that we’ve made the shift from balanced to structured literacy.) 

Our teachers are also putting their own spin on our new curriculum, by building in meaningful, hands-on projects that allow students to be creative at the same time that they are solidifying the content they’ve learned. Check out the giant squid that Ms Shannon and Mr Brian’s class made out of papier-mâché as they are wrapping up their module on the sea, as well as the cityscape collage that Ms Sheri’s class made as part of their module on the five senses. Spectacular! 

Our new English language arts curriculum is considered a “knowledge building” curriculum, and researchers are now understanding the critical role that content knowledge plays as children work to comprehend text. To learn more about this, check out Building Knowledge: What an Elementary School Curriculum Should Do by Natalie Wexler. (For a deeper dive, Wexler’s Knowledge Matters podcast is well worth a listen.) 

Kindness Month

December is Kindness Month at PS 107! Stay tuned for some kindness tips from the PS 107 Kindness Club in next week’s letter. Our wonderful Kindness Club also left messages for the visiting principals and district staff yesterday. Today and everyday, try to do one kind thing for someone you don’t know very well. It can make all the difference for them — and for you!

Does Your Child Need a Remote Learning Device? 

Finally, if you haven’t yet done so, please let us know if your child needs a device to participate in remote learning (should it become necessary because of a large snowstorm or other event making it hazardous to travel). We have limited devices available for distribution at school, but are committed to ensuring that all of our students can engage in remote learning. Please complete this survey if you need a device for your child to use at home. (If you received a school-owned device in previous years, please be sure that it works, and if it doesn’t, please return it to the school building ASAP so that we can repair it.)

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - November 29, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

I hope that your Thanksgiving holiday was just the right balance of time with loved ones and time to relax. On my end, I spent Thanksgiving with my ex-husband and his wife (yes, you read that right!), his family, his in-laws, and our daughter. Knowing how very differently situations involving divorce can unfold, I am incredibly grateful to be a part of this large, extended (and blended) family.

Dress for the Cold

The weather has turned downright cold since Thanksgiving break, so please remember to dress your children for it! Coats, hats, gloves, scarves – kids need it all to be outdoors when it’s cold like this. (Even if they tell you they’ll be fine!) Please also label all of your children’s winter gear with their name and class, as this is the time of year when our lost and found starts to overflow with cold weather items. 

Snow Days are Out, Remote Learning is IN

Yesterday, during 5th grade recess, it started flurrying, and the Big Yard erupted into a chorus of cheers! It’s been so long since we’ve had measurable snow in NYC (654 days to be exact), and I know our students can’t wait to see the streets and parks blanketed in snow. What our students may not be so thrilled to know is that the New York City Public Schools have done away with snow days, and if we do have a big storm where it’s hazardous to travel, learning will be remote. 

To that end, we are surveying our families to find out if you need a device for your child to participate in remote learning, if it becomes necessary. Many of you may still have the devices that were distributed during the pandemic – if you have not done so recently, please power them up and make sure they still work! If your child does not have any device that they can use at home, please complete this brief form to let us know. Note that we have very limited devices to give out, but are committed to ensuring that our students can engage in remote learning if our building is closed. 

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - November 22, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

With Thanksgiving right around the corner, I want to take this opportunity to express my deep gratitude to the PS 107 community. Every day, you exemplify our Core Values of compassion, curiosity, and community. I am deeply touched by all of the ways in which this manifests, from volunteering to help Ms Diane in PE classes; to making regular donations to support our partner, CHiPS as they feed hundreds of our neighbors daily; to donating supplies to your children’s classrooms during a tough budget year; to dropping off treats to keep our staff going during difficult days; to volunteering to organize PS 107’s family and fundraising events like Fall Festival, the Book Fair, the Stoop Crawl, the Craft Fair, and more; and, most importantly, to providing your children with the strongest possible foundation so that they can go out there and change the world!

Having a regular gratitude practice is so important, and it’s something we all (myself humbly included) neglect to engage in on a daily basis. Our brains are wired to focus on the negative – this helped us to remember threats to our safety and survive thousands of years ago. But in modern times, that negativity “bias” is a bit too strong, and we need to actively combat it with our own gratitude practice. Starting this past Monday, we are doing this as a staff at PS 107, leaving little messages of gratitude for our colleagues in their mailboxes all this week and next. Some of our teachers are doing this as well in their classrooms! For instance, Ms Gina and Ms Abby’s class has gratitude journals that they write in daily after reflecting on what they appreciate in their lives.

You can cultivate gratitude in your children at home as well! And gratitude is much more than just saying thank you. According to the Raising Grateful Children Project at the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, gratitude is an experience that has four parts: 

  • What we NOTICE in our lives for which we can be grateful

  • How we THINK about why we have been given those things

  • How we FEEL about the things we have been given

  • What we DO to express appreciation in turn

For more on this, see this article from Greater Good magazine. In addition, VeryWell Mind offers easy tips for teaching gratitude to your children.

To our beautiful community, have a wonderful Thanksgiving break! I hope that you have time to connect with friends and family, rest and rejuvenate, and notice all that we can be truly grateful for. 

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - November 15, 2023

Used books find new life at our book sale last Friday

Dear PS 107 Families, 

We are in the midst of PS 107’s annual Powerhouse Book Fair, and I’ve had the great pleasure of visiting all of our Kindergarten classes this week to read aloud a book that I recently purchased from Powerhouse, The Story of a Book by Joy McCullough. This beautiful picture book is about the magic of reading and seemed an ideal story to help our students get excited about their upcoming visits to Powerhouse. It’s been such a joy to see children so engaged in this story – one of my favorite parts of being an educator has always been reading aloud to students, observing their reactions to the characters and all that they encounter over the course of a book. Reading is quite simply the best way to experience magic in our daily lives. Thank you to parents Kseniya Babkina and Feba Michel for organizing the Powerhouse Book Fair!

Thank You Community Outreach Team

I also have to shout out Emily Hager and Jeanne Schwartz, our parent Community Outreach team leads. Most recently, they organized a used book sale, which is another fabulous way to give a second (or more) life to books. So many happy children walked away with new-to-them books last Friday! This is so wonderful, as not only are we able to share the joy of books with more and more children, but it’s also an environmentally sustainable practice. In addition to organizing this used book sale, Emily and Jeanne have been establishing a relationship of mutual aid with the PS 124 community where 40% of students are living in temporary housing (read about the difference between mutual aid and charity here), collecting weekly donations for our beloved neighborhood resource CHiPS, organizing the PTA Fun Run, and much, much more. I encourage you to join the Community Outreach WhatsApp group if you would like to become part of our mutual aid work.   

Welcome New Staff Members

I’d also like to introduce two new staff members to the community. Jelisa Wilson is our second nurse, which we were able to secure as a result of some of the significant health needs of our students. Jelisa has been working as a nurse for four years and is the parent to a 4-year-old currently in PreK. She is thrilled to be a part of the PS 107 community! Getting a second nurse would not have been possible without the advocacy of several 107 parents. Thank you to Sarah and Tim Geisenheimer, Basia and Ian Burgess, and Andrew Tucker and Nicole Williams. 

We also have a new recess coach, Coach Todd Nesbitt! Coach Todd takes the place of Coach Destiny, who unfortunately had to leave the Asphalt Green Recess Enhancement Program for personal reasons. Coach Todd has been doing an amazing job bringing additional structure to all of our recess periods by blocking off zones in the Big Yard for specific games; teaching students the rules of kickball, basketball, and soccer; and helping children to resolve conflicts when they arise. As always, students are not required to participate in games with Coach Todd, but his presence has made an enormous difference in all children being able to engage in safe, healthy play during recess periods. Many thanks again to the PTA for their support of PS 107’s recess coach!

The Peace Path and Anti Bullying Workshops

In classrooms, our students are also learning to resolve conflicts and be on the alert for bullying. Our counseling team, Sarah Green and Colleen Dondero, are visiting every classroom in the next month to teach them the Peace Path, a method for conflict resolution, as well as how to be an upstander rather than a bystander in a bullying situation (and how to recognize bullying when it is happening). Currently, Sarah Green is visiting all of our Kindergarten through 2nd grade classrooms to teach them the Peace Path and Colleen is visiting all of our 3rd through 5th grade classrooms for two anti-bullying workshops. In January, they will switch grade bands, so that K-2 students can learn from Colleen and 3rd-5th grade students can learn from Sarah. Learn about the steps of the Peace Path here for K-1 and here for grades 2-5. 

Cafeteria Updates

Are your children complaining that the cafeteria runs out of a particular food item before they are able to get lunch? Please reach out to Nadia to let her know what that food item is! This will help us to communicate with our kitchen manager about ensuring that they order enough of popular menu items. 

Safer Access Updates

As many of you know, the NYC Public Schools are in the process of installing video buzzer systems (similar to a Ring camera) in the main entrances of all school buildings, so that front doors can be locked and visitors admitted by being buzzed in. PS 107 is part of the first phase of this project, called “Safer Access,” and a survey was recently conducted of our entry locations. We are expecting to have our video buzzer system installed in the next few months. We will continue to keep you updated. 

Attendance Before Holidays

Next week is Thanksgiving, and we know that many families prefer to start their holiday travel on Wednesday (or earlier). We encourage you to send your children to school as much as possible next week – even if that means for a few hours on Wednesday! We will have full days of teaching and learning next week, and in-person attendance is so important for children. Help us avoid the before-holiday attendance dip!

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

PS If you have not yet completed your Family Income Form, please do so now by clicking here. It takes just a few minutes! Note that you can opt out if you prefer not to disclose your household’s income information. In order to do so, after you begin the form, you’ll click the box that says "I do not wish to provide my household information.” You will need to finish filling out the form by listing all of your children who attend the NYC public schools, along with their date of birth and OSIS (student ID). You can find your child's student ID in Operoo or in your NYCSA account. At the end of the form you need to digitally certify and submit. You will receive a receipt in your email in-box if you have correctly submitted the form. If you have questions about completing the Family Income Form, please reach out to Nadia Benlarbi at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov. THANK YOU for taking the time to complete this important form which helps our school receive the funding we need. 

The Wednesday Weekly - November 8, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

Welcome to November! November is Native American Heritage Month, and we will be celebrating the rich history of Native American people and their cultures, traditions, and ways of living, particularly their commitment to protecting the earth and its resources. All classes will be reading We are Water Protectors by Carole Lindstrom and discussing how we can help protect earth’s most essential resource. 

The Armory and Physical Education Classes

I also wanted to update you on what’s happening with the Park Slope Armory YMCA, which is where PS 107 currently holds Physical Education classes for 1st-5th grades. The main floor of the YMCA, the drill floor, is in need of repair. These repairs will be done by the city, and unfortunately, we do not have a timeline for their completion. This week, the YMCA closed a larger portion of the drill floor, but there is still plenty of space for our students to have Physical Education classes. We are in regular communication with the Armory staff and will continue to keep you apprised of the situation; however, for the foreseeable future, we will continue to use the Armory as usual. 

Please Complete Your Family Income Form

It is very important that families complete the Family Income Form, which can help our school get additional funding. The vast majority of PS 107 families have not yet completed the Family Income Form. It takes just a few minutes to do so — please click here to complete it. 

Note that you can opt out if you prefer not to disclose your household’s income information. In order to do so, after you begin the form, you’ll click the box that says "I do not wish to provide my household information.” You will need to finish filling out the form by listing all of your children who attend the NYC public schools, along with their date of birth and OSIS (student ID). You can find your child's student ID in Operoo or in your NYCSA account. At the end of the form you need to digitally certify and submit. You will receive a receipt in your email in-box if you have correctly submitted the form. If you have questions about completing the Family Income Form, please reach out to Nadia Benlarbi at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov. THANK YOU for taking the time to complete this important form. 

Help Us Plan Parent/Caregiver Workshops!

If you have not yet done so, please complete our Parent/Caregiver Workshop survey! We need your input into what kinds of parent workshops you’d like to see at PS 107 this year. 

More Treats Requested :)

Finally, THANK YOU to the families who dropped off candy at PS 107 last week! We’d still love to have more on hand so that our teachers can pick up a sweet treat in the main office when they need a little burst of energy. (Yes, we know candy isn’t the healthiest, but sometimes we all need that little sugar rush to keep us going!) Please drop off individually-wrapped treats in the main office anytime. 

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - November 1, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

I hope that you and your families had a wonderful Halloween! This year was the first school year in recent memory that children were allowed to dress up in school, and yesterday was filled with so much joy. Wednesday Addams, Marie Antoinette, Harry Styles, Hermione Granger, Harry Potter, Spiderman, and more skeletons, witches, and vampires than I could count enjoyed their day at PS 107!

No Place for Hate Kickoff

On Monday morning, we held assemblies to kick off our work as a No Place for Hate school. No Place for Hate (NPFH) is a project from the Anti-Defamation League that helps schools build a community of inclusivity, respect, and equity. At these assemblies, we were joined by Stay Fit Culture, a non-profit organization partnering with our district, District 15, to support schools with diversity, equity, and inclusion work in an innovative way – through fitness! Stay Fit Culture teaches children about the mind-body connection, and how physical activity helps us to feel better, and an improved mood helps us to be more compassionate towards others and more respectful of peoples’ differences. At each assembly, Stay Fit Culture reviewed the No Place for Hate pledge with all of our students, and our Cheer Team performed an original cheer, emphasizing the role that we all play in building a culture of inclusivity and respect at PS 107. 

Parent-Teacher Conferences

Parent-Teacher Conferences are tomorrow, Thursday, 11/2! Students have a half-day and will be dismissed at 11:35 am. There is no afterschool at PS 107 on half days. By now, you should have signed up for a conference slot with your child(ren)'s teacher(s). All conferences will be virtual, unless otherwise requested. 

If you would like to meet with one of our specialty or academic intervention teachers, please email them directly to set up an appointment time. They are available during the same windows as classroom teachers, 1-3 pm and 4:30-7:30 pm. 

  • Crystal Barnes, 2nd-5th grade Science: cbarnes13@schools.nyc.gov

  • Diane DiTonno, PreK-5th grade Physical Education: dditonn@schools.nyc.gov

  • Gary DiFranco, PreK-5th grade Music: gdifranco2@schools.nyc.gov

  • Julie Brunner Cross, PreK-5th grade Art: jbrunnercross@schools.nyc.gov

  • Peg Galella, PreK-1st grade Library + Academic Intervention/English as a New Language: mgalell@schools.nyc.gov

  • Michele Dente, 1st grade reading intervention: mdente2@schools.nyc.gov

As a reminder, you will not receive a report card prior to Thursday's Parent-Teacher Conferences. As of Fall 2022, PS 107 distributes report cards twice a year, at the end of January and at the end of June. At this first conference, you can expect your child’s teacher to provide you with an update on how they are doing in reading, writing, math, and with social-emotional skills. 

As noted in an earlier issue of the Wednesday Weekly, we are now assessing reading skills very differently, and parents will no longer receive A-Z reading levels, such as A, or M, or R, which were based on a flawed reading assessment called the Fountas + Pinnell Benchmark Assessments. Instead, students will be given universal screening assessments three times a year. Students in K-2 will be assessed with Acadience Reading screening assessments. Students in grades 3-5 will be assessed with MAP Growth screening assessments, which are computer-based. These nationally-normed short assessments give us a good indication of whether your child is on, above, below, or well-below grade level. If children are below or well-below grade level on these assessments, we will give more detailed diagnostic assessments to find out which areas in the continuum of phonics skills they need support with. As students become proficient word readers, comprehension is a natural outcome. Comprehension will also be checked with three-times-a-year assessments. If your child shows a weakness in any area, they will be closely monitored and given interventions to help them become stronger in their area of weakness. ICYM the details in the Wednesday Weekly, you can read more about how we teach (and assess) reading and writing at PS 107 here

Help us get on the Participatory Budgeting Ballot!

As many of you know, in 2022, PS 107 won funding from NYC’s City Council through the Participatory Budgeting (PB) process to resurface our playground (aka The Big Yard). While we had hoped this funding would also cover the cost of some playground equipment, we’ve been informed by the School Construction Authority (SCA) that it isn’t enough. Therefore, we’re submitting another Participatory Budgeting project this year so that we can get equipment for our playground as well. In order to help our project make it to the final ballot, please click here and “Support” PS 107’s playground equipment project. The more support we get, the more likely we’ll get on the final ballot which will be brought to the larger City Council District 39 for a vote!

Got Extra Candy?

Last but certainly not least, if you find yourself with an abundance of extra Halloween candy following last night’s festivities, we’re happy to take it off your hands here at PS 107! We try to keep our Conference Room stocked with treats so that our staff can get a quick recharge when they need it. Please drop off candy or other individually wrapped treats with Nadia in the main office anytime. The entire PS 107 staff thanks you!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - October 25, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

This year, in October, PS 107 is celebrating Diverse Abilities Month. October is traditionally Dyslexia Awareness Month, as well as Disability Awareness Month. Last year, our staff did an extensive study of neurodiversity, and when we were discussing how to celebrate the differences that we all have in how our brains and bodies function, our Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Team decided to designate October as a celebration of diverse abilities, which includes a range of physical differences, as well as neurodiversity. Our DEI Team put together a presentation which will be shared in every classroom that honors the diverse abilities that we all have. In addition, class 4-303, Mr Gary’s class, is working on a Diverse Abilities Quilt of Heroes that will be displayed in our school lobby as soon as it’s completed. At PS 107, we celebrate the many ways in which our brains and bodies work.

Family Mornings – Tomorrow and Friday

We are looking forward to welcoming families tomorrow and Friday for the first Family Mornings of the 2023-24 school year! Half of our families will be visiting classrooms tomorrow, Thursday, 10/26, and the other half of families will be visiting on Friday, 10/27. (Note that 1-202, 4-303, and our 5th grade classes have a slightly different arrangement for Family Mornings – please review the communication sent by your child’s teachers.) 

Please enter the school building with your child at their regular entry location so that we can match children to family members and ensure that unauthorized people are not entering the building. We also ask that no more than two adults accompany a child to minimize crowding in our classrooms. Finally, we recommend leaving younger siblings at home if at all possible. We are so glad that you’ll have the opportunity to see your children’s classrooms in action tomorrow and Friday!

Halloween

Halloween is next Tuesday, and we’re thrilled that students are able to wear their costumes to school this year! As a reminder, these are the guidelines for dressing up: 

  • No masks or heavy make-up

  • No weapons or anything that can be used as a weapon; no wands or items that can poke other children

  • No costumes that are overly gory, bloody, or frightening

  • Costumes must be comfortable enough for children to wear all day (we cannot manage children changing in and out of costumes during the day)

  • If children do not want to wear a costume, we also encourage them to wear orange/black or Halloween-themed clothing instead of costumes 

Many classrooms will be having Halloween parties in the afternoon. If you are sending in treats to share, please remember that we have children with severe allergies in our school community, so be sure to review teacher guidance about what treats can be sent in – and what cannot. Happy Halloween! 

Parent-Teacher Conferences

Parent-Teacher Conferences are next Thursday, 11/2, and they take place within two timeframes, 1-3 pm and 4:30-7:30 pm. Thursday, November 2nd is also a half-day and all students will be dismissed at 11:35 am. There is no after-school on half-days. 

Please note that as of September 2022, PS 107 has disconnected report cards from Parent-Teacher Conferences. Your children will not be receiving a report card prior to the November 2nd Parent-Teacher Conferences. These conferences are a time for teachers to provide you with verbal updates on your children’s progress during the first 8 weeks of school. They will share assessment data with you, as well as their observations of children’s academic and social-emotional strengths and challenges. In next week’s issue of The Wednesday Weekly, I will provide you with additional information on what you can expect to learn during these conferences. In the meantime, please be sure to sign up for a conference time with your children’s teachers!

2023-24 Series of Parent/Caregiver Workshops

Finally, we are planning our annual series of parent and caregiver workshops, and we need your input! Please complete this brief survey to let us know when you’d prefer workshops to take place, whether in-person or virtual workshops are better for you, and the topics you’d like to learn about. We look forward to hearing from you.

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - October 18, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

Our annual Fall Fest is a beloved tradition at PS 107, and this year’s was another beautiful community event! With heavy rain in the forecast, the Fall Fest leads, Sarah Friedman and Lisa Esterhuizen, expertly pivoted to move the event indoors and under tents. Pumpkins were painted in the cafeteria; henna was applied in the halls; pies and chili were sampled and judged in the Big Yard; and games were played on 14th Street. This event would not be possible without the many, many volunteers who brought it to fruition – THANK YOU! The enthusiasm for volunteering to support our school is truly awe-inspiring, and a reminder of what makes this community so special. 

I must also congratulate our chili and pie contest winners. Bravo to: 

  • Sarah Liebel for the delicious salted caramel apple pie

  • James Bednark for the incredible bean and barley vegan chili

  • Aaron Goldfarb for the amazing bourbon barreled chili

My stomach is growling as I type!

Speaking of the volunteer spirit, Picture Day was on Monday, and I would be remiss if I didn’t thank parent Erik Holm and the many parent volunteers who helped get classes photo-ready. I can’t wait to see the results.

Last but certainly not least, behind the scenes for all of these events is our Parent Coordinator extraordinaire, Nadia Benlarbi. Nadia expertly liaises between school staff, parent volunteers, and the NYCPS’s permitting department. This is not an easy feat! Nadia, we are so grateful for you. 

Digital Citizenship

At PS 107, we typically designate the month of March as Digital Citizenship Month; and the New York City Public Schools also have us bring awareness to online safety this week, October 16th-20th. We have shared age-appropriate resources from Common Sense Media with teachers to present to students during Morning Meetings this week. We’d also like to share these family resources that are aligned with the topics we address in school. Finally, I must shout out parent Tali Horowitz, who works for Common Sense, and regularly advocates for teaching our children how to be thoughtful and careful digital citizens, which is so important in today’s world.     

Family Mornings are Back!

Family Mornings are a way for parents to get a window into their children’s classrooms, and we are thrilled to announce our Family Mornings schedule for the 2023-24 school year. This year, we are asking teachers to divide their families in half, and to invite half of their parents to visit their classrooms on a Thursday and the other half of their parents to visit classrooms the next day, a Friday. (Note that 5th grade, because of their departmentalized structure, will have a slightly different arrangement for Family Mornings.) This structure is meant to reduce crowding in the classrooms so that parents, teachers, and students can have a more structured experience. Every family will have the opportunity to visit children’s classrooms three times this year, in October, January, and May. The dates for Family Mornings are below, and your children’s teachers will reach out and let you know which day your family is scheduled to visit each month. 

  • OCTOBER: Thursday, 10/26 or Friday, 10/27

  • JANUARY: Thursday, 1/18 or Friday, 1/19

  • MAY: Thursday, 5/16 or Friday, 5/17

To further reduce crowding, we ask that a maximum of two family members attend per child, and we recommend leaving younger siblings at home (though we realize this isn’t always possible). Note that Family Mornings are not a time to discuss your child’s progress with their teacher. [Parent-Teacher Conferences, which are an appropriate time for these discussions, are fast-approaching, on Thursday, November 2nd. Your children’s teachers will reach out soon to schedule these.] We are looking forward to seeing many of you in classrooms next Thursday and Friday!

PTA Meeting Budget Presentation

At this week’s PTA Meeting on Thursday, 10/19 at 6:30 pm, I will be giving a presentation on how New York City Public Schools are funded. I hope you’ll be able to join this meeting, as I aim to make a very convoluted, complicated process clear to our families. And what will likely be even more clear is how important PTA funding is to PS 107’s daily operations. I hope to see you on Thursday evening! 

Halloween

Finally, a quick reminder about Halloween. Students are permitted to wear costumes to school this year on 10/31. Just keep in mind these guidelines: 

  • No masks or heavy make-up

  • No weapons or anything that can be used as a weapon; no wands or items that can poke other children

  • No costumes that are overly gory, bloody, or frightening

  • Costumes must be comfortable enough for children to wear all day (we cannot manage children changing in and out of costumes during the day)

  • If children do not want to wear a costume, we also encourage them to wear orange/black or Halloween-themed clothing instead of costumes

As always, if your family needs any kind of support now or at any point in the year, please do not hesitate to reach out to us. We are here for you. 

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - October 11, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

As I wrote to the community last night, my heart is heavy with grief about what is going on in the Middle East. Two generations ago, my own family was driven out of Eastern Europe with similar violence, perpetrated by groups of people who hated us simply because we were Jewish. Because this history of violence has become part of my DNA, the horror of what is currently taking place has shaken me to my core. The current situation is incredibly complex, and I cannot pretend to know the solution. But what I do know is that now, more than ever, we must meet one another with compassion and community, two of our core values here at PS 107. 

Yesterday, I walked into the school building, as if in a fog. The graphic images of death and destruction from the weekend were seared in my mind. Just before children started to arrive at school, the mariachi band that our parent Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion team had brought to celebrate Latinx/Hispanic Heritage Month, began to play. My mood shifted and the fog lifted, if only temporarily. I watched our students enjoying the music, enthusiastic to hear more. I watched our families donating generously to Mixteca, to support migrant families who are in the midst of their own escape from violence and persecution. It can feel strange to experience joy in moments like these, but I was reminded how very critical that is, to sustain the human spirit, to keep us moving towards peace, justice, and equity. 

I’d like to express my deep gratitude to Christine Canedo-Pullan, parent lead for our Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion team, for making Latinx/Hispanic Heritage Month such a beautiful celebration for our entire community. Christine had an incredible team working with her, including our Assistant Principal Rinah Fernandez Vasquez, and parents Caroline Reginelli, Magda Rangel-Hendrick, Brenda Loya, Angelica Cesario, Carolyn Vadino, Tre Johnson, Raul Vilchis, Rebecca Cetta, and Jaume Miralpeix. Thank you for helping our entire community learn about Latinx cultures, as well as allowing our Latinx students and families to feel seen and represented.

Halloween is fast approaching, and for the first time in many years, we have decided to allow students to wear costumes to school! There are a few important guidelines to keep in mind: 

  • No masks or heavy make-up

  • No weapons or anything that can be used as a weapon; no wands or items that can poke other children

  • No costumes that are overly gory, bloody, or frightening

  • Costumes must be comfortable enough for children to wear all day (we cannot manage children changing in and out of costumes during the day)

  • If children do not want to wear a costume, we also encourage them to wear orange/black or Halloween-themed clothing instead of costumes

Classrooms are permitted to have Halloween celebrations in the afternoon, and your children’s teacher will reach out to you if they are doing so and need anything for the celebration. 

Lastly, New York is currently in a state of a blood emergency, and a local teen has organized a blood drive at the Park Slope Jewish Center, this Sunday, 10/15, from 2:30-6 pm. Click here to reserve a spot (there are only a few left!). Anyone 16+ is eligible to donate. 

If I have learned anything in the past few days, it is that in dark times we must continue to turn towards the light, as difficult as that may be. My thoughts are with all of you who have been impacted by the ongoing tragedy in the Middle East. 

In community, 

Ms Joanna


The Wednesday Weekly - October 4, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

It has been another wonderful week at PS 107! One of our school priorities is to support our students’ social-emotional well-being – so much so that it’s written into our mission statement: 

At PS 107, students are at the center of all that we do. Social and emotional well-being is the foundation on which our school community is built. Our teachers strive to meet the needs of diverse learners and know that every child can achieve success. We believe student inquiry drives rich learning, student agency creates change, and the community of students, staff, and families have the power to create a more equitable world. 

Every morning around 8:30 am, students participate in a Morning Meeting with their peers. Morning Meeting helps students transition into the school day, build community in their classrooms, learn social-emotional skills, and know what to expect for the day ahead. Many teachers follow the Responsive Classroom model for Morning Meeting, which includes four main components in these meetings:

  • Greeting: every student and teacher is greeted by name and welcomed to the classroom

  • Sharing: students have the opportunity to share important things in their lives with peers so that the class can build a strong, trusting community

  • Group Activity: the class participates in an activity together that generally has a social-emotional or academic goal

  • Morning Message: students read a morning message from their teacher(s) together, which tells them what’s to come each day

Morning Meetings typically last 15 to 20 minutes and are a powerful vehicle for building trust, community, as well as academic and social-emotional skills. This is why it’s so important that children are on time for school every day! Ask your child what they did in Morning Meeting today. 

Have a terrific week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - September 27, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

The first three weeks of the school year have flown by! It’s such a joy to see our students so engaged in learning as I visit classrooms. Thanks to our new English language arts curriculum, Wit +  Wisdom, I’ve seen children participating in deep conversations with their peers, as well as writing thoughtful responses to questions about the texts they are reading.To learn more about our new curriculum, take a look at this Wit + Wisdom Curriculum Overview that’s designed especially for families.

UNIVERSAL SCREENING ASSESSMENTS

In the next several weeks, teachers will be assessing students' reading and math skills using what are called universal screening assessments.Universal “screeners” are administered to all students three times a year, in reading and in math, and assess student skills against grade-level standards. These screeners will let teachers know which students’ reading or math skills are above grade level, on grade level, below grade level, or well below grade level. For students who score below or well-below grade level, teachers will administer diagnostic assessments to determine which skills specifically they are struggling with. This helps teachers to not only identify which students need additional support, but also what type of support they need. Finally, these screeners also help us to identify our very strong students who need an extra challenge!

In Kindergarten through grade 2, we will be administering Acadience Reading and Math screening assessments. In 3rd-5th grades, we will be administering MAP Growth screening assessments. Generally speaking, the results of these screening assessments are internal documents; however, teachers will discuss how your child is doing as compared to grade-level expectations at the November parent-teacher conferences, with these screeners being one of several data points on which teachers will base their conversations with you. (Save the date for conferences, which will be held on Thursday, November 2nd, between 1 and 3 pm and between 4:30 and 7:30 pm – closer to the date, teachers will reach out to you to schedule your conference time.)

PLEASE BE ON TIME FOR SCHOOL

Just a reminder the school day begins at 8:20 am, and that our drop-off gates close at 8:25 am this year. Students will be marked late who arrive after 8:25 am. From 8:20 to 8:30 am, students unpack, settle into the classroom, eat breakfast (if they haven’t eaten at home), and complete morning work. At 8:30 am, teachers begin their morning meetings, which are critically important to helping students transition to school and know what to expect for the day ahead. Please make every effort to get your child to school on time. If you find that your regular drop-off gates are closed (or are closing), please bring your children to the main entrance on 8th Avenue, which will remain open slightly longer than the other entry points.

COMMUNICATION WITH TEACHERS

Finally, we must ask that parents please be considerate in what you email to your children’s teachers. This year, more than any year in recent memory, our teachers are spending time learning a brand-new curriculum and approach to teaching reading and writing. They are spending many hours outside of the school day preparing lessons and reviewing student work, which ultimately benefits all of our students. While we very much want parents to know that our teachers are approachable and responsive, they do have limited time to write and respond to emails, so please consider whether what you are reaching out to your child’s teacher about is absolutely necessary. If you have a schoolwide question or a question about a lost item, you can reach out to Parent Coordinator Nadia Benlarbi at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov. If you have concerns about your child’s emotional well-being, you can reach out to our school counselor Sarah Green (sgreen15@schools.nyc.gov) or social worker Colleen Dondero (cdondero3@schools.nyc.gov). Thank you for your support with this! Educators are reporting incredibly high levels of burnout, and we are trying to protect their time during an intense year, curriculum-wise. 

Have a terrific week!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

The Wednesday Weekly - September 20, 2023

Dear PS 107 Families, 

The first full week of school is in the books, classroom routines are being practiced and solidified, and students are beginning to dive into the curriculum. I’m so excited about our new literacy curriculum, Wit and Wisdom, which, along with our existing foundational skills curriculum, Recipe for Reading, brings our school fully in alignment with what’s commonly known as the Science of Reading, a vast body of interdisciplinary research relating to how children learn to read (and write!). 

HOW WE TEACH READING + WRITING AT PS 107

Indeed, reading and writing instruction are going to look quite different this year in kindergarten through 4th grade (5th grade is working through how the new curriculum fits into their departmentalized structure), and there is going to be a learning curve for all of us, but we are so excited to be on the forefront of District 15 schools, implementing a structured literacy approach to reading and writing. 

Last school year, we were fortunate to be named one of the New York City Public Schools’ structured literacy pilot schools. For years, most NYC schools, including PS 107, have been teaching reading using a “balanced literacy” approach. This approach is what most teachers have been trained to use for the last three decades, including myself. However, in recent years, research has clearly demonstrated that balanced literacy is not working for a large group of children, and many students struggle with reading and writing throughout their school careers. When our school was offered the opportunity to transition from balanced to structured literacy, we jumped at the chance. 

Since last school year, thanks to a grant we received from our State Assemblymember Robert Carroll, our staff has been immersed in what research says about how children learn to read, how to make sure every student learns to read, and what to do when a child encounters difficulty in learning to read. The research is telling us that while reading is more challenging for some students than others, with evidence-based reading instruction, nearly every child can become proficient by the end of 3rd grade. Decades of research have determined that reading occurs in a specific way in the brain in all people. It does not occur naturally the way that speech does. The process must be taught. It is a process of building neural pathways in the brain that link sounds of speech to written symbols or letters. The strings of letters are attached to meaning, and then those ‘letter strings with meaning’ are stored in the brain’s “letterbox” for later retrieval that is instantaneous and effortless. This process is called orthographic mapping and it is our goal to help our students build a giant ‘letterbox’ of instantly retrievable words. That translates into fluent reading and subsequent comprehension. Guessing at words based on context does not aid in orthographic mapping, phonics-based decoding does.

If your family has been a part of PS 107 for some time, you’ll notice big changes in how we teach reading this school year; if you’re new to PS 107, jump on board, it’s going to be a fantastic journey! It’s an exciting time to be in education as all elementary schools in the New York City public schools align instruction with what the research is telling us.

These are some key parts of our literacy instruction this school year: 

  • Explicit and Systematic Phonics Instruction: We will have an order or continuum of phonics skills, progressing from simple to complex, that will be followed throughout the early grades. Students will progress through the continuum as they master skills. The curriculum that we use is Recipe for Reading, an Orton-Gillingham-based phonics curriculum. In the intermediate grades (3-5), word study will continue with more grammar and morphology (learning about word parts such as Greek and Latin roots).

  • Phonemic Awareness: This is the ability to get to the individual sounds in words by listening and to identify and manipulate those sounds orally. While this skill will be emphasized in grades K-1, we will make sure all students at PS 107 have this necessary foundation. Students in the intermediate grades may need to practice these skills until they have firmed up this foundation of reading. Don’t be surprised if you have a 2nd-5th grader who will be working on phonemic awareness. This is a skill that the research has indicated is enormously important. The curriculum that we use is Heggerty Phonemic Awareness

  • Decodable Readers: Our early readers will be working with decodable readers. These are books or passages that only include words that the students can ‘decode’ (sound-out) according to the skills they have been taught thus far. Our kids need practice with the phonics skills they are learning and these books and passages provide that practice. So be aware that at times, your primary students may be bringing home a sheet of paper with a passage for practice rather than a book. 

This also means that your child will no longer be assigned a reading level that corresponds to a letter of the alphabet. This practice, based on the A-Z leveling system, has no research backing its use. Instead, students will work with a variety of texts. Some texts may address specific phonics needs, some may be grade-level text to build knowledge that is related to their grade level, some may be interest-based, some will be at a determined level for fluency practice, but they will not be confined to a certain ‘level.’ 

Sometimes children will bring home a book for homework that seems too easy – or too hard. This is OK! If the text is too hard for them to read independently, you can read it with them or, if there are a lot of pictures, they can look through the book and learn through images. If the text appears too easy, that is also fine! They are being challenged daily with grade-level text in their classrooms. 

  • Assessments: As noted above, your child will no longer be assigned an A-Z reading level, such as A, or M, or R as in the past, which were based on a flawed reading assessment called the Fountas + Pinnell Benchmark Assessments. Instead, students will be given universal screening assessments three times a year. Students in K-2 will be assessed with Acadience Reading screening assessments. Students in grades 3-5 will be assessed with MAP Growth screening assessments, which are computer-based. These nationally-normed short assessments give us a good indication of whether your child is on, above, below, or well-below grade level. If children are below or well-below grade level on these assessments, we will give more detailed diagnostic assessments to find out which areas in the continuum of phonics skills they need support with. As students become proficient word readers, comprehension is a natural outcome. Comprehension will also be checked with three-times-a-year assessments. If your child shows a weakness in any area, they will be closely monitored and given interventions to help them become stronger in their area of weakness.

  • Small Group Instruction: There will be time set aside in every classroom for small-group instruction. Students will be grouped according to various reasons: needs in phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, writing projects or knowledge building/interest.

  • Early Intervention: If we see any signs that your child may be struggling with the foundational skills of reading, we will not take a ‘wait and see’ approach; we will immediately implement interventions and monitor their progress. The best solution to the problem of reading failure is early identification and intervention.

  • Knowledge Building and Vocabulary: Research has indicated that reading comprehension is closely connected to the background knowledge we have on a topic we’re reading about and by understanding the vocabulary contained in the text. Therefore, this year, PS 107 is adopting a knowledge-building literacy curriculum called Wit and Wisdom in Kindergarten through grade 4. (Grade 5 will be piloting certain modules this year as we determine how the curriculum works with our departmentalized structure.) Our students will have the opportunity to build a broad knowledge base on history/social studies, science, and the arts. Kids will have access to complex text, often read aloud by their teacher, and in the process, they will learn more complex vocabulary. The research tells us that building knowledge and vocabulary contributes significantly to reading comprehension and should be taught beginning in the earliest grades.

  • Comprehension: The ultimate goal of all reading instruction is for students to understand what they read. The model of The Simple View of Reading demonstrates that reading comprehension occurs only when students have both decoding/word recognition skills and language comprehension skills. Children need the essential skills to get the words off the page as well as knowledge, vocabulary, and a good understanding of how our language works in order to comprehend what they read. We must provide instruction that will help students achieve these goals.

  • Independent Reading: We believe in the importance of developing a love of reading! Part of this is achieved through learning to read, which is our primary objective. We will also be providing students with opportunities to read books of their choosing independently throughout each week. They will also read independently for homework and when they have free time in the classroom. 

  • Writing: The research shows that writing is best taught when connected to content that children are reading. Therefore, students will be writing about the topics they are learning about in each Wit and Wisdom module. Students will have the opportunity to write in multiple genres across the school year. Writing helps students develop a deeper understanding of the texts they are reading. 

  • Handwriting: Handwriting instruction is extremely important, though it has been deemphasized in the last few decades. We will be bringing handwriting instruction back, and all students, in Kindergarten through grade 5, will have regular handwriting instruction. This is something that you will want to monitor closely at home as well, as students with handwriting difficulties go on to have difficulties with writing in general. By the end of 2nd grade, we want letter formation to be automatic and fluent for all students. This year, we are using Recipe for Reading’s handwriting instruction in Kindergarten and 1st grade; Handwriting without Tears in 2nd-4th grades; and Zaner-Bloser Handwriting in 5th grade. 

We now know a great deal about how the brain develops as we learn to read and what instructional practices are most effective for all children. We are committed to being guided by scientific research to ensure that we deliver on the promise of literacy for every PS 107 student. On Curriculum Night (which is tomorrow, Thursday, September 21st), your child’s teachers will tell you more details about what reading and writing will look like in their classroom this year. Remember that this is new to all of us, and I thank you for your support this year as we are all learning brand-new curriculum and pedagogical methods. 

CURRICULUM NIGHT

Please join your child’s teacher(s) for Curriculum Night tomorrow, Thursday, September 21st, 4:30-7:30 pm. All presentations will be virtual, so you can tune in from home, work, or on your commute! The schedule is below, and with the exception of specialty teachers, all classroom teachers will be providing you with the link to join their presentation directly. Please reach out to your child’s teacher if you have not yet received a Zoom link. 

  • 4:30-5:30 pm, Specialty Teacher Roundtable: Hear what’s in store for your child this year in Art, Library, Music, Physical Education, and Science! Join the Specialty Teacher Roundtable with this link: https://zoom.us/j/97771665561?pwd=MG9jQjYrKzdibURabDE3clJkaUxSdz09

  • 5:30-6:30 pm, Presentations from teachers in PreK, 3rd-5th grades (links will be sent by classroom teachers)

  • 6:30-7:30 pm, Presentations from Kindergarten-2nd grades (links will be sent by classroom teachers)

Ms Rinah and I will be stopping by presentations, and we look forward to seeing many of you there! Note that presentations will not be recorded, though teachers will share their presentation slides afterwards. 

WELCOME TO OUR RECESS COACH!

We are thrilled to be able to bring a recess coach from Asphalt Green’s Recess Enhancement Program (REP) to PS 107 this year. Our coach, Ms Destiny, will be with us Mondays-Thursdays, every week, at all recess periods. Ms Destiny will be organizing cooperative games that students are invited to play (note that participation is completely voluntary, and children can still engage in free play if they wish). More broadly, Ms Destiny will be helping our students to understand the importance of: 

  • making the rules of a game clear to all participants, 

  • giving everyone a chance to play, no matter what their skill level, and

  • cooperating and collaborating with our peers to make recess fun for everyone.

Ms Destiny will even be with us during indoor recess on inclement weather days, which will allow our students to engage in physical activity, even when it’s not so nice outside. Check out this video from Monday’s indoor recess, which was an absolute blast! We are so grateful to the PTA for funding a recess coach at PS 107 this year. 

HISPANIC/LATINX HERITAGE MONTH

Hispanic/Latinx Heritage Month began on Friday, September 15th and runs through October 15th. Our parent Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Team hung posters of Hispanic/Latinx icons around the school on Friday. Our staff DEI Team is also working on a presentation that teachers will do with their classes this month on the contributions of the Latinx community to American culture, and our parent DEI team has some special activities planned as well. If you’d like to do more at home with your children, check out these ideas from PBS Kids. 

OUR COMMITMENT TO ANTI-RACISM

It is critically important to us at PS 107 to honor and bring wider awareness to the many backgrounds, cultures, and identities that make the United States — and our school — such unique places. We aim to do this throughout the year by studying diverse texts, understanding how power and privilege play out, learning about multiple perspectives on specific issues and events, and acting as agents of change. 

Heritage months like Hispanic/Latinx Heritage Month provide us with specific times to learn about other backgrounds, cultures, and identities, but we do not believe this is enough. This year, we will also engage in a yearlong study of identity with our students based on the Learning for Justice Social Justice standards, and we will look at our new curricula through the lens of New York State’s Culturally Responsive Sustaining Education framework. As noted in our Parent Handbook, we are committed to anti-racism at PS 107, which is an active approach to combating racism at the individual, social, institutional, and structural levels.Our yearlong identity focus will help our students understand their unique identities and develop their sense of belonging in our diverse community. 

Finally, l’shanah tova to all who celebrate! Have a sweet New Year!

Warmly, 

Ms Joanna

PS Here are some additional resources for you to learn about our approach to reading and writing instruction:     

Welcome to the 2023-24 School Year!

Dear PS 107 Families,

Welcome to the 2023-24 school year! I hope that it has started off smoothly for you and your children. It certainly has for us as a school. As I’ve been visiting classrooms, the cafeteria, and our specialty classes (Art, Music, Science, PE, and Library), it’s clear that our students are so thrilled to be back at school, are quickly adjusting to their new classroom environments, and are making new friends – and reconnecting with old friends. It is truly a joy to see!

WELCOME NEW STAFF!

As many of you know, our beloved long-time Science teacher, Mr Tomsik, moved away from New York City over a year ago. Last year, Abby Roberts did a phenomenal job as a part-time Science teacher. This year, I’m thrilled to announce that we’ve been able to hire a full-time Science teacher so that our Science classes will return to their former frequency (twice a week in grades 3-5 and once a week in grade 2). Crystal Barnes has joined the PS 107 community from PS 676 in Red Hook. At PS 676, Crystal was not only a classroom teacher with a keen interest in Science, but also the lower grades Harbor Coach. She oversaw the Billion Oyster Project work at 676 and is excited to bring her love of Science and sustainability to PS 107!

This year, we were also able to hire a part-time Physical Education teacher who will be working with Diane DiTonno. Armando Perez will be splitting his time between PS 107 (Mondays/Tuesdays) and Brooklyn New School (Wednesdays-Fridays). Armando has been teaching PE and movement at BNS since 2019, and we’re thrilled to have him on our PE team at 107!

SETTLING IN

The initial weeks of school involve students getting to know one another, learning (and practicing) classroom routines, and building classroom community. All of this work, while not obviously academic in nature, pays enormous dividends across the school year. Students who internalize classroom routines and expectations and who feel connected to a community are able to be more engaged in learning.

CURRICULUM CONFERENCES

Please save the date for Curriculum Conferences, where you’ll learn more about your child’s classroom, as well as our speciality classes. They will be held on Thursday, September 21st via Zoom on the following schedule:

Specialty teachers roundtable presentation (Art, Music, Library, Physical Education, Science), 4:30-5:30 pm, Zoom link to come

Presentations for 3rd-5th grade classrooms, 5:30-6:30 pm, individual teachers will share Zoom links with families

Presentations for Kindergarten-2nd grade classrooms, 6:30-7:30 pm, individual teachers will share Zoom links with families

COMMUNICATIONS

As a reminder, because of NYC Public Schools (NYCPS) data privacy regulations, our staff will only be communicating via our @schools.nyc.gov email addresses this year. All teachers have provided these email addresses to you. Important school and district contacts are listed on the first page in our Parent Handbook. Unfortunately, Konstella is not an NYCPS-approved platform for school communication purposes (but is fine for PTA-related communications), so the school will be sending all schoolwide communication via Operoo this year. Messages come from “Operoo Administrator” (we wish this weren’t the case!), so please be sure that your spam filters do not send emails from Operoo to your junk folder.

Finally, if you have questions about school operations, policies, or procedures, be sure to check our Parent Handbook first. If you don’t see the answer there, feel free to reach out to your child’s teacher if it is classroom-specific or Nadia Benlarbi, Parent Coordinator, if you have more of a school-wide question, at nbenlarbi2@schools.nyc.gov. Please give our teachers 24-48 hours on work days to respond to emails. Teachers have very limited time to write and respond to emails during the school day, and, at 107, we strongly encourage all of our staff to have work-life balance so that they can be present, positive, and engaged with their students during the day.

Have a wonderful week!

Warmly,

Ms Joanna