Students get chance to rock out
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Marisa O’Neil
Summer school rocks.
Students in the Summer Science/Math Institute at Paularino
Elementary School learned all about rocks and minerals last week. The
popular three-week camp, sponsored by the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District, also teaches the third- through sixth-graders about the
solar system and mathematics.
In their class, teachers Giao-Anh Le and Tiana Fox worked with
third- and fourth-grade students to identify and analyze rocks and
share their knowledge with their families.
First, the students learned about different types of rocks and
minerals, then they gathered samples from the playground. They also
examined specimens of feldspar, quartz and obsidian -- a favorite for
its smooth, black appearance -- and recorded their findings in their
scientific notebooks.
“Now that we’re rockologists, we’re going to make a rock reference
book,” Fox told the students.
Each child received handouts to color on the different types of
rock -- sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic. After coloring, cutting
and pasting, they would have a book to take home with them.
“Can we cut, then color?” 8-year-old Joseph Kidane asked as he
grabbed a pair of scissors.
The students sat quietly, concentrating on the task at hand. Susan
Ostler, 9, grabbed a blue pencil and got a temporary case of writer’s
block as she stared at the front page of her book.
“What do we write?” she wondered aloud.
“Rock Reference Book,” 9-year-old Ilene Umansky reminded her.
Meanwhile, Joseph struggled with his safety scissors.
Andre Hernandez, 10, set to work illustrating the cover of his
book. He drew two volcanoes with bright-red lava oozing out of them.
Inside their books, the students pasted their colored pictures and
descriptions of all the rocks. Brittany Stump, 9, was looking forward
to giving her book to her family.
“It’ll teach them new stuff,” she said.
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