׉?ׁB!בCט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://ChQE5_I8-Te2NmLbLVeW30HODrB1YHpIreZnQn6PbaM >`׉	 7cassandra://EfaxDlZDthCkX8facr3X9H6_Gjv9E7ILwCxNoo8GxKk͎F`s׉	 7cassandra://hD76IdPRK_fv0wfRB0Jvb4QHlmUHOr0XEfVCzvbQSwM'+` ׉	 7cassandra://2Hf3rinDsslYwOsYE22AAEU572XWYQJb04__BBRNPq0 p͠]\n=_t^ט   (u׈         ׈E\n<_tT׉ESTUDENTS FIRST
December 2018
Volume 1, Issue 4
A Florence One Schools Newsletter
Wilson IB program uses TEDx events to
spark student conversations about change
The aim of the IB
Program is to develop
internationally
minded people
who, recognizing
their common
humanity, help to
create a better and
more peaceful
world. This slogan
drives project
based learning experiences
in Laura
Anne Hofler’s
10th grade MYP
English 3 course
at Wilson High
School.
The course begins
with a study of
The Narrative of
Frederick
Douglass and discussion
about how
he was a powerful
advocate for the
end of slavery. Students then
transition into their own ideas
about change.
Last year, sophomores attended
TEDx Evans Street and
heard from speakers, including
their German teacher Lucia
Huang, about “The Audacity
to Dream.” They returned
to school and worked
with a small group to design
and implement their own advocacy
project. One group
promoted racial equality and
sold “We Are One” bracelets,
raising $500 for Helping
Florence Flourish. Another
group hosted a forum about
school violence at Town Hall
restaurant for students from
the three high schools and
community and school leaders.
At the conclusion of the
year, students were encouraged
to try out to be a speaker
at the upcoming TEDx.
This year’s TEDx Evans
Street included one of
those students, IB junior
Rebecca Liu, on stage
speaking on the theme of
being a “Change Agent.”
The idea of our common
humanity resonated with
her from the literature she
studied in her MYP English
class, and she spoke
on the power of learning
from other cultures based
on her experience growing
up in America as the
child of Taiwanese immigrants.
This
year’s sophomores
sat in the audience to hear
from her, along with other
speakers including the
mayor of Lake City and
the editor of The Morning
News. The field trip concluded
with round table
discussions at Town Hall
restaurant where students
discussed the ideas they’d
heard about and brainstormed
their own ideas
for change.
After the field trip, students
chose a personally
meaningful topic to research.
They used traditional
sources like websites
and databases, and
they also conducted a personal
interview with an
adult about the topic, allowing
them to practice
business communication
skills like professional
emails, preparing for and
conducting an interview,
and writing a thank you
note. From their research,
they came up with their
own “idea worth spreading”,
in the spirit of TED
Talks, and are drafting
their own short talk about
change. Which student
will develop the talk further
and take to the TEDx
stage next year?
IB encourages many attributes
in learners including
inquiry, communication,
risk taking, and reflecting.
These are some
of the traits that students
have developed as they’ve
learned how to research,
organize, and present an
idea.
We have engaged students
with great, inspiring ideas
and a desire to make a difference.
It will be exciting
to see how they use the
skills and knowledge
they’ve gained in Florence
1 Schools to go out and
change the world.
׉	 7cassandra://hD76IdPRK_fv0wfRB0Jvb4QHlmUHOr0XEfVCzvbQSwM'+` \n<_tU\n<_tT(בCט   (u׉׉	 7cassandra://ASPisWQbkhVU24r3i5_enpqQOq7G2Bt7hALnEgoF_FY `׉	 7cassandra://kQifslxkiwA7DI0h6INgRgZvcv_8SgZ8kN1F_Dn7AHM̓`s׉	 7cassandra://YQmtkuXvr2Fo2zoeS-MPYOGhaDiCX0A-dlkQecS2GQ0&` ׉	 7cassandra://nYya9tJYUM5xKv0WTCXEonet87XQ6CUNVdu7FmrAaoM 4@͠]\n=_taט  (u׉׉	 7cassandra://MEikLOdzcPvIpN9fIk23BX0YtxpPBFLMeD_Bn1yC42U j`׉	 7cassandra://GaKWZBJQz4fvjOxaxJpAu7xrWODhw3hKVf7jnSPWnn0͔N`s׉	 7cassandra://eLnA0njvTCei_a_bYJPiYZOOedV8yL4Poo-P3KR4st0)-` ׉	 7cassandra://glSy69OOByzIUD17R1b2AHJEdPPezTQUIQrOKJ5RTAs ͠]\n=_tb׉EPage 2
Volume 1, Issue 4
Savannah Grove Beta Club builds a strong community
of learners
The Savannah Grove Gator Beta
Club recently presented McLeod
Hospital with over 100-holiday
greeting cards for patients who may
not be able to go home during the
holiday season. The members of
the National Junior and Elementary
Beta Club, a community service
club that focuses on helping others,
worked last week to make and
decorate cards for those medically
less fortunate this holiday season.
Kate Miccichi accepted the cards on
behalf of McLeod for the third year
in a row. She spoke with the
members of the club on how special
the cards are and how they impact
patients, families, faculty, and
staff.
“I wish the students could see the
looks on the patients’ faces when
they receive a card,” Miccichi said.
“They truly help to heal those
patients and make their situation
easier.”
Officers within the club, treasurer
Kimora Cusaac and vice-president
Tristen Mack, presented the cards
on behalf of the club. The members
were excited to brighten up the days
of others and enjoyed spending time
together, singing Christmas songs
while they decorated the
cards. Miccichi presented the club
members with a special holiday
treat that has become a tradition
now with the students.
The S.G.E.S. Gator Beta Club
consists of 5th and 6th-grade
students who earn membership into
the club by making Honor Roll
during the first nine weeks of the
school year and modeling high
moral character. The students work
to build a strong community of
learners within the school and
give back as often as possible.
The club meets at least once a
month to plan and organize their
events. In January, the members
will participate in a candlelight
pinning and induction ceremony
to recognize and celebrate their
achievements.
This year, with the support of
incredible faculty and staff, the
club hopes to add a project after
the holidays to continue to grow
and help others. Their next
community service project will be
a donation drive for the Florence
Area Humane Society in the
spring. Along with Principal
David Copeland, the S.G.E.S.
Gator Beta Club is sponsored by
Haley Taylor, Tiffaney Brown,
Victoria Holdaway, and Layton
Wicker.
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Students First
Royall uses FLEX to promote maximum learning
In order to effectively
reach all learners,
teachers at Royall use a
variety of differentiation
strategies. One of
the strategies that
teachers employ is flexible
grouping. Flexible
grouping techniques
are designed to accommodate
the needs of
individual students by
specifically targeting
their learning style,
readiness, and interests.
This is done by utilizing
whole class instruction,
small groups, or
by working with a partner.
Flexible
grouping at
Royall, called FLEX, is
utilized in grades 1 and
2 and includes additional
support from the
Literacy Coach, Instructional
Technology
Specialist, Enhanced
Learner Interventionist,
Librarian, Primary Plus
Assistants and our
Reading Recovery
Teacher. These experts
come together to plan
for meaningful and intentional
reading instruction
based on the
needs of Royall’s first
and second grade students.
Utilizing
the data reports
generated after
monthly Istation testing,
FLEX teachers
meet to analyze data
and assess the needs of
their students.
Although Istation is a
great place to start,
teacher judgement is
the most important factor
when placing students.
Teachers assign
their students to a
smaller group
(typically no larger
than 12) for instruction
based on their
needs. Students assigned
in one FLEX
group may be reassigned
on an individual
basis as needed.
FLEX groups are
reassigned approximately
every 4-6
weeks. These groups
are a temporary way
for students to work
together in a variety of
ways and configurations
depending upon
activity and learning
outcomes as well as to
learn from another
teacher at Royall. In
order to promote maximum
learning, students
need to move frequently
among groups according
to their specific
needs. For example
when a student shows
progress in one area of
instruction such as
comprehension or fluency
they may be
placed with a group of
students who share
their strengths. If data
analysis shows that a
student is struggling in
an area, they too may
be reassigned to a
group with students
that have similar needs.
In addition to the
monthly data analysis
meeting, teachers involved
in FLEX meet
on a weekly basis during
their grade level
planning time to discuss
progress, move
student groups when
appropriate and create
activities and lessons
that target the needs of
all learners. Current
lessons include word
work, vocabulary and
comprehension strategies,
the writing process
and a daily read
aloud.
According to Principal
Julie Smith, FLEX
groups “allow our
teachers to meet the
individual needs of
students
through carefully designed
intervention. In
addition to providing
remediation, FLEX
groups allow us to provide
enrichment opportunities
to our stronger
students.”
Second grade students
have this to say about
FLEX groups:
“I get to see my friends
from other classes!”
“We get to learn in different
classrooms from
different teachers.”
“FLEX groups are fun!”
Second and first grade teachers report,
“FLEX groups at Royall are
just one way that we can meet the
academic, social, and emotional
needs of each student.”.
FLEX grouping allows teachers to
zero in on the specific needs of each
student. It allows students to have
the opportunity to work with, and
learn from, their peers in a way that
encourages them to be active participants
in each lesson. When students
work in a variety of groups, they
learn to work independently and cooperatively
with a variety of personalities.
The teachers involved in FLEX
grouping will meet once again after the
holidays to discuss progress and concerns,
analyze data and regroup students according
to need. FLEX grouping at Royall has
proven to be an effective tool to enhance
student achievement.
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Students First
Wallace-Gregg provides positive role models through
Mighty Eagle Men, GRL PWR Clubs
Wallace Gregg Elementary
School
(WGES) recognizes
that our male students
are in need of
guidance. It is this
need that our students
presented that
lead the male faculty
to start a gentlemen’s
club for our young
boys. The men on
staff came up with
the name, Mighty
Eagle Men Club. The
Mighty Eagle Men
Club is sponsored by
Larry M. Jackson,
Henry Watson, Justin
Gee, Charlie
Willoughby and
many of the Wallace
Gregg Elementary
School faculty. The
students had to fill
out an application.
This allowed the
sponsors to see the
student’s commitment
to the club. The
club is specifically
designed for the 5th and
6th grade male students;
the club meets twice a
week- Wednesday mornings
from 7:30 - 7:50
a.m. and Friday afternoons
from 2:15 - 3:20
p.m. They are required
to dress up for all sessions
and are expected to
exhibit good character
for all other students of
the school.
During their sessions,
students learn teambuilding
skills, character
development, health and
hygiene, and many other
important essentials of
manhood and life. They
also offer structured support
in math, science,
and technology, while
emphasizing the areas of
etiquette and mentorship.
The Mighty Eagle
Men have completed
their first module regarding
character, responsibility,
respect,
trustworthiness, caring,
fairness, and citizenship.
They are expected to exhibit
these qualities throughout
the school, home, and community
exemplifying understanding
of each one. We
have also had community
personnel to come in and
work with each young man
such as the Honorable
Judge Taft Guiles of Florence
and Darlington County
judicial system.
The Mighty Eagle Men
Club is taking an interest
and involvement with the
community. The young men
will be sponsoring a food
and toy drive in January,
participating in weekend
community service projects,
and many other endeavors.
The MEM Club gentlemen
also receive mentoring from
local, public servants and
officials within the area
every other Friday and are
also collaborating with
GRL PWR, a mentoring
group for young girls at
Wallace Gregg Elementary.
The Mighty Eagle Men have
already attained many public
and private sponsors to
help them not just be successful
in the school and
community but to become a
true Mighty Eagle Man.
Wallace Gregg’s GRL PWR
club is a club for our young
girls in grades 4th-6th. GRL
PWR stands for Growing
Responsible Leaders that
are Phenomenal, Worthy,
and Relentless. This club is
being sponsored by April
Robinson. The club is in the
beginning stage and meets
on Tuesdays from 2:15 to
3:15 p.m. The aim of the
club is to provide our female
students with positive
role models outside the
home. This club offers the
benefits of activities in
math, science, and technology
with an emphasis in the
areas of health, etiquette,
mentoring, and book clubs.
Together both of these clubs
are providing our students
with the opportunity to grow
personally into a wellrounded
child!
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Students First
MYP German students send Holiday Greetings
to friends overseas
Through the course of
the 2018-19 school
year, MYP German
Williams Middle
School eighth graders
partner with a class in
Schifferstadt in the
German state of
Rhineland-Palatinate to
learn more about one
another, culture and
language learning.
Leading up to the days
before Winter Break,
Williams students
created holiday
greetings to send along
with items that
represent Florence to
the students in
Schifferstadt. Their
German counterparts
are working on e-books
and digital presentations
featuring German
Christmas traditions to
share.
Williams students are in
their second year of
learning the German
language and the
students in Germany are
in their third year of
English. Students are
comparing their likes,
hobbies, shows, music
and school days through
their correspondences
using what they are
learning daily in the
classroom authentically.
Kayla Keith an eighth
grader at Williams says,
“I love this project. It’s
so fun to have a friend
you can send a letter to
because this generation,
we text- so it’s cool to
send letters back and
forth.”
Asked why they enjoy
the project, Lauren
Gaskins said, “I am
excited that I have the
opportunity to have a
German pen-pal. This
project helps me get a
better glimpse of
German culture and the
German language.”
Kennedy McDowell is
enjoying the
opportunity to connect
with fluent Germans.
Mrs. Uschi Jeffcoat
teaches the class in
Florence and Frau Sarah
Berzins teaches the
class in Schifferstadt.
The two have worked
together in the past on
similar projects. Both
value the enthusiasm
and the significant
learning opportunity it
brings to the students.
Frau Berzin shares,
“When I told my
students about the
project, they were very
excited and kept asking
me when the first letters
would arrive. The day I
brought them to school
everyone was thrilled
and eager to read their
letter. I think that this is
a hands-on project
which makes our
students see and
understand the value of
learning a foreign
language and getting to
know other customs
and cultural habits. This
way we teach them to
become open-minded
global citizens who
share an understanding
of others without
forgetting about their
own cultural
background.”
Jeffcoat particularly
enjoys watching the
sense of curiosity it
creates among her
students. Especially in
how their daily lives compare.
The project will continue
throughout the school year
incorporating traditional
reading and writing paired with
media and digital projects.
The Realschule Plus und
Fachoberschule im Paul-vonDenis
Schulzentrum
Schifferstadt (http://www.rsschifferstadt.de/wp/)
has 793
students, 66 teachers and 30
classes. Principal of the
Fachoberschule im Paul-vonDenis
Schulzentrum
Schifferstadt is Jochen Geeck.
The city of Schifferstadt has a
population of 20,000 and is the
neighbor city of Speyer, which
is famous for its beautiful
cathedral.
German students at Williams
Middle are part of the
International Baccalaureate
Middle Years Programme (IB/
MYP). For more information
on the MYP Programme,
contact Tenika Evans-Pee at
tevanspee@fsd1.org at or visit
www.f1s.org/domain/1774
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Students First
Students explore all aspects of law enforcement
at Florence Career Center
Have you ever wondered
what it is like
to be a real police
officer? For students
in Florence One
Schools they have
the opportunity to
find out. The Florence
Career Center’s
Law Enforcement
Services program
offers students the
opportunity to learn
the demanding job
skills that are required
of today’s law
enforcement officers.
The program is set
up into two classes in
which the student
will earn four credits.
Law Enforcement
Services 1 is where
students will learn
the basics of being a
law enforcement officer.
The students
will learn the same
material a new officer
would learn at
the South Carolina
Criminal Justice
Academy. Students
will learn about the
history of law enforcement,
the rights
afforded to US citizens
as well as visitors
to our country by
the US Constitution,
and how to communicate
these protections
to the public
both in written and
spoken form. Students
will learn about
the ethics of the job
so we do not intentionally
violate these
rights. Students will
learn about several
South Carolina state
criminal laws that today’s
police officers
have to enforce such as
murder, burglary, robbery,
etc. They will also
have to perform various
physical activities to get
an understanding of the
physical demands of law
enforcement. Lastly,
students will learn about
the Use of Force Continuum.
The Use of Force
Continuum is taught using
a simulator similar to
the one used at the
Criminal Justice Academy.
The simulator projects
a scenario that other
officers have faced in
real life onto the screen
and the students must
interact with the scenario,
decide the type of force
needed, and then apply that
force. The simulator allows
the students to use handguns,
pepper spray, and a
Taser. The simulator really
helps the students understand
the split second decisions
that officers have to
make in the line of duty.
Law Enforcement Services
2 is for those students that
have made the decision that
law enforcement is the career
field for them. Students
in Law Enforcement
Services 2 learn more in
depth about the different
fields inside law enforcement.
Students will learn
about patrol procedures and
how to apply accepted law
enforcement tactics in situations
they may face as police
officers. Students will
learn how to perform traffic
stops, how to protect and
document a crime scene,
and how to prosecute cases
in the court system. Students
will learn about commonly
abused substances,
foreign and domestic terrorism,
and the juvenile system
in South Carolina. Law Enforcement
Services 2 is a
more hands-on class.
The goal of Law Enforcement
Services is to make
sure every student that finishes
the second year will be
ready for the rigorous classes
they will have to take at
the South Carolina Criminal
Justice Academy to begin
their career in law enforcement.
The class is also
helpful to students that do
not aspire to become law
enforcement officers in that
it will help them have a better
understanding of our
criminal justice system and
a better appreciation for our
law enforcement officers.
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Page 7
Smarty Ants, Achieve 3000 change instructional time
at Timrod Elementary
Students in kindergarten
through second
grades at Timrod Elementary
engage in an
instructional website
during blended learning
called Smarty
Ants. It is an effective
and research-driven
solution to differentiate
instruction in foundational
reading skills
and accelerates student
achievement.
Smarty Ants provides
students with activities
that are engaging and
interactive. The students
are given the
opportunity to choose
their activity, while
the program selects
the skill level. The
program continuously
evaluates each student’s
exact skill level,
learning temperament,
and learning
pace. Based on this
information, the adaptive
content system
automatically delivers
the right level of skill
instruction and practice
to keep learners in
the zone of proximal
development. No two
students will approach
the content or process
in the same manner.
Teachers track and
monitor student progress
through lessons
and growth toward
fluency and comprehension.
Students
learn more
than surface-level
phonemic awareness
and phonics. Students
dive deep and master
these foundational
reading skills through
Smarty Ant’s complete
scope and sequence.
Smarty Ants
transforms emergent
readers into independent
readers.
“It is astonishing to
see our students actively
engaged with
this program during
ELA instruction,” said
Timrod Principal
Michelle McBride.
Achieve3000 is utilized
in grades third –
sixth during ELA
blended learning instruction.
This program
provides differentiated
instruction
solutions to students
for nonfiction reading
and writing. It provides
solutions in the areas of
English Language Arts,
literacy in the content
area, intervention, ELL,
blended learning, and
foundational literacy.
Achieve3000 students
made significant and substantive
gains in vocabulary,
reading comprehension,
and total reading
skills, according to a
2014-15 study conducted
by an independent evaluation
firm. Achieve3000
differentiated instruction
provides engaging, nonfiction
content that supports
core curriculum,
Response to Intervention,
English language learning,
special education,
workforce readiness, and
other instructional models.
Achieve3000 is often
used during ELA/literacy
stations in Timrod’s
blended learning program.
Achieve3000 uses
precisely matched text
using a student’s Lexile
score and the auto-adjust
feature. Achieve3000 ensures
that all students will
be able to access curriculum
and engage in the
daily lesson without
exceptions. Recently, Ms.
Strickland’s fourth grade
class won the
Achieve3000 2018 Read to
Succeed Contest! Ms.
Strickland was awarded a
gift card to use for a class
celebration.
“These two programs have
changed the culture of our
instructional practice at
Timrod,” Principal
McBride said.
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Students First
North Vista Garden Club grows more than just veggies
During the 20172018
school year,
North Vista Elementary
School
was awarded a
grant for raised
flowerbeds from
the City of Florence
along with the Eat
Smart Move More
initiative. The goal
of Eat Smart Move
More is to get
young children to
consume more
fresh fruits and
vegetables. In
March of 2018,
raised beds were
built on North
Vista’s campus.
Geneva Brown, a
Lower Montessori
teacher, is the coordinator
of the
school-based garden
club.
Ms. Brown had a
desire to have a garden
at school due to the
limited access to fresh
fruits and vegetables.
Research has shown
that without a balanced
portion of fresh fruits
and vegetables many
person may experience
health issues such as
obesity, cardiovascular
disease, diabetes and
nutrition related diseases.
According to the
National Initiative for
Children’s Health Care
Quality, 33.7 percent of
South Carolina’s children
are overweight or
obese.
Having a school garden
will give students hands
-on experience along
with the exercise of
growing fruits and vegetables.
In addition to
learning about the art of
growing a garden, students
are taught how to
make informed decisions
about what they
are eating so they can
get into the habit of
maintaining a healthy
lifestyle.
Students will be experimenting
and
working with foods
grown in the school
garden as part of
mastering state
standards and learning
about nutrition
and health facts.
Hands on learning
promotes success
across the curriculum
and develops
collaboration, critical
thinking, social
and language skills,
and subject matter
including STEAM
(Science, Technology,
Engineering,
Arts and Music).
The goals of the Garden Club
are:
•To get students involved with
gardening at school and beyond
the classroom
•To acquire a love for gardening
•To introduce students to the art
and science of gardening using
STEAM and writing skills
•To help foster students’ leadership
skills that may lead to future
hobbies and career opportunities
•To teach students about healthy
lifestyle choices by exercising
through gardening; the nutritional
value of eating fresh fruits and
vegetables
•To enter an exhibit in the Florence
County Agricultural Fair
•To establish neighborhood and
community connections
•To increase awareness of the
environment, natural resources,
ecology, conservation, composting
and recycling
•To help raise standard test
scores, especially in Science
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