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Week of:
August 23
Bell Schedule
Monday - Bell II
Tuesday - Bell II Wednesday - Bell I Thursday - Bell I Friday - Bell I
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Enrollment Forms
Parents are reminded that every student must have a completed enrollment/residency form on file by Friday, September 3. If you have not completed your enrollment, please make sure you do so. |
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August 23 First Day of School 8th Grade Textbook Distribution
August 24 7th Grade Textbook Distribution
August 25 6th Grade Textbook Distribution
August 30
8th Grade Safety Meeting; Period 1 in the auditorium
August 31
7th Grade Safety Meeting; Period 1 in the auditorium
6th Grade Parent Workshops; 6:30 - 8 pm
September 1
6th Grade Safety Meeting; Period 1 in the auditorium
PTA Meeting 6 - 6:30 pm 6th Grade Parent Workshops; 6:30 - 8 pm
September 2 New to Deal Staff Meeting; 3:30 pm Music Department Family Night; 6:30 pm
September 3 LSRT Meeting; 7:30 am Deadline for Schedule Changes
September 6 Labor Day (school closed)
September 7 DCBAS Reading PTA Family Night/ Back to School Night 6 - 9 pm
September 8 DCBAS Math WTU Chapter Meeting Department Chair Meeting
September 9 DCBAS Makeup SCAC Meeting
September 14 6th Grade Hemlock Field Trip (Team Rio)
September 15 6th Grade Hemlock Trip (Team Istanbul)
September 16 6th Grade Hemlock Trip (Team Manila) Deficiencies Due to Homeroom Teachers Science Project Part I Due Faculty Meeting; 3:30 pm
September 17 PD Day for Teachers and Aides (No School for Students)
September 22 Deficiencies Due to Administrators Department Chair Meeting IB Curriculum Night; 6:30
September 23 First Advisory Midpoint
September 24 IB MYP Committee Meeting; 8:10 am
September 27 -
October 1
Spirit Week September 29
WTU Chapter Mtg; 3:30 pm
September 30
Buddy Day
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Stay Informed!
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Library Media Center General Information
Library Hours
8:00 am - 5 pm
Before School
8:00 am - 8:40 am
After School
3:30 pm - 5 pm
*Students must have parent permission to stay after school
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Support Deal!
Deal would like to thank Steve Agostino of Taylor Agostino Group, Long and Foster Real Estate for joining our Promotional Sponsorship Program. Thank you!
For more information about becoming a promotional sponsor, plese contact Diana Rojas, nogroj@yahoo.com or Lisa Oakley, oakleyhome@rcn.com
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The Weekly Bulletin

"Think Globally. Listen Compassionately. Act Inclusively." |
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Our Mission:
Alice Deal Middle School inspires excellence, curiosity, and compassion through intellectual and social engagement. |
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Thought for the Week
"The beginning is the most important part of the work."
-Plato |
Principal's Message...
Welcome to the first day of the 2010-2011 school year!
It was a joy to welcome the new 6th grade students and
their families last Friday during orientation. I
have received only positive feedback from everyone about the event. Thanks to all of the Deal staff and the Deal PTA for making it possible.
Parents, stay connected & informed! The first step is to join the Deal PTA. The PTA is our
strongest partner, and I would like to see 100% of parents join the PTA
this year! In addition, I recommend reading "The Roller-Coaster Years,"
by Giannetti & Sagarese. This book does a good job of
combining research with practical suggestions about the middle school child.
Teachers, thank you for a great week. I know you are excited and ready! Please take the time in your teams and homerooms to review this week's "Food for Thought" article. It sets the stage nicely for opening the school year with the right attitude. I am eager to see you in action, doing what you do best!
Students, welcome back! The halls are not the same without you. We continue to be the best middle school in the city, and I cannot wait to see how you will make us even stronger and better! Always get to school on time and do your best!
I look forward to seeing all our students tomorrow morning! This school year is going to be fantastic!
Principal Kim |
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Distribution of Schedules
Beginning at 8 am today, 7th graders (West wing entrance) and 8th graders (gymnasium entrance) will pick up their schedules and proceed directly to their first period class. 6th grader will pick up their schedules in front of the building and proceed to the auditorium where they will sit by homerooms with their teachers.
Textbook Distribution
Monday - 8th Grade (in math classes)
Tuesday - 7th Grade (in math classes)
Wednesday - 6th Grade (in math classes)
All students are expected to have all of their textbooks covered by Monday, August 30.
Lunchtime
For the first two weeks, 6th and 7th graders will sit by teams during lunch. All students will be seated when they enter the cafeteria and will be directed when to get on line. It is very important that students who purchase lunch know their student ID number. |
Student and Parent information..
Girls' Soccer Girls in grades 6, 7, and 8 who are interested in trying out for the Deal soccer team should see Mr. Ngwa in CG07 on Friday at 3:15 pm to pick up a permission slip. Try-out dates will be communicated in next week's bulletin.
Step Team Do you have rhythm? Do you love to perform in front of a crowd? Then you should tryout for the Deal Step Team! We are forming early this year so that we will be able to compete throughout the school year! An interest meeting will be held on Monday, August 30 in Room C222 at 3:30 pm SHARP! If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to stop by and see Ms. Ofodile in Room C222. See you there!!
Welcome Peer Mediators We hope you had a good summer. If you have already been trained at Deal or in another school to be a peer mediator, you are invited to the first peer mediator meeting of the year at 8:00 am on Friday, August 27, in the counselor's office. You must have Ms. McFarland sign your agenda before Friday in order to be permitted in the building. We look forward to working with you this year.
Physical Education Uniforms Students who will have Physical Education for the first semester will need to bring $20 for a physical education uniform this week. Please prepare for physical activity beginning Tuesday. Athletic Department Fundraiser Please purchase your ESPN The Magazine subscription and support our athletic program. The 2 year subscription is $40. The school keeps $30 and ESPN gets $10. Help our school and give the gift that keeps on giving the whole year round. Sign up with Coach Downing (202) 327-4875 cell or coachdowning@yahoo.com Make checks payable to: ALICE DEAL (MEMO Team ID# 87885) |
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Lockers Please make sure to assign lockers this morning.
First Day of Faculty Debriefing
There will be a quick faculty meeting at 3:30 pm today in the auditorium.
Professional Development Profile All teachers are asked to complete and submit your Professional Development Profile to Dr. Shanklin by the COB on August 27.
Team Calendar - September Each team should forward a copy of their September calendar to the appropriate grade-level administrator by Monday, August 30. Homeroom Documentation Homeroom teachers are asked to submit the cell phone and discipline policy certification forms as well as their locker list and money to Ms. Baxter by Tuesday, August 31. Substitute FoldersSubstitute folders must be turned in to Ms. Baxter by September 3. Schedule Changes All schedule changes must be approved by an administrator and emailed to Ms. Baxter by Friday, September 3.
Bulletin Announcements Please email information for the bulletin to Ms. Baxter by 1:30 pm on Thursdays. The subject should be bulletin in your email.
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IB Middle Years Program
Welcome back to an exciting year of activities and learning based on Deal's IB Middle Years Program. Students will engage the IB Learner Profile this week on Tuesday. Each grade will explore the Learner Profile in different ways, but all of them will look at these important characteristics: the student as a thinker, communicator, inquirer, and risk-taker, and the student who is knowledgeable, balanced, reflective, principled, caring, and open-minded. What are our strengths? Where do want to grow? As students develop here at Deal, we hope that we can frame their experience with these characteristics.
IB Curriculum Night - September 22 The first of this year's four IB curriculum nights will be held at Deal from 6:30 until 8 pm on Wednesday, September 22. Through these evenings we hope to describe IB assessment, vertical planning, units, areas of interaction, and many other elements of the program. Different topics will be covered at each of the four nights - these topics will be announced next week.
IB MYP Committee meeting - 8:10 am on September 24 Teachers who serve as "MYP masters" for their teams are to attend our first committee meeting on Friday, September 24 at 8:10 am in the Library Media Center (tentative). Please note this on your calendars.
Zeroes Are Not Permitted (ZAP) The ever-popular ZAP will not get underway this first week of school. ZAP, Zeroes Are not Permitted, is a lunch-time support program that provides students in all grades with a chance to catch up on work missed or to even get ahead. Look for more information next week in this space! |
Explorer Time
Start Up Information for Parents and Students
Explorer Time, the Deal afterschool program, will start today. Over 225 students have registered for the program so far. This is a remarkable increase from last year's usual group of 30 students! Our first weeks will be organized a little differently than the program that we will eventually have in place. In the first two weeks students will be divided into groups of 30-40 students. Groups will be divided by grade and teams. We will focus on getting acquainted and building a team, learning procedures and rules, using simple steps for managing homework and staying organized, and completing work on summer reading assignments. We will also take time each day for recreation including arts activities, games and sports. Each day will include a break for supper at 4:30 (like an extra lunch) to feed hungry young people! In a couple of weeks when additional staff are in place to work with our expanded program, we will be able to reduce the size of grade/team groups to approximately 15-20 students working with a teacher and we will shift our focus to expanded homework time and introduce clubs.
At 3:15 pm students will have 10 minutes to go to lockers and register in the gallery outside the cafeteria. Many of our activities in the first weeks will take place in the cafeteria.
The program ends at 6:15 pm. Parents are required to come to the front door, show identification and sign their children out. Students who have permission to leave on their own to walk or take public transportation home will sign themselves out.
Students will not be permitted to go to lockers except at the end of the regular school day and they will not be allowed to use cell phones during the program. Parents please make sure that you have made a clear plan for when/how your child will get home each day. If you have an emergency that requires a change of plans you may call Ms. Berkey, program coordinator, at 202-251-5803.
In the first week parents should be on the lookout for a program handbook and the final enrollment form for the program. One final piece of good news! There is NO co-pay for students in DCPS afterschool programs at middle schools! The entire program is free of charge.
Please feel free to email Ms. Berkey any questions, requests, updates, etc. at margaret.berkey@dc.gov
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Before & after school activities this week...
All teacher sponsored activities will begin on the week of September 6th. Please be on the look out for details in next week's bulletin!
Friday AM Peer Mediators meeting, 8 am, Counselor's office
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Food for thought...
How Educators' and Students'
Mind-Sets Influence Achievement Beliefs
about intelligence have a major impact on student achievement, says Stanford
professor Carol Dweck in this Principal
Leadership article. Teachers, administrators, students, and parents tend to
see intelligence in one of two ways: - Fixed - How bright you are is set at birth: "Some students are smart and
some are not, and that's that." - Malleable - Intelligence can grow as a result of effort and instruction. "A
growth mind-set doesn't imply that everyone is the same or that anyone could be
Einstein," says Dweck, "but it does imply that everyone's intellectual ability
can grow - and that even Einstein wasn't Einstein before he put in years of
passionate, relentless effort." Having a growth mind-set is especially
important for students who believe the negative stereotypes about their
abilities - for example, many African Americans, Hispanics, and girls (with
respect to science and math). To
test this theory, Dweck and two colleagues monitored hundreds of New York City
students who entered seventh grade with similar math achievement. Over a
two-year period, students who believed that intelligence could be developed
significantly outperformed students with the fixed mind-set, and the
achievement gap between the two groups widened with each passing semester. Why? "Because they believed
that their intellect could be developed, students with the growth mind-set
focused on learning, believed in effort, and were resilient in the face of
setbacks," says Dweck. "Students with the fixed mind-set, however, worried more
about looking smart and not making mistakes, thought that needing to make an
effort to learn meant that their intelligence was deficient, and became
discouraged or defensive in the face of setbacks because they believed that
setbacks reflected limitations in their intelligence." When they got a bad
grade on a test, these students thought about cheating on future tests because
they believed they didn't have the ability to do well by legitimate means. But can the growth mind-set be
taught? Dweck and her colleagues identified seventh graders whose math scores
were steadily declining and divided them into two groups: - Students
in the control group were taught study skills in eight workshop sessions. - Students
in the intervention group learned study skills and were also taught about the
malleability of intelligence - that the brain is like a muscle and the more
it's used, the stronger it becomes - that when they learn something new, their
brains form new connections, making them smarter. "Students were galvanized by the idea that
the growth of their minds was under their control," says Dweck. One boy who had
been a troublemaker heard this message and said, "You mean I don't have to be
dumb?" What
were the results of the study? The math achievement of students in the control
group continued to get worse, despite instruction in study skills.
Control-group students, on the other hand, showed marked improvement. Teachers
(who didn't know which students were in which group), immediately noticed the
difference in control-group students' attentiveness, study habits, motivation,
homework completion, and achievement. Dweck
was so impressed with the results of this study (and others like it) that she
and her colleagues developed Brainology,
a software program designed to teach students the growth mind-set, and tested
it in 20 New York City schools. Virtually all students reported positive
changes in their ideas about learning and study habits. "Most exciting," says
Dweck, "many reported using the image of their neurons making new connections
to motivate themselves in school, saying that they pictured their neurons
forming new connections when they paid attention in class and that when tempted
to not study, they rejected that idea on the grounds that new connections would
not be formed." What
about teachers' mind-sets? Dweck reports a German study showing that
low-achieving students who had teachers with the fixed-ability mindset made no
progress, whereas students with teachers with the growth mindset improved to
become moderate or high achievers. Dweck has found that adults with the
fixed-intelligence mindset tend to make snap judgments, quickly putting people
into categories. "This means that once they have decided that someone is or is
not capable," she says, "they are not very open to new information to the
contrary... When teachers decide that certain students are not capable (or when
principals decide that certain teachers are not capable), they may not take
steps to help them develop their potential." The differences in how
students are treated by different teachers is stark. For example, when dealing
with a student who just failed the first math test of the year, a fixed-mindset
teacher typically comforts the student and says that not everyone can be good
at math. A growth-mindset teacher tells the student he or she can do better,
offers encouragement, and teaches specific learning strategies and study
skills. Students
are quick to pick up on their teachers' beliefs, says Dweck, as was
demonstrated by a study of college athletes. "The more that athletes thought
their coaches believed in hard work over natural talent," she says, "the better
the athletes did that year. Students know what educators value - they pick up
their messages and act on them... It is essential for educators to communicate
that they hold a growth mind-set." The way adults deliver praise
is particularly powerful in shaping their mindsets. "When adults praise
students' intelligence after a student performs well," says Dweck, "they send a
fixed mind-set message: you're intelligent and that's what I value in you. When
adults praise effort (or strategies), however, they send a growth mind-set
message: you can build your abilities through effort." Students who are praised
for ability go to pieces when they fail or encounter frustrating tasks.
Students who are praised for effort are undaunted by challenges and continue to
improve. Recent studies show that
teachers' mind-sets are key to closing the achievement gap. Students who
believe that ability is fixed are haunted and discouraged if they believe their
race or gender is less able. But students who see ability as malleable, even if
they know their race or gender has underperformed historically, are willing to
work on changing history through effective effort and working with their
teachers. "When black and Latino students adopt a growth mind-set," says Dweck,
"their grades and achievement test scores look more similar to those of their
non-stereotyped peers. When female students adopt a growth mind-set, their
grades and achievement test scores in mathematics become similar to those of
their male classmates. In these studies, every group seemed to benefit from
holding a growth mind-set, but the stereotyped groups gained the most." "Mind-Sets
and Equitable Education" by Carol Dweck in Principal
Leadership, January 2010 (Vol. 10, #5, p. 26-29), no e-link available
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