Aloha C1-C Families,
Here are a couple of updates for today:
1. Prodigy code working
The prodigy team sent an email today that the code for our class should now be working and a parent confirmed that when they entered it today, it worked. So if your child is using their old account for prodigy please do the following:
2. Epic
It appears that some students are having trouble logging in to Epic without a class code, while others are accessing the site without any issues. I believe if you log in as a parent, there's no class code needed. However, if you log in as a student, you need to enter the code. Therefore, I posted the code on our class site and it's cqb6701.
I hope those of you trying out the Origo at Home Math lessons with your child have been managing it okay. I'm doing the same lessons with my son and they seem to be quick. Feel free to have your child do a couple more examples. If you have expo pens at home, you could make your own "white board" by getting a sheet protector and sticking a blank paper inside. Then you can write on the sheet protector and erase over and over again. I think next week's lesson will be focusing on division, but since the material is more of a review of what we already learned in school, I tried to connect the area model (array) to division. If you start with the number on the inside (dividend) and write a single digit number on the outside (divisor), can your child come up with the missing factor (quotient) by breaking the number on the inside apart into groups?
Have a wonderful evening!
~Mrs. Au
Here are a couple of updates for today:
1. Prodigy code working
The prodigy team sent an email today that the code for our class should now be working and a parent confirmed that when they entered it today, it worked. So if your child is using their old account for prodigy please do the following:
- Sign in to prodigy
- Select "update"
- Input class code: 801446
2. Epic
It appears that some students are having trouble logging in to Epic without a class code, while others are accessing the site without any issues. I believe if you log in as a parent, there's no class code needed. However, if you log in as a student, you need to enter the code. Therefore, I posted the code on our class site and it's cqb6701.
I hope those of you trying out the Origo at Home Math lessons with your child have been managing it okay. I'm doing the same lessons with my son and they seem to be quick. Feel free to have your child do a couple more examples. If you have expo pens at home, you could make your own "white board" by getting a sheet protector and sticking a blank paper inside. Then you can write on the sheet protector and erase over and over again. I think next week's lesson will be focusing on division, but since the material is more of a review of what we already learned in school, I tried to connect the area model (array) to division. If you start with the number on the inside (dividend) and write a single digit number on the outside (divisor), can your child come up with the missing factor (quotient) by breaking the number on the inside apart into groups?
Have a wonderful evening!
~Mrs. Au