Discovery Arts and Technology Academy

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Fresh Fruit & Vegetables

Monday, November 14th, 2011

11/14/2011- Today we will be serving carrot sticks for snack


Fresh Fruit & Vegetables

Monday, November 14th, 2011

11/14/2011- Today we will be serving  carrot sticks for snack


Upcoming events: November

Friday, October 14th, 2011
  • 11/2 SPIRIT breakfast
  • 11/8 No school for students
  • 11/10 Parent teacher conferences
  • 11/11 Parent teacher conferences

We are currently completing the MEAP test. Students are giving 100% of themselves. Parents please support us during this time.

Friday, October 14th, 2011

Important Dates in May

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

5/9 – School Board Meeting at 6pm

5/26 - Paragon Night for 3rd to 5th grade at 2pm

5/30 – No School: Memorial Day


Important Dates in April

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

4/06 – Student of the Month Breakfast

4/11 – Parent-Teacher Conferences, from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.

4/12 – Parent-Teacher Conferences, from noon to 4 p.m. and Half Day of school for students. Students will be dismissal at 11:30 a.m.

4/14 –  Pre-K & Kindergarten Round Up, at 6 p.m. in the school cafeteria

4/15 – Class Preview Pre-K 7 Kindergarten Round UP, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

4/18-25 –  Spring Break

4/26 – Students Return to School

4/28 – School Board Meeting at 6 p.m.


Discovery Arts and Technology Academy Now Open for Pre-Enrollment

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

We are currently inviting parents to pre-enroll their children at Discovery Arts and Technology Academy for the 2011-2012 school year. Once your pre-enrollment form is received, a school representative will contact you to discuss enrollment options.

Pre-enrollment is now open to all students residing in the respective school district. Discovery Arts and Technology Academy can accommodate students entering into kindergarten to 8th grade. It is imperative that parents submit enrollment applications for each student planning to enroll, as early as possible.

Discovery Arts and Technology Academy implements a thematic, interactive program that incorporates multiple learning styles. Mornings are dedicated to building solid skills in the core subject areas of reading, writing, math and science. While the afternoons are reserved for foreign language, music, physical education and a daily 90-minute block of Discovery Arts and Technology Academy’s Paragon curriculum.

The Paragon curriculum is interdisciplinary, engaging, discovery-based and multi-cultural. The hands-on approach of Paragon addresses the multiple intelligences and individual learning styles. This enhances students’ communication skills, analysis and self-expression.

Discovery Arts and Technology Academy also offers an emotionally and physically safe learning environment, access to computers and technology, committed and qualified teachers and staff and encourage parental involvement. Teachers will conduct regular goal setting conferences with individual children and their parents, to ensure the student’s success.

To pre-enroll, click here .


Discover Arts and Technology Academy Schedules School Board Meeting, for October 28

Monday, October 18th, 2010

Inkster, Mich.  – Discovery Arts and Technology Academy (DATA) had scheduled the next School Board meeting for 6 p.m., on October 28 at the school cafeteria.

This meeting is open to the public and parents are encouraged to attend.

DATA will host School Board meetings, on the fourth Thursday of every month. For more information or to obtain a copy of the minutes from previous School Board meetings, please call (313) 827-0762.

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Discover Arts and Technology Academy Schedules School Board Meeting, for October 28

Inkster, Mich. Discovery Arts and Technology Academy (DATA) had scheduled the next School Board meeting for 6 p.m., on October 28 at the school cafeteria.

This meeting is open to the public and parents are encouraged to attend.

DATA will host School Board meetings, on the fourth Thursday of every month. For more information or to obtain a copy of the minutes from previous School Board meetings, please call (313) 827-0762.


Raising A Reader

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Nurturing a love for reading and writing is a role that parents can play in their children’s lives. Success in school and later careers depends on having good reading and writing skills. These days we constantly hear about the importance of literacy. What does literacy mean? It’s the ability to read and write.

You can help your child develop a love for reading by reading out loud to him or her regularly. Research shows that reading together just 30 minutes a day significantly increases your child’s reading ability.

Another important activity for promoting literacy is using the library. Get a library card for each child and go often to select new books. Check with the librarian to find what is appropriate for your child’s grade and reading level. Take the time to look at your daily activities and help your child see the connection to reading and writing. Cooking, reading food labels, playing word games, and writing stories can be helpful, too.

For children who don’t read much, it might take time to get used to reading aloud, and later, silent reading. Give it the time it deserves. You may get tired of reading the same stories again and again, but it is that repetition that is so important for your child.

Children see adults around them writing and reading messages, notes, articles or books. This often makes them want to say their ideas out loud so you can write them down. At preschool age or older, children begin to write, using their own invented spelling or best guess. They understand that writing helps them share important information and experiences. It is less important for children to spell the words right than it is to enjoy the experience. Correct spelling can happen a little later.

Language and Reading Activities

Here are some easy language and reading activities to do together with children at home or at school.

At home:

·      read the mail and let children have what you do not need

·    browse together through catalogs

·    keep a family calendar with messages and reminders

·    send birthday and other special occasion cards with personal notes

·    create a family library of magazines, newspapers and books

·    save a space at the kitchen table for drawing and writing

·    have your child tell a story as you write it down

·    read books with your child

For the store:

·    write shopping lists and clip coupons

·    discuss recipes and ingredients

·    read food labels and containers (children love cereal boxes)

·    read words on birthday cakes

Other places:

·    go to the library, yard sales and school fundraisers for sources of books

·    read the names and numbers on athletes’ shirts

·    get library cards for your family and go every few weeks

Creating A Special Place

You can encourage your child to include reading and writing in his or her activities by providing a special place. You might have a child-sized table or desk and low, open shelves, but a designated chair at the kitchen table can work well, too. A nearby bulletin board to display finished work is a good idea. Here are some suggested materials to have available:

·                  magnet boards with alphabet numbers and letters

·                  magnetic poetry

·                  chalkboards and chalk

·                  alphabet and number tiles

·                  puzzles

·                  stamps and stamp pads

·                  clipboards and file folders

·                  envelopes and paper (different sizes and colors, lined  and unlined)

·                  junk mail, catalogues, magazines, coupons

·                  mailbag or mailbox (recycle an old handbag or shoebox)

·                  pencils (regular and colored) and pens

·                  crayons and markers (nontoxic, thick and thin)

·                  paints and brushes

·                  magic slates

·                  bookbinding materials (stapler, hole punch, yarn, scissors)

·                  ready-made blank books

Source:  The Daily Parent, Vol. 8. The Daily Parent Online


Welcome

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

A group of teachers, curriculum specialists and Mosaica executives gathered for the Mosaica Math Summit on May 4 and 5. The summit focused on ways to increase math achievement at Mosaica schools around the world. Dawn Linden, Mosaica’s Director of Education explained the purpose of bringing these educators together: “Mathematics achievement is high on our list of priorities and we’re looking for innovative, effective strategies to increase conceptual understanding, and to ensure that we’re reaching each student every day.”

Referencing the Final Report of the U.S. Department of Education’s National Mathematics Advisory Panel (2008), summit attendees reviewed various math programs’ strengths and weaknesses and explored successful methods used in the United States and by countries that performed well on TIMMS, with the goal of adopting best practices from around the globe, raising math interest, and making math an integral part of school culture. Michael J. Connelly, Mosaica’s Chief Executive Officer, announced the rationale at the beginning of the summit: “Literacy and numeracy are the twin tools for international success on the global stage of the 21st century. Our schools are committed to high levels of student achievement and the development of life-long learners who are comfortable participating on that stage. Following our Literacy Summit, which launched our highly successful Literacy Initiative two years ago, this Math Summit is the both the culmination of years of research and planning and the beginning of the implementation phase.”

As a result of the decisions taken at the summit, Mosaica Education will implement a system-wide Math Initiative beginning in the fall of 2009. This initiative focuses on placing Math Coaches in every school, increasing the number of high-quality math teachers at every grade, exploring ways to offer alternative certifications to math teachers coming from science and industry, and bringing math specialists to upper elementary grades. The initiative will also adjust the daily schedule to allow for 90 minutes of uninterrupted math in all grades; provide additional professional development for teachers to cultivate confident implementation of the new program; develop math clubs and competitions in all schools; and – perhaps most importantly – ensure that learning math will be FUN!

Dr. Dawn Eidelman, Mosaica’s Co-Founder and President of its Paragon Division commented, “The beauty of our new initiative is that it will augment project-based learning by linking mathematics more integrally to the history of great ideas and great people in world culture through our Paragon curriculum. To innovate purposefully and to design the future, we must build upon the lessons from our past.”


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