Chain Reactions

Third grade has been learning about the famous cartoonist Rube Goldberg. Goldberg is well known for the elaborate crazy contraptions he drew of complicated chain reactions that, in the end, performed a simple task. Each of the third graders were inspired to use the engineering design process, along with what they learned about forces and motion in science, to create their own Rube Goldberg Machines. They each came up with their own design for a contraption with at least 5 chain reactions to complete a simple task.  The third graders used great perseverance to keep trying and redesigning until their machine worked! The students really enjoyed sharing their machines with each other and the second graders!

Why You Should Attend the Auction

We are very excited for this year’s Peace, Love, Saklan auction, and hope you will join us next Friday, April 26th, from 6 – 10:00 PM at The Garden in Walnut Creek. This adults-only event will feature a cocktail reception, seated dinner, live auction, paddle raise, and loads of fun! 

Wondering why you should attend?

  1. To support a great cause! Proceeds from the auction support the unique programs offered at Saklan, including: field experiences, guest experts, project based learning, family groups, and professional development opportunities for our amazing teachers.
  2. To hang out with old friends and make new ones! Many Saklan parents, teachers and staff members will be in attendance. This is an opportunity to get to know fellow parents and Saklan teachers better!
  3. To bid on fantastic auction items! This year’s live auction is full of must-have items:
  4. To dress up and have an adults-only night out! Dust off your leisure suits, bell bottoms, platforms and peace-sign necklaces, or whatever makes you happy, and join us for a night of fun! Signature cocktails, disco ball centerpieces, groovy tunes, and a massive game of rock, paper, scissors await you!

Ticket sales close on Monday, so don’t delay – get your tickets today!

Can’t make the auction?

There are several ways to participate in this year’s event even if you can’t attend: underwrite a teacher ticket, contribute to this year’s Fund-a-Need to elevate our classrooms to align with our gold-standard PBL curriculum, and/or participate in our online auction.

Thank you for your support of the auction and The Saklan School.

#SaklanAuction

Moraga Rotary Field Day

All Saklan students in 3rd through 5th grades are invited to participate in the 29th Annual Moraga Rotary Field Day on Wednesday, May 1st from 4:00-6:00 p.m. at Joaquin Moraga Intermediate School. This event involves all schools in Moraga and is always a ton of fun for our students. Sign-in begins at 3:30 p.m., with the events beginning at 4:00. Mr. Crabtree and David are offering to take the students from Saklan to JM at 3:00 p.m. Students will need to be picked up at JM at 6:00 p.m.

Please complete the form linked below if your child wants to participate.

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Look for additional information in Friday Folders. Everyone is invited to come out and cheer for the Saklan team. Go Suns!

#SaklanWellRounded

Spring Service Social

All Saklan community members are invited to join the PA for our Spring Service Social this Sunday, April 21st from 11:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. at The Saklan School. Pizza lunch will be provided; please bring your water bottles. 

Participants will be assembling kits of food for White Pony Express to distribute to local unhoused neighbors who do not have kitchen appliances. We will have some donated food items on site but would love your donations of:

  • Protein Bars
  • Tuna/Chicken Pouches
  • Small Containers/Individual-sized Peanut Butter
  • Jerky

Please bring your donations with you to the event. Materials will also be available for children to make notes or pictures to go with the kits. We hope you can join us!

#SaklanCompassionate #SaklanCommunity

Project-Centered Classrooms

Over the past two years, The Saklan School has transformed Project Based Learning (PBL) into an even more authentic and impactful experience, setting new benchmarks in educational innovation. We’ve significantly enriched our curriculum with a surge in field experiences, guest expert collaborations, and deep-dive project work. This evolution is driven by our commitment not just to spark our students’ curiosity and passion for learning but also to position Saklan at the forefront of redefining educational excellence for all students.

As we build on this momentum, our auction Fund-a-Need campaign this year is crucially focused on enhancing our facilities to support truly effective and collaborative PBL. While our educators are pioneering remarkable projects, the current physical spaces constrain the full potential of their innovative teaching and our students’ learning experiences. Elevating our facilities to align with our gold-standard PBL curriculum is essential for enabling our students to excel and illuminate their talents. Visualize with us the future of PBL classrooms at Saklan.

Imagine a PBL classroom that moves at the pace of imagination, where furniture shifts to support the ebb and flow of collaborative energy and creativity. In this adaptive setting, students and teachers seamlessly transition between layouts conducive to group or individual work. This environment is designed to minimize distractions and elevate concentration, with strategic lighting and acoustics setting the perfect stage for students’ creative expression.

Further, our envisioned PBL classrooms harness cutting-edge technology to connect students with a world of ideas and expertise. Through high definition monitors, advanced audio systems, and comprehensive digital tools, students can engage with thought leaders from diverse fields, fostering a learning experience that is not only interactive but also deeply resonant and personally relevant. 

By supporting our Fund-a-Need initiative, you’re investing in a future where education transcends traditional boundaries, where Saklan students are empowered to explore, innovate, and lead. Join us in shaping an environment that nurtures the thinkers, creators, and changemakers of tomorrow by attending this year’s Peace, Love, Saklan auction. It promises to be a great time for a wonderful cause.

#SaklanPBL #PeaceLoveSaklan

Public Products with a Purpose

High level Project Based Learning units at Saklan extend beyond the walls of the classroom. When students feel a sense of authentic purpose, projects become richer and more relevant for our learners. As they demonstrate understanding of academic standards, they are also engaging in sustained inquiry, thinking creatively, and acting compassionately. 

The product in each PBL unit looks different depending on a number of factors including the academic learning goals, division, and student interest. However, our work at Saklan differentiates itself by final products being more than a retelling of academic content via a poster or report. Instead Saklan students demonstrate their proficiency in academic standards through the process of answering a question or solving a problem that matters to them.

This unique blend of honoring students’ interests and maintaining academic rigor empowers students to make change and impact their community. Through high quality Project Based Learning Saklan students learn that their opinions are valued, that they have creative solutions to problems that exist in our communities, and that they can take action to make a difference. 

Below are some outstanding examples of public products from PBL units at Saklan this year that help answer a question, solve a problem, or support our community needs. 

2nd Grade

  • Driving Question: “Can colors change people’s feelings?”
  • Public Product: Concert backdrop

A concert backdrop is an essential element to our annual Saklan concert. This year our second graders took on the authentic task of designing and creating the backdrop for this important community event. 

They first developed their understanding of the art world by experiencing Yayoi Kusama’s installations at SF MoMA and diving deep to understand how artists like Joseph Albers, Erin Fong, Anne Patterson communicate emotion through either a single or a combination of colors both in painting and in large-scale installations. Considering their new understanding of color theory, students engaged in a process of design, critique, and revision before deciding as a group on the direction of their concert backdrop design. From there they stretched and explored with various materials for the background before ultimately settling on ribbon and fabric since it would flow and also be weighty enough to not tangle. They helped tie the hundreds of ribbons to the 8 foot dowels that were installed professionally in our concert space at the Lesher Performing Arts Center for our annual spring concert.  

For an additional second public project, students have been working in collaborative small groups to cut and redesign the original installation, creating smaller hanging pieces for our school auction later this month! Now their art that communicates love and serves our community will take on a new life and get to go home with a few lucky families!

7th Grade

  • Driving Question: “How can we reduce single use plastic?”
  • Public Product: Design of sustainable alternatives to single use plastic

Plastic trash and microplastics in our oceans are a real and relevant issue that seventh graders worked to address through design innovations and creativity. 

After a field experience at the Monterey Bay Aquarium and service learning on the beaches of Oahu, seventh graders considered the impact of plastics on the environment, particularly on ocean animals and what they can do to be change makers. Students designed solutions to single use plastics and presented their designs and prototypes to a panel of adults, including a local designer and small business owner, in a Shark Tank style presentation. Through this experience they grew in their capacity to think creatively about solutions to problems that exist outside the walls of Saklan and consider how they can be part of the change they want to see in the world around them.

1st and 8th grades

  • Driving Question: “How do homes keep us safe?”
  • Public Product: Bag lunches for distribution with 10,000 Lunches

An ideal Saklan graduate is an empathetic, inclusive, and kind leader. First graders lived into those descriptors during the final milestone of a months-long Project Based Learning unit on homes. 

The Homes unit in first grade is a cross-curricular unit that integrates informational reading and writing, geometry, weather, social studies, and art. This year students moved from geometry and shapes that can be used to make a strong structure to learning from our 8th graders about what can happen when people lose their homes due to natural disasters, like hurricanes. In their final milestones, first graders learned how communities can come together when housing insecurity impacts food insecurity and were inspired to think about how they can be helpers too. Together 1st and 8th graders helped their family groups bag 200 lunches for a local organization called 10,000 Lunches that aims to support local people experiencing housing and food insecurity.

#SaklanPBL

Fruits of Their Labor

Generosity from last year’s auction fund-a-need donors allowed for the purchase of a vertical indoor garden for Saklan’s Science Lab. The garden holds 30 different plants: many lettuces, herbs, vegetables and some flowers. This year the 6th graders have been tending to these plants as part of their earth science curriculum, in which they study both nutrient cycling in the environment and healthy food choices. The students have researched their plants, kept biweekly measurements and drawings, and now are getting to enjoy the fruits of their labor!

Right before Spring Break, students got to enjoy lettuce (butterhead, red and green tatsoi, hon tsai tai, red sail and montecarlo) from the garden! They enjoyed eating the sweet basil they grew mixed with some mozzarella and tomatoes from the store (their tomatoes are still green). They also added mint leaves to lemonade. 

Next they hope to enjoy the cauliflower, tomatoes, peppers and more of the herbs they have grown! 

#SaklanHandsOn

Be Forgiving

Saklan’s social-emotional learning emphasis for April is to be forgiving. During the month, all Saklan students are discussing what it means to forgive and looking for ways to be forgiving with others. On Monday, April 22nd, all Saklan students will participate in Earth Day activities, and during the activities the 1st – 8th grade students join with their family group members and take part in cross-grade level discussions and activities to gain an even greater understanding of being forgiving.

#SaklanSEL

Loving Family Groups

On Tuesday, Saklan’s 1st – 8th grade students gathered with their family groups to discuss how to be loving, the March social emotional learning focus. Together the groups shared actions to show love or care for others.

The family group leaders shared that the 1st and 8th graders have been learning about homes and what it is like to not have a home or not know where your next meal is coming from. The 1st graders shared reasons why people might need help or experience hunger. The 1st and 8th graders explained that there are many reasons why people might need help, including: because they lost their job, due to a natural disaster, due to extra expenses (like a broken down car or unexpected medical expenses).

After sharing the book, Saturday at the Food Pantry, the Family Group leaders explained that the day’s family group activity was to make bagged lunches for those who are food insecure in our community. Each group then worked together to make 20 bagged lunches, each containing a can of Vienna sausages, fruit cup, fruit squeeze, oatmeal, granola bar, peanut butter, crackers and tuna.

After school on Tuesday, the bagged lunches were transported to 10,000 Lunches, a local organization that distributes food to those who are food insecure in our bay area community.

#SaklanCompassionate #SaklanSEL

Spring Holidays

For those who attended CLAS last Friday, you caught a glimpse of the learning our students have done around spring holidays. Here is a deeper glance into some of the learning that has taken place during the month of March.

Fourth grade students partnered up to explore and learn about various spring holidays including Holi, Easter, Ramadan, and St. Patrick’s Day. Their collaborative efforts culminated in the creation of informational posters which they formally presented to their classmates, and then put on display at CLAS. Through this activity, the fourth graders emphasized the importance of respecting and understanding different cultures while celebrating diversity.

Earlier this month, Hoot Owl parents, Rachel and Richa, taught the Hoot Owls about Holi. They shared that Holi is the Indian festival of colors which happens in Spring when new colors start showing up in nature. It is a time to celebrate our differences, and even though we are all different, we are all beautiful.  They read the book Festival of Colors by Surishtha Sehgal and Kabir Sehgal, and illustrated by Vashti Harrison. It shared the meaning of the holiday and how people celebrate it by wearing white and throwing powders of various colors (made from dried flowers) at each other in a fun and festive way. As a class the Hoot Owls represented this by creating marble art with lots of different colors. The marbles were rolled on top of paper in different skin colors, and when the paint dried they cut them out into people.

The Owlets learned about Ramadan when Nadia, an Owlet parent, visited their classroom. Nadia narrated the book Moon’s Ramadan and showed the Preschoolers images of her family celebrating Ramadan. The students discovered that Ramadan is observed throughout the new moon phase and concludes on the new moon. Adults fast during the day and eat at night, breaking their fast with an iftar, a meal which usually starts by eating dates. The Owlets also enjoyed painting some Ramadan decorations!