Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Click Here
Eighth grade English with Ms. Phan started reading and discussing “The House on Mango Street.”
Opening Message
The Associate Teacher Program: Learning, Teaching, Inspiring
Anthea Lavergne, Director of Curriculum and the Associate Teacher Program
Post Date: November 15, 2024
In a short walk from this morning’s Fall Sports Assembly in the Barn to Mrs. Bettinelli’s music room in the Schoolhouse, the impact and importance of the Associate Teacher program at Belmont Day School were on full display. At the assembly, John O’Neill, our director of athletics and a former associate teacher at BDS, ran the show with the confidence and caring of an experienced educator. While in the music room, our six current associates were enthusiastic students, joyfully playing xylophones as an introduction to the pedagogy and approach of our masterful music teachers.
The legacy of the Associate Teacher program now extends across decades of helping to create generations of new teachers. Each fall, in partnership with Lesley University, we welcome preservice teachers into our school community and immerse them in the classroom while they earn their graduate degree in education and complete the requirements for Massachusetts state licensure. During their year-long apprenticeship, associates teach in two different classrooms, work closely with experienced teachers, and learn through direct feedback and reflection.
We currently offer three licensure paths–early childhood, elementary, and middle school humanities–and this year’s cohort is evenly split between the elementary and middle schools. Their placements this fall include second grade, third grade, fourth grade, fifth grade humanities, sixth grade social studies, and eighth grade English. Early in 2025, they’ll each start in a new classroom with new students and new mentors.
Since that nerve-wracking first day of school, our associates have gradually stepped through more challenging responsibilities that prepare them for the ultimate goal of managing their own classrooms. In the first weeks of school, they spend time observing the teaching and planning practices of their mentor teachers and supporting and building relationships with students as they learn. After that time observing, a shift occurs. Associates start planning and teaching individual lessons with the support of their mentor teachers. And now, our associates are taking over.
Takeovers allow the associates to be the classroom’s primary teacher. Typically, we start with a takeover morning and increase it to a takeover day. Eventually, associates take over for a whole week. This process is integral to the apprenticeship as associates apply what they learn about classroom management, teaching approaches, and student support and engagement. This exercise also builds confidence and helps associates develop their own identities as educators.
The Associate Teacher program is a gift to our entire school community. Associates bring fresh perspectives and new ideas to the classroom, as well as our fields and courts as athletics coaches. Their lessons are informed by current educational theories and practices from their graduate studies and can introduce creative and engaging approaches to teaching that complement their mentor teacher’s style.
As associates receive regular feedback and refine their teaching methods, the quality of instruction improves, directly benefiting the students they teach. From a student’s perspective, seeing an associate in the role of a learner as well as a teacher models the importance of lifelong learning, inspiring students to value education. Add to that, the partnership between the mentor teacher and the associate fosters a collaborative atmosphere and demonstrates the value of teamwork and effective communication in achieving goals.
As we continue to see the changes in education and the increasing demand for excellent teachers amidst a national teaching shortage, we are grateful for the program that provides us the privilege to contribute to the development of the new generation of teachers. And, because our associates will embark on their own journeys in schools near and far, we are especially proud of the positive impact that Belmont Day School has on students in classrooms across the country and beyond.
Upcoming Events
Coming Up This Week
Monthly Calendar
Step Into the Studio Night
Wednesday, November 20 at 7 p.m.
Palandjian Arts Center
You might remember last year’s big campus-wide live music event called the BDS Music Showcase, a middle school talent show organized and run by the seventh and eighth grade music classes. This year, instead of doing a live music talent show, the students are organizing a live recording session featuring the songwriting and singing talents of students in Mrs. Bettinelli’s A Cappella and Songwriting classes! Teacher Cotner’s Recording Technology class will be responsible for curating the space, planning the technical side of things, and promoting this unique and fun community event in a studio environment here on campus.
So, please join us in supporting our talented middle school musicians!
After School & Enrichment Registrations Are Now Open
Pre-Thanksgiving Break Celebrations
Pajama Day!
Monday, November 25
We will close out our penultimate day of learning before the Thanksgiving break joyfully! Students in all grades are invited to wear their coziest, comfiest, school-appropriate pajamas for Pajama Day on Monday, November 25. Slippers are fine, but please send in a pair of sneakers and essential outdoor gear (coats, hats, gloves, etc.) with students for recess.
Gratitude Assembly & Early Dismissal
Tuesday, November 26
Assembly from 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
School Closes at 12:30 p.m. | no After School Program
Join us in the Barn gym as we gather before the start of Thanksgiving Break.
The assembly will include reflections and sharings celebrating how Indigenous Tribal Nations honor community and family. These Tribal Nations continue to be leaders in understanding the importance of communal care. On this day, BDS will engage with Indigenous-centered content, share the ways we show gratitude, and enjoy music before heading off for break. We hope you will join us for this special event!
Fall Garden Workday
TOMORROW! Saturday, November 16
10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
As we wind down our harvesting for the season, please join us for the fall garden workday. Lower school students are invited to participate with a parent. Middle school students can come with a parent or on their own. We’ll work together to rake, clear, mulch, and put the school garden to rest for the winter. Please contact Kathy Jo Solomon with questions or if you plan to attend.
Lunch & Snack Menu
November 18 to November 22
Monday
Snack: fruit cup; Goldfish
Lunch: beef stew; vegan stew; buttermilk biscuits; warm rolls; steamed Brussel sprouts; mixed green salad with shredded carrots and balsamic dressing
Tuesday
Snack: bananas; Smartfood
Lunch: cheese tortellini with marinara; penne with marinara; gluten-free tortellini with marinara; steamed seasoned broccoli; Mediterranean salad with artichokes and olives
Wednesday
Snack: apple slices: Tiger Bites
Lunch: BDS Thanksgiving: carved turkey; vegan Italian sausage; mashed potato; gravy; cranberry sauce; seasoned green beans with roasted shallot; spinach salad with goat cheese, pumpkin seeds, cranberries, and sherry vinaigrette
Thursday
Snack: clementines; Fritos
Lunch: BDS tomato soup; cheesy bagels; vegan cheesy bagels; gluten-free cheesy bagels; roasted butternut squash; Caesar salad
Friday
Snack: apples; banana oatmeal rounds
Faculty Lunch
Please click the button below for a more detailed and updated weekly menu.
BDS News
COMMUNITY NEWS
State of the School 2024
Thursday, December 5 at 8:30 a.m.
Coolidge Hall
How are we doing? Where are we headed? Join us for the 2024 State of the School! Along with reviewing some of the feedback we received in last year’s parent survey, this year’s State of the School is an invitation to engage in a conversation about Belmont Day’s future. Informed by research, the recent AISNE accreditation visit, and our perennial pursuit to live our mission, this year’s State of the School will include a conversation about the ways in which we deliver on our promise of excellence at Belmont Day.
This year’s State of the School will be presented as part of the Parents’ Association December meeting. I hope to see you there!
If you are unable to attend, all PA meetings are recorded and made available on the Parent Portal.
– Brendan Largay, head of school
LIBRARY NEWS
Visiting Author To Share Some Scientific Secrets
Dan Nott, author of the book Hidden Systems: Water, Electricity, the Internet and the Secrets Behind the Systems We Use Every Day is coming to Belmont Day School next Friday, November 22. We are thrilled to host this author whose book was longlisted for the National Book Award last year. While lower school students are participating in the sharing assembly, Mr. Nott will meet with all middle school students to share his approach and process for creating comics. After that, he will lead a workshop on creating nonfiction comics to describe scientific processes with the seventh grade. This will connect to their study of water systems in science class.
While all seventh graders will be reading the section of the book on water, any student who would like to read the book has access to a digital copy through Sora, our ebook and audiobook lending library. Click here for the instructions on accessing Sora.
For anyone who would like to purchase a physical copy of the book, please consider ordering a copy from Belmont Books to support the Parents’ Association Online Book Fair, which starts today! Enter the code BELMONTDAY24 at checkout for your purchase.
– Maggie Small, seventh grade science teacher, and the Innovation Team (Brit Conroy, Annie Fuerst, and Amy Sprung)
Families Can Borrow Books Throughout School Year
Did you know that families are welcome to browse our library catalog from home and place holds on books? You may request any books for delivery to your child’s cubby in addition to the choices students make when they visit the library. Click here to browse the catalog. Requests are typically processed and delivered twice a week. Please remember to return your books to your classroom return cart when you’re finished with them.
For students in pre-kindergarten to grade 3, your child’s username for the catalog is their first initial, last name, and year of graduation (e.g., asprung25). Their password is the year the school was founded. For students in grades 4-8, they may log in to the catalog with their BDS Google account to request books.
Continue Reading
Another way to access books is via our ebook and audiobook catalog, Sora. If you’re familiar with Libby from your public library, Sora is very similar as it is the school-facing version. We share access to these collections with other schools in Massachusetts in order to provide a wide variety of ebooks, audiobooks, magazines, and read-alongs. Sora can be accessed via the app or website. Click here for instructions to get started listening to great stories on any upcoming car rides with your student.
Please email asprung@belmontday.org with any questions, and thank you for being patrons of the Erskine Library.
– Amy Sprung, school librarian
BUSINESS OFFICE NEWS
First Trimester Auxiliary Program Payments Due December 13
Parents are reminded that payments for After School and Enrichment programs for the first trimester are due by December 13, 2024. Parents can view their invoices and initiate an online payment by logging into the Parent Portal and clicking on the “Invoices and Payments” button. Parents may also pay by check. Please make checks payable to Belmont Day School and mail or drop off to the school.
For families who have registered for automatic payments, the autopay batch will be processed on Friday, December 13. Please contact Blair Fross or the Business Office if you have any questions about your bill or payment.
– Hilary Berkman, chief financial officer
AUXILIARY PROGRAMS
Registration Open for Vacation Week Camps
Planning ahead for the February and April vacation weeks? We are offering Belmont Day School families the opportunity to register now for both the February and April vacation camps. We are only opening registration to school families at this time and all registrations will be processed manually through the camp office. Camp descriptions and instructions for how to register are in the dropdowns below.
February Camp
Space: The Final Frontier
Dates: Tuesday, February 18 to Friday, February 21
Cost: $625
Ever wonder how long a mission to Mars would take? Welcome to space camp at BDS! We are thrilled to be running our space odyssey-themed day camp where we will be offering programs around our galactic theme. Want to make a spaceship? Be an astronaut? Or understand the mechanics of a shuttle? Get ready to delve into planets, spaceships, aliens, and NASA with fun, engaging and educational adventures. Put on your space gear, fuel up your space shuttle, and learn about the universe! We also have limited space for extended day care ($35/day) during February Vacation Week.
April Camp
Zootopia: The Wild World of Animals
Dates: Tuesday, April 22 to Friday, April 25
Cost: $625
Ever wonder what kinds of creatures live in Antarctica? How much does an elephant weigh? What would the world be like if animals were in charge? Discover extinct ecosystems, make your own animal foot caste, and master the animal kingdom. Get ready to howl like a wolf, run like a cheetah, and build like an army ant at our very own BDS Zootopia. Perhaps we’ll even enjoy a visit from some real-life animal friends. We look forward to seeing you there! At this time we do not have extended day care available for the April Vacation camp, but hope to offer it if we are able.
Registration Process
How to register:
For families who have attended camp before:
- Send us an email at summer@belmontday.org that includes:
– Which students you wish to enroll in which weeks of vacation week camp
– Whether you need extended day care - We will enroll the children in the camp and confirm payment information
For Families who have NOT attended camp before:
- Send us an email at summer@belmontday.org that includes:
– Your camper’s name, current grade, and date of birth
– Your preferred home address
– The best phone number to reach you during camp hours
– Which weeks of vacation week camp you wish to register for - We will create an account for you, register your camper and send you a link to login.
- Following the login link will allow you to set a password.
- After logging in, please add payment information under “Financial Management.”
– Once this is done, we will run the card on file.
Please contact summer@belmontday.org with any questions registration-related questions. If you have any questions on the programs offered, please contact Blair Fross, director of school year auxiliary and specialty programs, at bfross@belmontday.org.
Learning Updates
Athletics Update: Girls’ JV Soccer Saves the Best for Last
It was an uphill battle for the girls’ junior varsity soccer team this fall. With a condensed roster and some first-time players, the team struggled to gain traction early on. As the season progressed, however, the team slowly began to make strides. Practices were focused on basic skill development and coaches worked to celebrate small successes on the field. Team captains Abigail Chang, Bea Stevenson, and Maren Whitman were instrumental in the team’s progress. As second-year players, the trio used their experience to help guide the team through some tough losses to begin the season and were impact players during the team’s final three games, which included a pair of close losses, and a hard-fought 5-4 win. During the team’s final game, first-year players Rosie Smith, Emily Wang, and Marina Hubbard shined, proving that hard work through a season’s worth of practice eventually pays dividends on the field. Congratulations to the entire girls’ junior varsity soccer team for finishing their season on a high note and saving their best for last.
– John O’Neill, director of athletics
Athletics News
- The volleyball program will be making its annual trip to Havard University this weekend to celebrate another successful season while watching the Havard women square off against Princeton.
- The boys’ JV soccer team finished the season with an even 3-3 record behind strong leadership and solid defense from veteran players Henry Mallet, Harvey Borisy, and Ewan Wheeler.
- The cross country team celebrated another successful campaign yesterday as they recognized the accomplishments of all 23 athletes, all of whom set PRs on the home course.
- Zazoue Marsan, Siri Paulsson, and Lucy Walther all finished their BDS field hockey careers on a high note as impact players despite never playing the sport before middle school.
- The football program combined for an 11-4 record this year and has talented players in the pipeline. Evan Bae and Lee Piechota will be the only returning varsity players.
- Julia Casey broke the school’s single-season scoring record by tallying a remarkable 23 goals over the course of girls’ varsity soccer’s perfect 10-0 season.
- Sam Rodriguez and Hughy Marsan finish their careers as the only three year members of the boys’ varsity soccer team in the class of 2025. Both players have left their mark on the program.
Sixth Graders Interview Faculty About Identity
Wild Robot Inspires Innovative Project in Fourth Grade
This fall, the fourth graders read The Wild Robot by Peter Brown and completed a cross-curricular project involving science, innovation, and writing. The novel is about a robot named Roz who finds herself on an island and has to adapt to survive. The book allows for rich discussions about acceptance, inclusion, forgiveness, and helping others. In the book, Roz camouflages herself to get to know the island and its inhabitants (animals), so we decided to build our own versions of Roz so she could learn about our BDS community. This process began in science class where the students learned about cardboard engineering and how to connect cardboard structures without using tape or glue. They learned how to create folds, slots, flanges, and tabs to hold their creations together.
Continue Reading
The class then worked with the innovation team on a design challenge. They needed to create their own wild robot out of cardboard with no glue and only 12 inches of tape available to them. Other constraints included height requirements and that their robot needed to be free-standing. Students set to work planning, experimenting, iterating, and trying again. Next, students created a project journal in writing class to document the tools and strategies they used and to reflect on what went well and what they would do differently next time. This is the first of three cardboard engineering challenges the students will take on this year. These journals will help students reflect on prior projects and use what they learned while also developing new skills.
The last part of the project involved fourth graders hiding their robots around the schoolhouse so the robots could observe our BDS community. Our Roz creations did not use camouflage but instead utilized the environment to hide in plain sight (a place where she may not be noticed unless you were looking for her.) We then alerted the pre-kindergarten to grade two classes to be on the lookout for our robots and provided them with data sheets they could use to keep track of the robots they found. This part of the project (much like sharing assemblies and cross-graded partnerships) connects our younger students with our older students and helps build our BDS community. Next week, the fourth graders will analyze the data and reflect on the project as a class. Fourth grade students and teachers enjoyed collaborating with the innovation team and our youngest community members.
– Lana Holman, fourth grade teacher
Parents’ Association News
Book Fair
The Parents’ Association 2024 Online Book Fair is now live! We are again partnering with Belmont Books for the annual book fair, which will be held online through November 22, with an in-store shopping event at Belmont Books on Friday afternoon, November 22 from 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. Browse and buy books from Belmont Books online and enter the code BELMONTDAY24 in the “coupon code” field (not to be confused with “online gift code”) at check-out.
Visit the book fair website for grade-level reading lists, wish lists for contributions to the Erskine Library, and further details. Please also refer to the email sent from the PA to all families this morning. Thank you!
PA Meeting
The next parents’ association meeting will be on Thursday, December 5, at 8:30 a.m. in Coolidge Hall. Our guest will be Head of School Brendan Largay who will present the 2024 State of the School (details in the BDS News section above). All parents are invited, and coffee and light refreshments will be served.
Parent Independent School Network Meeting
The Parent Independent School Network (PIN)—all Belmont Day School parents and guardians are members—hosts informational meetings throughout the school year. The next meeting will be held over Zoom on Tuesday, November 19 at 12:00 p.m. The topic is “Adolescent Psychology: Strategies for Understanding Your Teen and Preventing Risky Behavior” featuring speaker Joani Geltman, MSW. Click here for more information and required pre-registration to receive the Zoom link.
Contact the PA
Please feel free to reach out directly to any of the PA ambassador team or to email us at bdspa@belmontday.org:
President – Shanying Zhang
Vice President – Megan Akkina
Treasurer – Andy Stevenson
Clerk – Jeff Wang
Beyond BDS
DANCE PERFORMANCE
Seventh Grader Joins Production of The Nutcracker
Check out this beautiful holiday classic and you may just see Belmont Day seventh grader Annika Cash dancing across the stage. Annika will perform in the Jose Mateo production of The Nutcracker at the Strand Theater in Dorchester. You can see Annika in the role of party child in the shows on December 7 at 2:00 p.m., December 8 at 5:00 p.m., December 13 at 7:00 p.m., and December 14 at 7:00 p.m., December 15 at 1:30 p.m., December 21 at 2:00 p.m., and December 22 at 5:00 p.m.
Click here for more information on the show, tickets, and location.
COMMUNITY WORKSHOP
Belmont Library To Host Fixit Clinic
Saturday, November 16 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Belmont Public Library at Beech Street Center, 266 Beech Street
Fixit Clinics are do-it-together community-based workshops staffed by volunteer Fixit Coaches who share their time, tools, and expertise to consult with you on the disassembly, troubleshooting, and repair of items. So bring your broken, non-functioning things like electronic gadgets, appliances, computers, toys, sewing machines, bicycles, and fabric items for assessment, disassembly, and possible repair. Fixit Coaches (and helpful neighbors) will be available for consultation and provide workspace, specialty tools, and guidance. Whether an item can be fixed or not, attendees will learn more about how items were manufactured and worked and will be ready to share their newfound confidence and insight with their friends, neighbors, and the community.
This is a free all-ages, family-friendly event: accompanied children are heartily invited. Pre-registration is suggested. Click here for more information and registration.