Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Bible Verse for 10/16

Students will take a quiz on the first block (the first four lines) and then finish memorizing the rest next week.

1 Corinthians 15:1-5

Now, brothers and sisters, I want you to remember the Good News I told you

You received that Good News message, and you continue to base your life on it. 

That Good News, the message you heard from me, is God’s way to save you

But you must continue believing it. If you don’t, you believed for nothing. 


I gave you the message that I received. I told you the most important truths

that Christ died for our sins, as the Scriptures say;
that he was buried and was raised to life on the third day, as the Scriptures say;
and that he appeared to Peter and then to the twelve apostles.

Thursday, September 18, 2025

Assignment for 9/18

English
  • Paragraph about a noisy place (example here)
    • Indent (paragraph shape)
    • Start with a topic sentence
    • Add extra detail sentences that stick to the topic

Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Assignments for 9/17

Bible

  • Finish God's Plan art
English
  • pages 3-4

Camp Yamhill Ropes Course Field Trip

We have an AMAZING day scheduled for our 6th grade class. 

On Tuesday, October 14, we are going to spend the entire day at Camp Yamhill. This is the same place where we will have outdoor school in May (details coming soon), but we are taking a preview trip to work on our class culture and to use some of the challenge course elements that aren't included in the outdoor school schedule - including an aerial obstacle course and a giant swing off the side of a hill. This will be one of the best days of the entire school year, guaranteed.

The details:

  • Camp Yamhill is located at 19651 NW Old Railroad Grade Rd, Yamhill, OR 97148. This is about 90 minutes away (depending on traffic).
  • We will meet at school at 7:40am and return at 6:00pm.
  • WE NEED DRIVERS who can stay for the whole day. Please let me know if you can help and how many students you can transport. We'll credit you with 15 volunteer hours.
  • The cost is $45 per student. The school is paying for part of the cost and for chaperones.
  • Students will wear athletic shoes or boots (no sandals), bring a jacket, and pack a lunch and snacks.
  • There is a REQUIRED release form that students will be given.
  • If you have questions or concerns about our four day (three overnights) outdoor school, this is the perfect opportunity to get a feel for where we'll be and what it will be like.

Please let me know if you have any questions - AND IF YOU CAN HELP!

Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Assignment for 9/10

Bible

  • Our current memory verse is

    Hebrews 4:12-13 (NIRV) The word of God is alive and active. It is sharper than any sword that has two edges.  It cuts deep enough to separate soul from spirit.  It can separate bones from joints.  It judges the thoughts and purposes of the heart.  Nothing God created is hidden from him.  His eyes see everythingHe will hold us responsible for everything we do.

  • Today's homework:
     - Use BibleGateway.com to look up the verse in any language other than English, if you speak one.
     - Create verse art with this passage in English or another language that you speak.
     - Add color and decorations.

Upcoming Dates to Note

Monday, 9/15 - Walking field trip to Princeton Village assistant living community (first of many)

Thursday, 9/25 - Picture day

Monday, 10/6 - No school (professional development)

TBD - Field trip to Oregon State Arthropod Collection in Corvallis

Monday-Thursday, 10/13-16 - MAPS testing during English and math classes

Tuesday, 10/14 - Extended day field trip to Camp Yamhill (site of our springtime outdoor school experience) to use the ropes course for building class culture, expanding our teamwork skills, and challenging ourselves (more details coming soon

Monday-Thursday, 10/27-10/30 - Spirit Week (special dress-up themes each day)

Thursday, 10/30 - End of first quarter

Wednesday-Thursday, 11/5-6 - No school (Parent-teacher-student conferences)

Monday, 11/10 - No school (Veteran's Day observed)

Wednesday-Thursday, 11/26-27 - No school (Thanksgiving)

Thursday, 12/18 - Last day before Christmas break

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

6th Grade Math

A message from Mrs. Litchfield (email tlitchfield@smcak12.com):

6th grade math homework will be the even numbers for each lesson every day. 
Students must copy these problems into their math graphing notebook to turn in on Thursdays. 
Next week, their math homework will be lessons 1-3, even numbers due Thursday. 
(We will work on odds in class.) 

I will not assign homework for enrichment, but students are welcome to bring supplies for the week's topic. Next week, we will be working on creative LEGO projects. Students are welcome to bring in a few loose LEGOs with their initials written on them, but I will have plenty of them from my two boys' stashes 

I may eventually use Google Classroom to communicate at least pictures of homework each week, just in case they leave their books at school. (They will need to turn in physical homework, not digital.)

Thursday, September 4, 2025

Assignments for 9/2-9/4

THURSDAY, September 4

English
  • Class discussion about good writing
  • Homework: Use your best writing skills to write about your family

Monday, September 1, 2025

6th Grade Overview 2025-2026

 Welcome to a new school year at our 6th-12th grade campus! We are very excited to be getting started and are confident that it will be full of great learning and growth - spiritually, academically, physically, and personally. We are going to work hard, have fun, and develop great relationships.

We are here to invest deeply in the development and success of SMCA students and families, and we're really looking forward to working together to see all of our students thrive. We have an amazing team collaborating to make this 6th grade year one of the absolute best of your child's educational journey.

This blog is the hub for all of the 6th grade news, updates, links, important dates to put on your calendar, assignments (especially for Bible and English), and all resources that will be helpful for you. It will be the first place to check for almost everything you need to know. Students will use it for accessing homework content, descriptions, examples, and resources.

Please let us know any time you have questions, concerns, or anything you'd like to make sure we know in order to help your child or your family thrive.

Sincerely,
Evan Chandler

echandler@smcak12.com


6th Grade Syllabus and Expectations

Communication

I will frequently send short group messages and announcements through email.

Parents are welcome to text or call me any time at (503) 666-7133. Email is also a great way to communicate with me.

If you need to get a message to me right away during the school day, please call me. I may check text messages during breaks, but if I'm teaching, the lesson will have my full attention unless my phone is actually ringing.

Students should communicate with me in person or by email, and I am always happy to set up times to work with students who would like additional help completing or correcting their work. 

Feel free to send me a message at any time. I have my phone set to almost never interrupt me, so early morning and late night messages won't disrupt me at all. I set Sunday aside to focus on family and my church community so I don't check text or email messages, but I will reply as quickly as possible.

Academics

This blog will display the assignment descriptions for the current week in the classes that I teach - Bible and English -  and our other teachers may use it for posting their assignments as well. Refresh this page each time you check it so that any new resources and updates will be displayed. The word UPDATE will indicate any content that was added after the post was initially published.

Curriculum for each of our core classes

Our schedule of classes can be found here.

Taught by Mr. Evan Chandler - echandler@smcak12.com:

Bible - No formal textbook - Survey of the New Testament and practices for living out faith in Jesus, relying heavily on reading the Bible and content from BibleProject. We will memorize scripture and complete projects, tests, or art assignments to represent the learning from each week. Personal reflection and application of biblical concepts is a central part of this class.

English - English 6 Writing and Grammar (consumable work-text), published by the Bob Jones University Press, in addition to many additional writing, reading, speaking and listening projects

Taught by Mr. Hayden Rogers - hrogers@smcak12.com:

Science - Science Level 6 (and a consumable workbook), published by Purposeful Design

Taught by Mrs. Tammy Litchfield - tlitchfield@smcak12.com:

Math - Math 6 (consumable work-text), published by the Bob Jones University Press

Taught by Mr. Josh Jen - jjen@smcak12.com:

History - Heritage Studies 6 (and an accompanying consumable activity manual), published by the Bob Jones University Press, focusing on ancient civilizations from all parts of the world

Other enrichment classes - twice per week each

PE (taught by Ms. Charley Kozol - ckozol@smcak12.com) 

Russian (taught by Mrs. Larissa Dorokhov - ldorokhov@smcak12.com)

Enrichment - every day (taught by Mrs. Tammy Litchfield)

Materials

As previously noted, students will have consumable work-texts for grammar, science, and math. There are textbooks with separate workbooks for history and science. Students will make sure to have their textbooks and workbooks at school for any classes scheduled on a particular day.

Being prepared for every class, every day, is absolutely essential. Students simply cannot learn what they need to learn if they are not on time for class with all required materials.

Refer to the SMCA supply list for a complete list of school supplies for 6th grade this year.

Students may want to bring a book of their choice to read every day.

Expectations

Please refer to the SMCA Parent-Student Handbook, the dress policy, and the school website for complete descriptions of policies and information regarding activities, attendance, discipline, late or missing work, and the school calendar. They contain a wealth of really important and helpful information. Please note that some details are subject to change.

Schoolwork Standards

All assignments should be fully completed by 8:20 am on the day they are due. They should be turned in or submitted by email (including sharing a Google doc) at the start of each school day. 

Students should not work ahead in their books without first talking to their teacher.

The top left corner of every paper, including typed assignments, should list this information, in this order:
ASSIGNMENT TITLE in all caps
Student First and Last Name
Subject (Bible, English, etc.)
Date

Note: Bookwork that is checked in class should still list the student's first and last names in the top left corner of every page.

Written assignments may be handwritten or typed in a Google doc or an email, as long as they include the required heading (TITLE, name, subject, date).

Bookwork should be completed in the appropriate book or on a separate sheet of paper as necessary as long as the answers are neatly organized, clearly labeled, and easy to locate. Incomplete assignments and math that is turned in without showing work will be not be graded until it has been corrected.

Late work may receive partial or no credit at the teacher's discretion.

Students are expected to complete all tasks and activities that are assigned to them. When they miss school for any reason, they miss out on learning experiences that are often impossible to replicate. Please do everything possible to minimize absences, including using the school calendar to schedule vacations during school breaks. Creating alternative assignments and compiling missed work uses valuable teacher time that could be used for focusing on activities that benefit the whole class instead of individual students.

Students who miss multiple days of school will be required to stay after the end of the school day on their first day back in order to make sure the have an organized list of what assignments need to be completed.

Completing assignments with academic integrity is a nonnegotiable part of our core values. This means that all students always complete all of their own work. When students work together in class, they sometimes work with a partner or a group, but they do not split an assignment in half and then share answers so that they have only actually learned half of the material. Similarly, students may sometimes help each other but that never means saying what the answer is. Copying and pasting information from any source is a form of cheating. The standard practice for any students who are involved in taking shortcuts to find answers or complete work - including those who share their answers with another student - is to re-do the assignment the right way and to receive an automatic zero on the assignment with no opportunity for an improved score. Please note: Students always write their own answers on their papers, conduct their own research, and complete their own calculations. We are privileged to surround them with supportive parents and staff who offer assistance as needed, but that help almost always comes in the form of questions that guide the student's thinking; it must not interfere with an student's ability to clearly demonstrate his or her own knowledge.

Sixth grade students should expect up to 60 minutes of homework per day, with occasional projects that may require more time if students have not worked diligently before the due date.

Students should keep all assignments at least until they have received a satisfactory score on a project or test at the end of the current unit.

Reading is a highly enjoyable hobby and a critically important skill for success in life. Students should plan to read at school and at home every day.

Grading

Assignments for Mr. Chandler's classes will typically be classified as activitiesskill practice (homework), or assessments (projects, quizzes and tests). Bible class also has a memorization category for our weekly verses.

Most activities and skill practice tasks will be graded on a scale from 1-4, with the following criteria:
    1 - "I barely did any of the work or I completely misunderstood the assignment. It might look like my goal was to finish as quickly as possible without paying ANY attention to accuracy."
    2 - "There are significant mistakes or pieces missing from my work."
    3 - "I met all of the basic requirements of the assignment."
    4 - "My work shows obvious effort, attention to detail, and an attempt complete the assignment with EXCELLENCE."
When students feel like they are finished, they should evaluate their work to decide if it is good enough to meet the basic requirements (score of 3 out of 4) or if it reflects true commitment to creating high quality assignments (full credit).

When an assignment is marked "incomplete" or "missing," our computer gradebook counts it as having received a score of zero. The system also automatically sends a parent email notification any time an assignment earns lower than 70% of the total points possible. This happens daily at 11:00 am for all scores entered in the previous 24 hours, and if multiple assignments fit this description there is usually one single email that lists the tasks that were recently marked missing or inaccurate.

As much as possible, grades reflect student learning and academic skills. This is impossible to measure if work is not turned in. Completing assignments is absolutely essential.
Students usually have the opportunity to improve low scores on activities and skill practice assignments. Assessment scores are modified only under certain conditions at the teacher's discretion, and typically only on campus under the teacher's supervision.

Final grading scale - based on the combination of all assignment categories and weights:
99.5 - 100% - A+    92.5 - 99.4% = A      89.5 - 92.4% = A-
86.5 - 89.4% - B+   82.5 - 86.4% = B      79.5 - 82.4% = B-
76.5 - 79.4% - C+   72.5 - 76.4% = C      69.5 - 72.4% = C-
66.5 - 69.4% - D+   62.5 - 66.4% = D     59.5 - 62.4% = D-
Below 59.5% - F

Attendance

Students will be expected to make up any work possible for class periods they miss, regardless of the reason. When students miss multiple days because of extended illness or vacation, they will be scheduled to stay after school to discuss the work they need to complete.

Excessive tardies will result in detention being assigned.

Behavioral Expectations

Students will be held to a very high standard of personal conduct and behavior, consistent with the policies outlined in the Parent-Student Handbook. They will be informed in advance of the expectations and then held accountable for following them. Virtually all of our guidelines relate toward treating each other with kindness and respect, taking good care of our school and materials, and using our time and ability to be the best students we can be. Minor infractions will lead to informal conversations, problem-solving, and restorative consequences. Parents will always be informed when misbehavior continues after classroom interventions so that we can agree on strategies to make sure all of our students are fully invested in their learning.

SMCA students at Eastridge leave all electronic devices turned off and put away out of sight for the entire time they are on campus.

Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Outdoor School Info

Camp Yamhill Christian Outdoor School is one of the most-remembered highlights of all of the years that students spend at SMCA. It leaves an incredible positive impression that lasts for a lifetime.
Click here to see photos from a past year's trip and here to see pictures of our trip to the camp in October.

Who is going:
All 6th graders
plus Mr. Chandler and adult chaperones. 

When: Tuesday May 5th-Friday May 8th, 2026
We'll meet at school at our normal time on Tuesday, May 5, and then shortly after that we'll load up into vehicles and head to Camp Yamhill, which is about 90 minutes away. We'll be there until 1:30 pm on Friday, and then we'll load up to head back to Eastridge, where we’ll arrive at about 3:30 pm. 
Please let me know if you can help us with transporting students there AND back.

Where: Camp Yamhill (click the link for the camp's website) - 19651 NW Old Railroad Grade Rd, Yamhill, OR 97148

What: Outdoor School is an AMAZING four days full of bonding, adventure, learning, and laughter. Each day includes: a few hands-on activities related to concepts of creation and science; a few outdoor activities like a ropes course, canoeing, and hiking; group time with our class; meals together in the lodge; flag-raising ceremonies and campfires. We'll be there with 6th grade classes from two or three other Christian schools in the Pacific Northwest.

The boys sleep in a large cabin with six separate sleeping rooms in one area of the camp, and the girls have their own similar cabin in a completely separate area of the property. We always ensure that there are at least two men and two women helping to lead, protect and support our students.

Cost: $237 per student (a fraction of the price of any overnight camp, and this includes EVERYTHING the kids will need) - submit to the school office or deliver to me and I will make sure it gets to Mrs. Lina. SMCA will pay for chaperones.

Emergency contact info:
The camp is outside of cell service, so if you need to reach me, send an email. 
If it's an EMERGENCY during office hours, call the camp office at (503) 662-3710.
Outside of office hours, try contacting Carol Davis, Program Director at (360) 887-8265 or thunderbird.ods@gmail.com.
I will try to find a time to check my messages once per day, but we are on the move for the whole time at outdoor school.

Answers to questions:
Is there a parent letter?
Yes! Click here to read it.

Who supervises and stays with students?
Mr. Chandler and a number of school staff, parents, high school students, and other volunteers.
We always have at least two adults of each gender in the cabins, sleeping in a separate bunk room within easy earshot of students.
WE WOULD LOVE FOR YOU TO JOIN US!

What if I have medications or special concerns like food allergies?
LET ME KNOW so I can make sure we make all of the necessary preparations.

What should I bring?
Click here for a list and the outdoor school dress code! 

Please read the list and pack carefully. We often have great weather for most of the week. It's best to pack, however, for the possibility of some rain. Activities will be held indoors, if possible, during heavy downpours, but select activities can only be done outside. 

As you pack: Imagine that it rains hard while we’re outside and kids get soaked in their hoodies and warm coats - what will they wear while it’s still cold and maybe continuing to rain and their previous outfit is drying out? Every night if it’s not raining we’ll be sitting at the campfire - in the forest beside a river after dark - but not close enough to be warmed by the flame. After an hour, kids will be very glad to have brought warm clothes, hats, mittens, and maybe even a blanket.

Because it may be rainy and we will be in the forest, it’s better not to send white or light colored clothes, especially not brand new ones. (Sometimes parents just throw certain items of dirty laundry and shoes straight into the garbage after outdoor school.)
For footwear, I recommend boots if you have them plus at least two pairs of gym-type sneakers (in case one gets soggy from walking through wet grass).

Make sure to bring water shoes, strapped sandals or boots for the activity where we'll be wading into the creek! Flip-flops, slides and Crocs will not work, and the camp staff may require students to borrow a pair of their spare shoes instead - a pair of old tennis shoes that can get soaked would be better.

Do we have to follow the regular dress code?
These are the official Camp Yamhill Christian Outdoor School guidelines:
  • Long pants are required on Wednesdays when students most need protection in the forest.

  • Shorts – When worn, should extend below the fingertips when arms are relaxed and hanging to the side.

  • No tank tops.

  • Spandex/leggings – must be worn with a long shirt that covers the bottom.

  • Clothing should not depict offensive or harmful imagery.

Students need to be dressed appropriately and respectfully, but they will not have to follow school guidelines about colors. Jeans should not have holes and girls may ONLY wear leggings if their bottoms are fully covered. Sweatpants are fine. Make sure to prepare for a variety of types of weather since we'll be outside a lot no matter what kind of weather there is.
Please note: We will be outside a lot, it may be cold, and there are plants in the forest that can cause skin irritations if students leave the path.

What are we going to do?
Click here to see the schedule.

Can we bring our own food?
Students will be well fed with the camp menu, but they can bring snacks - only items they’ll be willing to contribute to a stash for the full group students in their cabin (all the girls or boys from our school only). Their consumption will be kept to reasonable levels by our adult chaperones. No gum or any nuts, please, by the request of the camp. Any food that students bring will be considered a contribution for the whole group. There is also a process for notifying the camp of special dietary needs.

Can we fish?
Fishing is not allowed at Camp Yamhill.

Are there forms to fill out?
Yes! The complete packet is here and will be sent home with students soon.

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Helpful Links

Chapel Blog - ask questions about what we discussed and make suggestions for our next Q&A chapel






Every assignment should have this heading in the top left corner:
ASSIGNMENT TITLE (all caps)
First and last name
Subject
Date


Learning Opportunity 

Monday, June 10, 2019

Strategies for Summer Studying

Here are some general thoughts about the academics of 6th grade at SMCA, including skills and knowledge that can be practiced at home over the summer:
 
All classes:
-Being able to read out loud from a novel or a textbook. This can be practiced with any written text.
-Completing assignments and having completely ready to turn in the very next day. 
-Keeping track of multiple tasks and making sure they all get done.
 
Math:
-Our math curriculum is an integrated model that covers many things that students have already learned, reviewing them quite a bit before testing them on the material. There is LOTS of practice with basic computations, especially multiplication and division. We do a lot of work with adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing decimals, fractions, percents (and conversions between all of those), and also some basic geometry - parts of a circle, segments, lines, rays, types of polygons, etc. 
-If students are really solid on having basic multiplication memorized (all the numbers up to at least 10), that will make any new content much easier to navigate. The thing that most students trip over is lapses in attention that lead to errors in the math they already know, like forgetting to carry the one when adding multiple digits. Any extra knowledge that students have will be a bonus.
 
Bible:
-The vast majority of our Bible class will be focused on the New Testament. The more familiarity with those books of the Bible, their themes, and how we apply them, the better - that will be the focus of our conversations in class. 
-We also memorize a verse every week - typically between 35 and 50 words. We do some activities in class to help us, like noticing the structure of the sentence and which words are repeated, and then we recite it over and over while erasing a few words at a time until we don't need much help.
 
Language Arts:
-We do quite a bit of work in Language Arts with reading novels and identifying the ways that authors intentionally include elements like theme, symbolism, and figures of speech to enhance their writing. Students could start trying to identify why authors write the way they do and what they include in their writing to help them communicate with their readers. 
-We also practice spelling challenging words and identifying basic elements of grammar, including parts of speech. Students could identify new or difficult to spell words that they encounter - in any context - and practice remembering how to spell them. 
-Parents can help their kids to do a little extra reading by turning on the captions any time the TV is on. 
-We'll also be visiting the library a lot for students to check out books that fit into categories I give them (like "book about an invention" or "book with a main character who is an outcast, an outsider, or in some way feels left out").
 
Social Studies:
-Social studies covers the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia, Egypt, Israel, India, China, Persia, Greece, and Rome. This year, we also just barely touched on the Byzantine Empire and ancient civilizations in Africa and Mesamerica. Students could get a sneak peak at some of those by reading books or watching kid-friendly documentaries. The library has some great resources about ancient history.
 
Science:
-Science includes a lot of classifying plants and animals, cells, genetics, and the periodic table of elements, including how atoms, atomic parts, and molecules work. There's quite a bit more that we didn't get to, but any background knowledge about any of those topics would only be helpful.

Please let me know if you have specific concerns related to your child's education or if you'd like some more specific suggestions related to a particular area. The best way to reach me is by sending an e-mail to echandler@smcak12.com.