The Shrine Catholic Grade School curriculum follows the Archdiocese of Detroit Standards for all subject areas.
We believe for a child to meet their greatest potential, they need to feel important, accepted, and welcomed. In our Early Childhood Center, each child’s self esteem and emerging identity as God’s own child is affirmed. We believe that because each child grows at their independent pace, it is our job to teach them at their individual level of readiness. We build on the child’s own knowledge and questions through brainstorming, inquiring, classifying, and cooperating. All of this occurs through multi-sensory experiences while providing an atmosphere of playful learning and discovery at the same time!
The teachers and staff at Shrine Early Childhood Center understand that parental involvement is key to a child’s success in school. Frequent parent communication builds community and gives each child the greatest potential for success. As part of our communication, we are excited for our “daily wrap ups” at the end of each school day. This is a time for your child’s teacher to share with you all the activities your child participated in on any given day. The teachers will also share research-supported information backing up the daily curriculum.
For our evaluation tools, we use daily documentations, portfolios, and assessments. Parents will meet formally twice a year for conferences, yet an open communication will be ongoing throughout the year. We believe by providing students with these tools, they will be able to walk confidently from the preschool hallway into the grade school when their preschool experience has ended.
Q: What are Star Assessments?
A: Star Assessments are short tests that provide teachers with learning data. Star tests are computer adaptive, which means they adjust to each answer your child provides. This helps teachers get the best data to help your child in the shortest amount of testing time (about one-third of the time other tests take).
Your child may take a Star test for early literacy, math, reading, or other subjects of their teacher’s choice.
Q: What do teachers do with Star Assessments?
A: Teachers analyze the data they get from Star Assessments to learn what students already know and what they are ready to learn next, to monitor student growth, and to determine which students may need additional help. Star Assessments are heavily researched and scientifically proven to help teachers guide each student on his or her unique path to mastery.
Q: What do Star Assessments do for my child?
A: By pinpointing exactly what your child knows, teachers can personalize your child’s practice to keep them growing. Plus, short test times ensure your child spends more time learning and less time testing.
Q: Can we use Star Assessments at home?
A: No, Star Assessments are only used at school by teachers to gain insight to guide instruction. However, your child’s teacher may send home reports of your child’s Star results and growth.
Q: How can I help my child with their Star Assessments?
A: The best way to help your child with Star Assessments is to help them understand why they are taking the test: so their teacher knows exactly how to help them learn! For anxious children, it may be important to tell them that they cannot fail a Star test—as long as they do their best, the data generated from the test will help their teacher teach them more great things!
Q: Where do I go if I have questions?
A: Your child’s teacher is the best source of additional information about your child’s progress with Star Assessments. Renaissance is committed to protecting student privacy and will not share data with anyone outside your child’s authorized school staff.
Star Assessments’ parent reports
Parent reports available in English and Spanish for Star Reading, Star Math, Star Early Literacy, and Star Custom provide a summary of student performance and a brief definition of scores.
Kindergarten Curriculum (PDF)
A Glimpse of What your Child Will Be Working on in Kindergarten
Religion
Major Emphasis: God, our Creator and Father, loves us
Sharing the church’s stories, beliefs, scripture, and tradition
Participating in public and personal prayer
Creating a sense of community by spreading the ”Good News” in school, parish, and larger community
Caring for God’s world
Learning about Saints and religious holidays
Understanding choices
Language Arts
Naming upper and lower case letters, matching them to sounds, and printing them
Using a combination of drawing, dictating, and writing (Six Traits) to describe an event, including his or her reaction to what happened
Comparing adventures and experiences of characters in familiar stories
Retelling familiar stories and talking about stories read to them using details from the text
Taking part in classroom conversations and following rules for discussions
Speaking clearly to express thoughts, feelings, and ideas
Understanding and using questions words (i.e. who, what, where, when, why, how) in discussions
Learning to recognize, spell, and properly use the little grammatical words that hold language together (i.e. a, the, to, of, from, I, is, are…..)
Math
Exploring patterns, sorting, and classifying
Counting objects to tell how many
Comparing two groups of objects to tell which, if either, has more
Acting out addition and subtraction word problems; drawing diagrams to represent them
Adding with a sum of 10 or less; subtracting from a number 10 or less; solving addition and subtraction word problems
Adding and subtracting very small numbers quickly and accurately (i.e. 4 + 1)
Exploring shapes
Science
Exploring senses
Exploring animals; plants; Earth’s land, air, and water; weather and seasons; the Scientific Method
Social Studies
Exploring geography and maps; working together; rules and laws; rights and responsibilities; patriotic symbols; jobs, goods and services; how things change over time
Special Classes
Gym, Music, Computer, Library, Spanish
Pray
Learn
Grow