February 6, 2019 Page 7C
Re porter
Each week during the school year The Reporter spotlights activities and achievements of students, faculty and staff at a different Monroe County schooL
Thank you to Erin Can;, media specialist, for cordinating news from Hubbard Elementary. Next week look for news from T. G. Scott Elementary. Email
school-related news, including items for "Monroe in College" to Diane Glidewell at news@mymcrnet
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On Jan. 23 kindergarten students at Hubbard Elementary participated in activi-
ties to highlight the lOOth day of school. Students were excited to meet "Zero the
Hem." They made and wore lO0-day shirts, made a special snack, had a lO0-sec-
ond stare competition and built with 100 manipulatives. The highlight of the day
was the 100 Day Fashion Show. (Courtesy of Mrs. Watts.)
Pictured, left to right: Antonio Jones, Culley Tallent, Connor Yates, Bradley Acosta
By Antonio Jones, 5th grader in Mrs. Price's class
In the Light Up the Night project, we had to install street lights down a section of
Main Street. The project had to be neat and colorful. In class we were learning simple
and parallel circuits. We also learned a circuit needs a power source, load, and conduc-
tor. A simple circuit only has one way for electricity to flow. A parallel has more than
one way to flow.
My group got two street lights and connected them underground with a battery. We
put one streetlight on each side of the building. Then we got two cords to connect the
lights to the battery. One end of the cord had to be connected to the battery and the
other had to be connected to the light. We did the same thing to the other side of the
building.
I
First graders at Hubbard
Elementary School are learn-
ing about animals and what
they need to survive. The
first graders had a guest
speaker from the Depart-
ment of Agriculture who told
them about animals that
live in Georgia. The students
learned about Georgia~
state animals and where their
habitats are located within
the state. It was an exciting
learning opportunity and a
fun presentation! (Courtesy of
Mrs. DeMichiel)
What are
the secrets
of the soft?
Hubbard Elementary School
3rd graders are researching
soil. They are also collecting
soil samples around the school
to see what location would
be the best to start a garden. '~
(Courtesy of Mr. Stephens.),'
e
4
~t
t"
J
!
4
1
1
I
t
l
t
|
~J
!
I
!
At Hubb Elementary 3rd, 4th and 5th grade students are preparing
County Fine Arts Center. (Courtesy of Mrs. Rusgrove)
for t ir performances of "Aladdin;'
which will
be on
Feb. 7 and
281 rift College Drive. Forsyth, GA 31029
478-992-9945
Hours: Monday - Friday, 9 am - S:30 pm
7 i~
8 at7
p,m.
at the Monroe
Hubbard Elementary
fo~ graders are learn-
ing about lights and sound.
They had the pleasure of
meeting with Mr. Hamilton
and Mr. Smith at the Fine
Arts Center and learning
about some of the different ]
lights and sounds used dur-
ing play production.
Mrs. K. Davis chose some
of the fourth graders to !
help with lights sound '
in 'Aladdin Kids, which !
Hubbard Elementary will '
present at Monroe County '
Fine Arts Center on Thurs-
day and Friday, Feb. 7 and 8 :
at 7 p.m. (Courtesy of Mrs. I