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Open to Grades 3, 4, and 5 - Peer Mediators volunteer
their time during recess. Mediators are assigned to different playground areas
and help to settle any small disputes between students at recess. Students can
use mediators as the first step to help resolve any conflicts. If a dispute is
settled with the help of a mediator, it prevents a referral to the yard duty
teacher or office.
Open to Grades 4 and
5
The Student Council of Mililani Uka directs and drives
school activities each school year. The Council is made up of five (5) officers
from Grade 5 (President, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, and Historian),
as well as ten (10) representatives (two representatives from each fourth and
fifth grade homeroom). The Student Council meets one to two times per month
during lunch periods, and participates in school and community activities at
least once per month. They also serve as the liaison between the student body
and the Administration, Hui `o Mililani Uka, and School Community Council.
Recruitment Guidelines:
Officers are recruited through an election process at
the end of the 4th grade school year.
Students wishing to run for office complete a nomination
form and their homeroom teacher completes a rating form.
Representatives are recruited at the beginning of the
school year. Two representatives are chosen from each 4th and 5th grade
classroom.
Open to Grade 5
The duty of a JPO is to ensure campus and pedestrian
safety before and after school. There are two JPO platoons that report to duty
every other week for the entire week throughout the school year. JPOs are
required to be at school at 7:15 AM on the days their platoon is on duty. They
serve from 7:25-7:40 in the morning, and 2:05-2:20 after school (Wed.
1:10-1:25).
Duties include raising and lowering the flag, supporting
pedestrian safety at the corner of Kuahelani and Hokulewa under the supervision
of the crossing guard, and supervising various locations on campus (bike rack,
office, bus stop). On Fridays 12:00-12:30 JPOs practice drill formations and
receive safety training from a HPD officer
JPOs are considered school leaders. Each platoon has
further opportunities for leadership through the positions of Captain,
Lieutenant and Sergeant. A JPO of the year is also honored at the 5th grade
Aloha Assembly in June
Open to Grade 5
Peer Mentors are fifth grade volunteers who work with K
and First grade students once a week after school to help reinforce academic
concepts and assist with homework.
Open to Grade 5
Responsibilities:
·
Remember to attend all Club Meetings scheduled.
·
Responsible for keeping a log of the number of recesses worked in
the library (1point/recess)
·
Understand the Dewey Decimal Order so that shelving non-fiction
books are done correctly
·
Sort and shelve books on the book cart, check your assigned
non-fiction rows; put in correct order.
·
Police the library by politely reminding students to follow
library rules, and focus on their purpose.
·
Straighten books and magazines to keep the library neat and tidy.
·
Help students on OPAC to find books and help locate those books on
the shelves
·
Help students at the CD-ROM computers in the mini-lab and print
articles they need
Students from Grades 3, 4, and
5 work in the cafeteria from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. This includes 30 minutes
of lunch (free lunch). Jobs include passing out plastic forks, separating paper
trays, serving rolls, buns, cookies, fruit, etc. Clean up includes wiping
counters and tables. No heavy lifting is involved.
Students use no sharp
implements. They learn about preparing, serving, cleaning, working together and
community service (BOE Rule 8-3766 Use of Student Help in the Cafeteria).
One Grade 5 student is
assigned per day. The office monitor performs duties such as delivering school
messages and items from parents to children, delivering messages to classrooms,
stamping, collating, counting flyers, and distributing forms as needed. The
monitor is expected to complete class work when not occupied with office duty
(8-42-1 Relating to school services by students).
Grade level classrooms adopt
another classroom for peer education activities.
2. Student Council: Open to Grades 4 and 5
• The Student Council officers are elected during the spring of their fourth
grade year.
• Student Council officers may not be JPO’s due to scheduling conflicts.
• The Student Council body is selected in early August, two representatives are
chosen from each fourth and fifth grade classroom to represent their classmates
and act as representatives to one K-3 grade classroom.
• The full Student Council meets once each month during lunch to discuss, select
and organize school service and school spirit events.
• Student Council members organize and emcee the twice per quarter recognition
assemblies.
• Student Council committees (Student Activities and School Service) meet once
per month.
• Student Council President and Vice President represent the SC at monthly
School community meetings (SCC).
Student Council Officer Selection Process:
1. The students are nominated by classmates or volunteer to run for one of five
offices (President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer, or Historian) in
February and must return election forms by the date stipulated.
2. Fourth Grade teachers complete an evaluation on each candidate.
3. In March, during the Primary Election rally, all candidates give a one-minute
speech detailing why they are the best choice for their selected office.
4. The speech is evaluated by the fourth grade teachers and Student Council
Advisor and given points based on speech content, poise, volume, and eye
contact.
5. Each fourth grader votes for two candidates per office and the top three
candidates chosen by majority vote/point run in the General Election.
6. General election candidates may campaign with approved material only during
the dates specified in the election process. All campaign guidelines must be
followed.
7. A General Election rally is held in April, all candidates give a two-minute
speech detailing why they are the best choice for their selected office. The
same election point/vote system used in the Primary election determines the
elected student for each office.
8. The officers are introduced during the May Recognition assembly.
revised 6/8/05
3. Junior Police Officer (JPO):Open to Grade 5
The duty of a JPO is to ensure campus and pedestrian safety before and after
school. There are two JPO platoons which report to duty every other week for the
entire week throughout the school year. JPOs are required to be at school at
7:15 AM on the days their platoon is on duty. They serve from 7:25-7:40 in the
morning, and 2:05-2:20 after school (Wednesdays 1:10-1:25).
Duties include raising and lowering the flag, supporting pedestrian safety at
the corner of Kuahelani and Hokulewa under the supervision of the crossing
guard, and supervising various locations on campus (bike rack, office, bus
stop). On Fridays 12:00-12:30 JPOs practice drill formations and receive safety
training from a HPD officer
JPOs are considered school leaders. Each platoon has further opportunities for
leadership through the positions of Captain, Lieutenant and Sergeant. A JPO of
the year is also honored at the 5th grade Aloha Assembly in June
Recruitment Guidelines
• JPOs are selected in April of their fourth grade year by their teachers.
• JPOs serve from mid-May of their 4th grade year to mid-May of their 5th grade
year.
• Student Council Officers cannot be JPOs because of scheduling conflicts.
• JPOs should: have a positive attitude, consistent school attendance;
be responsible, dependable, alert, and respectful;
obey school rules, and follow directions.
4. Peer Mentor: Open for Grade 5
Peer Mentors are fifth grade volunteers who work with K and First grade students
once a week after school to help reinforce academic concepts and assist with
homework.
Recruitment Guidelines: Mentors are recruited at the beginning of each school
year.
• Each candidate must submit an application, which consists of a short written
paragraph, explaining why he or she wants to be a Mentor.
• Part of the application includes a teacher rating on these areas: ability to
keep up with own studies, cooperation, dependability, math, and language arts
skills.
• Mentors commit to participating for the entire school year.
• Mentor duty is after school for 30 minutes once a week.
5. Library Club: Open to Grade 5
Responsibilities:
Remember to attend all Club Meetings scheduled.
Responsible for keeping a log of the number of recesses worked in the library
(1point/recess)
Understand the Dewey Decimal Order so that shelving non-fiction books are done
correctly
Sort and shelve books on the book cart, check your assigned non-fiction rows;
put in correct order.
Police the library by politely reminding students to follow library rules, and
focus on their purpose.
Straighten books and magazines to keep the library neat and tidy.
Help students on OPAC to find books and help locate those books on the shelves
Help students at the CD-ROM computers in the mini-lab and print articles they
need
Library Club Recruitment Guidelines
Library Club members are recruited at the beginning of their fifth grade school
year.
Library Club Candidates should not be members of Student Council, Peer Mediation
or Peer Mentors because of conflicts in meeting times.
Students are asked to volunteer to join and are recommended by their teacher
according to the following: -respectful behavior
-able to keep up with class work
-willing to do library service and activities during recess once a day
-able to learn the Dewey Decimal Order
(Time will be given to practice and self-check through exercises.)
Students are requested to write a letter to the librarian explaining why they
would make a good library club member. They should also write about their
commitment in joining for the school year.
Students will be selected by the librarian after the letters are turned in and a
trial period is completed.
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