Please Enjoy Photos From Our 
Literacy Day and Night Events. 
A Special Thank You to our Reading Coach, Ella MacLeod;  
Reading Teacher, Stascia Pollack; and Social Emotional Coach, 
Stacey Bukarus, and the many additional staff members who 
volunteered their time and extra efforts to make both our Literacy Day 
and Night Events such a success!
Harvard Staff and Students are greeted by Ms. MacLeod before 
heading off to read to students in grades K - 5
Another Special Visitor Came to Lincoln!  
Fifth Grade Morning Announcers
Eva, Arriana, and Audrey
WFEE Fall Gala - Saturday, November 2nd
If you are planning to dazzle with a new chapeau and dance the night away on November 2nd you need to finalize your plans now.
There are a handful of tickets left for Hats Off for Education!, WFEE's fall gala that offers tasty treats, cocktails, charity blackjack, and dancing.
Tickets available at  www.wfee.org, all proceeds benefit our children and their educators
What is WFEE?
Creativity, innovation, and excitement - WFEE (Winchester Foundation for Educational Excellence) exists to bring all those things to the Winchester Public Schools.  Founded in 1992, WFEE is deeply rooted in the community, grateful for the support of neighbors that has allowed us to donate nearly $5 million to the Winchester public schools. Our initiatives touch every student in the district through:
-Education and professional development grants - annual seed money for creative projects that span every public school in Winchester
-System wide initiatives - gifts to meet critical needs apparent in all Winchester schools. WFEE recently completed an $850,00 campaign, powerED UP! designed to transform learning in all Winchester classrooms through the effective integration of technology.  Through our efforts, WPS updated wireless infastructure, management software, purchased thousands of student devices and provided teacher training across all grade levels. 
Lincoln School Has Many Wonderful Social Emotional Books, Including This One!
 Note by Dr. Edward Hallowell, from the book, 
Mrs. Corski, I think I Have The Wiggle Fidgets

 
 
  
   
    
     
      
Training Active Bystanders (TAB) for 4th
      and 5th Grades 
 
      Over the next few weeks, the LSPA along with Lincoln School Faculty and
      Staff will be offering the TAB program presented by Quabbin Mediation to
      our 4th and 5th grade students.  We hope this email helps you
      discuss the program with your children and understand the
      social-emotional learning they will receive.  We would love to hear
      from you if your child enjoyed the program or learned important skills
      from it or, on the other hand, if they were uncomfortable or didn't like
      the program.  Please feel free to reach out to your child's teacher
      or lincolnspa@gmail.com.  This program was made possible
      by the generous donations to the direct appeal. 
       
      What is TAB (Training Active
      Bystanders)? 
       
      A bystander is a witness—someone who sees a harmful situation and has a
      choice to make: Do I do something?  If so, what do I do?  
       
      Training Active Bystanders (TAB) helps participants recognize when they
      are bystanders, analyzes the situation in which they find themselves, and
      evaluate the consequences for everyone involved. The TAB curriculum
      heightens bystanders’ power. It teaches how bystanders can interrupt harm
      doing and generate positive actions by others. We emphasize that active
      bystandership does not mean aggression against the harm doer. It means
      taking responsible action to help people in need, instead of remaining
      passive and becoming complicit. TAB gives bystanders the competencies
      they need when they witness something they feel is unfair, or wrong, or
      troubling. When people have the tools to create justice in the moment of
      need, it can transform those who take the training, the trainers, and the
      community. 
       
      TAB is taught by trainers to their communities, which makes the TAB
      message powerfully relevant and applicable across demographics. The
      lessons are interactive, using games, small group activities, group
      brainstorming, role plays and journal-writing. The power of TAB comes
      from those who engage in it—the teachers and the participants, the way
      the program becomes, through conversation, specifically relevant to their
      lives. Each group walks away from that experience with a changed and empowered
      vision of an individual’s role in creating a supportive and engaged
      community.  
  
Key Language and
      Concepts for Conversations with your children: 
· Bystander: A witness, someone who is in
      a position to know what is happening and to act 
· Active Bystander: A bystander who acts
      to stop harm  
· Passive or negative bystander: One who
      ignores, watches passively, joins in and is complicit in what is
      happening 
· Target: The recipient of harm 
· Harm doer: The person who engages in
      doing harm to others 
Promoters of active
      bystandership:                
                 
· Empathy 
· Self-interest, reciprocity 
· Inclusive caring 
· Responsibility for others 
· Competency to help 
· Moral courage 
Inhibitors of
      active bystandership:          
· Pluralistic ignorance 
· Ambiguity of the need for help 
· Diffusion of responsibility 
· Fear of disapproval 
· Danger or cost of helping 
 Thank you to the LSPA for Sponsoring this Enrichment Program  
For Our Fourth and Fifth Grade Students.   
 | 
      
 
 | 
    
 
 |