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Thursday 31 May 2018

Using five language features and exactly 100 words..........A random paragraph

"She was as beautiful as an angel sent from heaven. She was everything to us all, there couldn't have been a better person than her. She was simply svelte, scrupulous, scintillating I could say so much more.” I really didn’t know how he was holding it together, he looked on the verge of tears. “Do you know what she used to say, to everyone, despite everything, ‘The world's a stage, and we are all its dancers, some balancing on the beam, others already tripping over themselves.’”. He couldn’t hold his tears, they poured as he quietly walked to his seat.

Friday 25 May 2018

I wonder…

So, for English we're are going to need to these 'I wonder...' blogs where we research our curiosity topic, picking a new one each week, today I was curious about The Cat's Eye Nebula. What is causing the Cat’s Eye Nebula to appear this way?




What the Cat’s Eye Nebula is currently going through is a phase of stellar evolution that the sun will experience several billion years from now. Each 'ring' is actually the edge of a spherical bubble seen the projected onto the sky, that's why it appears bright along its outer edge. When a star begins to lose fuel,
it becomes a red giant. In this phase, a star sheds some of its outer layers. A fast wind streams away from its hot core, ramming into the ejected atmosphere, pushing it, creating the graceful colours across the galaxy. In the case of the Cat’s Eye, material shed by the star is flying away at 4 million miles per hour. Eventually, the hot core left behind will finish its phase and collapse into a dense white dwarf starThe central star is surrounded by a cloud of multimillion-degree gas.


Now, this makes me wonder…


Are there any other planetary nebula that can compare to the size of The Cat’s Eye Nebula?


Facts…


  • The Nebula is thought to be 1,000 years old.
  • The Nebula has three names, The Cat’s Eye Nebula, NGC 6543 and Caldwell 6.
  • The Eye was discovered in 1786 by William Hershel.
  • It is thought that it was originally 5 times the mass of the sun.
  • The Cat’s Eye is believed to be around 3,300 light-years away
  • The Planetary Nebula is found in the constellation Draco, in the Northern Hemisphere.





When will move off of the subject of the government? NOBODY KNOWS

We have been learning about most of the thing to do with the government and more recently

SOCIALISM.

So we have to write a paragraph about whether we like it or not. I'm not particularly fussed on what the government does unless it affects me but, we have to do it anyway.

I feel like socialism is the best for countries. Others may argue it is communism but, communism is a controlling and limited community and can easily become predictable. Socialism taxes the people and others say that this is for no one but the government, while in reality, it provides for education, transportation and other things I have not mentioned. In New Zealand, we have a Socialist community, with communist groups within the country itself, and compared to other countries and communities, we are one of the most stable.

Tuesday 22 May 2018

Creative writing

https://www.newschoolers.com/news/read/Flying-Houses-Floating-Sky
Ever since the revolution, those who hadn’t been taken had fled to the skies. It had been years since more than a few people had seen the ground, the few who had seen the ground didn’t come back sane. The guards thought that living in the sky, with no other communication, was punishment enough, as anyone who hadn’t caught a house to the skies was imprisoned or was on the run from the guards. They would send us up baskets of food, with the pulleys, according to how many people we had here. What they didn’t know was that we were all constructing bridges to reach each other, and the kids constructed their own pulleys to share and deliver letters according to where they needed to be sent, all of the homes were in a giant ring, so the pulleys were perfect for that sort of thing.

Some days the loneliness got to us all and we slept through entire days at a time and maybe even more. No one kept a calendar, nobody knew the what day it was anymore. Sure, things can get boring, but one-day things changed.

Friday 18 May 2018

So we've been looking at scripts to perform for Drama...

and we've been looking around and narrowed it down to these -


  • God, I hate Shakespeare - By Something Rotten. This is probably what we are going to do at this rate.
  • A Shakespeare script that Miss will give us. She said she would look around for something that would suit the number of people we have.
  • We looked at doing something from Wicked. But, it seemed the notes were too high for us.

What are Dictators actually like?

They screwed up.

So we're doing a post about dictators and what they're like. So we basically write down what characteristics we think dictators have.


  • Ambitious
  • They're a liar
  • Resourceful
  • Insensitive
  • Intelligent
  • Self-absorbed
  • Confident
  • Corrupt
  • Hateful
  • Deep down, anxious
  • Intimidating
  • Rude
  • Demanding
  • Controlling
  • Bold
  • Sadistic
  • Jealous
  • Power-hungry
  • Manipulative
Etc.


Friday 11 May 2018

More things about the Government

New Zealand is a constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system of government. This means that our head of state is a sovereign, currently, the sovereign is Queen Elizabeth II. The Queen is represented in NZ by the Governor-General, Dame Patsy Reddy. Our Government is made up of a democratically elected House of Representatives. The Government advises our head of State. MMP is our current voting system to select our Parliament. In this system, each voter gets two votes, the first is for the party you prefer. This is the vote that mainly decides how many seats each party, out of the 120 seats in parliament, gets. The second vote is for which person you want to represent your electorate. New Zealand is currently divided into 71 electorates. Whoever gets the most votes will win and become your local Member of Parliament and they will have a seat in Parliament. To get any seats in Parliament a party must have at least 5% of the votes or have an electorate seat. Let's say a party got 40% of votes, these are first filled with the won electorate seats and then other members of the party. If a party got 4% percent of the votes they are not entitled to any seats, but if they won an electorate they would be entitled to 4 more seats in Parliament.

Sites I used for Information:
https://www.govt.nz/browse/engaging-with-government/government-in-new-zealand/
https://www.parliament.nz/en/visit-and-learn/how-parliament-works/our-system-of-government/
http://www.elections.org.nz/voting-system/mmp-voting-system

Monday 7 May 2018

For social studies we are learning about government and monarchies and we had to write ten facts about what we learned from this video called 'Why Do We Still Have Monarchies?'

Maori Music Task and other tasks

Maori Music Task

This is a version of pop music by Stan Walker and featuring Ria Hall, Troy Kingi and Maisey Rika, I believe maori language week is what inspired them to perform this song. I liked how catchy the song was and how they used part of the national anthem in the song. How with progress everything came along and together.

I found a translation of a few lyrics:

Nō tawhiti, nō tata                                 No matter if you're near or far
nō te whenua o te Atua tātou              We come from the land of God
ahakoa nō hea mai koe                       No matter where you Belong
ka whawhai tonu mātou mōu              We'll fight for your freedom

Maori Matariki Story Task


It is a traditional story from long ago, it was written for people to pass from generation to generation. The main story idea was for the legend to be told how the author perceived it.

DEVISIN' STUF ABOUT WAR AND BLOOD

On Friday we played games like Sneak Up Granny, Tequila and somehow Duck Duck Goose to practice our skills.

Okay, so for drama we are devising ideas for a play of some sort about ANZAC day and Gallipoli. We were thinking we could show a New Zealander and Turk fighting then they kill each other and maybe the mans wife receiving the news of his death. Personally, I think that instead of war we maybe settle our differences like civilized humans instead of being like animals fighting over our territory.

Matariki or is it Mataariki?

What is Matariki?

Matariki is a celebration of the new year, harvest of crops, new life and remembering the dead. Although it is also the maori name for a cluster of stars also known as Pleiades. Matariki has two common meanings, ‘the eyes of god’ (mata ariki) or ‘little eyes’ (mata riki). According to legend, when Ranginui, the sky lord and father, and Papatūānuku, the earth mother, were parted by their confined children, the god of the winds, Tāwhirimātea, became so angry that he tore out his eyes and threw them into the heavens.

Why do people celebrate Matariki?

It is usually celebrated after a harvest of crops and it means a maori new year.

Who celebrates Matariki?

The people of New Zealand, even some people refer to it as the New Zealand Thanksgiving.

When is Matariki celebrated?

It comes in mid-winter, after the harvest.

Where is Matariki celebrated?

Matariki is celebrated in New Zealand.

How is Matariki celebrated?

Matariki was commonly celebrated long ago, and many still do now, by offering gifts to the Earth Mother, planting new trees, and gathering their family together. Now a lot is celebrated with music, dance, food and family.