Thursday, March 29, 2012

Maori Phrase video


This is a video of Edward, my room14 buddy, and I. He is so nice and also very fun.We had lots of practises at the end and we got it. I bet the rest will be better than any other. I need to practice more on pronouncing hoa correctly. I think I did well on speaking in a clear voice.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Glow-worm presentation



On the 22nd of March I did a presentaion. I told the class lots of facts about glow-worms.


I did well on finding interesting facts. I need to work on speaking in a nice clear voice.


Thursday, March 22, 2012

Crystal flower Experiments









Yesterday we started a flower Experiment!!!!. We were trying to grow crystals on them. I think that my flower will grow small crystals and they will grow bigger and bigger and at the end when they are finished growing.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Pop art








This is a photo of my pop art. It is really colourful. It was so fun. It just took a long time.




Monday, March 12, 2012


these are two pitch

f caves.these are caves and bats in cave tops.


Thursday, March 8, 2012

Waitomo caves trip













On Tuesdays we went to waitomo caves. It was so fun we went up down and around
I was with Courtney's dad Nick. He was funny. We went on the bus to go to lunch. After lunch we went to the museum. Then the classroom. Scott taught us lots of things about caves. Then we went on the Ruakuri bushwalk.

Monday, March 5, 2012

glow worms


Facts
  • A glow-worm uses its glow to invite insects to dinner :o)
  • Insects fly towards the glow and get stuck in the sticky lines that the glow worm makes like spiders web
  • It also uses its glow to turn other creatures off eating it.
  • It makes its tail glow using bioluminescence which is a chemical reaction between a chemical the glow worm makes called luciferin mixes with air. That chemical reaction gives off light.
Did You Know?
  • There are lots of different types of glow-worms but the one we have in NZ is arachnocampa luminosa
  • A glow-worm is the larva of a two-winged insect.
  • The glow-worm starts as an egg, hatches into the lava (glow-worm) turns into a pupa in a cocoon and then turns into a tiny two winged flying insect.
  • Glow-worms live in caves because they are damp so the glow-worm doesn’t dry out; because there are lots of hanging surfaces; because there are lots of insects and it’s dark to allow the glow-worms glow to be seen.
Experiments
Glowing glow sticks

What you need:
A dark room
Glow sticks

What you do:
Inside the glow stick you can see a clear or coloured liquid. Also inside the glow stick is a little glass bubble (or ampoule) full of another chemical. When you bend the stick the bending breaks the glass bubble and the two chemicals mix together causing a chemical reaction to occur and that reaction causes light so your glow stick glows.

Warming a glow stick under your armpit for a few minutes and cool one in the fridge for a few minutes before breaking them and see what happens. Does one glow brighter than the other? Does one last longer than the other?
Investigation
One evening have a good look for flying insects around your front or back door – without turning the light on. Turn the outside light on and go back inside. Do some homework for a while then go back outside and check for insects again.
Are there any insects now? Where are they and what are they doing? Why would they be doing that?
Jokes
Why did the bird want to eat glow worms?
It wanted a light meal
Why was the glow-worm unhappy?
Because her childern were not bright