Thursday, 30 April 2015
Monday, 27 April 2015
ANZAC Writing
Here are 3 examples of our Anzac Writing this week
The
Dawn Parade
Why
is the Dawn Parade so early in the morning?
The
ANZAC Soldiers landed at Gallopoli on the beach at dawn. The soldiers who didn’t
die wanted to remember their soldier friends who died. Also, they meet at dawn
because it is a quiet time of day.
I
think it is good to remember the soldiers.
By
Mia
Poppies
Why do we have lots
of poppies?
A poppy grows and
scatters many seeds so lots more pppies spread all over the land. The poppies
spread all over the fields where the soldiers had been fighting. The soldiers
that did not die will remember the people who died in the war because the poppy
reminds them
By Ruby
Poppies
Why do we have
poppies on ANZAC Day?
Poppies are a flower.
They are all over the world. Poppies can be a weed because the seed spreads and
grows easily. Poppies grew in the fields where the war happened. They grew
where soldiers had died.
We wear poppies on
ANZAC Day to remember the people who died.
I think ANZAC Day is
a cool day.
By Ashton
Thursday, 23 April 2015
Friday, 3 April 2015
Egg-citing Discovery!
What we needed was:
A large glass of water
A plastic plate
A cardboard tube (1/3 of a glad wrap roll but a toilet paper tube would work just as well!)
A raw egg
What we did:
1. Place the plate on top of the glass of water
2. Sit the cardboard tube on top of the plate, lined up directly over the glass
3. Rest the raw egg sideways on the tube
4. Knock the plate out of the way and see what happens!
A special thanks to our 'eggs-pert' Damon for the demonstration
What was going on:?:
This is very like the table cloth trick where you pull out the cloth and everything stays on the table. Only this has a higher success rate!
The plate needed a rim to catch the edge of the tube. The egg is just sitting - not moving. As the support is moved, gravity makes it drop and it lands in the water. (One of Newton's laws of motion)
Have a 'crack' at this at home- outside!
Happy Easter everyone!
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