Wednesday 31 May 2017

Friday 26 May 2017

My learning conference

Learning conference 
My learning conference was fun I was so so scared at stare it was ok but the next slide THERE WAS MY SPELLING MISTAKE. ON NO I said to myself. But my mum really enjoyed it so I did when I got home I was really proud for myself.
Cow heart dissection

Layah, Shantelle, Connie and I were in a group we pot our gloves on and then the heart went on the tray. Me and Layah were so subsided to Kant the heat when it was my turn to Kant some of the fat off it was really withe. Layah Kant some of the meat off it was so badly. The blade went every where. Everyone was begging of me to get my heat look at but I didn’t.

                       TREATY OF WAITANGI BY SHANTELLE AND JESSICA
The Treaty of Waitangi (Māori: Tiriti o Waitangi) is a treaty first signed on 6 February 1840 by representatives of the British Crown and various Māori chiefs from the North Island of New Zealand. It resulted in the declaration of British sovereignty over New Zealand by Lieutenant Governor William Hobson in May 1840
Image result for facts about the treaty of waitangiWhat is the Treaty of Waitangi about?-The Treaty of Waitangi is the founding document of New Zealand. It is an agreement entered into by representatives of the Crown and of Māori iwi (tribes) and hapū (subtribes). It is named after the place in the Bay of Islands where the Treaty Was first signed, on 6 February 1840.
What are the principles of the treaty?-The treaty set up a partnership, and the partners have a duty to act reasonably and in good faith.
  • The Crown has freedom to govern.
  • The Crown has a duty to actively protect Māori interests.
  • The Crown has a duty to remedy past breaches Signed in 1840, the

  • Treaty of Waitangi is an agreement between the British Crown and Maori. Around this time, there were 125,000 Māori and about 2000 settlers in New zealand . Pakha stopped by Alexandra hotel / they stop and catch up food drinks they would trailed their was heaps of hotels. Alexandra redoubt maked a look out you could see the river  there is not allowed dogs or cars.There is a sign on what it first looked like then then what looked second then what looked liked now.That the Queen (or king) of Great Britain has the right to rule over New Zealand;
that Māori chiefs would keep their land and their chieftainships, and would agree to sell their land only to the British monarch; and
that all Māori would have the same rights as British subjects.

Māori people’s sense injustice. From 1980 annual protests Waitangi Day impelled successive governments make changes legislation affecting ... non-Māori, European law changed reflect Māori practice. Treaty settlements The Waitangi Tribunal formed 1975 investigate

Friday 19 May 2017

Tug of war

Tugging hard on the rope anxiously, I look on the other team. They’re huffing and  puffing away.

Frighteningly, I am  screaming in my head for “help” .
     
Uselessly, I wonder if we are going win.           
Helpfully, my mum jumps in. I screamed in my head “we’re going to win”. I pull the big trigger. The last person goes over the line. “We win!”      

                         By Jessica!

Friday 12 May 2017

Other resolutions: 320 × 172 ...BLACK  
by Jessica
Black is a color like the basement.
It’s not something you eat
because it might be dead.
It’s like a black dress
you  wear to a funerall.
It’s like a movie in 1918.
          It’s like a graveyard  
               you see at  night
              I still like the colour black.
Swimming sports

In swimming sports we were doing freestyle,backstroke and breaststroke. It was so much fun I really enjoyed that.
I thought it would be hard so I didn't want to do it .
And I got picked on for the relay also thought that would be hard but it was so much fun I really enjoyed it.

Friday 5 May 2017

Swimming sports

In swimming sports we were doing freestyle,backstroke and breaststroke. It was so much fun I really enjoyed that.
I thought it would be hard so I didn't want to do it .
And I got picked on for the relay also thought that would be hard but it was so much fun I really enjoyed it.
Integrity Games.
1st May 2017

Written by Jessica Meanie
1st May 2017
As part of the Senior Leadership responsibilities Shantelle, Jessada and I had to discover an integrity game by the end of ten weeks, for the junior team to participate in.  We brainstormed some ideas of games that hand not been invented. The three of us decided to go with a game called Kiwi hut.

Kiwi hunt!
Equipment:          Ten tennis balls, ten hockey sticks and two hoops.
Area:           Native bush, back field.
Formations:         Ten children from year 1 and 2.
Instructions:        1. Ten Balls are hidden by the referees (the older kids)
2. Once the year 1 and 2 kids find a ball they yell out ‘Got it’ and one of the   older kids gives the kids a hockey stick.
3. Once they get the hockey stick they try to get the ball to one of the hula hoops
Variations:           Make the game harder and harder every game but not    too hard for the kids by hiding them in different places.
Each person in our team had to create a game for five classrooms of the junior team with four rotations with each group having Ten or less children in it.  Two groups had to share one rotation time.  This game happened in term 1, 2017 in the back field of the school.
From our game the children learnt eye movement, hockey sticks skills and balls skills with hockey sticks, they had to use eye movement to look for the balls and use the hockey sticks and to hint the balls into the hula hoops.