Thursday, December 17, 2009

Thursday, December 17, 2009

General Announcements:
  • Friday, Dec. 18: Field trip to Amherst College (Bassett Planetarium & Amherst Natural History Museum) still needs a few more drivers. We will leave Hilltown right after All-School (~9:30 a.m.) and be returning about 2:30 p.m.
    • All students must bring their own lunch, even if you usually get pizza or a lunch from Blue House on Fridays.
    • Please dress warmly, as some parts of the field trip will not be heated. Dressing in layers is recommended.
  • Copies of Eighth-Grade Project documents for phase one available for download here.
  • You must have an independent reading book every day. If you are getting close to the end of one, have the next one at school and ready to go.
Math:
  • Note: All assignments should be turned in to Grace first thing, before 8:30
  • 7th Grade:
    • Due Fri., 12/18: Make-up work only
  • 8th Grade:
    • Due Fri., 12/18: #1, 2, 3 on p.166 of Additional Practice (photocopy from Teacher's Edition, handed out in class today) — more practice with determining slope and y-intercept for linear equations in the form y=mx+b
Social Studies:
  • None assigned:
Science:
  • None assigned :
Language Arts:
  • Note: All assignments should be turned in to Grace first thing, before 8:30
  • Due Fri., 12/18: On separate paper, typed or neatly handwritten, write a one-¶ response to your beginning experience with Shakespeare's play. Be certain the paragraph is edited and has a main idea sentence as its first sentence.
Moment of Zen:
For those of you who have been folding pieces to make a 12-piece spiky ball ("stellated octahedron" in geometry-speak), there's a lot more to do with them besides. The pieces are called Sonobe units, named for their creator, Mitsonobu Sonobe, and there are many websites out there with other ideas of 3D figures to make with them and plenty of pictures of these sometimes-boggling constructions. Click the picture above (featuring a 30-piece spiky ball or stellated icosahedron) to visit one of these sites.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

General Announcements:
  • Friday, Dec. 18: Field trip to Amherst College (Bassett Planetarium & Amherst Natural History Museum) still needs a few more drivers. We will leave Hilltown right after All-School (~9:30 a.m.) and be returning about 2:30 p.m.
  • Copies of Eighth-Grade Project documents for phase one available for download here.
  • All students must have an independent reading book every day. If you are getting close to the end of one, have the next one at school and ready to go.
Math:
  • 7th Grade:
    • Due Thurs., 12/17:
      • Finish Math's Mate 2.2 begun in class today, with work for * problems shown on separate sheet of paper.
      • Bring colored pencils to class 12/17.
  • 8th Grade:
    • Due Thurs., 12/17:
      • Finish Math's Mate 2.2 begun in class today, with work for * problems shown on separate sheet of paper.
      • Quiz on definition of "slope" as defined in glossary of CMP book
Social Studies:
  • Due Thurs., 12/17: Write a story summary of either Horatius at the Bridge or The Decision of L. Junius Brutus. Illustrate it with a ½-page, colored pencil drawing.
Science:
  • Due Thurs., 12/17: Read Physical Science, p. 311-317 and answer questions 1-8 on p. 320. Group 2 has the textbooks tonight (Wed.). Group 1 should ask about a copy of questions if not finished.
Language Arts:
  • None assigned
Spanish:
  • 7th Grade:
    • Due Thurs., 12/17: Finish your 8 drawings representing Ch. 4 in Pobre Ana
  • 8th Grade:
    • Due Thurs., 12/17: Finish your drawing of two favorite scenes from Piratas
Moment of Zen:
This picture, of a family from Bhutan, is part of a photo series of families from around the world and a week's food for them, from the book Hungry Planet: What the World Eats by Peter Menzel and Faith D'Aluisio. Click the picture to see a number of other examples from around the world from Germany to Sudanese refugees in a camp in Chad, with a whole lot in between. It's interesting not just to see how much food and cost, but also what's included.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

General Announcements:
  • You must have an independent reading book every day. If you are getting close to the end of one, have the next one at school and ready to go.
  • Copies of Eighth-Grade Project documents for phase one available for download here.
Math:
  • 7th Grade:
    • None assigned
  • 8th Grade:
    • Due Wed., 12/16: Study the definition of "slope" in the glossary and be ready for a quiz on it on Thursday. I will type it and leave works out that you have to fill in.
Social Studies:
  • Due Thurs., 12/17: Write a story summary of either Horatius at the Bridge or The Decision of L. Junius Brutus. Illustrate it with a ½-page, colored pencil drawing.
Science:
  • Due Wed., 12/16: Write a 1-¶ reflection on what the Relative Planet Size activity showed you and what surprised you most in this activity.
  • Due Thurs., 12/17: Read Physical Science, p. 311-317 and answer questions 1-8 on p. 320. Group 1 has the textbooks tonight (Tue.). Group 2 will have the textbooks tomorrow (Wed.) night.
Language Arts:
  • Due Wed., 12/16: Bring independent reading book.
Spanish:
  • 7th Grade:
    • Due Thurs., 12/17: Finish your drawing representing some part of Ch. 4 in Pobre Ana
  • 8th Grade:
    • Due Thurs., 12/17: Finish your drawing of two favorite scenes from Piratas
Moment of Zen:
The Bacon Cake Is a Lie...
...Or at least so claims Seattle-based home food-artist "Ms. Humble," who runs the food blog Not So Humble Pie, and has not only made "bacon cake" (which both contains and is styled to look like bacon) but also the edibles constructed in the pictures above (the sushi are actually cupcakes, and contain no actual fish). This biological anthropologist turned food artist also has a penchant for science-related food, her collection of which includes gingerbread scientists, cookie Drosophila melanogaster, chocolate atoms and a periodic table fashioned out of cookies. The whole thing is worth checking out, but I recommend her Gallery of Weird Food, containing some of her most adventurous creations, as a jumping off place.

Eighth Grade Project Documents

I know you are all keeping track of the information about eighth grade projects very carefully, but in case of shark attack, alien invasion or parents wanting a copy, here are digital copies of each: (unfortunately, these are not easy right-click/Ctrl-click->Save as downloads, you must follow the link and then download - I will see about getting .pdf versions of these on the school server soon) Added 12/15/09 Added 1/20/10 Added 1/22/10 Added 3/24/10

Monday, December 14, 2009

Monday, December 14, 2009

General Announcements:
  • Ancient Greece Museum Exhibits are ready to go home if they have not already. They are in the 3rd floor classroom and hallway.
  • You must have an independent reading book every day. If you are getting close to the end of one, have the next one at school and ready to go.
Math: 7th & 8th Grade:
  • Due Tue., 12/15: Work for 20 min. in grade-level Math League.
Social Studies:
  • None assigned
Science:
  • Due Tue., 12/15: Answer Qs on worksheet about relative planet size. Exension p. 2; #1-3 + Extension on p. 3 (Answers on back, in complete sentences).
Language Arts:
  • Due Tue., 12/15: In your LA journal, record a fact about Julius Caesar that you found interesting and a fact about William Shakespeare that you found interesting. Be certain to record the source of your facts in journal as well and using standard bibliography form (Use the style sheet given to you by John for the bibliography). Citation Format Guide with examples (.pdf)
Moment of Zen:
Beyond Whining: The Complaints Choir
The Finnish word valituskuoro, which translates as 'complaints choir' describes the sound of a number of people complaining all at once. This sparked the idea of an actual choir, singing complaints set to music, for Finnish artists Oliver Kochta-Kalleinen and Tellervo Kalleinen. Shortly thereafter, the Helsinki and Birmingham (UK) Complaints Choirs were born in 2005, in very short order. The Helsinki Complaints Choir—dozens of people, dressed in formal wear—sang in a concert hall about what flat-out annoyed them: everything from people talking on their cell phones too loud to losing to Sweden in hockey. The idea caught on, and there have since been a number of complaints choirs in cities all around the world. You can see a comprehensive list of complaints choirs - many with videos - by clicking the picture above or reading this article describing the development of the art.