Monday, March 8, 2010

Monday, March 8, 2010

General Announcements:
  • Parents! You can pick up your Prism's progress report in the main office! Also, conference slots still available for this Fri., 3/12 if you haven't signed up yet - Sign-up sheets in Prisms' main classroom entryway.
  • 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 Grade:
    • Due Tue., 3/9: #7-10 on p. 60-61. Show how you got your answer.
  • 8th Grade:
    • Due Tue., 3/9: #1-7 on p. 34. You will need dot paper for #1 and 2. Use Pythagorean Theorem and symbolic method to do #3-7.
Social Studies:
  • Due Tue., 3/9: Read " A Taxing King" (photocopied handout, p. 50-55) and highlight/underline important things and/or write questions where you have them.
Science:
  • Test Thurs., 3/11: Read over your notes, especially pre-assessment. Come up with a list of topics you want to review for test.
Study/8th Grade Project::
  • Due Tue., 3/9: Complete draft #1 of outline. Bring everything to school: binder, journal, notecards, web resources.
Language Arts:
  • Due Tue., 3/9: Complete the reading of Ch. 1 of The Children of Willesden Lane. Be ready to actively participate in a discussion of the chapter, have a quiz, and/or write a paragraph on a prompt given in class.
Spanish:
  • 7th Grade:
  • 8th Grade:
    Moment of Zen:
    Although last night's Academy Awards ceremony probably accounts for this weekend's Big Deal in Movies, I know many of you went to see the most recent cinematic take on Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland, as imagined by Tim Burton, which opened on Friday. However, many others have tried to bring Alice and her adventures in Wonderland to film since the very beginnings of the medium. A cursory search turns up more than a dozen attempts, the first of which was made in 1903 - 37 years after the book's release and just 5 years after Lewis Carroll's death in 1898. This 1903 silent film, directed in England by Cecil Hepworth and Percy Stow, was the longest film ever made at the time, running almost 12 minutes (only 8 of which have survived). Hepworth was insistent about staying as faithful as possible to the book's original illustrations by Sir John Tenniel. The cast included his wife as the White Rabbit and Red Queen, his secretary as Alice, and the family dog, Blair. The dog went on to star in 1905's Rescued by Rover. The British Film Institute has made the surviving 8 minutes of the movie available online.

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