this is my art colouring book for the summer learning journey
Welcome to my blog, I'm a student at Karoro School in Greymouth, New Zealand.
Monday, 13 December 2021
Friday, 10 December 2021
Thursday, 9 December 2021
The door- a world of possibilities
This is my door writing. We had to write about what we wanted to see in the future.
Friday, 3 December 2021
Friday, 1 October 2021
Friday, 24 September 2021
harekeke weaving
today in mrs Barrow class we focus on harekeke weaving I made a knife like object using the hard pieces of the flax I allso made a rose here is what we wrote
Wednesday, 16 June 2021
water tension dlo
Title:DLO | Water Tension DLO |
Question | How much tension can multiple water droplets hold? |
Research | Test water tension on a 20c coin |
Hypothesis | Can the coin hold 8 drops on the heads side? |
Experiment
| We got given a straw, A flask of 20ml of water and a 20c coin. We used the straw to collect the water by sealing the pressure on the top of the straw and slowly releasing the pressure of the water to make a water droplet fall on the coin. |
Collect Data | 7 drops on heads side, 18 on tails side. |
Analyze | We could fit 18 droplets on the tails of the coin. |
| We think that this was the limit because we couldn’t manage to fit anymore droplets on the coin. There was another group that could only get to the same amount. |
Report | We had a hypothesis and that was how many droplets of water could fit on a 20c coin. We estimated 5 droplets of water on the heads side of a 20 cent coin, the result we got was 7 drops of water on the coin before the surface tension burst and the water flowed off the coin! |
Wednesday, 2 June 2021
my bike trail recount
My Bike Trail Recount
On the 26th of May my class went on a bike ride to Hurunui Jacks and Mananui Tramline near Hokitika. My car group was Robyn, Matt , Luken, Charlie and me We started early in the morning at about 8:30 am and set off at 9:00am.
We arrived with are gear pack and a full stomach. There was frost everywhere. There were old relics everywhere old shovels pieces of a railway from possibly 100s of years ago. It was very exciting. We also had to stop every 20 minutes nearly to read the bearings of our compass.
There were a few downhill parts which were very fun. I had a little bit of trouble switching between gears but got the hang of the new bike gears. We had lunch when we reached the end. Most of us just rode off the 30 cm drop off the wood panels of the car park.
We set back off to the cars. I was going faster than I was on the whole track. It was 200 meters down hill. I was going fast enough to catch up to the rest of the group up front but of course I was confronted by another incline. There were large wooden bridges with a narrow appearance but when I started to slow they did not seem such a risk.
We got to the end and it was time to load the bikes and set off to the Hurunui Jacks bike trail (with a quick petrol stop in Hokitika).
We were at Hurunui Jacks with big water races to the side of us. We had lunch and began. I was one of the first to take off. There were big turns and dirt and gravel roads. It was challenging at first but it kept getting harder and harder as we went more and more up inclines until we got to a nice flat gravel part. Of course there was a down side, there is always a down side... on my right a steep 20m hill and on my left a 2m water run for about 20 minutes straight then some bends and slopes. There was a noise to the side of us which turned out to be a road. I was delighted we were at the end!
Ms Kemp sent Mylah, Emma, Ilish and I to wait for the others at the start of the track and Donna was to take them there. We had a long drive there but we all got to sit in the horse float with the stretcher like beds folded out. We then ate chocolate cookies and had a run around.
A man arrived. It was just some old dude who wanted to talk to Donna about the cycle trail. Slowly he went away. We waited and waited for the rest of the class to come back but they came eventually we loaded up the bikes and left back to school.
