Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Literacy about Planet Earth from Room 9

Raedence:
Wind, Clouds, Rain - Weather!
Raedence and H.j saw lightning outside their house along time ago.Weather can be every where.

Wind can move softly and wind can move strongly.Thin clouds sometimes can mean the weather might change.The dark grey clouds mean that the rain is ready to come out of the clouds .Rainbows are made when rain and sunshine combine.





My report tells about something new, important, unusual or interesting.

My piece has a headline.

My headline gets the readers attention and tells about the main idea of the newstory.

The introduction comes next. It is short and tells who, when, what where.

The rest of my writing tells more facts.


I told about the news happening to someone else.- I have not used I


I have not wasted words.

I have underlined and corrected my spelling.

All my sentences start with a capital letter and end with a full stop.


Saving the nature trail

I used the toolkit because I am being literate.

Erana:
Wednesday  2nd  November
Me and my classroom went on a tour to the nature trail it was pretty slippery.Room 9 decided to fix the nature trail room 9 questioned and talked about what room 9 could do for the nature trail room 9 decided that there could be flowers and a anther path to go some where else.

James:
Natural disasters in NZ!

There are lots of disasters. Sometimes they can cost lots of money to fix and it is scary for towns/citys when they happen! There is earthquakes, tornados, floods, forest fires, volcanoes and lots more in NZ! Sometimes earthquakes can make floods because they might break the water pipes underground! Also, they could break a wall around a river and then it starts to flood! Did you know that Hamilton is quite safe from earthquakes? There have been 20 earthquakes in NZ (New Zealand) 2010 to 2016 (2010-2016). There has only been 1 in Waikato at Taupo! Christchurch has had 4 earthquakes (2010 to 2016). Only talking about ones with a biggter magnitude of 60. Also not talking about aftershocks. Did you know that tornados can spin up to 300 mph? Also, did you know that tornados often come from very very early in the morning to bedtime? They still come at other times. Tornados can also be named twisters or whirlwinds.
Newspaper Report Writing Rubric Level 1/2


Friend
Myself
My report tells about something new, important, unusual or interesting.

My piece has a headline.

My headline gets the readers attention and tells about the main idea of the news story.

The introduction comes next. It is short and tells who, when, what where.


The rest of my writing tells more facts.


I told about the news happening to someone else.- I have not used “I”


I have not wasted words.


I have underlined and corrected my spelling.

All my sentences start with a capital letter and end with a full stop.


Tawhiti:
Word work:



Cyclone a system of winds rotating inwards to an area of low barometric pressure, with an anticlockwise (northern hemisphere) or clockwise (southern hemisphere) circulation; a depression.



Severe (of something bad or undesirable) very great; intense.


Dew tiny drops of water that form on cool surfaces at night, when atmospheric vapour condenses.

Rain the condensed moisture of the atmosphere falling visibly in separate drops.

Satellite an artificial body placed in orbit round the earth or another planet in order to collect information or for communication.


Weather reporting in Te Reo

Enviro message from Aniket and Ahmed Room 9

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Room 12's Genius hour enviro team

During Genius hour in Room 12 one group decided to become an enviro-team. They researched native plants that could go on the nature trail, interviewed an enviro-agent about composting and made planter signs so that other students will know what the plants are called.
All ready to present

A Kowhai seedling carefully dug, potted and then planted

The first planter label, for a Totara plant

Working on the nature trail

We are lucky to have families from our community who are willing to help us with our school grounds and to be an enviro-school. The grandmother of one of our students is a keen gardener and she came to help out with the development of the nature trail. She has helped us find some native seedlings from around the school and she brought some from her garden. 

Here she is with students from Rooms 12 and 13 explaining about the plants and showing the students where and how to transplant them. We hope that the nature trail will eventually have lots of beautiful native plants for us and the wildlife to enjoy.




The enviro-team explain what they are doing

At Positive Assembly this week the students from the enviro-team and Ms Jones explained what they are doing and reminded us that we all have a responsibility to look after and sustain our environment.



Here is what was said - written and presented by the enviro-team and Ms Jones.

"We are here to talk about our enviroschool. Our school has Silver status. The top level of Enviro schools is Green-Gold.   We are going to apply for Green-Gold status this year.
To be given Green-Gold status, we have to show that we are doing things to be sustainable and that we look after our environment.
A panel of judges are going to come to school in week 9. We will welcome them and show them around.   We will show them lots of things that make us proud of our school and  tell them what make us worthy of being a Green-Gold Enviro school.
What is Enviro all about?
·   It’s about a lot more than just picking up rubbish  - it’s about reducing rubbish in the first place (nude food, recycling, using environmentally friendly packaging and products)
·   It’s about being sustainable. This means doing things that don’t trash the planet or destroy the lives of other creatures.
·   Sustainable means not using things up. It means doing things that help nature keep being healthy so it can support us. It means leaving the world in a better place than we found it.

Some of the things we already do are:
·  Grow food in our Kitchen Gardens
·  :Care for our beautiful grounds with trees and plants that attract native birds
·  We have a composting system for our food scraps
·  We are growing fruit trees
·  We want to encourage bats to live in our school – we have a bat house in a totara tree (do you know where it is?)
·  We have rainwater tanks that collect rainwater off the roofs (do you know where they are?)
·  We now have a solar water heating panel on the roof of a very big building in our school (do you know which roof?)
·  We have a school bus which helps reduce the number of cars that bring children to school each day
·  We celebrate our school community – its cultures and foods and traditions.
· We have a nature trail and we are growing native trees to plant on it.
·   We take our lunch rubbish home and try to have nude food at school.
Our toolkit is all about sustainability:
·   We are engaged with our environment
·  We are curious about the world and the ways we can make it a better place
· We respect our environment
· We are connected with our environment  we know we are part of it, not separate from it.
· We can explain why it’s important to be sustainable and to care for our place because we are literate
We are as good as the world we live in and we are the children who will be the next adults to look after our planet.
We want everyone to think about how we can show the enviro judges that we are worthy of Green-Gold status.  You might have some things to add to our list of things we do.
We would like every class to have something to present to the judges when they come to visit. We hope you will talk about what that will be in your classes.



Sunday, November 6, 2016

Our fight against litter and rubbish!!

One of our big problems at Hamilton East School has been litter around our grounds. This year we decided to have a nude food Wednesday to try and encourage people to come to school with no packaging and just recyclable food containers. This was ok for a little while but didn't do enough.

At the start of term 4 we decided to get serious about the problem!

We removed all the bins from the grounds (don't worry, there is method to our madness), this was not so that people would drop rubbish...it was to make people take their rubbish away!

We want to encourage students to come to school with no packaged, processed food. This will reduce litter and maybe school lunches will become healthier.

So far this has worked quite well but we are still working on being 100% clean!

Here are some posters that our enviro-team member Josh made to spread the message:



Greenhouse

This is the Greenhouse that was gifted to the school by the WISE group.
It has been incorporated into the improved area between the Old Dental Clinic and the Hall.
We hope to grow early tomatoes this spring.






We have installed a watering system to irrigate the Greenhouse.