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Monday 19 October 2020

letter

 Election results 2020: Labour's Jacinda Ardern wins second term, crushes National's Judith Collins; Winston Peters and NZ First out


Watch the clip, then write a letter to Jacinda Adern congratulating her on her win (if you choose to), then  tell her a little about yourself and  let her know what you would like her Government to do to help improve your quality of life and your future. 


Letter format:


Hornby High School,

180 Waterloo Rd.,

Hornby,

CHRISTCHURCH


19/10/20


Ms Jacinda Ardern,

Prime Minister of New Zealand

Parliament Buildings

WELLINGTON


Kia ora, My name is Harry and I go to Hornby High School in Christchurch. I just wanted to say that you did a great job at handling the corona situation very well and also  to say congrats for  winning the Election.


Cheers,

Harry




Thursday 10 September 2020

Tongan language week

    Today I have learned about Tongan language week. Here are some Tongan phrases I have.


Koe ha e taimi -  what is the time

Malo tau ma’u e pongipongi ni- good morning

Ko hoku hingoa ko... - my name is …

Sai pe, malo - i'm fine thanks

Fefe hake- how are you

Malo e tau ma’u e pongipongi ni- glad we’ve made it this morning 


The archipelago in the South Pacific Ocean south of Samoa is also known as the Friendly Islands, it comprises 176 islands, 36 of them are inhabited. Tonga is the only kingdom in the Pacific since Taufa'ahau in 1875 declared Tonga a constitutional monarchy. He also gave Tonga its first constitution.



Tuesday 1 September 2020

World War 1

kia ora welcome to my blog

Today i have finished my WW1 DLO and i just want to share it with yous  


Why did New Zealand fight in the war? The war began in 1914 when Austria-Hungary invaded Serbia because of the assassination of an archduke


Who did they fight with? Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire, the Central Powers) fought against Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, Romanian, Japan and the United States


What qualities did ANZAC soldiers display? Anzac came to stand for the positive qualities which Australians have seen their forces show in war


What challenges did they face during the war? With soldiers fighting in close proximity in the trenches, usually in unsanitary conditions, infectious diseases such as dysentery, cholera and typhoid fever


Where did they fight? The Western Front


What did the soldiers struggle with after the war? They inhabited a world of pain and suffering beyond comprehension: a world of tetraplegics, paraplegics, multiple amputations, wrecked lungs, mutilations, emasculation and blindness.


What international event caused the 1930s depression? The Great Depression was the worst economic downturn in the history of the industrialised world


What sport and activities were enjoyed following the depression? People liked listening to sports and news, as well as jazz and swing music. Singing telegrams were popular.

Thursday 27 August 2020

pari haka

Today we did a acrostic poem about pari haka, Here is mine 

Parihaka Poem

 (1 words for each letter, beginning with the same letter)


P ositive

A dditude

R espect

I nhumane

H arrassment

A rmy

K illing

A wful


Thursday 20 August 2020

What Is Gravity?

 


Gravity 


Read, then answer

What Is Gravity?

Gravity is the force by which a planet or other body draws objects toward its center. The force of gravity keeps all of the planets in orbit around the sun.

  1.  What keeps all of the planets in orbit around the sun? 

Gravity is the force by which a planet or other body draws objects toward its center. The force of gravity keeps all of the planets in orbit around the sun. 


What else does gravity do?

Why do you land on the ground when you jump up instead of floating off into space? Why do things fall down when you throw them or drop them? The answer is gravity: an invisible force that pulls objects toward each other. Earth's gravity is what keeps you on the ground and what makes things fall.

  1.  Define gravity in one sentence]

 Use gravity in a sentence. Gravity is why this fruit falls to the ground. Licensed from iStockPhoto. noun. The definition of gravity is the force that causes everything that goes up to fall back down to Earth or is a word used to describe seriousness.


An animation of gravity at work. Albert Einstein described gravity as a curve in space that wraps around an object—such as a star or a planet. If another object is nearby, it is pulled into the curve.

An animation of gravity at work. Albert Einstein described gravity as a curve in space that wraps around an object—such as a star or a planet. If another object is nearby, it is pulled into the curve. Image credit: NASA

Anything that has mass also has gravity. Objects with more mass have more gravity. Gravity also gets weaker with distance. So, the closer objects are to each other, the stronger their gravitational pull is.

  1. What makes gravity weaker?

Earth's gravity comes from all its mass. All its mass makes a combined gravitational pull on all the mass in your body. That's what gives you weight. And if you were on a planet with less mass than Earth, you would weigh less than you do here.

  1. What does Earth’s gravity come from?

  2. Earth's gravity comes from all its mass. All its mass makes a combined gravitational pull on all the mass in your body. That's what gives you weight. And if you were on a planet with less mass than Earth, you would weigh less than you do her

  3. Look at the image below and write how much you’d weigh on the following planets if you weighed 100lbs on Earth.

That's because the planets weigh different amounts, and therefore the force of gravity is different from planet to planet. For example, if you weigh 100 pounds on Earth, you would weigh only 38 pounds on Mercury.

Jupiter 253  lbs           Mars 38 lbs     

Saturn 107 lbs              Neptune 114 lbs

  1. How much would you weigh on the moon? 17 lbs

Infographic showing how much you'd weigh on other planets and the moon

Image credit: NASA

You exert the same gravitational force on Earth that it does on you. But because Earth is so much more massive than you, your force doesn’t really have an effect on our planet.

7. Why doesn’t your force really have much effect on Earth? 

Earth's gravity comes from all its mass. All its mass makes a combined gravitational pull on all the mass in your body. ... But because Earth is so much more massive than you, your force doesn't really have an effect on our planet

Gravity in our universe

Gravity is what holds the planets in orbit around the sun and what keeps the moon in orbit around Earth. The gravitational pull of the moon pulls the seas towards it, causing the ocean tides. Gravity creates stars and planets by pulling together the material from which they are made.

8. What causes ocean tides?  In 1687, Sir Isaac Newton explained that ocean tides result from the gravitational attraction of the sun and moon on the oceans of the earth (Sumich, J.L., 1996). ... Based on its mass, the sun's gravitational attraction to the Earth is more than 177.

9.  How does gravity create stars and planets?

Gravity not only pulls on mass but also on light. Albert Einstein discovered this principle. If you shine a flashlight upwards, the light will grow imperceptibly redder as gravity pulls it. You can't see the change with your eyes, but scientists can measure it.

Black holes pack so much mass into such a small volume that their gravity is strong enough to keep anything, even light, from escaping.

10. Why is gravity in black holes so strong that it keeps anything (even light) from escaping?

The gravitational pull of a black hole is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape once it gets too close. ... As black holes gobble up the matter in their surroundings, they also spit out powerful jets of hot plasma containing electrons and positrons, the antimatter equivalent of electrons

 

What is a black hole?

an image of a supermassive black hole with galaxies and stars

 

Watch this video to find out more about these areas of immense gravity!


Gravity on Earth

Gravity is very important to us. We could not live on Earth without it. The sun's gravity keeps Earth in orbit around it, keeping us at a comfortable distance to enjoy the sun's light and warmth. It holds down our atmosphere and the air we need to breathe. Gravity is what holds our world together.

11. What is the role of the sun’s gravity?

The sun's gravity keeps Earth in orbit around it, keeping us at a comfortable distance to enjoy the sun's light and warmth. It holds down our atmosphere and the air we need to breath. Gravity is what holds our world together.


12.   Can humans live without gravity?


13. Describe where Gravity in Earth is slightly stronger.

Gravity isn’t the same everywhere on Earth. Gravity is slightly stronger over places with more mass underground than over places with less mass. NASA uses two spacecraft to measure these variations in Earth’s gravity. These spacecraft are part of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission.

The sun's gravity keeps Earth in orbit around it, keeping us at a comfortable distance to enjoy the sun's light and warmth. It holds down our atmosphere and the air we need to breath. Gravity is what holds our world together.


A gravity map of Earth made with data from the GRACE mission

The GRACE mission helps scientists to create maps of gravity variations on Earth. Areas in blue have slightly weaker gravity and areas in red have slightly stronger gravity. Image credit: NASA/University of Texas Center for Space Research

GRACE detects tiny changes in gravity over time. These changes have revealed important details about our planet. For example, GRACE monitors changes in sea level and can detect changes in Earth’s crust brought on by earthquakes.

14. List 2 things that the GRACE mission can do for Earth.

GRACE-FO will continue to monitor Earth's gravity and climate. The mission will track gravitational changes in global sea levels, glaciers, and ice sheets, as well as large lake and river water levels, and soil moisture.

 15.  Gravity on Mars


List 5 or more facts about GRAVITY ON MARS in the space below. You can copy and paste and add images. Save in your Hurumanu 3 File.




Astrobiologists put Mars Rover life-detecting equipment to the testNASA Just Unveiled Its 2020 Mars Rover, And We're Beyond Excited


Thursday 6 August 2020

beep test

What ones are you happy with?

-I am happy with my beep test result because i have improved in my beep test since last year

-no so happy with the fact that in pe we don't do pe we do maths

i am feeling fit

I will try in the parts that i dont like to do such as maths


Tuesday 28 July 2020

Six photographs

Six Photographs by Dylan Owen

Make a copy of this document and save in your HUR 1 folder. You will complete the following work to share what you have learned from this reading. You must complete your answers in full sentences.

What was the main message of this story?
To learn about our history through photos 


The journal article looks at 6 different photos throughout NZ history. Re-read the paragraphs which match each photo and share 1 interesting fact for each photograph that you learned. 

Family of T.W Ferry
Children had to sit still for 10 seconds 
Māori at Parihaka
Woman were wearing raukura 
Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee
The children were in fancy dress
Irini Kemara
She was a woman of rank with a moko 
Māori Farm at Winiata Taihape
Milking cows 
Kitchen Interior by William Williams
Guns on the wall 

Find Your Own Source: Complete some research about why it is important to remember our history. Find an article or website that supports this idea. Remember, it will likely not be the first website you come across. It needs to be appropriate for your learning level and you need to read it. Use key words like “for students”, “for children”, “in New Zealand” to help narrow your search results. 

Places to help you start: 

Link to my article: 

I think this is a good source because… 



Thursday 23 July 2020

A resting heart rate

a resting heart rate is something that helps you breath and it beats for kids resting heart rate beats 40 times per minute and for adults resting heart rate beats 60 to 100 in a minute

Tuesday 21 July 2020

Hurmanu 1 why study history

what historical events in NZ do you know about?

i know about the Te tiriti o Te watangi
 matariki,
 war

 i also know about the Earthquake

what do you know about more recent events in our country?

mosk shooting

covid 19

volcano

Mums dad was tainui, from waikato. its enormously important and its been a source of inspiration and ideas, thinking about what life must have been like for my grand farther and his siblings.

                               

Tuesday 30 June 2020

How to grow food on mars

For the last couple of weeks we have been Doing a little experiment

Don´t forget a comment please


Thursday 11 June 2020

highest to lowest sodium

Hello my name is Harry

Today I will be showing you a google slide of the highest to lowest sodium's. I learned that out of all of the foods on this slide that ham was the highest and the yoghurt was the lowest.


Monday 8 June 2020

Adverbs

Adverbs give more detail about actions

Yesterday I walked to the dairy

Yesterday I walked carefully to the green dairy

The bird sang a song

The tui sang a wonderful song

The singer was good

The young singer was amazingly good

Friday 5 June 2020

tangata whenua


Welcome back to my blog

for the last couple of weeks we have been doing
questions:

Use the questions below to help guide your note-taking. You need to identify the key points from the video and write your own notes. You can rewatch the video if you need to.

Your notes will be used to help you write a summary of the video.

  1. Where did the Māori people arrive from?

            eastern Polynesia they came from fiji, samoa, cook island, tonga

  1. How did they arrive in NZ? 

           They arrived on a waka 


  1. What did they bring to aotearoa?
              dogs ,rats, kumara and crops for the moari´s diet

  1. How did they get food?

          They hunted the moa to get food and they did not know that the moas lay eggs once a year  

  1. Write 3 sentences about the Moriori people

They settled on the Chatham islands
They were passive
i


  1. How did they prove that Māori and Moriori descended from the same people?

They checked out skeletons and DNA


  1. Explain how the Moa came to be extinct

They only laid one egg a year and the rats ate the eggs. Maori thought Moa would be like hens and lay lots of eggs.


  1. Why did Māori choose to settle in the places they did?
They could grow and catch food there, get water and keep warm.


  1. In your word bank, write the meaning of whānau, hapū and iwi

Family,  a group of your iwi,  your tribe/ancestors

  1. Explain the role of the rangatira - list at least 5 roles

They were chiefs, teachers, landowners, guardians of cultural treasures and leaders.

snapper

Hello welcome to my blog

For the last two weeks we have been researching about traditional kai. I did snapper

Please leave a comment


Red snapper can grow to about 40 inches. 

weigh up to 50 pounds.

 live more than 50 years.

Red snapper begin to reproduce when they are about two years old. 

spawning from May to October along rocky ledges or coral reefs.

They live in a wide range of habitats in New Zealand's warmer coastal waters.

Red Snapper – Whole – Bali Sustainable Seafood