BONES!! (Muscles, too) 10/4/20

This week we were working on our human body assignment. We talked a little about this topic last week, and we had to cut out all the bones of the human body that we will be learning. First, we had to cut them out, then we had to glue them on a huge sheet of paper so they make up a skeleton. We then had to cut out the certain muscles we were learning and put them in the correct places. Next week, we are going to finish that up, and then we get to decorate these bodies with markers and clothe!

For homework, we had a choice of either defining words on a google slide or reading the first chapter in our science book. I chose to do the slide and I am learning more about our amazing bodies.

Hopefully next week it won’t be so rainy and we can continue working on our chairs, but for now, we will continue learning about bones and muscles.

  • I wonder if we will have any field trips this year??
  • Will we get homework on the same week we have to do NWEAs?
  • Will we go back into quarantine??

Thanks, and bye!

 

Awesome Chairs! 9/27/20

Hi! This week our science classes consumed of first, finishing our insect project, and second, making chairs! You are probably thinking “how could 7th and 8th graders actually make well made chairs?”, well here is the answer: a “chair recipe”, help from Shane and Tom, and a great thinking mind! We were allowed to decorate our chairs however we like, but first we had to do the thinking part of the project. We had to measure, check to see if our measurements were correct, and–OH YEAH! We got to handle power tools! At first, I wasn’t scared at all, but I wasn’t expecting the tool to vibrate so much! It was so much fun. Thanks to Shane for thinking of this to do in class!

(These chairs looked somewhat like the ones we made in class)

 

 

 

 

For the design part, I am going to draw a frog and put a quote I like behind him. I can’t wait!

-Who thought to name chairs “chairs”?

-How big is the biggest chair in the world?

-How big is the biggest chair that’s ever been in the White House?

-Audrey

Minty the Mean Mosquito 9/20/20

It’s Minty the Mean Mosquito.

Hey, guys. Today was exhausting. Today my friends, my family, and I went out to find some food, when all the sudden we saw that we were being followed by an owl. Guess the owl was hungry, because once we noticed him, he came at us so fast, like a dog to his frisbee. Which was horrible because mosquitos only go about 1 to 1.5 miles an hour. Some of us escaped, but most of us were eaten. Not too big of a deal, though, because I was not captured and swallowed by the blood-thirsty animal. After the owl seemed like he had had his full, he retreated back to his nest. Good thing he did, because the rest of the mosquitos were getting really hungry, now. The whole reason we went out of our houses was to eat. We searched a little longer until, finally, we found some good, young, juicy, children in the shade. Perfect. The children were only a few years old, and they didn’t know how to kill us properly, so we got an amazing meal. We were spitting our saliva into the children and sucking up tasty blood with our needle-like mouths into the squishy flesh, when out came the dreaded bug spray. We had to go back home. The taste is AWFUL!!!!! No mosquito can stand it.

This day has been terrible!! Especially when the average mosquito gets about 5-millionths of a liter of blood when they go feeding.

Anyway, I hope tomorrow will be better. Thanks for following up!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-Why are some people more allergic to mosquitoes than others?

-Who made up 7 days in a week?

-Why are our national colors red, white, and blue?

-Why do chrysalises have to hang? Do they die if they get knocked down?

Lollie The Lady Bug 9/13/2020

Hello everyone!!

It’s Lollie the Little Ladybug!

I haven’t posted in a while, and everyone has been asking me how I am. Well, to answer that question, I am doing great!! I have been traveling the forests of Michigan, eating all the aphids I find. I have been learning new tricks from fellow ladybugs that I have been meeting along the way. I have been learning so many new things! I have learned that there are about 5,000 of us in the world, and 500 in America. We might also eat about 5,000 aphids in our lifetime. I also learned about a strange song ladybugs sing to each other for fun. I’ll show you the lyrics.

Ladybug! Ladybug!

fly away home

your house is on fire

and your children all gone.

 

All except one,

and that’s little Ann

for she crept under the frying pan.

 

That’s pretty much it! Scary I know, but it has a catchy tune.

That’s all for now! Thanks for checking in, I’m still an awesome ladybug.

P.S. Technically I am a lady beetle, not a ladybug.

 

-Do you think that song is creepy?

-Do you like pasta? If so, what is your favorite kind?

-What is the most cuddly animal in the world?

Gordon the Green Stink Bug 9/6/2020

Hello, friends!

Thanks for checking in with Gordon the Great Green Stink Bug!

When I was just an itty bitty nymph, I was accidentally brought to the U.S. from Asia. I am having a great time eating up all the flowers and leaves in the family’s garden! There is a problem, though. It is getting into the fall season, and that means it’s getting colder, especially at night. Stink bugs, believe it or not, do get cold. So, I walk into the house, to get warm. When I wake in the morning, my family always tries to CATCH me!! But I always get away. I don’t know why they try to hurt me, I am just an innocent stinky bug.

Anyway, I learned a new fact today! Stink bugs only grow to be around 17 mm! and I am 17 mm!! So cool!!

Have a great weekend, everyone! Thanks!

Wait for another post the following week!

 

 

 

Online school is making me crazy! 4/26/20

This week has been very crazy, and I think my classmates can agree. I know I am feeling like I don’t want to be on a screen doing schoolwork for the whole day. I don’t think it is healthy, either.

Being on an electronic makes it hard for kids to sleep at night, and boy do I need my sleep. It can also raise children’s risk for atteYour kid's first computer: What to look for – SheKnowsntion problems, anxiety, and depression. After I am on the computer for a few hours, I feel a little irritated and crabby. 

-If you were a student at Hogwarts, which teacher would want?

-If you could travel in time, where would you go?

-If you could only have one flavor of ice cream for the rest of your life, what would it be?

PS. Since we are on a computer or other electronic all day, can we have the weekends to do something WE want to do? just for sanity.

PPS. I got this information at Healthline.com.

PPPS. Just speaking my mind, do not take this personally.

Timeline Stay at Home 4/11/20

Hi! This week was my first week of online classes. Some parts were hard, some parts were fun, and some parts were just very interesting. This week Shane gave us homework about a timeline about 4.5 billion years of earth into 24 hours. We could do this assignment outside with a line, or something else that could represent time. I chose to make a clock and write about the times of change. Shane gave us a really cool video to watch, and it was amazing.

This time has been hard for a lot of us, but it is giving me time to do things I don’t usually have a lot of time for. Like, I have been reading a lot more, and I make dinner with my sister for our parents on Thursdays, we have been going outside more, and FaceTiming a lot more, too.

Here is a picture of my timeline project.

 

 

 

 

 

 

-How long does it take for a pine tree to grow to its limit?

-What is Alicia Keys’s favorite food?

-What is the top sport in England?

Gum Super Grossness!!!!3/8/20

This week we only had three days of school, but  we had lots of fun. Lars and I got teamed up to do a disgusting project. One of us had to chew gum for two minutes (that was me), and one of us had to write down the data. First, we had to measure the piece of un-chewed gum (length times width times height), Then we weighed it. Then Lars timed me while I chewed the gum. Once that the two minutes were done, I spit the gum out and we weighed it, then I had to roll the gum out and put it in the graduated cylinder. Then I did it again, and again, we repeated this SEVEN TIMES! Once we were done, we had to draw a graph and fill out a paper. At the end of class all of us got a piece of gum. I made the poor decision to eat the gum right away, even after the whole class of chewing gum and spitting it back out and chewing it again.

The gum was so gross!!!! When it was put in the graduated cylinder, it looked a worm! I decided it was better to just stretch it out instead of having to roll it out for the graduated cylinder. at first ti was very sticky, and after being dunked in the water a couple of times, it got very very chewy.

How many 6th graders have done this before?

Would cows enjoy eating meat instead of grass?

What do mice eat?

Science Expo 3/1/20

Audrey Mason

This week we had to do the science expo, my class had to do the Wax Museum. I was Jane Goodall, and here is the speech that I wrote and had to memorize.

Hello I am Jane Goodall

It was 1957 when Dr Louis Leakey applied for a grant to start a 6 month study of chimpanzees in the wild. He believed that the study might lead to new observations about the behavior of early man. Leakey wanted an amature, someone who could think with a new mind. Impressed by my lifelong passion for animals, Leakey selected me, his 26 year old secretary, for the quest. I had not gone to university because my family was not  wealthy, so I had no training, and I didn’t have a scientific degree before I went on the expedition. My mission was to get close to chimps, to get to know them and be accepted, I wanted to be as close to talking to them as possible. This began an over 55 year study of social and family interactions of chimpanzees.

I was born  April 3, 1934 in London, England. I had grown up wanting to live in the jungle some day. 

  The reason I was not afraid of the jungle was because people weren’t talking about that sort of thing at that time, I didn’t really know what the chimps could do to me, and I always thought that if I didn’t bother the animal, the animal wouldn’t hurt me. 

Once I got to Gombe, Africa I would go out every day to see if I could get close and learn about the chimps and study them. Back then, there was no research on chimpanzees because no one had done what I was doing before, and so I didn’t know much about the chimps. I would write in my journal about my days in Gombe, I would make graphs like a scientist would, I would draw pictures of the chimps. I would go out every single day in any weather from dawn until dusk. Most of the time I would find the chimps in groups, or a single chimp, and sometimes I wouldn’t find them at all. First, before they got used to me, whenever they saw me coming close, they would run away as fast as possible. But I never thought of quitting, “I would have forever lost all self respect if I had given up.”

In those days it was thought not safe for a young girl like me to go out into the wild alone, so my mother volunteered to go with me. My mother had been the one that had believed in me my whole life. At first the chimps seemed they were never going to get used to me being there and I was always worried that time was going to run out. But, after months of waiting and not being able to get close to the chimps, they had finally accepted me! 

Once that I could recognize them by their looks, I started naming them, names like David Greybeard, and Fifi. Scientists would have never done this because they thought that people shouldn’t get attached to them if something were to happen, but I hadn’t gone to college, and didn’t know this. The chimps were a community, they are like us in so many ways. I found that the chimps all had different personalities. I observed them patting each other on the back, giving each other hugs and kisses, and sometimes tickling. They would even spend hours grooming one another. 

We have always thought that man was the tool maker, but here was one of the chimps I was studying, using a tool that he had made out of grass, to get his food from a termite mound. I sent this research to Leakey, and it was published. This was one of my biggest discoveries. Some people did not like my research because they thought that I was an untrained young girl. However, Leakey believed in my research and was able to get a grant from the National Geographic Society to keep my study going, but they would also be sending a photographer out to document the chimpanzees. His name was Hugo van Lawick. At first I did not like the company in my little paradise, but I grew to enjoy being around him, and eventually, I grew to love him. Later, we had a baby, Hugo Eric Louis, nicknamed: Grub. I knew that being a mother was helping me better understand the chimps. 

Little did I know the chimps had an aggressive side to them, I observed them fighting and killing each other, just as if they were in a war.  At first I thought that they were just like humans, but kinder and more civilized. But exactly like us they fought, too.

This study has led to so many discoveries, including other species using tools, social and family interactions, and that chimpanzees are very similar to humans. I am now 85 years old and now my purpose is to preserve the wild habitat and help animals from going extinct.  

Thank you

 

Was Jane Goodall ever put in any life threatening situations?

Was her child, Grub, ever put in any life threatening situations?

What did she usually have to eat in Gombe?

 

 

Save the ELEPHANTS!!!! 2/9/20

On January 28, in the village of Amliya Toli, Jharkhand, an elephant fell into a dry well that was 25 feet long. The people that were in the village awoke to hear the cries of the elephant. The people called the forest department right away. The forest department knew that they couldn’t just lift the elephant out of the well, they had to think. They thought of the Archimedes’ principle, which according to the article means that when something is in enough water, like a boat, it will rise and float. So, the rescue team filled the well up with water until they could get the elephant out. As soon as the elephant was out, it went away in to the near by forrest.

It took the team three hours with three big pumps to get it out. In the video you can see people cheering the elephant on in the background. You can definitely tell that the village really cared about the elephants safety.

Here is the article.

https://www.dogonews.com/2020/1/31/rescuers-in-northeast-india-use-the-archimedes-principle-to-save-an-elephant-in-distress

-What is the elevation in Telluride, Colorado?

-If a turtle and a rhino had a baby what would it look like?

-How many people in the world actually grow up to have their dream job?