This is a Year 3 and 4 class blog at South Hornby School. We are in the Uru Mānuka Cluster. This is a place where we will share our learning. Please note that some of it will not be complete, it will be my first drafts. Remember to be positive, thoughtful and helpful when you leave a comment. Please check out our individual blogs as well.
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This week we have been reading about how cars have changed over time. Then we watched a video about different types of transport that have b...
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Freyja has created a storyboard of the EPIC story 'The Clothesline'. Good job, Freyja. Keep up the great work!
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On Thursday, some of the Year 4's in our learning space were lucky enough to go to Cross Country Zones for the first time! We were...
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After learning about a new species of penguin who can actually fly, the children got some scissors out and helped Mr Smith cut the grass edg...
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Evening team, I was absolutely blown away with the work that was shared with me yesterday and I am equally as proud nearing the end of day 2...
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As part of Samoan Language Week we have been solving some Samoan themed math problems. Here is today's problem and how we solved it. ...
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Day 2's shared learning is from Josh, Kate and Liam (see pictures below). These three made sure that their adverts were colourful and ey...
Hi Luke, wow you are definitely an expert on 4WDs. Do you have one with a bumper bar, wynch, light bar and spot lights? Sounds perfect for taking up to Mesopotamia. My Dad has a Toyota Landcruiser which I drive sometimes, it has bull bars but no spotlights. It is a lot of fun. The brilliant blue of your toyota is eyecatching, did you use special pens to colour it in?
ReplyDeleteHi everyone, great to see such fantastic home learning!
ReplyDeleteBella, fabulous acrostic poem about sunshine, it really makes me yearn to be eating icecream on a hot sunny day. I like all the shark photos on your poster, so many sharp teeth! I had no idea they were nocturnal, I always imagined them swimming around all day. I wonder why they prefer to be awake at night? Great maths too, what a superstar!
Arav, wow, 170 is A LOT of islands!! I calculated 134 Tongan Islands are uninhabited, have I got that right? I wonder why no one lives on them? Awesome maths calculations too, well done. Your bright orange suns looks so warm, I had no idea it had lava inside it, or that it was so far from Earth.
Putauaki, your Blazing Sun poster is magnificent, especially the sun itself, so bright! Look at that cool yak poster, they live in Tibet, am I right?
Abigail, what an intriguing rock collection, are they all rocks you found yourself? Such beautiful colours.
Princess, so many interesting facts, I can see you have been working really hard on your research. I had no idea that 1 million earths could fit in the sun. The sun must be gigantic.
Ben, wow you've worked so hard on your counting forwards and backwards in 1s, 10s and 100s, great skills to have!
Mason J - so much information to be had on yaks! I had no idea their lungs were large due to the thin air. How clever. Three different predators, must be scary to have to watch out for wolves, grizzly bears and snow leopards. What would you do if you came across one?
Great rap Mason! Sounds like a lot of fun stealing treasure on the high seas.