Posts Tagged ‘Language Arts’

Stocks

 

In language arts, we read a book called The Westing Game. In The Westing Game there’s a girl names Turtle Wexler who likes to do stocks. Mrs. Sprague and Mrs. Donnelly worked with us to set up formulas in a spreadsheet, then Mrs. Donnelly let us spend $20,000 fake dollars on stocks. The stocks I invested in were Netflix, Starbucks, Nike, Target, Costco, and Amazon. My final gain was $755.13.

My TED Like Talk

My TED Like Talk was some book recommendations. The books I had chosen to talk about were the Warriors series, the Wings of Fire series, I have a blog post about both of those series if you want to check it out, I also talked about Orphan Island, Front Desk, and the Lockwood & Co. series.

At the beginning of the project we watched some TED Talks and chose what we wanted to share. Then we researched about our topic and created a presentation. After we finished our presentation, we practiced then presented. After we presented, classmates would have some questions and compliments.

It was a fun experience and I liked presenting to the class.

 

The Last Cuentista and My Ideal World

Sora

The first book we read in language arts class was The Last Cuentista by Donna Barba Higuera. The book is about a girl named Petra Peña. What happens is that her, her family, and some other people have to leave Earth and go to a planet called Sagan and leave behind everyone else because Halley’s Comet is going to destroy the Earth. The ride to Sagan takes hundreds of years so all the passengers except the people that are taking care of them need to basically go to sleep for the whole ride. When they wake up, Petra is the only one who remembers Earth. She has to keep stories alive and save the people. To keep stories going, you have to tell them to other people then they pass them along and keep the stories going and alive.

My ideal world is my version of perfect. Everyone is happy, there’s candy meadows, people can fly, everyone is at peace. I have another blog post about my ideal world, check it out! Ideal worlds really depend on the person making them, they are really fun to make.

After we had made our ideal world and our cuentos, we made books! We had Peg Gignoux come and she helped me and my class make books. We did ink printing then we collaged, then we did folding and cutting, and putting on our covers.

Thanks for reading! I hope you read The Last Cuentista!

My Ideal World


In Language Arts, we had to design our dream world! This is how I imagine mine.

My planet is in the Milky Way and it is called Shnoopia. The sunset and sunrise colors can change; one day the sunset could be a purple to blue gradient for example. The clouds are made of cotton candy.

There are meadows and forests like Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory. You can go on clouds and float around on them and even though they are made of cotton candy; they aren’t sticky. There are also floating islands where people can live and play. There is no pollution and the temperature is 75˚F. Plus, there are no bugs.

Candy is not bad for you. There are also no bad germs or  sicknesses. People have wings so they can fly around. There are animals from Earth and mythical creatures like dragons and unicorns. Plus, the animals and people get along well. The people are nice and care for each other, the planet, and the animals. People’s clothes are made out of dyed animal furs. People make dye out of different flowers and berries.

In terms of currency, there is no money but people do trade things. Specific people are better at making clothes and they get their food from trading clothes for it.

As for food and water, people are more like hunters and gatherers. They hunt for their food and they gather berries and other fruits and vegetables. The water on the planet’s flavor changes depending on what the person drinking likes. There are no farms and people don’t own any animals.

That is what my dream planet is like. You should make one too!

Wisdom Tales Project

For Language Arts, we had to work on a project about a story from the book Wisdom Tales from Around the World. I was in a group of three with me, Elena, and Louise. We did a Scratch project about a story called Feeding His Clothes, it is a Sufi story from the Middle East. Here is Our Scratch Project. The story is about a man named Mulla Nasrudin, that tried to get into a banquet but wasn’t let in because his clothes were ratty. He got some nicer clothes and he was able to go and before he ate, he put food on his clothes. I think the moral is don’t judge people on what they look like.

What we did is split up the jobs, Elena put in the facts like the story and moral, Louise made the buttons, and I did the coding.

This project was really fun and I enjoyed doing it.