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Friday 27 September 2019

Critical Literacy - Musicals

Vocab : Stereotypes, Construction, Bias, Gender, Masculinity, Femininity

Masculinity stereotypes:
  • Tough
  • Strong
  • Scary
  • Brave
  • Aggressive
  • Tall
  • Good job
Feminine stereotypes:
  • Cleaning
  • Sensitive
  • Delicate
  • Pretty 
  • Quiet
  • Small
  • Soft
  • Passive
Somewhere that's green
11. How are adults constructed in this text?
Women clean and stay at home. Men mowing lawns and doing more physical work

28. What kind of social reality does this text portray?
Women do the more feminine, easier jobs and men have actual jobs and are more physical.

29. How does this text construct a version of reality? 
It constructs a version of reality where boys and girls are stereotyped into being more like their sex such as girls are all dressy and perfect with soft voices and the boys are working hard and really masculine.


27. What view of the world is this text presenting?
That men are always doing hard work as they're more strong and girls are more gentle and caring so they look after their family and keep everything nice and tidy.

So much better
11. How are adults constructed in this text?
Really determined to do what they want and more capable of a range of jobs but males were more likely to get the job than females.

28. What kind of social reality does this text portray?
Her gender didn't really decide if she got the job it was more if she was smart enough to qualify for itl 

29. How does this text construct a version of reality? 
How gender isn't really a huge judgement anymore when it comes to getting a job and it's about how hard you work and but it also constructs the version of reality where blondes are stupid.


27. What view of the world is this text presenting?



Wednesday 18 September 2019

Home Economics - Week 8 Souvlaki

I was not able to cook on Friday as I was sick but I completed other unfinished work instead

Tuesday 17 September 2019

Pe - Gymnastics

In PE we have been doing gymnastics. In the past 3 lessons, we have been getting used to the equipment and learning how to do certain trick or practicing what we already know. Yesterday, Dylan and I spent a lot of time on the floor practicing some of the routines. Since I hate feet, the main ones I enjoy are floor and bar because my socks are allowed on :)

Something I could improve on:
Pacing myself so that I get to all the equipment without getting tired.

Something I could work on:
Practicing the floor routines so I get them really clean.

Something I did well:
Learning some of the tricks on the floor.
Image result for forward roll
This was something I did a lot yesterday.  I managed to do forward rolls pretty well but I spent a lot of time trying to gain control over standing up afterwards so that it looks tidy when I put it into a routine.

Friday 6 September 2019

Figurative Language Revision


  1. ‘As straight as an arrow’
  1. Metaphor
  2. Simile
  3. Onomatopoeia
  4. hyperbole
2.      ‘Lucky lady’
  1. Metaphor
  2. Oxymoron
  3. Alliteration
  4. Onomatopoeia 
3.     ‘Boom!’
  1. Alliteration
  2. Simile
  3. Personification
  4. Onomatopoeia
4.     ‘The city was a jungle’
  1. Metaphor
  2. Personification
  3. Hyperbole
  4. simile

Figurative Language - Hyperbole

Hyperbole  An exaggeration of facts
E.g My head is killing me!

For each of the following sentences, does it have a hyperbole or not. 
  1. I’m so hungry I could eat a whole elephant! (Hyperbole)
  2. May is the nicest month of the year. (Not)
  3. Her brightly coloured dress hurt his eyes. (Hyperbole)
  4. The roof rose up and down to the rhythm of the music. (Hyperbole)
  5. I ate all of my salad for lunch.  (Not)
  6. The dog was so dirty it had a tomato plant growing on its back. (Hyperbole)

Turn each of these into a Hyperbole sentence: The first is done for you.

An old car- The car is older than the hills.
 
A strong wind. The wind was as strong as a gorilla.
A headache. My headache was as painful as giving birth.
A fast computer. The computer was as fast as a cheetah.
A funny movie. The movie was as funny as me.
A hot pan. The pan was as hot as me
The pan was as hot as the sun.
A loud, crying baby. The baby was as loud as a bulldozer.
Heavy groceries. The groceries were as heavy as a wrecking ball.
A scary dog. The dog was as scary as Dylan's mentality.

Figurative Language - Onomatopoeia

Onomatopoeia When words sound exactly like the sound they are describing
E.g Crash! Bang! Boom!

Match the following sentences to the onomatopoeia that describes them.

A plate being dropped on the floor. Smash
A balloon being burst. Pop
A gun being shot. Bang
Someone eating chips. Crunch
A light being switched on. Click
A fierce dog. Growl
A small bell being rung. Tinkle
A door opening 
A bomb exploding Boom
A child screaming.  Screech

Highlight the onomatopoeia in each of the following sentences:

  1. The old engine chugged down the rickety track. 
  2. The hard-hit tennis ball whistled by my ear.
  3. The truck’s brakes screeched in the distance.
  4. The rain beat on the metal barn roof.
  5. His guitar strings twanged the sad melody. 
  6. The old floor creaked as we walked slowly across it. 
  7. The fire cracked and popped on a cold night. 
  8. The snake hissed when I startled it.
Leaves crunched as kids ran around.
Dylan roared at her stretched out tights.
The bomb went boom as Natasha ran away from the crime scene.

Wednesday 4 September 2019

Home Economics - Week 7 Pizza

In foods last week on Friday we made pizza. First, we made the base out of yogurt and self-raising flour n a bit of salt. Once we'd made the base everyone went and got different vegetables and meats to add onto it. Our group got ham and salami which we cut into strips and put into two separate bowls and then we moved onto the vegetables. We cut up the vegetables which were capsicum, pineapples, onions, and mushrooms. Next, we had to grate the cheese and we couldn't have any leftover. We rolled the dough and cut it into 4 even lots and made them into a ball before squishing them out into a circle. we spread the pizza base sauce and then added whatever ingredients we wanted on top and left them to cook. Our group worked pretty well and efficiently and I think we shared out the jobs pretty well and the pizza tasted good too.


Figurative Language - Personification


In each sentence, an object or idea is personified.  Identify the object or idea that is being personified and explain which human trait or action is applied to the object or idea.

The wind whispered through the gloomy forest. 
What is being personified?
The wind
What human trait or quality has it been given?
Whispering

The gardener lovingly added the manure to his crops believing he was making happy flowers.
What is being personified?
Flowers
What human trait or quality has it been given?
Being happy

As we walked through the scorching desert, the sun beat down on us.
What is being personified?
The sun
What human trait or quality has it been given?
Beating

The lumberjack leveled the many trees into a clearing and his chainsaw sang its deadly song.
What is being personified?
The chainsaw
What human trait or quality has it been given?
Being able to sing

As Alice searched for her missing pencil, she said sarcastically, “Well, I guess it just walked off of my desk.”  She looked at her classmates accusingly.  
What is being personified?
Her missing pencil
What human trait or quality has it been given?
Walking

When Monica walked through the shoe store, each shiny pair of high heels called out to her.
What is being personified?
High heels

What human trait or quality has it been given?
Calling out to someone

The noisy door screamed as it opened.
The leaves danced in the wind.
The hoodie was hiding from me in my closet.

Figurative Language - Alliteration

Alliteration is when a consonant sound is repeated over and over. 
E.g The time ticked tediously by. The warm wind wafted across the window.

  1. The sun sizzled the swimmers skin.
  2. I accidently ate an awful apple.
  3. Beth borrowed Barry’s books before biology. 
  4. Slipping and sliding, I stumbled in the snow and slush.
  5. Many mysterious men mumbled messages.
  6. The gallant goat gobbled gobs of garbage greedily
  7. The rapidly rising river rushed rampantly.
Finish these sentences with your own alliterations.

Red roses rarely run randomly.
While wandering west, warren waltzed weirdly.
The tired traveler tried to tan.

Figurative Langauge - Similies and Metaphors

Similes are where you compare two unlike things using the words ‘like’ or ‘as’
e.g He ran like the wind. She was as strong as a lion.

Metaphors are where you compare two unlike things using by saying something is something else. 
e.g He is a stonewall, unbreakable by force. The rain is glass shattering against the street.

    Use a word from the box to complete each simile
    1. The cloth was as black as coal
    2. The wet ball was as slippery as an eel
    3. My little sister is as playful as a kitten
    4. The top of this table is as smooth as silk
    5. I’ve been as busy as a bee
    6. The lamb is as white as snow


    Copy these sentences onto your blog and highlight the simile in each:

    1. My bedroom was as black as a cave in the depths of the earth.
    2. The classroom after school became as noisy as a gaggle of gabby geese.
    3. The cat capered along the fence top like a tightrope walker on the hire wire. 
    4. My anger crashed into me like waves against the shore.



    For each of these sentences is it a simile or a metaphor?

    1. As slippery as an eel. similie
    2. Arnie was a man-mountain. metaphor
    3. He was a lion in battle.  metaphor
    4. She is as pretty as a picture. similie
    5. The striker was a goal machine.  metaphor
    6. The torch lit up the room as if the sun had already risen early. similie
    7. The moon was a misty shadow. metaphor
    8. My friend has a face like thunder.  metaphor


      Dylan is as high as a kite
      Natasha is as smart as Wikipedia
      Jaime is as cool as an ice cube

      Tuesday 3 September 2019

      Figurative Language - Idioms

      Idioms- say things that are understood in ordinary English and do not mean what they say. Idioms are not meant to be taken literally; e.g ‘My teacher is the bomb!’.

      Figurative Column
      Literal Column
      a.Just chill out dude! 
      It means: Calm down

      b. ‘He is driving me up the wall!’
      It means: He's driving me crazy
      c. ‘His nose is out of joint’
      It means: You're annoyed with something

      d. The teacher is a real scream
      It means: The teacher is fun
      e. What is she cooking up in her mind right now?
      It means: What is she thinking of

      f. He gave her the eye. 
      It means: You're flirting with them