Marble run

Kia ora  my name is Kayden and my class is all doing a marble run. I’m still sketching my marble run. It’s still a work in progress and i am working through changes through the prototype. I think when my marble run is finished it will be different to others in my class. When you drop the marble in the triangle from the top it makes its way to the bottom on the way down it bounces on the nails in the board at the bottom there are different slots that gives a player different points with each marble dropped. What do you think i can do to improve my marble run?

 

 

 

At camp

 

While we were at camp we performed a role play called the maori role play.

Manaaki, Antonio, Kortez, Darcy and I came up with the Maori role play. Turekau and Mc’Phill  were our biggest fans.

I was nervous but we smashed it everyone laughed and we won the golden cup.

The role play was about a Maori guy that got Crocs and then another Maori guy stole his one croc and then ran away with it. Darcy gave him his jandal, we all the went to the pub and then afterwards all went and got him a new jandal at the Ware whare.

The jelly layup

This is a video of me accomplishing my trick. A jelly lay up is when you drive into the paint lines towards the hoop and defender, fake one way, and put it up and in the other way. It has taken me since last November to master this.  It was hard because I kept hitting the backboard. Now I am working on doing a jelly lay up while a defender is standing in my way.

What new basketball trick should I do next?

ANZAC

This week I have learn more about poppies and why we use them.

We use them to remember the soldiers that fought for are country in WW1 18000 and in WW2 where 105000 died.

The purple poppies are to remember the animals .The poppies start growing on the soldiers graves. 

So that’s why we use poppies to remember the soldiers. Buying or getting a poppy supports the soldiers and help pay for resources necessary for the soldiers.

1.Wearing a poppy shows the support for the service and sacrifice of our armed veterans and their family’s.

2.The poppy became a symbol of Remembrance and hope for a peaceful future in the aftermath of the First World Ww1.

3.Wearing a poppy is a personal choice reflecting individual and personal memories.

4.During the First World War previously beautiful countryside was blasted, bombed and fought over, again and again. The landscape swiftly turned to fields of mud where little or nothing could grow.

5.The red poppy is worn as a show of support for the Armed Forces communities across the UK, Allied Forces and the Commonwealth.

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