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Wednesday, 28 August 2019

🍣 Sushi 🍣

For the last practical, we made vegetarian sushi. it was quite an easy practical, with a few elements that were rather easy to cut up and to get done. As a group I think that we worked well and were focused throughout the whole lesson and responded well to each other and what was needed of the group in order to be finished on  time for the bell. Everyone contributed and worked on the sushi, with one person spreading the rice, two people cutting up the veggies and another person collecting any extras that we wanted.

The only thing that we need to improve on is keeping to a time frame. While the quality of work is good and high, I think that we really need to produce that quality of work but in a shorter time period. I'm not sure how we managed to finish just before the bell with such a simple recipe, but it is what it is. Next practical, we will make sure that we all have a job, no one is standing around doing nothing and that we are all focused and punctual.

This recipe was really simple and healthy. It would be a good food to put into a lunch box, or to take to work. It has to be made on the day and eaten on the day however so that maybe a problem. But if you cut the veggies the night before and have everything ready in the morning, it's definitely a food that you could take on the go. I recommend having a go at making sushi yourself.

Wednesday, 21 August 2019

Fish and Chips...Fish and Chips make me want to lick my lips...

Image result for homemade  chips
On Friday last week, we made fish and chips based on a Nadia Lim recipe. It consisted on making our own chips out of raw potatoes, seasoning them and crumbing pieces of hoki with Panko breadcrumbs.


What went well?
The group that I work in (the same  as last week) all work well together and meld well as a group. We got everything done on time- the cooking, the cleaning and the dishes all done about five minutes before lunch, which is the earliest we've ever finished which I think is a big improvement. We prepped all the ingredients well and had everything laid out and ready to go when we needed it.

What we could improve on?
Listening to what the other members of group are saying and what we need to. Listening and paying attention to the teacher is also a big thing that we need to all work on as a class. Otherwise, the class all worked well together and to finish early was a huge achievement as we don't usually finish that early
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Tuesday, 20 August 2019

Students addicted to their phones? No way! Hang on...have to check a text...

Are students addicted to their phones? If so, is that a problem?

Some students can't live without their phone. Then, others don't really care whether they have or not. I think it relies on whats going on in someones life, and much they use social media. To me, if you are checking your phone regularly while we are having a conversation, I would come to the conclusion that you are slightly (a lot) addicted to your phone. If you only look at your phone to check the time or to look at messages that could be important, I wouldn't call you addicted. But in our time now, when social media is becoming a staple in our days, a thing that we check so often during the day, more and more students are becoming less engaged and more anti-social. By using our phone, we don't take the time to actually talk face to face, and we aren't using the brain as much. Talking to others connects parts of our brains that wouldn't usually connect. In a world where people are becoming less engaged and less talkative, I think that a high number of teens are becoming anti-social and aren't functioning properly. So, yes. The fact that we are getting more and more attached to our screens is a huge problem in today's society and could heavily impact our skills that we need when you are looking to get a job.


Friday, 16 August 2019

Technology & the way it has changed

Definition:

Technology is the creative process that utilises tools, resources and systems to solve problems. It also enhances control over natural and man made environments to improve our lives




https://www.canva.com/design/DADifQoSThA/3PL1-dcahdBpOb69XF6ntA/view?utm_content=DADifQoSThA&utm_campaign=designshare&utm_medium=link&utm_source=publishpresent


The above is a link to the presentation that Molly and I made concerning the ways that we have been evolving technology. We have been looking at things such as the way that we used to have to dial up the internet and now we can have a modem in the house. There is also the evolution of music, which has come a long way from using vinyl record to now using Spotify. 

Wednesday, 14 August 2019

Making Jam Drops- Week 3 Home Ec

Last Friday, our class made Jam drops for Home Ec. They have a plain biscuit base that we then filled with a small dollop of jam that made them have a hit of colour and flavour. My group consisted of Presayus, Tarm and Starling. The group worked well together and all participated within the group, whether it was measuring  or mixing. Everything had to be measured perfectly, not over mixed and not over or under cooked.

Image result for jam dropsEvery member of the group was skilled in their own way, and we all melded well together and worked good together. Improvements could be that some people didn't understand what was happening and what was needed to be done. But other than that everything went smoothly, and we didn't do anything that was wrong. Well I don't think we did. They were cooked nicely, not over mixed and not burnt at all.

The two staff members that sent through responses, thoroughly enjoyed the biscuits and even brought forward memories of when she was younger and her mother would do the baking on a Friday night. To one staff member the biscuit was a bit flavourless, but the bit with the jam was really good.

Next steps that I could take would to be less controlling and bossy towards members of my group and to make sure that I listen to the teacher and my group members.

Tuesday, 6 August 2019

The Power of One Essay

During the long period of the South African Apartheid, the Black population was treated unfairly and weren’t given the same treatment as the British and Germans. In the film, The Power of One by John Avildsen, we watch a scene where Gideon Duma and P.K are running through the village. Duma tells what it is like living as a black in the Apartheid. By the way he talks to P.K, it is evident that the British and German have no idea what goes on within the villages. Using film techniques such as dialogue, scenery, and sound, Avildsen builds a great scene that conveys the story across to the viewing audience. 


Firstly, the setting of the scene shows you that Avildsen wanted to portray that, during the catastrophic time of the Apartheid, the black population of South Africa was treated unfairly. We see this when Gideon Duma and P.K run past the toilet, with the line going back until the start of the shabby houses. We see this when Gideon Duma and P.K run past the toilet, with the line going back until the start of the shabby houses. The use of scenery and people lets us see that the Black Africans-even though they were in the country first- were inferior to the British and German Africans. This scene can be heavily contrasted with the shot of the Marais household. The luxury that the Marais family lives in while the Black people have to live in small, shabby buildings.


Another technique that is used well is the dialogue that is used while they run. During the short run through the village, P.K and Duma talk about the pressing issues that restrict the Black Africans from doing what they want and from going to school. Which is meant to be a basic human right for all. Avildsen used this to illustrate the fact that the White Africans know barely anything that is happening within the Black settlements. Duma explains that law only allows two percent of the population to go to school and get an education. “The law says that only two percent of us can go to school.“The dialogue and the words chosen to word it let me have insight into the sort of world that the blacks have to live with daily, it makes the audience viewing the movie think about how the characters feel, and what it would be like to live in South Africa as a Black African during the Apartheid times. 


The third technique that stood out to me was the way that Avildsen used to sound. When the two starts running, in the background you can hear the villagers talking to one another. While you can’t hear what they are saying, it adds depth to the scene by showing you that the village is full of energy and is bubbling even though they are stuck in the Apartheid camps. Using both diegetic and non-diegetic sound over the top of one another can show that Avildsen wanted to add another dimension to the scene; whereas if he had only used diegetic sound, the sense of the depth wouldn’t have been there. The scene would have then not had an impact as big as it did on the audience members. The music that is playing while they run gives you the feeling that you are there in the village, with the villagers.  It gives you a feeling that that was what the real Apartheid was like, and what life would have been like if you had colored skin in the 1940s. You (the audience) could feel what life was like and what they did during the day in the village. 


In conclusion, by Avildsen using both verbal and visual film techniques, he paints a vivid picture of the scene. The scene has depth as Avildsen portrayed that the whites knew nothing about the villages they had created. We were given a small sliver into what life was like when only two percent could go to school when there was only one toilet for two hundred people. Avildsen gives us insight into what the lives were like for the blacks compared to the whites. 

Above is the essay that I wrote for my English assessment. I didn't think I was going to publish this to my blog, but here we are. And I'm writing a reflection paragraph.

Last term, we watched the film The Power of One. Throughout this film study, we watched the film twice, and some scenes over and over. With my essay, I'm proud of the links that I made at the end of each paragraphs as that was the one thing that I struggled with quite a bit when we were learning to write paragraphs. Linking my ideas to modern day events both in and out of New Zealand is something that I could improve on as my links are to mostly in-film scenes. This film wasn't something that I would've chosen to watch in my own time, but I did enjoy it. It was that type of feel-good movie that I enjoy, a film that brings people together and gets them talking to one another. The challenging aspect about the film was that I felt bad that I couldn't do anything. Or still can't do anything. But I did find that using the T.A.K.O and G.O.L.D.E.N tools made it easier to write 

Chapter Two- TWTWB


  1. How did the group of teenagers ascend Tailors Stitch?
  2. What are the two special events happening the day after the teenagers leave for the bush?
  3. How many days were they planning on staying? How much food do you think is reasonable to bring, split between 7 teenagers?
  4. Who is the Hermit and what is he supposed to have done? 
  5. Do you think the Hermit will be significant to this story? Why/Why not?
  6. Is their decent down Satan’s Steps into Hell dangerous? Discuss what are the dangers, how could they have made it safer, what would you have done?
  7. Predict what the bridge signifies

  1. With the use of the land rover until they got to the point when they could no longer drive. After that, they packed their packs and walked down Satan’s steps.
  2. The Wirrawee Show and Commemoration Day land on the day they leave.
  3. They were planning to stay for five days. The food that they take should be enough, and in saying that I mean that as long as each person is carrying at least five items each, then they should have enough food for the five day journey
  4. The Hermit is a man that is said to live in Hell. The teenagers made up stories when they were younger about him, he was said to have murdered his wife and baby
  5. I do think that he will be significant to the story as the bridge that they cross in Chapter 2-3 could be a relation to the Hermit. Since they are descending to hell where the Hermit is said to live, they have a high chance of encountering him and him being apart of this story
  6. The descent of the steps is a very dangerous one and they could have done a number of things that would have made it safer for everyone. The dangers involved are people falling. Breaking bones in their body and getting trapped. I personally would have tied a rope at the top, and then tied it around each member of the group, just so they were safe. They also could have made sure that there was someone camping at the Landie, in case of an emergency. 
  7. I would say that the bridge represents the crossover from Earth to Hell. In a sense that is. It could signify them crossing over from “Earth” to “Hell”.