Tuesday, April 29, 2008

小学生造句

Dear children,
Just wanted to share something funny.
Hope you don't write sentences like these!!

1.题目: 原来 小朋友写: 原来他是我爸爸。
老师评语: 妈妈关切一下

2.题目: ..一边...........一边............ ..
小朋友写: 他一边脱衣服 ,一边穿裤子.
老师评语: 他到底要脱还是要穿啊~~

3.题目: 其中
小朋友写: 我的其中一只左脚受伤了。
老师评语: 你是蜈蚣?~~

4.题目: 一... 就....
小朋友写: 一只娃娃就要一百块。
老师评语: 老师笑到不行..

5.�目: 你看
小朋友写: 你看什么看! 没看过啊

6. 照样造句 例题: 你 (唱歌) 我(跳舞)
小朋友写: 你(好吗 ) 我(很好)
老师评语: 你在写英文翻译吗??

7.照样造句 例题: 别人都夸我( ),其实我( )
小朋友写: 别人都夸我( 很帅 ),其实我( 是戴面具的)。
老师评语: 什么面具这么好用???

8.题目: 好... 又好..
小朋友写: 妈妈的腿,好细又好粗...
老师评语: 那到底是细还是粗?

9.题目: 陆陆续续
小朋友写: 下班了,爸爸陆陆续续的回来。
老师评语: 你到底有几个爸爸呀?

10.题目: 皮开肉绽
小朋友写: 停电的夜晚,到处很黑,我吓得皮开肉绽!
老师评语: 看到这句... 老师佩服你。

11.题目: 欣欣向荣-比喻生长美好的样子。
小朋友写: 我的弟弟长得欣欣向荣。
老师评语: 孩子,你弟弟是植物人吗...
还有一个更瞎的… 小朋友写: 欣欣向荣荣告白。
老师评语: 连续剧不要看太多~~

12. 题目: 谢谢....因为......
小朋友写: 我要谢谢妈妈,因为她每天都帮我写作业......
老师评语: 原来你的作业是妈妈写的!!!!!!!

13.题目: 难过
小朋友写: 我家门前有条水沟很难过。
老师评语: 老师更难过......

14. 题目: 天才
小朋友写: 我3天才洗一次澡。
老师评语: 要每天洗才干净~~

15.�目: 一… 便…
小朋友写: 我一走出门,对面就是便利商店。
还有一‚€更瞎的… 小朋友写: 哥哥一吃完饭,就大便。
老师评语: 造句不要乱造...

16.�目: 又.....又.....
小朋友Œ‘: 我的妈妈又矮又高又瘦又肥。
老师评语:你妈妈......是怪物吗?

17. 果然
上课小朋友说:昨天我吃了水果,然后又喝了凉水
老师:这是词组,不能分开造句。
小朋友又说:老师,我还没说完呢,果然晚上我拉肚子了!
老师:…………

18 况且
小朋友:一辆火车经过,况且况且况且况且.....
老师:……………

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

All About Earth (Happy Earth Day!!!)

On August 16, WE ARE ABLE TO SEE A PARTIAL LUNAR ECLIPSE'S MOON SET IN SINGAPORE!!!!
Here is the link to see the Lunar Eclipse's path:http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/LEplot/LEplot2001/LE2008Aug16P.GIF
There is also a Solar Eclipse on 1st August but it is only visible from Canada to Mongolia.
That's all for this year's eclipses but there is a change in moon now!

The Moon and the Magnetotail
04.16.08

The moon. Credit: NASA Behold the full moon. Ancient craters and frozen lava seas lie motionless under an airless sky of profound quiet. It’s a serene, slow-motion world where even a human footprint may last millions of years. Nothing ever seems to happen there, right?Wrong. NASA-supported scientists have realized that something happens every month when the moon gets a lashing from Earth’s magnetic tail.“Earth’s magnetotail extends well beyond the orbit of the moon and, once a month, the moon orbits through it,” says Tim Stubbs, a University of Maryland scientist working at the Goddard Space Flight Center. “This can have consequences ranging from lunar ‘dust storms’ to electrostatic discharges.”Yes, Earth does have a magnetic tail. It is an extension of the same familiar magnetic field we experience when using a Boy Scout compass to find our way around Earth’s surface. Our entire planet is enveloped in a bubble of magnetism, which springs from a molten dynamo in Earth’s core. Out in space, the solar wind presses against this bubble and stretches it, creating a long “magnetotail” in the downwind direction.Anyone can tell when the moon is inside the magnetotail. Just look: “If the moon is full, it is inside the magnetotail,” says Stubbs. “The moon enters the magnetotail three days before it is full and takes about six days to cross and exit on the other side.”It is during those six days that strange things can happen. Fine particles of dust on the moon's surface can actually float off the ground when they become charged by electrons in Earth's magnetotail.During the crossing, the moon comes in contact with a gigantic “plasma sheet” of hot charged particles trapped in the tail. The lightest and most mobile of these particles, electrons, pepper the moon’s surface and give the moon a negative charge.On the moon’s dayside this effect is counteracted to a degree by sunlight: UV photons knock electrons back off the surface, keeping the build-up of charge at relatively low levels. But on the nightside, in the cold lunar dark, electrons accumulate and surface voltages can climb to hundreds or thousands of volts.Imagine what it feels like to be a sock pulled crackling from a dryer. Astronauts on the moon during a magnetotail crossing might be able to tell you. Walking across the dusty charged-up lunar terrain, the astronauts themselves would gather a load of excess charge. Touching another astronaut, a doorknob, a piece of sensitive electronics -- any of these simple actions could produce an unwelcome discharge. “Proper grounding is strongly recommended,” says Stubbs. Earth's magnetic field responds to the solar wind much like an airport wind sock: It stretches out with its tail pointing downwind. The ground, meanwhile, might leap into the sky. There’s growing evidence that fine particles of moondust might actually float, ejected from the lunar surface by electrostatic repulsion. This could create a temporary nighttime atmosphere of dust ready to blacken spacesuits, clog machinery, scratch faceplates (moondust is very abrasive) and generally make life difficult for astronauts.Stranger still, moondust might gather itself into a sort of diaphanous wind. Drawn by differences in global charge accumulation, floating dust would naturally fly from the strongly-negative nightside to the weakly-negative dayside. This “dust storm” effect would be strongest at the moon’s terminator, the dividing line between day and night.Much of this is pure speculation, Stubbs cautions. No one can say for sure what happens on the moon when the magnetotail hits, because no one has been there at the crucial time. “Apollo astronauts never landed on a full moon and they never experienced the magnetotail.”The best direct evidence comes from NASA’s Lunar Prospector spacecraft, which orbited the moon in 1998-99 and monitored many magnetotail crossings. During some crossings, the spacecraft sensed big changes in the lunar nightside voltage, jumping “typically from -200 V to -1000 V,” says Jasper Halekas of UC Berkeley who has been studying the decade-old data. The moon spends about six days each month inside Earth's magnetic tail, or "magnetotail." “It is important to note,” says Halekas, “that the plasma sheet (where all the electrons come from) is a very dynamic structure. The plasma sheet is in a constant state of motion, flapping up and down all the time. So as the moon orbits through the magnetotail, the plasma sheet can sweep across it many times. Depending on how dynamic things are, we can encounter the plasma sheet many times during a single pass through the magnetotail with encounters lasting anywhere from minutes to hours or even days.”“As a result, you can imagine how dynamic the charging environment on the moon is. The moon can be just sitting there in a quiet region of the magnetotail and then suddenly all this hot plasma goes sweeping by causing the nightside potential to spike to a kilovolt. Then it drops back again just as quickly.”The roller coaster of charge would be at its most dizzying during solar and geomagnetic storms. “That is a very dynamic time for the plasma sheet and we need to study what happens then,” he says.What happens then? Next-generation astronauts are going to find out. NASA is returning to the moon in the decades ahead and plans to establish an outpost for long-term lunar exploration. It turns out they’ll be exploring the magnetotail, too. More Information:Earth’s magnetotail isn’t the only source of plasma to charge the moon. Solar wind can provide charged particles, too; indeed, most of the time, the solar wind is the primary source. But when the moon enters the magnetotail, the solar wind is pushed back and the plasma sheet takes over. The plasma sheet is about 10 times hotter than the solar wind and that gives it more "punch" when it comes to altering the charge balance of the moon's surface. Two million degree electrons in the plasma sheet race around like crazy and many of them hit the moon's surface. Solar wind electrons are relatively cool at only 140 thousand degrees, and fewer of them zip all the way down to the shadowed surface of the moon's nightside.

Tony PhillipsNASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Also want to see how beautiful is Earth on moon here is the link!
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/earthday_gallery/

Beautiful right???

Hope you like it but everybody likes to know are there any disasters?

The Last of Neoguri Terra
MODIS captured the image at 11:30 a.m., local time (3:30 UTC) just as Neoguri was winding down from a Category 2 to a Category 1 storm. Three hours before the image was taken, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center estimated the storm’s winds to be 180 kilometers per hour (110 mph or 95 knots). When the center issued their next report three hours after the image was taken, the storm’s estimated winds speeds had dropped to 160 km/hr (100 mph or 85 knots). The Joint Typhoon Warning Center predicted that the storm would weaken into a tropical storm before striking mainland China on April 19.

OMG A HURRICANE!!!

Next time I will post about global warming!!!

Are we Gonna To Die SOONER or LATER??

NASA Statement on Student Asteroid Calculations

WASHINGTON -- The Near-Earth Object Program Office at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., has not changed its current estimates for the very low probability (1 in 45,000) of an Earth impact by the asteroid Apophis in 2036.Contrary to recent press reports, NASA offices involved in near-Earth object research were not contacted and have had no correspondence with a young German student, who claims the Apophis impact probability is far higher than the current estimate.This student's conclusion reportedly is based on the possibility of a collision with an artificial satellite during the asteroid's close approach in April 2029. However, the asteroid will not pass near the main belt of geosynchronous satellites in 2029, and the chance of a collision with a satellite is exceedingly remote. Therefore, consideration of this satellite collision scenario does not affect the current impact probability estimate for Apophis, which remains at 1 in 45,000.

Who believes the german boy is correct or NASA is correct?
Anyway WE ARE GOING TO DIE BETWEEN THE AGE OF 30-40 YEARS OLD!!!!
WILL NASA STOP THE ASTERIOD???
If the asteriod hits the Earth in Alantic Ocean(Which NASA calculated where it lands) It will create A SUPER HUGE TSUNAMI!!!! And the dust particles will block the sunlight for ???(uncalculable) years!!! We will die because of lack of food due to the food chain.No plants, no animals then no humans!!! So sad!!!><

Pray to God that we will survive and pray that the asteriod won't hit Earth like the dinosaurs!!

GOLDEN RULES

rules...
while using the blog...


1. No Profanities (i.e. vulgarities)


2. No destructive criticism


3. Be responisible for what you've posted, always leave your name


4. Let's learn together!

Monday, April 21, 2008

P5 Adventure Camp

Dear 5I-ians,

Hope everyone enjoyed yourself during the P5 Camp.
Besides having to put up with mosquitoes, cramped sleeping huts, lack of rest etc, I believe it was an unforgettable experience for all of you.


Many of you overcame your fear for dirt (during the nature rumble), fear for water (during kayaking), fear for heights (during the confidence rope course). You must have learned more about yourself during these three days at Jalan Bahtera.


Moreover, I saw your spontaneity while playing games, sportmanship when cheering for your team mates, self discipline and self control while waiting for instructions (and food!), leadership skills in organising your group as well as the willingness to serve while performing your duties during meal times.


I am truly proud of all of you!

Here are some pictures I took of you during the camp!

Cheers, Miss Lee

Stanford missing his pillow already

On the way there


Grouchy black cat
Zhi Han serving food

Someone is hungry!

Dirty but happy after nature rumble!

Look who's that over the wall?!

Braving the height

Guess who's this?

HUNGRY HUNGRY!!!!

Who's that and what is he trying to do??

Campfire's burning!!

Hao Ming helping Reefver with his barang barang

Happy to go home!

Carrying the flag with pride

Bernice and her dirty plate

Guess who's that?

Another one?
Mosquitoes had a feast on Shi Zhang's blood!

Home Sweet Home soon....


Where are my things?!
Lost and found!

That's all folks!

View the rest of the pictures here. (will update the link soon!)

Hugs,

Miss Lee

Miss Lee's Underwater Adventures

Hi dears,
In one of the English chapters, we read about people's adventures.
Here is mine!
I went diving for the first time over the Good Friday weekend.
It was simply an amazing experience.
Here are some pictures.

A rainbow we saw on the first morning!



Clear waters

Our Airtanks were carried out into the sea by these boats.

Yes that's me!
A cuttle fish!

Corals, Reef fishes and kunning

My favourite fish- puffer fish

Up close and personal with a turtle Magnificent!

Bat fish

Finding Nemo (clown fish)

A sleeping puffer (eyes not closed as it does not have eye lids)

A crab camouflaging itself by carrying two corals on its body


A colourful sea slug

A cuttle fish with a blue starfish


An eel





Monday, April 7, 2008

Hello!

Hello, my dear children!
Finally I have created a blog for our class use :)
Do visit this site often for news and information.
Yours Sincerely,
Miss Lee