Here is a quick video about MAKING A DECISION and STICKING TO IT. You may be only 11, 12, 13 but you can develop the habit of making a decision and sticking to it!
Table points up for grabs:
This clip has some big ideas and tricky words - find one word or idea that you dont understand and write it in the comments (20 points per person that comments with a question).
Then try and answer someone's question - (50 points per person that comments with a question)
This landing page is primarily for student discussion starters and student/parent information sharing - check out the tabs below for my views on educational issues and class specific blogsites
Tuesday, 31 July 2012
Monday, 23 July 2012
New Zealand Author Margaret Mahy passed away today. She was both a great author and a great New Zealander....
Writing Lessons from Margaret Mahy
2006 Hans Christian Anderson award winner, Margaret Mahy, has the
following sound advice to aspiring writers:
Be Persistent! Work Hard! Be
Tough! And Read! Read! Read!
How did she go about learning the craft, and what advice does she have for new writers of children's books?
Learn the Craft of Writing
“Most authors teach themselves to write the sort of stories they want to write,’ she says in an interview with Christchurch City Libraries.
“It can be useful to go on courses, or to weekend schools, but mostly
writers learn by writing stories, making mistakes, recognising what the
mistakes are and never making them again.”
Her first published story appeared in the School Journal, published by the New Zealand Education Department for free distribution in schools.
“I love being a writer,” she says, “but I do think I work very hard at what I do, so don't think of being a writer if you imagine it is an easy way of making a living.”
Through these early years Mahy lived in a very simple house overlooking the sea, with very few mod cons. Part of her success can be put down to the fact that she did not try to publish too early, but wrote until she had developed her voice into something entirely unique.
Read more about Margaret Mahy in the excellent biography “Margaret Mahy a writer’s life” by Tessa Duder.
Her first published story appeared in the School Journal, published by the New Zealand Education Department for free distribution in schools.
Work Hard
A single mother, she worked for many years for the Schools Library Service in New Zealand. Supremely disciplined, Mahy wrote relentlessly, late at night after her children were in bed. She was famous for being so tired that she fell asleep standing up, and more alarmingly, while driving home after work.“I love being a writer,” she says, “but I do think I work very hard at what I do, so don't think of being a writer if you imagine it is an easy way of making a living.”
Be Tough
“You need to be tough, because most writers get stories turned down, particularly in the beginning, and you must not let yourself become too discouraged.”Through these early years Mahy lived in a very simple house overlooking the sea, with very few mod cons. Part of her success can be put down to the fact that she did not try to publish too early, but wrote until she had developed her voice into something entirely unique.
Be Persistent
"Be persistent," advises Mahy. She wrote continuously for fifteen years before an American publishing house found one of her stories in the journal, and wrote to ask if she had any more. She had a trunk filled with over a hundred, and they bought every one. Her first commercially published book, ‘The Lion in the Meadow’ was an instant success, and is still selling today.Read Read Read
“I do know writers who don't read much, partly because they are frightened of somehow copying stories they are currently reading. However, I think most true writers are so interested in their own ideas they can't be bothered copying anyone else's, so personally, I think reading lots and lots of books is always a good thing," she says.Read more about Margaret Mahy in the excellent biography “Margaret Mahy a writer’s life” by Tessa Duder.
Sunday, 22 July 2012
This wouldve taken a lot of patience and a lot of rubber bands....
Thanks to Mrs Coffey for sharing the link!
Saturday, 14 July 2012
Much Better Now....
Kakapo -
Check out this short clip at some point - It links to one of your focus areas for the term.....
What do you think the clip is trying to say?
Check out this short clip at some point - It links to one of your focus areas for the term.....
What do you think the clip is trying to say?
Tuesday, 3 July 2012
Where in the world is this....
Not only.....
Where in the world?
But also who lived here?
And how long ago?
Where in the world?
But also who lived here?
And how long ago?
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