Wednesday, 30 March 2016
Everyday Super Heroes!
On May 6th the students of CJFS will be taking part in a school wide parade to celebrate student learning and school culture. The students of room 16 have decided that our theme will be Everyday Super Heroes. This can be someone that they know (mom, dad, friend...) or someone who is famous and has made a positive difference in the world. Students may not choose a comic super hero such and Batman or Superman. When students have chosen their "superhero" they need to fill out the google form here by next Friday April 8th.
Tuesday, 29 March 2016
What Does it Mean to be Canadian?
In Social
Studies, we are learning about the different groups of people who have come to
Canada over the years, their ways of life and appreciate the diversity of
Canada's heritage. Students are applying for a job as a tour guide
for the National Museum of Canada, assigned to a new exhibit that will examine
the diversity and complexity of Canadian identity. The exhibit will share the
stories of the many groups of people who made Canada what it is today. As part
of your application, you will become an expert on one group and create a
presentation to share. By listening to the presentations of the other
applicants, you will make some conclusions about the diversity and complexity
of Canadian identity. The museum curator requires guides who are knowledgeable
about Canada, both past and present.
Students
should have answered the following questions to help guide their research for
the project.
Questions
for Research
• Where did they come from?
• How did they get to Canada?
• How did they live once they were in
Canada?
• How did they adapt to their
environment in Canada?
• Where did they settle in Canada?
(rural, urban)
• Why did they come to Canada?
• Who were they?
• What did they bring with
them?(customs, traditions…)
• What kind of housing did they live
in when they arrived?
• What did they eat? (did they
continue to eat their traditional foods or did they change what they ate)
• How did they feel about coming to
Canada?
• When did they come to Canada?
• What did it mean for them to be
Canadian?
• How did their lives change once they
came to Canada?
When they
are finished their research they need to ask themselves the following
questions:
• Is the information on topic?
• Is there enough information to help
the audience understand my topic?
• Does the information help me
understand how these people felt?
They will
also be working with a peer coach to help them answer these questions and give
them feedback on their research.
The final
step will be to use a visual or oral format to create an exciting and
informative presentation about your selected group that:
• Shares important information from
your research (how they lived, their hardships and their contributions to
present-day Canada)
• Draws conclusions about how they
felt about their lives (their sense of identity) supported with evidence
obtained from your research.
Thursday, 17 March 2016
Electricity at CJFS Assignment
Students in Room 16 explored and discovered electricity at CJFS last week by taking photographs throughout the school.
We are now working to sort these photographs by the following categories:
-Heating
-Lighting
-Communicating
-Computing
-Moving
-Other
These assignments are to be completed over the spring break and can be accessed via Google Drive from home!
Please review the following checklist before sharing with Mrs. Storrier:
- 6 categories with at least 2 pictures per category
- Explanation of WHY these pictures were sorted the way they were
- Titles, labels, etc
To submit these assignment it must be shared with testorrier@educbe.ca
Hope you have a safe and restful break!
Thursday, 25 February 2016
Electricity Quiz
You need to be able to define and give an example of the following?
What is a conductor?
What is an insulator?
What is a resistor?
What is a switch?
What do you need to make a circuit and be able to draw.
What is a conductor?
What is an insulator?
What is a resistor?
What is a switch?
What do you need to make a circuit and be able to draw.
What Makes a Pattern?
Can you find the pattern rule for this pattern? |

Sunday, 24 January 2016
How can where we live in Canada affect the way we live?
The students in room 16 have been studying the regions of Canada and the first people that lived in those regions.
The Royal Alberta Museum has decided to celebrate Canada's history with a very special exhibit called, "Surviving the Wilderness: Canada's Aboriginal Cultures and Heritage." The museum curator has decided to hire our class to create a display for this exhibit. In order to complete this task to the curator's satisfaction, you and your team will need to focus on the main idea for this exhibit: How were Canada's First Nations cultures able to survive in their unique region? The curator is expecting this to be a very large and spectacular exhibit, so he has requested that you and your team create a display for ONE region of Canada, and the First Nations people who live there -- he is hiring other teams to cover the remaining regions and Aboriginal cultures required to complete the exhibit.
Students have completed their initial research and have completed slide shows on Google to present their findings. The next steps will be to create a diorama to represent their region and how their aboriginal group lived on the land. Then they will be creating an artifact to represent the way these people lived.
To see the full assignment please click here
The Royal Alberta Museum has decided to celebrate Canada's history with a very special exhibit called, "Surviving the Wilderness: Canada's Aboriginal Cultures and Heritage." The museum curator has decided to hire our class to create a display for this exhibit. In order to complete this task to the curator's satisfaction, you and your team will need to focus on the main idea for this exhibit: How were Canada's First Nations cultures able to survive in their unique region? The curator is expecting this to be a very large and spectacular exhibit, so he has requested that you and your team create a display for ONE region of Canada, and the First Nations people who live there -- he is hiring other teams to cover the remaining regions and Aboriginal cultures required to complete the exhibit.
Students have completed their initial research and have completed slide shows on Google to present their findings. The next steps will be to create a diorama to represent their region and how their aboriginal group lived on the land. Then they will be creating an artifact to represent the way these people lived.
To see the full assignment please click here
Wednesday, 6 January 2016
Classroom Chemistry Unit Review - Test Monday January 11th
Through out Classroom Chemistry inquiry students participated in various experiments, student-led research and visual learning to begin to understand the role that chemistry plays in our daily lives.
1) Discovering various ways to separate solids
Technique #1: Water
Technique #2: Sieves
Technique #3: Magnets
Experiment #2: Mixing Liquids
1) Discovering various ways to separate solids
Technique #1: Water
"The water made the moss float because it is lighter" (Student from 16A)
*Water was not as effective if materials are the same density

"They were good because if you mixed everything together when you sieve it, the smaller ones go to the bottom and the larger ones go to the top". (Student from 16A)
"If you mix two things that are practically the same size it won't work because they won't seperate" (Student from 16B)
"The magnets worked for the nails because they are magnetic but the other materials weren't (like the glass) so they were stuck together" (Student from Room 16A)

How did you know if something separated, partially separated or did not separate?
-"If you took the eye dropper and you had one that was heavier then the other you could have separated it from that" (Student Room A)
- "If you put two liquids and one is already separated with it and you mix it, and some of it is gone" Student on Room B (on how you know its partially separated)
Check out this great video that reviews vocabulary such as:
homogenous
heterogenous
dissolve
mixture
solution
Reversible and Irreversible Changes
Evaporation - Solids can be recovered by evaporating the water. The water is lost into the air as it evaporates while the solid remains behind.
Decanting - to pour off a liquid to leave behind a sediment
Filtering - Solids can be stirred up to form a suspension which can then be poured into a filtering system. Water will pass through the filter but the insoluble substance
Creating Crystals:
Crystals are a solid unit in which molecules have been arranged in repeating patterns or networks and are created by the process of evaporation
Students in Room 16 created their own crystals with the following procedure:
2. Tie a piece of string to the top of your decoration
3. Pour boiling water into your jar
4. Add 4 tablespoons of borax, continue until the water is cloudy. Once it is cloudy and no more will dissolve you're reached saturation.
5. Wrap the string horizontally onto your stick. Dip your decoration until completely under water.
Carbon Dioxide
Carbon dioxide can be produced through the interaction of solids and liquids. It is odorless, tasteless, colorless, heavier than air and does not burn. We learned about two different ways that carbon dioxide can be produce in chemistry.
Balloon Blow-up
Making Your Own Lava Lamp
Chemical Reactions
A chemical reaction has occurred when a substance changes color, odor, temperature (heat) or produces a gas. In a chemical reaction a new substance is created. Chemical changes are generally irreversible
An acid is a substance that can donate hydrogen ions.
Characteristics:
-Taste sour
-corrosive to materials
-can sting when touched
-become less acidic when mixed with bases
A base is a substance that can accept hydrogen ions.
Characteristics:
-Have a bitter taste
-Do not react when combined with most metals
-become less basic when mixed with acids
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