I am a student at in Uru Mānuka. In 2020 I was a year 8 and in 2021 I will be a year 9. This is a place where I will be able to share my learning with you. Please note....some work won't be edited - just my first drafts, so there may be some surface errors. I would love your feedback, comments, thoughts and ideas.
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Wednesday, 20 November 2019
Monday, 11 November 2019
Watashi no jiko shōkai (Japanese self introduction)
Here is my self-introduction or Jikoshokai
Tanoshinde (Please Enjoy!)
Tanoshinde (Please Enjoy!)
Friday, 1 November 2019
Hurumanu - Renewable energy
Hurumanu - Renewable Energy
Aim: To make a solar-powered oven.
Materials:
Conclusion
Aim: To make a presentation that investigates different renewable energy's.
Section 1: Title Page
Make a title page that incorporates all renewable energy 's Hydro, Solar, Wind and Wave.
Section 2: Definitions
Define and provide a picture of each energy type.
( Hydro, Solar, Wind, Wave )
Section 4: Renewable Energy in the future.
List 10 ways that renewable energy will be used in the future to replace our current activities.
Materials:
- Pizza box
- Scissors
- Glad wrap
- Tape
- Newspaper
- Straw
- Marshmallow
- Biscuit
- Tinfoil
- Vivid
- Ruler
- Black plastic
Steps:
- Cut out the flap on the lid of the pizza box so that it is 5cm around the edge
- Sellotape some tinfoil on the inside of the flap
- Sellotape some glad wrap so that the hole you have cut on the pizza box lid is covered over with glad wrap
- Get a square piece of black plastic and sellotape it in the inside of the bottom of the box
- Get the newspaper and screw it up into a roll shape and make 4 so it is on each side inside the box. Get one of the newspaper rolls and put them inside the box on the side. Do the same with the other 3
- Get a straw and put it onto one the flappy bit and on the glad wrap inside
- Inside the newspaper, rolls grab a plastic plate and put it inside
- Get your 3 biscuits and put inside
- Get your 3 marshmallows and put on top of each biscuit
- Make sure you write your name on it with vivid
Time
|
Temperature
|
0
| |
15
| |
30
| |
45
|
Conclusion
Aim: To make a presentation that investigates different renewable energy's.
Section 1: Title Page
Make a title page that incorporates all renewable energy 's Hydro, Solar, Wind and Wave.
Section 2: Definitions
Define and provide a picture of each energy type.
- Hydro Energy
- Solar Energy
- Wind Energy
- Wave Energy
( Hydro, Solar, Wind, Wave )
- Type: Hydro
- Is it used in NZ? Yes it has
- Other Countries that use it? Albania, Paraguay, Congo, Nepal, Namibia, Zambia, Tajikistan, Norway, Ethiopia, Kyrgyzstan
- How is it used to generate electricity? Hydropower plants capture the energy of falling water to generate electricity. A turbine converts the kinetic energy of falling water into mechanical energy. Then a generator converts the mechanical energy from the turbine into electrical energy.
- Draw and label a diagram of the main parts of the electricity generator? This can be done on paper and uploaded or on a drawing program on your device. I do not want any Internet images or pictures. They must be hand-drawn using a ruler and labelled.
Section 4: Renewable Energy in the future.
List 10 ways that renewable energy will be used in the future to replace our current activities.
Tuesday, 29 October 2019
Hurumanu - wind power
Measuring weather.
Definitions:
- Anemometer: An instrument for measuring the speed of the wind, or of any current of gas.
- Beaufort wind scale: The Beaufort scale is an empirical measure that relates wind speed to observed conditions at sea or on land. Its full name is the Beaufort wind force scale
- Monsoon: A seasonal prevailing wind in the region of South and SE Asia, blowing from the south-west between May and September and bringing rain.
- Typhoon: A tropical storm in the region of the Indian or western Pacific oceans.
- what is it when the weather is really nice and turns to hail: it is called climate variability because the weather can instantly change to anything.

MATERIALS
- two sticks
- four cups
- four strips of sellotape
- one pin
- one pencil with an eraser at bottom
- one sticky note
STEPS
- Tape the cups on each end of the stick x2.
- make a cross when you have done.
- stick a pin through the rubber at the top of the pencil.
Group Investigation.
Groups size: 5
Roles:
Groups size: 5
Roles:
- Timekeeper
- Counter
- Recorder
- Anemometer Manager
- Wind Manager
- Mount the anemometer in a place that has full access to the wind from all directions.
- When the timekeeper says "Go", the counter in each group will count how many times the marked cup passes them in one minute and write it down.
- Repeat the above step four (4) times and record the number of spins on the chart.
FINDINGS
- Record how many times it spins and record it in the table below.
- You will need to time them and count the number of spins.
Place name on school grounds | Number of Spins in 15 seconds | |
1. | Field | 20 |
2. | Old J Block site | 15 |
3. | Grass hill in the quad | 10 |
4. | Tennis Court gate | 3 |
- USING A4 PAPER DRAW YOUR RESULTS ON A GRAPH.
- TAKE A PICTURE OF THE GRAPH AND UPLOAD IT TO YOUR BLOG
WHICH IS THE WINDEST AREA AND WHY? the field because it has a cold climate there
WHICH IS THE CALMEST AREA AND WHY? the tennis court gate because there is a lot of friction stopping it
WHERE IS THE BEST PLACE ON LAND TO BUILD A WINDMILL? up high in the hills.
CONCLUSION:
Wind
Beaufort
Force |
Wind Speed
(KPH) |
Spins
|
Indicators
|
Terms Used in NWS Forecasts
|
0
|
0-2
|
0
|
Calm; smoke rises vertically.
|
Calm
|
1
|
2-5
|
10
|
Shown by the direction of wind smoke drift, but not by wind vanes.
|
Light
|
2
|
6-12
|
40
|
The wind felt on face, leaves rustle; ordinary vanes moved by wind.
|
Light
|
3
|
13-20
|
80
|
Leaves and small twigs in constant motion; wind extends light flag.
|
Gentle
|
4
|
21-29
|
130
|
Raises dust and lose paper; small branches are moved.
|
Moderate
|
5
|
30-39
|
190
|
Small trees in leaf begin to sway; crested wavelets form on inland waters.
|
Fresh
|
6
|
40-50
|
250
|
Large branches in motion; whistling heard in telephone wires; umbrellas used with difficulty.
|
Strong
|
7
|
51-61
|
320
|
Whole trees in motion; inconvenience felt walking against the wind.
|
Strong
|
8
|
62-74
|
390
|
Breaks twigs off trees; generally impedes progress.
|
Gale
|
9
|
75-87
|
470
|
Slight structural damage.
|
Gale
|
10
|
88-101
|
550
|
Seldom experienced inland; trees uprooted; considerable structural damage occurs.
|
Whole gale
|
11
|
102-116
|
640
|
Very rarely experienced inland; accompanied by widespread damage.
|
Whole gale
|
12
|
117 or more
|
730+
|
Very rarely experienced; accompanied by widespread damage.
|
Hurricane
|
Spins per minute
Wind speed ( kph)
Beaufort Scale
Field
80 13-20 3
Old J Block site
60 2 0
Grass hill
40 6-12 2
Tennis Court Gate
12 10-20 1
Spins per minute
|
Wind speed ( kph)
|
Beaufort Scale
| |
Field
| 80 | 13-20 | 3 |
Old J Block site
| 60 | 2 | 0 |
Grass hill
| 40 | 6-12 | 2 |
Tennis Court Gate
| 12 | 10-20 | 1 |