Mary and Elizabeth were cousins who needed to complete tasks. They each had to finish three things: the first was to clean their rooms, the second was to do the dishes, and the third was to take out the trash.
This document discusses special things. It does not provide any other details about the topic. In just two words, "Special Things", the document gives a very broad and vague description without any specifics or examples to explain what special things are being referred to.
The pond is a small body of fresh water surrounded by land. It is home to many types of plants and animals including lily pads, frogs, fish, and ducks. During the summer, the pond stays warm, but in winter it often freezes over with a layer of ice on the surface.
This story is about Mr. Spud who realizes he is out of potatoes for dinner. He goes to Tillie's shop to buy more potatoes. At the shop, Tillie shows off her new cash register by having customers request items for it to beep. After several funny requests, the cash register starts making strange noises and catches on fire. Everyone evacuates safely and Tillie faints, so she is taken to the hospital. The fire brigade puts out the fire. That night, Mr. Spud can't sleep because he thinks he has forgotten something.
Granny's garden is full of colorful flowers and vegetables. She spends her mornings watering and tending to her plants. All of the neighbors enjoy seeing the beautiful garden and sometimes stop by to buy produce from Granny's garden.
St. Brigid asked the King of Leinster for land to build a convent. The king agreed to give her as much land as her cloak would cover. When Brigid laid down her cloak on the ground, miraculously it began to grow, stretching over many acres of rich pastureland. Surprised by this event, the king granted Brigid the land that her cloak now covered to build her convent.
St. Patrick was born in Wales but captured and taken to Ireland as a slave when he was young. While working as a shepherd in Ireland, he heard God's voice telling him to escape and preach the Gospel to the Irish pagans. He became a priest and used the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity to the Irish people. St. Patrick spent his life teaching about Christianity in Ireland and died there on March 17th. Today, his feast day on March 17th is celebrated worldwide by Irish communities with parades and parties in his honor.
This document discusses special things. It does not provide any other details about the topic. In just two words, "Special Things", the document gives a very broad and vague description without any specifics or examples to explain what special things are being referred to.
The pond is a small body of fresh water surrounded by land. It is home to many types of plants and animals including lily pads, frogs, fish, and ducks. During the summer, the pond stays warm, but in winter it often freezes over with a layer of ice on the surface.
This story is about Mr. Spud who realizes he is out of potatoes for dinner. He goes to Tillie's shop to buy more potatoes. At the shop, Tillie shows off her new cash register by having customers request items for it to beep. After several funny requests, the cash register starts making strange noises and catches on fire. Everyone evacuates safely and Tillie faints, so she is taken to the hospital. The fire brigade puts out the fire. That night, Mr. Spud can't sleep because he thinks he has forgotten something.
Granny's garden is full of colorful flowers and vegetables. She spends her mornings watering and tending to her plants. All of the neighbors enjoy seeing the beautiful garden and sometimes stop by to buy produce from Granny's garden.
St. Brigid asked the King of Leinster for land to build a convent. The king agreed to give her as much land as her cloak would cover. When Brigid laid down her cloak on the ground, miraculously it began to grow, stretching over many acres of rich pastureland. Surprised by this event, the king granted Brigid the land that her cloak now covered to build her convent.
St. Patrick was born in Wales but captured and taken to Ireland as a slave when he was young. While working as a shepherd in Ireland, he heard God's voice telling him to escape and preach the Gospel to the Irish pagans. He became a priest and used the shamrock to explain the Holy Trinity to the Irish people. St. Patrick spent his life teaching about Christianity in Ireland and died there on March 17th. Today, his feast day on March 17th is celebrated worldwide by Irish communities with parades and parties in his honor.
The document discusses different types of trees and how their shapes are influenced by environmental factors. It provides details on various tree species found in Ireland, describing whether they are deciduous or coniferous. Key points covered include how trees form wide crowns to maximize sunlight exposure, conifers being shaped to shed snow, and palm trees with flexible leaves withstanding hurricane winds. Different tree species such as oak, sycamore, horse chestnut, ash, holly, and beech are highlighted with descriptions of their appearances and leaf characteristics.
Limestone is a soft rock that is often grey and contains fossils. It wears away easily in the rain. Marble is a decorative stone that comes in various colors like white, red, green, and black and has veins throughout. It is shiny. Granite is a very hard, durable rock that is pink and grey with small sparkles when light hits it. It is often used for long-lasting building materials.
The document summarizes key events in Irish history from the 16th to early 20th centuries. In the 16th century, English monarchs like Henry VIII and Elizabeth I sought to establish English control over Irish lands. Hugh O'Neill and O'Donnell led an Irish rebellion in 1580s with Spanish support, but it ultimately failed. In the 17th century, a civil war in Britain impacted Ireland and Oliver Cromwell confiscated Irish lands. Penal laws in the 18th century banned Irish culture and Catholicism. The United Irishmen led by Wolfe Tone sought equal rights but their French-backed rebellion in 1798 was defeated. The 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin against British rule lasted a week before the rebels surrendered.
Scratch Lesson 4: Create a Scary Movie_primaryschoollessonsSeniorInfants
The document provides instructions for a Scratch lesson that teaches students how to:
1) Understand how the stage grid coordinates work and how to move a sprite to a specific location using x and y values.
2) Make a sprite glide to different locations on the stage by dragging code blocks.
3) Add background music to the project by selecting music files from the sounds library.
This lesson teaches students how to make a character dance in a video by changing the background to a stage, making the character dance to music, and saving the project file to a USB drive so it can be worked on elsewhere. Students are instructed to choose a character, make it dance to music on a stage background, and save the file by navigating to their USB drive to export their creative project.
Timeline of Historical Events for a Primary School ClassroomSeniorInfants
This document outlines major periods in human history from prehistoric times through the 20th century, including the New Stone Age, Bronze Age, Ancient Greece, Iron Age, birth of Jesus, Medieval Age, rule of the Normans, Renaissance, Age of Exploration, French Revolution, Irish Famine, and World War 2.
Italy is a boot-shaped country that sticks out into the Mediterranean Sea. Rome is its capital and largest city, with a population of over 2.6 million people. Italy has mountains like the Alps in the north and the Apennines running down the center. The climate varies from cold in the north to hot in the south. Some of Italy's most important cities include Rome, Milan, Naples, Florence, and Venice.
The Renaissance began in Italy in the 15th century and was characterized by a revival of interest in classical learning. Wealthy patrons funded artists in cities like Florence, where figures like Lorenzo de' Medici supported the work of sculptors, painters, and writers. Engineers like Brunelleschi made architectural innovations, such as designing the dome of Florence Cathedral without internal supports. Michelangelo was one of the period's great artists, producing famous works like his David sculpture and paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The printing press helped spread new ideas rapidly during this period of cultural and intellectual rebirth.
One Point Perspective is a technique where all lines in an image appear to converge at a single vanishing point, usually located at the center of the image. Objects further from the viewer appear smaller, with the smallest objects located at the vanishing point in the center. Perspective is demonstrated through tiles that appear to converge at a single point, showing how one point perspective makes objects seem further away as they approach the vanishing point.
Leonardo Da Vinci was born in 1452 in Vinci, Italy. He was a renowned scientist, artist, and inventor who studied nature extensively. He carefully dissected human cadavers to study anatomy, which influenced his highly detailed drawings. As an inventor, he designed flying machines based on his observations of birds. As an artist, his most famous works include The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa, known for its enigmatic smile and realistic depiction of skin and muscles. Over time, the Mona Lisa has inspired many parodies and satires by other artists.
The document discusses the history and key considerations of flying machine design. Leonardo Da Vinci was the first to study bird flight and design parachutes and ornithopters. His ideas led others to design planes with fixed wings that did not flap. The Wright brothers added propellers to pull air and curved wings to increase speed. Successful design requires considering factors like wing shape for lift, weight distribution, streamlined shape, and power source to move wings through air such as engines or gliding.
This document discusses how light travels through different mediums like air, water, and oil. It describes an experiment where the viewer looks at a pencil through an empty glass, a glass filled with water, and a glass filled with oil and water to see how the light bends differently. The document then discusses that white light is made up of the colors of the rainbow and can be split using a prism. It explains how different colored objects reflect different colors of light and how mixing colored paints produces different results than mixing colored lights. The primary colors of light are identified as red, blue, and green and how combining them in different ways produces other colors or white light.
This document discusses how light travels through different mediums like air, water, and oil. It instructs the reader to draw three glasses, one empty, one with water, and one with water and oil on top to observe how a pencil appears differently based on the medium. Light bends more when passing through oil than water. The document also discusses that white light is made up of the colors of the rainbow and can be split using a prism. The way objects appear colored depends on which colors of light they reflect. Mixing colored lights produces different results than mixing paints. The primary colors of light are red, blue, and green, and combining them in different ways produces other colors like yellow, magenta, and
Information for Primary School students on stars and constellations. This PowerPoint uses some slides from http://www.slideshare.net/winga1sm/star-powerpoint-3308182 and the rest has been created by me.
What do you think these buildings were usedSeniorInfants
The document provides instructions for students to divide a page into three sections, draw a picture of a building in each section, and write a sentence guessing the purpose of each building. It then asks students to write a few sentences under each guess explaining what they learned about each building's actual purpose after receiving more information. It also lists additional instructions asking students to open their Earthlink book to specific pages and answer questions on their computer.
The document discusses different types of trees and how their shapes are influenced by environmental factors. It provides details on various tree species found in Ireland, describing whether they are deciduous or coniferous. Key points covered include how trees form wide crowns to maximize sunlight exposure, conifers being shaped to shed snow, and palm trees with flexible leaves withstanding hurricane winds. Different tree species such as oak, sycamore, horse chestnut, ash, holly, and beech are highlighted with descriptions of their appearances and leaf characteristics.
Limestone is a soft rock that is often grey and contains fossils. It wears away easily in the rain. Marble is a decorative stone that comes in various colors like white, red, green, and black and has veins throughout. It is shiny. Granite is a very hard, durable rock that is pink and grey with small sparkles when light hits it. It is often used for long-lasting building materials.
The document summarizes key events in Irish history from the 16th to early 20th centuries. In the 16th century, English monarchs like Henry VIII and Elizabeth I sought to establish English control over Irish lands. Hugh O'Neill and O'Donnell led an Irish rebellion in 1580s with Spanish support, but it ultimately failed. In the 17th century, a civil war in Britain impacted Ireland and Oliver Cromwell confiscated Irish lands. Penal laws in the 18th century banned Irish culture and Catholicism. The United Irishmen led by Wolfe Tone sought equal rights but their French-backed rebellion in 1798 was defeated. The 1916 Easter Rising in Dublin against British rule lasted a week before the rebels surrendered.
Scratch Lesson 4: Create a Scary Movie_primaryschoollessonsSeniorInfants
The document provides instructions for a Scratch lesson that teaches students how to:
1) Understand how the stage grid coordinates work and how to move a sprite to a specific location using x and y values.
2) Make a sprite glide to different locations on the stage by dragging code blocks.
3) Add background music to the project by selecting music files from the sounds library.
This lesson teaches students how to make a character dance in a video by changing the background to a stage, making the character dance to music, and saving the project file to a USB drive so it can be worked on elsewhere. Students are instructed to choose a character, make it dance to music on a stage background, and save the file by navigating to their USB drive to export their creative project.
Timeline of Historical Events for a Primary School ClassroomSeniorInfants
This document outlines major periods in human history from prehistoric times through the 20th century, including the New Stone Age, Bronze Age, Ancient Greece, Iron Age, birth of Jesus, Medieval Age, rule of the Normans, Renaissance, Age of Exploration, French Revolution, Irish Famine, and World War 2.
Italy is a boot-shaped country that sticks out into the Mediterranean Sea. Rome is its capital and largest city, with a population of over 2.6 million people. Italy has mountains like the Alps in the north and the Apennines running down the center. The climate varies from cold in the north to hot in the south. Some of Italy's most important cities include Rome, Milan, Naples, Florence, and Venice.
The Renaissance began in Italy in the 15th century and was characterized by a revival of interest in classical learning. Wealthy patrons funded artists in cities like Florence, where figures like Lorenzo de' Medici supported the work of sculptors, painters, and writers. Engineers like Brunelleschi made architectural innovations, such as designing the dome of Florence Cathedral without internal supports. Michelangelo was one of the period's great artists, producing famous works like his David sculpture and paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The printing press helped spread new ideas rapidly during this period of cultural and intellectual rebirth.
One Point Perspective is a technique where all lines in an image appear to converge at a single vanishing point, usually located at the center of the image. Objects further from the viewer appear smaller, with the smallest objects located at the vanishing point in the center. Perspective is demonstrated through tiles that appear to converge at a single point, showing how one point perspective makes objects seem further away as they approach the vanishing point.
Leonardo Da Vinci was born in 1452 in Vinci, Italy. He was a renowned scientist, artist, and inventor who studied nature extensively. He carefully dissected human cadavers to study anatomy, which influenced his highly detailed drawings. As an inventor, he designed flying machines based on his observations of birds. As an artist, his most famous works include The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa, known for its enigmatic smile and realistic depiction of skin and muscles. Over time, the Mona Lisa has inspired many parodies and satires by other artists.
The document discusses the history and key considerations of flying machine design. Leonardo Da Vinci was the first to study bird flight and design parachutes and ornithopters. His ideas led others to design planes with fixed wings that did not flap. The Wright brothers added propellers to pull air and curved wings to increase speed. Successful design requires considering factors like wing shape for lift, weight distribution, streamlined shape, and power source to move wings through air such as engines or gliding.
This document discusses how light travels through different mediums like air, water, and oil. It describes an experiment where the viewer looks at a pencil through an empty glass, a glass filled with water, and a glass filled with oil and water to see how the light bends differently. The document then discusses that white light is made up of the colors of the rainbow and can be split using a prism. It explains how different colored objects reflect different colors of light and how mixing colored paints produces different results than mixing colored lights. The primary colors of light are identified as red, blue, and green and how combining them in different ways produces other colors or white light.
This document discusses how light travels through different mediums like air, water, and oil. It instructs the reader to draw three glasses, one empty, one with water, and one with water and oil on top to observe how a pencil appears differently based on the medium. Light bends more when passing through oil than water. The document also discusses that white light is made up of the colors of the rainbow and can be split using a prism. The way objects appear colored depends on which colors of light they reflect. Mixing colored lights produces different results than mixing paints. The primary colors of light are red, blue, and green, and combining them in different ways produces other colors like yellow, magenta, and
Information for Primary School students on stars and constellations. This PowerPoint uses some slides from http://www.slideshare.net/winga1sm/star-powerpoint-3308182 and the rest has been created by me.
What do you think these buildings were usedSeniorInfants
The document provides instructions for students to divide a page into three sections, draw a picture of a building in each section, and write a sentence guessing the purpose of each building. It then asks students to write a few sentences under each guess explaining what they learned about each building's actual purpose after receiving more information. It also lists additional instructions asking students to open their Earthlink book to specific pages and answer questions on their computer.