String Waves

Students had fun creating standing waves on a string. They were able to calculate the wavelength of their wave.

Mrs. Wong

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Advanced Geometry

Geometry students have been exploring scale drawings with the use of proportions and ratios.

Mrs. Wong

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Making Graphs

Students studied conic sections this month. They learned how to graph circles, ellipses, hyperbolas, and parabolas.

Mrs. Wong

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Pendulums

Physics students have been exploring the pendulum this month. They studied the effects of varied string length, angles, and materials.

Mrs. Wong

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End of the Year

We enjoyed our last few classes together, as we reminisced about how fast the year went and how much fun we had, we also reviewed the major themes and events to know for the Regents and practiced the thematic and DBQ essays. We brought in snacks to share to make the intense study sessions a little more bearable. But, they paid off, as students did very well on their Regents; several students were just one question away from a perfect score!

Mrs. Lapp

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Current Events

Seniors worked on their final exam projects, which involved reading up on the news and finding an article related to economics. After finding something of interest, students wrote a paper explaining an economic concept that we studied and then relating it to the current event that they researched. Students turned in a variety of projects: on the oil spill and supply and demand, on New York City cupcakeries and candy shops and the free market, on the NBA and absolute/comparative advantage, on Microsoft and monopolies.

Mrs. Lapp

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All good things come to an end

8th grade has learned a lot about the world. And now it’s time to prove it. Finals are coming up!

Miss Kleinschuster

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Be careful what you eat

Chapter 28 centers around the treatment of the human body – that is, how we treat ourselves. Our bodies are temples for the Living God, and we shouldn’t abuse them. Obesity is now recognized as a growing and deadly trend; the flip side takes the form of eating disorders that deny any form of nutrition. Seventh grade is learning that poor food choices can lead to the development of noninfectious diseases, and so can drug abuse. Just because a drug isn’t addictive doesn’t mean it isn’t dangerous, and there are plenty of drugs that can be obtained legally at a certain age, but can still be abused. Now is the time to instill wise habits. Stay healthy and stay clean!

Miss Kleinschuster

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Inertia

However, an object in motion will stay in motion – that is the law. Newton’s First Law, to be exact. Sixth grade is continuing to learn about physics and the concept of inertia. Inertia is the tendency of an object to stay in motion, or, if it was at rest, to stay at rest. Scientists of Sir Isaac Newton’s time were incorrect in their assumptions about motion. They thought it required constant force to keep something moving. It’s really that other variables come into play: gravity, friction, an object in the way, and so forth. An object’s direction or speed will only change if something acts upon it; that’s Newton’s Second Law. Interestingly, Newton may not have made his many discoveries about math and motion if he had not been escaping the break-out of a plague at his university. And what if that killer apple had never fallen on his head? That’s what got the ball rolling… so to speak.

Miss Kleinschuster

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WATER WATER EVERYWHERE

Water is the universal solvent, able to break down many chemical bonds. It can also physically break something down. And that’s why a sudden rainstorm after a drought can actually be quite dangerous to soil: it can move loose earth around very, very quickly. 8th grade is studying the water cycle, the formation of rivers, and the power behind moving water. It covers 70% of the globe – and very little of it is actually drinkable. You wouldn’t think you’d need to conserve it since it’s right there in the ocean, but… what’s happening to our oceans even now?

Miss kleinschuster

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