Print out this page. As you do the assignments, write down the day that you completed each assignment. This will be your attendance record. Also, you can use this to record your scores.
Monday
Math
Find the correct time. Choose “nearest minute.” Play until you get 10 correct.
Round to the nearest ten. Play until you get 10 correct.
Round to the nearest hundred. Play until you get 10 correct.
Science
Atoms, Molecules, Steam Engines, Matter, States of Matter
Take a small piece of aluminum foil. Rip it in half. Again. And again and again and again until you can’t any more. If you could keep ripping it until it was the smallest piece of aluminum in the world, that would be an atom, an aluminum atom. Everything in the world is made up of atoms. Different types of atoms come together in different combinations called molecules to make up everything you see in the world.
Take a look at how small atoms are. Use the slider and move to the right to see smaller and smaller things. Can you find the atom?
Atoms are so small that five million hydrogen atoms would fit on the head of a pin. That’s 5,000,000 atoms.
Go back to the main menu. Click on Advanced. Click on the dog.
Round to the nearest 100. (If you don’t remember this, watch this video)
Science
Here is a periodic table to look at or to print out in color with picture examples. (Print it out if you can and put it in your notebook.) This is called the periodic table of elements. Each box is one element. Everything in the world, including you, is made up of these elements. They are listed on this table in order of their weights. Number one is hydrogen. It is a gas. It is the lightest element.
Look at the picture of Columbus. Look at a map of his most famous voyage. Here are twopaintings of imaginings of what it was like when Columbus landed. What do you observe?
Read the bar graphs. This site will only let you do a certain number of problems a day. Just answer the problems until it tells you that you have reached the limit.
Write about what people thought about Christopher Columbus’ ideas.
Play the Christopher Columbus video. There are different ideas about Christopher Columbus. There are many different ideas about many events in history. People have different perspectives.
if you don’t know any words look them up in a dictionary and write them down in your notebook.
read the lesson.
Writing
Write a list of ten pairs of rhyming words, five of which have to be at least two syllables long. If you need help getting started, here are a few words for which you could find rhymes: darker, rounded, lighten.
This year you are going to do more with typing. Complete lesson 1 of this typing program. If you want to create the free account to keep up with your typing progress.