Sunday, October 28, 2007
The Coca-Cola cafeteria
What would your reaction be if you walked into the cafeteria and as you sat down with your friends, the first thing you saw was a huge banner that said the COCA-COLA CAFETERIA, or the DUBBLE BUBBLE GYM? What would you think if the school tried to make money by encouraging you to buy common products?
I definitely think that it is a dumb idea. We're not even allowed to have soda, gum, or any good stuff that they're likely to advertise in school. So, if they decided to call the gym the Dubble Bubble gym, then the Principal shouldn't give out detentions for chewing gum. Even if gum and soda were allowed, I don't think the school should have to resort to advertising. I think they should not advertise the products through us.
What do you think?
Monday, October 8, 2007
Piano...
When you get older, and you have been playing piano for about 5 years, even though you hate it, you won't want to quit, even if it is a pain in the neck. You just keep on doing it, and for some reason, you just won't quit.
It isn't that the piano is a bad thing, it just doesn't give you anything.
Dawn's Ground Rules
First of all, I want you to always remember that the purpose of this blog is to give you really creative, smart, interesting ladies a place to talk with each other and learn from each other about things that are important or exciting for you. The following rules are meant to keep it that way, and they apply to both posts and comments.
1. No insults, name-calling, insinuations or hurtful statements. About any person. Including blog co-authors, friends, family, classmates, teachers, neighbors. Not even about (eewww) boys. Nobody.
1a. If you disagree with something, either take it up with the person who posted it, directly (i.e. not on the blog), or post a response that has the facts of why you disagree, not just your disagreement.
2. No posts about gossip or secrets. About anyone.
3. No personally identifying information -- no full names, ages, addresses, phone numbers, social security numbers, email addresses, etc. in posts. About anyone. Well...full names of public figures are ok, but you get the point.
4. No modifying someone else's posts, unless they give you permission.
5. Give credit where it is due. No plagiarism. And if you get an idea from somewhere or someone, please share the glory.
6. And last, but not least...I AM IN CHARGE! I WILL delete, as necessary. But only if the above rules are broken!
Please remember...blogs are open to a worldwide audience. I'm not saying you will definitely have a worldwide audience, but anyone in the world can hear your conversation. So please keep it civil, safe and interesting.
I think we must expect great things from you all.
Saturday, October 6, 2007
this is another sample posting
here's pink font
here's blue font
here's magenta font
this is fun!
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
Death By Eggplant
Death by Eggplant(by Susan Heyboer O'Keefe) is probably a new book to most readers, but nevertheless, it is an AWESOME one.
Bertie gets the old eighth-grade responsibility test: flour sack baby. How much weirder do these projects get?
Bertie has to survive ten days with this irreplaceable and soon to be cherished flour sack, without it getting harmed in any way. But from that point of view, his baby being harmed is not a problem, because it's simply not an option with a teacher like Bertie's.
Bertie just wants to cook, but the whole world is stopping him. Absolutely no one supports him or his one passion. Grades are tumbling, parents are grumbling, and it's the least Bertie can do to be nice to his parents and get a bully out of the way... not to mention Baby Cleo!
Sympathize with Bertie as you read a clip of his school year in Death by Eggplant!
Lookout for the forthcoming review on FEVER 1793!
Thursday, September 6, 2007
EXTRA, EXTRA, read all about it!
In a Time For Kids magazine we had to read in school, it even said that kids who do 60 minutes of homework per day get the same benifeits as those who do 90 minutes of homework a day. That's thirty minutes of spare time that you could use practicing an instrument, playing a sport, doing crafts, or many other extracurricular activities, or even just talking, or watching TV. Down the drain. Wasted. No, none of those can happen since a whole half an hour is wasted on unnecissary homework. Thirty minutes may not seem like a lot, but if you had thirty minutes every single day of every single week...well, it adds up. I'm not saying that homework is always bad, but too much of anything is bad.
The extra homework that they give us is not always hard, it's just unnessecary.For example in math, they'll give you a full page of two digit addition in FIFTH GRADE! This is not hard, but it is unneeded, unwanted, and uncalled for. (Well, you could think of it as hard, because it is awfully hard to stay focused on homework of this level of intriguingness.) If the newspaper EXTRA ever ran out of extras, they could just ask some school teachers for some everyday homework.
Thank you for reading, and please leave a comment by clicking on the # comments button below.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Jillian's Origami!
You can get a peice of origami made from paper as small as a Post-it note, to paper as big as 8.5 by 8.5 inches. You can get in any color; you just have to specify. Decorate your room, locker, desk, any area you want!