Tuesday, December 29, 2020

SLJ: Ultraviolet drawing

 Hello,

Today, we had to make a drawing that includes our home, and an ultraviolet indicator. We had to make our home, then make it like a ultraviolet home. I don't really know how to explain this, but,

Here it is:


One is the highest. 11 is the lowest. That is all.

4 comments:

  1. Kia ora Mahrosh,

    Shannon again from the Summer Learning Journey.

    Thank you for sharing what you think the UV levels would be in your home. I really like how you had the fridge and pantry as lower UV levels. How did you measure these levels?

    Although the actual challenge was to build your own UV indicator and describe how it works, I think you have done a great job of predicting the levels in your house. It shows a lot of originality and creativity and I love how you’ve acknowledged that UV rays can still reach someone even inside the home!

    Have you considered making a portable UV indicator that you could hang on your fridge so your family would know when to ‘slip, slop, slap’?

    Ka kite anō,
    Shannon (SLJ)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi again,
      I didn't really measure them, I asked my dad and he helped me understand and told me that most rooms are hot. I don't really know what 'slip,slop,slap' means.

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    2. Hi Mahrosh,

      That's super cool that your dad helped you! Did you go off which room would be the hottest?

      "Slip slop slap" is a Kiwi and Australian way to say put on sunscreen. Sunscreen can help protect us from the UVs. It's a bit of slang, shorter than saying "put on sunscreen". Do you know any other slang phrases?

      Bye for now,
      Shannon (SLJ)

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    3. Hi again,
      Thanks for replying,
      Thanks for telling me what 'slip,slop,slap,' means. For the bedrooms, I saw that one had the big window, and that more sunlight could go inside it. No,I don't know any of the other.

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