Ella

"I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious" - Albert Einstein

Code Girls- Notes

Code Girls by Liza Mundy tells the story of the female codebreakers during World War II. It focuses on the experiences of employed women during the war and how they solved countless codes which was crucial at the time.

Although I don’t really enjoy reading nonfiction texts, Code Girls was very engaging since it talks about the war from the perspective of female codebreakers. This nonfiction book is during a time period where women was treated unequally and was not encouraged to work. In Code Girls, it talks about the challenges women faces, not only from society but also from the war.

Below is some notes I took on Code Girls this unit.

The page above is a central idea I found at the beginning of Code Girls, which was that women during World War II was not appreciated enough.

At first I used a table layout to organize my notes, but I found that to be messy since I kept adding more evidence. So I rewrote it in a mind map layout, which makes it easier to see all the points.

Although there was many evidence of women not being appreciated enough in this in the book, I chose three main ones that I think really shows the point. The central idea was talked about throughout the whole story, majority of the code breakers were women, because men had to work overseas. However, after the war ended, the only ones that was celebrated was men.

I included reasoning in green to show how I thought about the quote and how it is connected to the central idea.

This is another note book page about a central idea I found in the book. It is that women can do just as well as men, which is pretty similar to the first central idea that I found. This time, instead of writing how women was not treated equally, most of the evidence is about the accomplishments they had made. I chose to write this in a table layout, including evidence and thoughts.

This page above was a preparation on a debate we did in class. Our book club decided on the claim of women were essential to America’s victory in World War II. I found two evidence talking about how women accomplishments were so useful that they began to be needed in other places. I color coded the evidence and reasons to show which reasoning is about which evidence.

This page was to write a social issue and then find evidence throughout the book to make connections. The two issues I chose was sexism and isolation, Code Girls talks a lot about how women was treated unequally. It also talks about their works, and as code breakers, they couldn’t tell people what work they had, therefore many people didn’t understand them. For this page, I color coded them in order for it to not get mixed up, I also included arrows to explain the evidence.

In this mini-lesson, we talked about the cause and effects in a book. I used a mind map format to easily show the main points. We first practiced this on a video from Hidden Figures, and together we found out the causes and effect of it. For my mind map on Code Girls, I used World War II as my cause and added several effects of it. World War II gave a lot of opportunities for women so I mostly focused on how it changed society’s perspective toward them.

Thank you for reading my blog post!

Overall, I enjoyed reading this book and discussing it with my book club. I would recommend it to people who people who wants to learn more about World War II!

How much of a humanist am I?

Humanism by Ella Wang [STUDENT]

Importance and dignity of an individual- 3/5

Individual achievement over class/family- 5/5

Interest in classical culture- 2/5

Secularism- 4/5

I would consider myself a humanist because I agree with most of their beliefs. For example, some times when I am learning about history, I feel like the way they use to think is really weird, like why are people not important if they were born as peasants, why does the hierarchy work like that? But humanists also seem to disagree to that, and they value individual achievements over a person’s class/family.

Murderer or Hero

The story I read is “Lather and Nothing Else” by Hernando Téllez, it was set during a unstable period of civil war known as La Violencia. The conflict in the story is between the barber and himself, it is an internal conflict because he is having a debate with himself on either he should kill the executioner, Captain Torres, or not. Both the protagonist and antagonist in the conflict is himself. At the end he didn’t kill the executioner because he didn’t want to be a murderer. My poem shows the conflict because at first it says “blood, enemy, murderer,” this is what the barber keeps thinking about. Then it says “I could cut his neck, he wouldn’t suffer, but they’d hunt me.” This shows how killing the executioner is really easy, but there will be consequences. “A coward or a name to remember. So which is it? Murderer or hero?” And then it says “blood is always there” which is kinda like a decoy but at the end the barber said “I, a murderer, no sir. You’re an executioner and I’m only a barber. That’s it.” This reveals that at the end the barber thinks that it’s not his responsibility to kill the executioner. At last it says “killing isn’t easy.” This is what the executioner said to the barber at the end of the story, I think it is important because it may seem easy to kill someone, but it is actually really difficult. In the design, I chose to have many ripped papers together, because it shows that the words are from different parts of the story, and when they are together they make sense. I added some red things, like blood, red lines and stained papers… because it was related to blood and murder. I also added a razor in the middle because this shows how the razor can change everything, it can be a murder weapon, or it can just be a normal razor.

Cardboard Arcade

Background:

In design, we will be working on an arcade for fourth graders and LCE.

while making the arcade, we will document our learning.

below is my process journal documenting my progress:

 

Welcome to Your New Blog!

When you blog you create posts and posts are categorised according to your subject. Some categories have already been set up for you. If you need more categories you can add them as needed. It’s important that your posts have the following:

  • An engaging title – this should not include the name of the subject since this is referenced in the category.
  • Body – this is where you share your learning. This can include text, images, embedded videos from Dragons’ Tube or elsewhere. You should always consider how your post looks to your audience. Is it engaging? Do they want to keep reading?
  • Category – select one that has been set for you or add a new category. Posts can have more than one category e.g. Humanities and Myself as a Learner

Click on the images below to learn more about blogging:

 

 

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