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Waspish Wednesday

April 4, 2018

very irritable

History

Discuss:

Signet rings

  • What are they?
  • What were they used for?
  • Why were they important/necessary?

About

Article

Read the article as a group (2-3 scholars) to learn about signet rings.

Answer the questions on a half sheet of lined paper.

  • What are they?
  • What were they used for?
  • Why were they important/necessary?

Bling

Bling yourself!

1. Observe the signet ring styles of these difference ancient cultures:

  • Egyptian
  • Chinese
  • Roman

2. Choose a style you'd like to recreate for yourself (or as a gift?)

3. Plan how you will design your signet ring

(Model Magic - difficult to mold after 1 day, so it must be done in one sitting)

Can some people bring some ziploc sandwich bags tomorrow?

ELA

Class Book:

  • Drafting / Editing / Illustrating
  • Cover: Create a cover, submit, class vote
  • Title: Submissions, class vote

(not: The Best Thing I Learned in 5th Grade)

ELA

Science

Science

Check Vocabulary

prey

predator

ecological relationship

competition (and example)

biotic

abiotic

symbiotic relationships

parasitism

host

mutualism

commensalism

  • prey - an animal that is hunted and killed by another for food.
  • predator - an animal that naturally preys on others.
  • ecological relationship - interaction among organisms within or between overlapping niches (specific area where an organism inhabits)
  • competition (and example) - interaction between organisms or species in which both the organisms or species are harmed.
  • biotic - living
  • abiotic - nonliving

  • symbiotic relationships - special type of interaction between species; sometimes beneficial, sometimes harmful.
  • parasitism - symbiotic relationship in which one species, the parasite, benefits at the expense of the other, the host.
  • host - an organism that harbors a parasitic guest; provides the parasitic guest with nutrients and/or shelter
  • mutualism - relationship between organisms of two different species in which each benefits.
  • commensalism - relationship between individuals of two species in which one species obtains food or other benefits from the other without either harming or benefiting the latter.
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