UROK - San Pasqual Academy

UROK Learning is a skills-support provider on-site at San Pasqual Academy.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

PIZZA PARTY!!! FRIDAY, MARCH 31

Pizza Party on Friday,March 31st at 12:50pm !!!!!

Be there, or be square!

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Bi-Weekly Blog Challenge #3:

Alright, here we go...

We all know sayings like, "succes isn't having what you want, but wanting what you have." There are many that use the same format, switching the order of the verbs to create some deep meaning.

You're mission, should you choose to accept it, is to remember or create as many sayings like the example above as possible. Write each entry on a separate piece of paper and drop it in the Bi-Weekly Blog Challenge Box in Room 204 (there is no limit per student).

Friday, March 10, 2006

Congratulations, JULIAN!!!

That's right everyone, we have a winner!

The correct answer to the question, "Who was the first man to prove mathmatically that the earth was round?" is:

Eratosthenes. He made his calculations and discovery while living in Alexandria, Egypt. Alexandria lies on the Mediterranean Sea. To the south lay the city of Syene. Syene sat on the Tropic of Cancer, the imaginary line around the Earth that delineates the sun's position relative to the tilt of the Earth on the longest day of the yea--in the northern hemisphere. On this day, the summer solstice, the people of Syene could see to the bottom of their wells at noon, when the sun was at its highest point in the sky. This is because at this time, the sun is directly overhead.

Because of increased communication over great distances due to imperialization, this observation was compared across the the Greek Empire. When Greek subjects who lived in Alexandria, further north, realized that they could never see the bottom of their wells, because they were always in shadows, it caused much debate.

Eratosthenes realized that there was a reason for differences in the angle of the shadows at different latitudes. He theorized that two sticks of the same length planted in the ground at a perpendicular, at a great distance apart, but along the same north/south line, would cast shadows of different lengths.

By comparing the shadow lengths, and using the relatively new Pythagorean Theorem, Eratosthenes discovered that the increasing difference in shadow length could only mean that the sticks were being planted perpendicular to the surface of a sphere; thus proving the shape of the Earth.

He didn't stop there. He extrapolated the data from the shadow to determine the size of the earth (very accurately, considering the lack of reliable measurement over great distance). And then he calculated the tilt of the Earth's axis relative to the sun, thereby discovering the true cause for the seasons.

JJ

(P.S. If you would like for me to show you how he did it, come in to Room 203, but you're not leaving 'til I'm done.)

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

$5 Question #2!!!

O.K. Nobody say, "Christopher Columbus."

A long time ago a man proved that the Earth was round. It had already been speculated for some time that our planet was not flat, like a pancake, but rather that it was round like a baseball. This gentleman, however, decided to do one better than speculation. He actually used math to figure out the size and shape of the Earth. He was the first to do so.

For $5.00:
1. Who was he?
2. When did he live?
3. Where was he when he did it?
4. How did he do it?
5. How close was he to being right?

Answer all five questions for all $5.00 (there will be no partial prizes). Prize will go to the first SPA student to post the correct answer to this blog as a comment. Although your comments will be received, they will not appear on the blog until after school on Friday, March 10.

JJ

Monday, March 06, 2006

Congratulations to our Dragon Ballers!

Hats off to our boys basketball team for their hard work and accomplishment this season! Although the game on Saturday didn't turn out the way we wanted, it was great to be at the Jenny Craig Center at USD with our SPA family cheering on our boys.