Tuesday, 3 December 2019

2019 R3 T3 W10 Holes by Louse Sachar.

Holes by 
Louise Sachar

This term my class has been reading a book, called holes we were also given Holes activity's to, do every time we finished a chapter or two. The activity's had about 8 thing's to do on each one, and there's from 1 to 50 activity's to do. 

My favourite activity was chapters 31 - 38 the first activity. You had do draw a picture of the main character Stanley Yelnat's and Zero the other main character hiding under a boat or draw or draw a  

  • RAW a picture of Zero and Stanley hiding under the boat.  Or draw the water truck crashed into a hole.
RAW a picture of Zero and Stanley hiding under the boat.  Or draw the water truck crashed into a hole.
  • RAW a picture of Zero and Stanley hiding under the boat.  Or draw the water truck crashed into a hole.

1 comment:

  1. Kia Ora Marama, this is Shannon from the Summer Learning Journey.

    You’ve done a wonderful job on your blog post. It is very clear and concise. I’ve read the book ‘Holes’ too and I absolutely adore it. Isn’t it clever how Louise Sachar made Stanley’s last name just his first name backwards. This means his full name, Stanley Yelnats, is a palindrome meaning it says the same thing forwards as it does backwards. Other really good examples of this include ‘racecar’, ‘a nut for a jar of tuna’, and ‘was it a car or a cat I saw’.

    I noticed your blog post cuts off at the end. Did you upload everything you meant to or perhaps did you miss the ending?

    It would be really awesome if you could include pictures or colours into your post to really engage your readers. Perhaps you could look at these tips for making eye catching blog posts to help or grab some inspiration.

    Have you read the ‘Narnia’ series by C.S. Lewis? The most famous one is ‘The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe’. It’s a brilliant story if you’re looking for a book over the summer! What other books have you read?

    Hei konā mai,
    Shannon

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your positive, thoughtful, helpful comments. 
Positive - something I have done well.
Thoughtful - a sentence or more that  lets me know you that you read/watched or listened to what I had to say.
Helpful - please give me some ideas for next time or ask a question you want to know more about.

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.