Monday 30 June 2014

Bookepida Task

Walt: discuss what we have read.

Task: To create something that tells the reader what we have been discussing with our reading buddies. 

Description:
In bookepida we have to read a story that our reading teacher has given us to read and then we have to discuses what we have read with our reading partners. We have to usually discuss what we do understand what we don't understand and the meaning of juicy words.

Here is Amy, Bella and my discussion. 


What does Inuit mean?    We researched it and it was a type of person who lives in Antarctica.

What did we understand? We learnt that Some people adapt to Cretan heat.

What did we not understand?  How do people get more heat and energy than others?

  For a little explanation on what brought this question up. I love warm weather, 85-93f (29.44-33.88c). I get cold really easy, and when I do its difficult to warm back up. However, I have a friend who prefers winter-typed weather. When it gets down in the 50's and even the 40's, he's still wearing tank tops and shorts. If its 70 degrees, he's sweating and I'm shivering. If you sit next to him, you can really feel the heat radiate off of him, and one time when it was 15f (-9.44c) out, he came in without a jacket on, and he touched my arm and it was really warm.
So, after that. What causes someone to feel hotter, or to generate or put out more heat? How can one person shiver at 70 and the next person sweat at the same temperature? Also, not sure if this information is relevant but, we are both males in our mid twenties.
What does Inuit mean?    We researched it and it was a type of person who lives in Antarctica.

What did we understand? We learnt that Some people adapt to Cretan heat.

What did we not understand?  How do people get more heat and energy than others?

  For a little explanation on what brought this question up. I love warm weather, 85-93f (29.44-33.88c). I get cold really easy, and when I do its difficult to warm back up. However, I have a friend who prefers winter-typed weather. When it gets down in the 50's and even the 40's, he's still wearing tank tops and shorts. If its 70 degrees, he's sweating and I'm shivering. If you sit next to him, you can really feel the heat radiate off of him, and one time when it was 15f (-9.44c) out, he came in without a jacket on, and he touched my arm and it was really warm.
So, after that. What causes someone to feel hotter, or to generate or put out more heat? How can one person shiver at 70 and the next person sweat at the same temperature? Also, not sure if this information is relevant but, we are both males in our mid twenties.

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