Wednesday 31 August 2016

Study habits to avoid #2

Cramming

Let’s face it, nearly everyone has crammed for a test, and it is likely that more than half of all students don’t study any other way.




Unfortunately cramming has a causes a lot of problems, and isn’t really efficient. Let’s break it down:

High anxiety
When you are cramming, you have a short period of time to learn a lot – which means you are going to be a bit stressed about it. Unfortunately this creates a bit of a feedback loop, because stress makes it harder to remember things. Which in turn will make you more stressed, and so on. So aside from feeling like crap because you are panicky, a bit jumpy, and probably a bit nauseous, you are also going to be seriously inefficient in what you do remember. Let’s not forget that high anxiety during cramming will follow you into the test, and guess what? High anxiety will likely cause you to forget stuff.

Wasted time
In addition to the time you waste being inefficient because you are stressed, cramming itself is an inefficient way of studying. There have been studies to show that your peak concentration only lasts about half an hour. Meaning that after that it takes more effort to remember less stuff. Now think about how inefficient it would be if you were to cram for 3 or 4 hours. Not very. 

No long-term retention
The way our brains work means that when we are cramming, we only make short-term memories. Which might be enough to get us through most of the test tomorrow, but sets us up for bigger failures later on. See, the way education is set up means that teachers assume you know things covered previous – that you actually remember, and understand, the stuff they tested you on last term. This means that, if you crammed and no longer remember something, it is going to be much harder to learn the next step.

So, what is the alternative? Study a little bit every day. I know it sounds boring, and it takes discipline. But in the end, you spend less time studying overall, and you improving your learning dramatically. What looks like more work on the surface, is actually less work, less stressful, and gives you more time for guilt-free enjoyment of the things you really want to do.



For further reading on particularly bad methods of cramming to avoid, check out this article: http://www.cracked.com/blog/the-7-dumbest-things-students-do-when-cramming-exams/

Information for this post largely sourced from:
Tucker, K. (2016). Disadvantages of cramming. Retrieved June 21, 2016 from http://classroom.synonym.com/disadvantages-cramming-tests-3960.html


Tuesday 30 August 2016

Winners of the Book Week quiz #3

The winners are...

Luke Lawson
Caine Gale
Isaac Carpenter

You will need to come to the ILC to collect your prizes.

Congratulations to the other students who had a go. Better luck next week!

Check out the blog again next week for a new competition and a chance to win!


For those who are curious the correct answers were:

Q1. What was the name of the monster in Frankenstein? 
  A. It didn't have a name

Q2. Dracula was a:
  A. Vampire

Q3. What is the first book in Charlie Higson’s zombie series?
  A. The Enemy

Q4. Dr Jekyll's alter ego is called:
  A. Mr Hyde

Q5. Who wrote the Fear Street series
  A. RL Stein

Q6. Which famous crime author created the characters Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot?
  A. Agatha Christie

Q7. Which of Miss Peregrine's peculiar children can control fire?
  A. Emma Bloom

Q8. Which Opera House does the Phantom of the Opera haunt?
  A. Palais Garnier, Paris

Q9. In 'World War Z' by Max Brooks what is the period of time called during which the plague spreads and world order starts collapsing?
  A. The Great Panic

Q10. Coraline's 'Other Mother' and 'Other Father' have what for eyes?
  A. Buttons

Monday 29 August 2016

Winners of Book Week quiz #2

The winners are...

Elliot Crowther
Tom Smith (8 Campion)
Caine Gale
Isabella Kelly
Abigail Valentine-Rawlins
Martina Gulino

You will need to come to the ILC to collect your prizes.

Congratulations to the other students who had a go. Better luck next week!

Check out the blog again next week for a new competition and a chance to win!



For those who are curious the correct answers were:

Q1. I am the first person narrator of my book. I am a boy at an American middle school. I keep a journal about my brothers Rodrick and Manny, video games, schoolwork and chores. I can be lazy, selfish and dishonest, but often show moments of being kind and caring. Who am I?
A. Gregory Heffley from  A Diary of A Wimpy Kid by Jeff Kinney

Q2. I am a girl who comes from a poor coal-mining district in the dystopian nation of Panem. I am very skilled in hunting and archery.  I took the place of my younger sister in a televised fight to the death competition. Who am I?
A. Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins

Q3. I am a demigod, the son of a mortal and the Greek god Poseidon. My powers include controlling water and making hurricanes. I can read Ancient Greek. Over time I become an accomplished sword-fighter, and work well as a leader. Who am I?
A. Percy Jackson from the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series by Rick Riordan

Q4. I am the oldest of three siblings. I am a young inventor who ties my hair up with a ribbon when I have a good idea. I am very strong-willed. I will inherit a large fortune when I reaches eighteen. Who am I?
A. Violet Baudelaire from A Series of Unfortunate Events by Lemony Snickett

Q5. I am a barn spider who lives on lives on a web overlooking a piglet's enclosure on a farm. I weave words into my web in an attempt to try and save the piglet, Wilbur, from slaughter. Who am I?
A. Charlotte from Charlotte's Web by E.B. White

Q6. We are two identical twins who couldn't be more different; one of us is loud, outgoing and wild, and the other is shy, quiet and kind. Each of us takes it in turn to narrate the story, telling our lives in an accounts book. Who am I?
A. Ruby and Garnet from Double Act by Jacqueline Wilson

Q7. A vampire with the physical body of a seventeen-year-old, but who is actually over 100 years old. His skin is very pale and sparkles in the sunlight, and possess superhuman stamina, senses, mentality and agility.
A. Edward Cullen from Stephanie Meyers' Twilight series

Q8. An ordinary boy-mad teenage girl, who lives with her mum, dad, sister Libby and crazy cat. Telling her story through her diary, this character desperately fancies the "Sex-God" Robbie, and tries to win him over along with the help of her close group of friends also known as 'the Ace Gang'.
A. Georgia Nicolson from Louise Rennison's Confessions of Georgia Nicolson series

Q9. A talking big cat, who is wise, compassionate and has magical authority. Although he is gentle and has a loving nature, he is very strong and capable of being frightening. He serves as a guardian to the children who visit his kingdom.
A. Aslan from C.S. Lewis' The Chronicles of Narnia

Q10. A redheaded pure-blood wizard, the sixth son of Arthur and Molly. He attended Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, and was sorted into Gryffindor house.
A. Ron Weasley from J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series

Winners of Book Week quiz #1

The winners are...

Izaak Gillies
Jared Leo
Caine Gale
Phoebe Humphrey
Martina Gulino

You will need to come to the ILC to collect your prizes.

Congratulations to the other students who had a go. Better luck next week!

Check out the blog again next week for a new competition and a chance to win!



For those who are curious the correct answers were:

Paddington Bear from A Bear Called Paddington

Lucius Malfoy from the Harry Potter Series


Finnick Odair from Catching Fire
(Hunger Games series)
NB: Finnick did not appear in The Hunger Games (book 1)
Anne Frank from The Diary of a Young Girl
(The Diary of Anne Frank)

Lee Takkam from the Tomorrow When the War Began series

Willy Wonka from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Hazel Grace Lancaster from Fault in Our Stars

Red Dog from Red Dog

Sherlock Holmes from The Hound of the Baskervilles
(or any of the Sherlock Holmes books by Arthur Conan Doyle)

Hanna Marin from Flawless (Pretty Little Liars series)

Long John Silver from Treasure Island

Mark Watney from The Martian











Word Wall Winners

Individual Competition - Longest Word

Congratulations to the following students who all came up with 13 letter words:
Joel Mahoney (11 Denn)
Isabella Mallia (10 Mores)
Mackinley Collins (10 Andres)
Kasey Markovic (10 Kostka)
Brogan Cooper (10 Andres)
Cody Beckley (9 Arrupe)
James Reilly (9 Arrupe)
Jaxon Connor (9 Arrupe)

Please come to the ILC to collect your prizes.

The long words found were: Structuralist, Astronautical, Autocatalysis and Auscultations.


Year Level Competition - Most Words


Congratulations to the Year 8s who won the Word Wall Year Level competition with a grand total of 443 words.
Year 7s were not so very far behind with a fantastic 376 words.
A special mention needs to be made for 9 Arrupe who produced a 154 words on Friday afternoon bringing the Year 9 total to 163 words.
Year 11 came in with 182 words, Year 10 with 174 words and Year 12 with 70 words.

Competition: world leaders

This fortnight's competition was written by one of our year 7 students. Lennon has chosen the topic World Leaders to test your knowledge about leaders past and present. The person who correctly answers the most questions will win the prize.

How much do you know about the people who have changed the world?

Go to the competition


Entries close on Friday 2nd of September.


Winners announced Monday 5th of September.


Friday 26 August 2016

Quote of the Week


Stories of imagination tend to upset those without one.
- Terry Pratchett

The Horror of Reading (last quiz for Book week)

You have spent all week being told about the joys of reading. So now it is time to celebrate the horrors - well, the Horror genre. From classic gothic to modern horror writers. How well do you know the things that go bump in the night?

Go to the competition


Entries close on Tuesday 30th of August.


Winners announced Wednesday 31st of August.


Wednesday 24 August 2016

Book Week quiz (second of three)

The second quiz for Book Week is also celebrating book characters that most of you will recognise. This time the questions will be Who Am I descriptions.

Can you name these book characters and the books they came from? Questions are multiple choice.

Go to the competition


Entries close on Friday 26th of August.


Winners announced Monday 29th of August.

Monday 22 August 2016

Book week quiz (first of three)

This week's quick is celebrating the characters from books that have made an impact on our lives (well, some of them probably have anyway!).

Whether you have read the books, seen the movies or just seen pictures on the internet. Can you name these book characters and the books they came from?

Go to the competition


Entries close on Friday 26th of August.


Winners announced Monday 29th of August.


Qlympic quiz winners

There was only one student that got every single question right. Therefore the winner is...

Jack Dumaresq

You will need to come to the ILC to collect your prize.

Congratulations to the other students who had a go. Better luck next week!

Check out the blog again next week for a new competition and a chance to win!


For those who are curious the correct answers were:

Q1. What is the motto of the Olympic games?
   A. Citius - Altius - Fortius (Faster - Higher - Stronger)
Q2. At which Games was the Olympic flag (with the five rings) first used?
   A. 1920 Antwerp Olympic Games
Q3. Who lit the Olympic flame at the Sydney 2000 Olympic games?
   A. Cathy Freeman
Q4. Who won the first gold medal at the 2016 Rio Olympics?
   A. Ginny Thrasher (USA) for women's 10-meter air rifle
Q5. Fraser House is named for Dawn Fraser. At how many Olympic Games did she win the Gold medal for 100m Freestyle?
   A. 3
Q6. In what year, and which city were the first modern Olympic Games held?
   A. 1896, Athens
Q7. Cuthbert House is named for Betty Cuthbert. How old was she when she became the first Australian to win 3 gold medals at one Olympic Game?
   A. 18
Q8. What are the names of the Rio Olympic mascots?
   A. Vinicius and Tom
Q9. Elliott House is named for Herb Elliott. At which Olympic Games did he break the world record for the 1500m run to win a gold medal?
   A. 1960 Rome Olympic Games
Q10. How many medals did Australian athletes win at the 2012 London Olympic Games?
   A. 35

Friday 19 August 2016

Children's Book of the Year Winner

The winner of the Children's Book of the Year award for Older Readers was announced today. The winner was:


Cloudwish by Fiona Wood



A story about what happens when your wishes come true. Sometimes what you think you want isn't as simple in real life as it was in your daydreams. For Vân Uoc Phan it turns out that the attention of the most popular boy in school isn't as simple as she thought. For a start, the other popular kids don't like it - especially the queen bitch from hell. Then there are her parents - how can she ask her parents, refugees from war torn Vietnam, to understand that although they lost everything and risked everything coming to Australia, she doesn't want to be a successful doctor living in Kew (why the obsession with Kew anyway?). Not to mention that she lives in a different world to the rest of her schoolmates. She lives in a commission flat and goes to school on a scholarship, they go to that school because their parents are rich....

Quote of the week


"That's the thing about pain, it demands to be felt".
Augustus Waters in Fault in our Stars by John Green

Wednesday 17 August 2016

Inky Awards short lists announced

The Inky Awards are all about what teenagers want to read. As opposed to the awards that are given to books that adults think you should read. Teenage judges have narrowed the long list down to the 5 books in each category they think you will like the best.

If you want to read them all and vote for your favourite you can. If you want to read one or two and vote for your favourite you can. Or, as I like to do, you want to just use it as a way of picking one of the more interesting books to read that has come out in the last year this list is great for that too!


The Gold Inky short list (for Australian authors)

Flywheel by Erin Gough
Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
Sister Heart by Sally Morgan
Green Valentine by Lili Wilkinson
Cloudwish by Fiona Wood

The Silver Inky short list (for International authors)

Simon Vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertelli
I'll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson
The Rest of Us Just Live Here by Patrick Ness
The Marvels by Brian Selznick
Made You Up by Francesca Zappia

Have you read anything from this list? Did you like it? Leave a comment on this post and tell us what you think.


Monday 15 August 2016

Celebrating Science Week

Drones, Droids and Robots


It's National Science week, so let's take a break from books and study, and enjoy some of the amazing things that are being done around the world in robotics.

For decades books and movies have been using robots for anything from cleaning our houses to fighting our wars. We have asked questions about what makes us human, and can we trust Artificial Intelligence. But for all that, it is only relatively recently that we have been able to manufacture humanoid robots that can actually walk (when you take uneven ground into account, it is actually quite hard!).

Take a look at this clip of some of the most advanced humanoid robots around today:


 Drones, quadcopters, remote controlled aeroplanes - they are fun to fly, getting more advanced all the time, and a bit scary when the military gets involved. But what about some of the cool non-military applications?

Check out this (short) article about some of the great ideas out there:

http://www.airdronecraze.com/drones-action-top-12-non-military-uses/

Finally, for a bit of fun, check out this video of Boston Dynamics testing the capabilities of Atlas (don't worry, they weren't really bullying the robot, they were just making sure that it could still perform its job!)



Competition: Olympics

This fortnight's competition is all about the Olympics. The history, the athletes and the symbolism. The person who correctly answers the most questions will win the prize.

How well do you know the the Games?

Go to the competition


Entries close on Friday 19th of August.


Winners announced Monday 22nd of August.