Wednesday, 9 November 2016

Maori Retell Story

A long time ago the sun started to move quickly across the sky. The people on the ground began to question the sun and why it was doing “He aha me mahi koutou i tenei i nga ra e ki poto, me te ko nga po ki te roa. e kore e tatou kua whiwhi nui rā, a tara mate ratou hohoro. mutu koa tenei tito”. (Translation=) Why must you do this the days are too short and the nights are too long. Our crops are not getting enough sunlight and they could die soon. Please stop this nonsense. But the sun did not listen and started bribe them and control them, "Ki te meatia e koutou te mea he mea ahau e neke āta ano ahau puta noa te rangi, engari ki te kahore e kore ai koe e kite ano te awatea!" (Translation=) “if you do what I say I shall move across the sky slowly again, but if not you might never see daylight again!” The village council held a meeting. We must if we do not are crops will die and we will have nothing to eat. No I think we should gather a team of brave warriors to the resting place of the sun and spring a trap on him and force to move more slowly again, I agree, yes we must. Good thats settled I shall get the team.
The village man searched for the brave warriors he needed to get. Suddenly the man jumped and thought wait a minute I know just the people. He raced up to the top of the village to the hut of Maui (the trickster) and his brothers.  The man knocked on the hut and Maui came out. “Maui we need your help to trap the sun the council wants the bravest men in the village to go right away to the sun’s resting place”. “Ok me and my brothers shall leave soon”. Maui gathered his brothers and started his long journey. He crossed great plains and forests, eventually the ground became hot sandy and cracked he could see the sun's pit in the distance he told his brothers his plan as the got nearer and nearer. Maui told his brothers to build a wall so they can pounce on the sun when it came out of the ground. Maui told his brothers to weave ropes with tightest flax they could find they needed to hold the sun down when they get it. The brothers waited patiently as time flowed away the brothers became restless “when will the sun come out of its dirty hole” “soon we just have to wait”. And so they did they waited and waited, all of a sudden Maui could hear rumbling, and he suddenly felt a lot warmer. And just like that the sun appeared from out of the ground, Maui and his brothers hid close to the rocks they couldn’t be seen or their plan would fail. As the sun floated upwards Maui know it's was time. “Now my brothers” Maui’s brothers flung the ropes over the sun. Maui jumped to his feet and raised the magic jawbone of his grandfather over the sun and started to repeatedly hit the sun untill it was tired and weak he told his brothers to losen the ropes and the sun began to creep slowly across the sky once more.
THE END
Written by: フォレスト =Forrest

Image result for maui and the sun




Thursday, 20 October 2016

Speech 2016

Housing Crisis                                                              -Forrest
Have you ever looked around you and seen houses really overpriced but you can’t afford it, even though it’s your dream house and you love it. Well this is the case for most New Zealanders. Over the last decade housing prices rose to crisis levels, and it's nothing to be proud about either.
In this written dispute I will write about what I think of this housing dilemma. The choice is with us and our government. Will New Zealand house prices rise or fall? The ball is in our court, but what will we do with it.

I think New Zealanders should come first when it comes to housing. At the moment it is estimated 42,000 people are homeless in our country. This is due to rising house prices and job shortages.

The reason why housing is so expensive in New Zealand is because the country has a housing bubble. A housing bubble is a run-up in housing prices fuelled by demand, speculation and quality. Housing bubbles usually start with an increase in demand, in the face of limited supply which takes a relatively long period of time to replenish and increase. Speculators enter the market, further driving demand. So I demand that investors from overseas should be a lot more restricted when buying a house then a New Zealander.  

New Zealand's housing crisis isn’t just caused by it's also the lack houses being built in the country. New Zealand has a total immigration of 55,000 each year and 80 per cent move to Auckland, and assuming there are 4 people per house it means the government needs to build 11,000 each year! And If Auckland needs 11,000 houses per year just for immigration and New Zealand is only building 7,500 we’re 3,500 houses short. And  If Auckland has been building 3,500 houses less than what people are wanting each year for 10 years that means Auckland is 35,000 homes short of the average, this leads to today's crisis and how some of it started

The housing crisis is now affecting more than 98 per cent of New Zealand! Head of the labour party Andrew Little says “Housing pressures have seen house prices rise faster than wages in all areas of the country except the Grey District, Masterton, Westland and Wairoa. The four areas make up 1.25 per cent of our population”. “The housing crisis is making life tougher for a lot of New Zealanders. Skyrocketing house prices are locking a generation out of the Kiwi dream of home ownership and pushing rents up so high, families are being forced to live in cars and garages”.

I believe as responsible people you must realise that we need to focus in maintaining and building proper homes, Not just for us but for future generations and the people living out on the streets. It's our country and we need to nurture it. Like how it's been nurturing us for the last 700 years

My Speech about New Zealand's Housing Crisis

Wednesday, 6 July 2016

My Last Fishing Trip

Here is my Book Track of my shared story. Enjoy.


Thursday, 30 June 2016

The Oblivious Town

The Oblivious Town

Icy cold drops of rain fell on the small unsuspecting town. The darkened clouds bellowed across the valley like a wave of fog, it looked almost unreal. The town was like almost every other town it had shops a dam a movie theatre etc... Once everyone arose from their slumber they didn’t know what was coming next. The town was surrounded by mountains like they were in a bowl, a bowl that was about to be filled up. Suddenly the dam started cracking when whoosh the water behind the dam destroyed everything in its path. The town is now history.

Memory Anchors

Memory Anchors - In the book     
Date of Origin
________________
Image result for the world in chains
I found this picture of the world in chains, for me it represents how in the book ‘Date of Origin’, humans are prisoners and don’t any sort of freedom anymore.



This picture shows the rising sun and how night will never be forever. I choose this photo because even though everyone thinks there is no hope there always is.

Image result for waves

This picture shows the ocean and it wondrous beauty. I choose this picture to represent their trips to the seaside (their own little sanctuary).

Image result for abandoned city
This picture is an abandoned city. I choose this picture to represent whatever we do nature will still blossom even if the world gets taken over by aliens nature take back what's rightfully hers.

Reading Assignment

Reading Assignment Date of Origin     

Q1: Rezza is fearful that the guards will take Snake the dogbot if "they found out he was programmed to think and talk" (p.5) What message is the author conveying about the way this society operates?

A1:The Author is saying It's a cruel society.

Q2: What questions can you raise about an authority that separates families for political purposes? Are there any text-to-world connections you can make to this through research?

A2:If there is a war families might be separated.

Q3: Rezza felt left out as she watched Boyd and Kesai go off to the meeting of the Unattached who are nearing their Date of Origin. (p.42) What connections can you make to her feelings? Why do you think the author includes this incident?
A3:I remember when I no one let me play with them it was horrible.

Chapters 5-6

Q4: What connections do you think the author wants you to make to phrases such as 'herded into transit wagons and transported to camps'? (p.46) What underlying message is the author conveying in this situation?

A4:It's like slave trading

Chapters 7-10

Q5: Will talks to the elders about how, "Tomorrow's going to be... a perfect day for the big party." (p.91) What makes Rezza suspect Will is making up stories about a party? (p.94)

A5: They didn’t talk to her about it, so there are no more parties any more.

Chapters 11-14

Q6:  Why do you think Will chooses Rezza to go back with Boyd for the contents of the cake tin? (p113)

A6: Will said Rezza was brave and courageous.

Q7: Is Rezza's encounter with the Guards a predictable element in the plot? Does her escape seem credible? (p.129) why/why not?

A7: Rezza's encounter with the Guards was so predictable because for me you have to really think what would happen realistically. Her escape is credible because if she didn't escape the plan would of fallen to pieces.

Chapters 15-16

Q8: What feelings are evoked by the description of the Guards collapsing into "piles of mangled, melting bits of scrap"? (p.147)

A8: The feelings are satisfaction and hysteria.

Q9: Could robots rule the world with artificial intelligence? What arguments would you put forward to support/ oppose this premise?

A8: Well I think It could be any, because you're talking about the future so we might have the ability to shut down the robot system with the press of a button, or if robots are superior enough they might be able to overcome the human resistance. Really won’t know unless it happens.

Text to Text
This book reminds me of the hunger games because everyone is controlled under one rule.

Text to Self
They have friends and I have friends.

Text to World
In Homs Syria no one is allowed to leave they are trapped and forced to starve.