Project meeting in Bucharest will be organized with the support of Romanian students' parents.
Friday, 29 April 2011
Thursday, 28 April 2011
Project meeting in Bucharest
Wednesday, 27 April 2011
Spring has come also to Dub!
Spring is a time of baby animals, nice flowers and the nature waking up after winter. Children in Dub have lots of pets and many of them have babies at this time. Cats and dogs are our favourites!
The small green frog went on the sun every day and found its place on a bright red wrapping paper from some wafers. Normally we would clean this waste from the grass into a bin, but the frog used it as a beach pad!
Saturday, 23 April 2011
Thursday, 14 April 2011
Examin gimnazjalny z języka angielskiego 2011
Patrycja is entering the examination room. 57 students are taking an English exam.
You can see exam tests here:
Transkrypcja nagrań Arkusze zadań Przykładowe odpowiedzi |
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
Radish
Mathematics- Science Examination
No 16
Students carried out the experiment of radish seedlings. They prepared three sets of samples. Each sample contained the same number of identical seedlings. Each set of seedlings was illuminated for 10 days with light of equal intensity, but of a different color: white, red or green. Students measured the growth of plants every day. Define the problem that the students wanted to solve.
A. Does light intensity affect the growth of seedlings of radish?
B. Does the presence of light affects the growth of seedlings of radish?
C. Is the color of light affect the growth of seedlings of radish?
D. Is the exposure time has an effect on seedling growth of radish?
Today Ola, Patrycja, Marcelina and Sebastian are taking the math-science exam.
History and patriotism
Two out of 29 parts of the exam.
No. 28
Your classmates decided to open a school regional museum. Write a letter to the head teacher asking for financial assistance needed to implement this project.
No 29
Write an essay You can be a patriot both during the war and in peacetime. Justify your opinion with three arguments taken: from the literature, from history and from your own observation.
Tuesday, 12 April 2011
Exams, exams, exams
The Lower Secondary School Exam
The exam is administered by Regional Examination Boards, usually in the student’s own school, in April, in all lower secondary schools in Poland, on the same day fixed by the Director of the Central Examination Board. Every student gets the same exam set with an answer sheet. The exam set used in the examination is selected by the Central Examination Board. Sample exam sets are published in the Syllabus. The first Lower Secondary School Exam took place in 2002.
The Lower Secondary School Exam is a cross-subject exam consisting of two parts (arts and science). The first part tests the abilities and knowledge in the humanities: Polish, History, Civic Education, Art, Music and some educational paths such as Philosophy, Regional Studies, Reading and Media, Polish Culture and the Mediterranean Civilisation. The second part tests the abilities and knowledge in science subjects: Maths, Biology, Geography,
Chemistry, Physics and Astronomy and educational paths such as Health Education or Ecology. The third part of the exam – foreign language – is going to be administered for the first time in 2009.
Open-ended questions solved by a student are assessed and marked by examiners from the Regional Examination Boards. The results of the lower secondary school examination are given as a point score calculated by the Regional Examination Boards. In each part of the lower secondary school examination the maximum score is 50 points. The result is final. Every pupil receives 2 certificates – one confirming graduation from lower secondary school issued by the school and the other detailing the exam score issued by the Regional Examination Board. Both of them are taken into account by secondary schools during the recruitment process.
Source: http://www.cke.edu.pl/
The exam is administered by Regional Examination Boards, usually in the student’s own school, in April, in all lower secondary schools in Poland, on the same day fixed by the Director of the Central Examination Board. Every student gets the same exam set with an answer sheet. The exam set used in the examination is selected by the Central Examination Board. Sample exam sets are published in the Syllabus. The first Lower Secondary School Exam took place in 2002.
The Lower Secondary School Exam is a cross-subject exam consisting of two parts (arts and science). The first part tests the abilities and knowledge in the humanities: Polish, History, Civic Education, Art, Music and some educational paths such as Philosophy, Regional Studies, Reading and Media, Polish Culture and the Mediterranean Civilisation. The second part tests the abilities and knowledge in science subjects: Maths, Biology, Geography,
Chemistry, Physics and Astronomy and educational paths such as Health Education or Ecology. The third part of the exam – foreign language – is going to be administered for the first time in 2009.
Open-ended questions solved by a student are assessed and marked by examiners from the Regional Examination Boards. The results of the lower secondary school examination are given as a point score calculated by the Regional Examination Boards. In each part of the lower secondary school examination the maximum score is 50 points. The result is final. Every pupil receives 2 certificates – one confirming graduation from lower secondary school issued by the school and the other detailing the exam score issued by the Regional Examination Board. Both of them are taken into account by secondary schools during the recruitment process.
Source: http://www.cke.edu.pl/
Wednesday, 6 April 2011
Math Kangoroo in Poland
http://www.jasnet.pl/zs11/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=716:midzynarodowy-konkurs-matematyczny-qkangurq&catid=73:wydarzenia-20102011&Itemid=95
On 17 March 2011, thirty two Polish students took part in the International Mathematics Test. Some problems were easy to solve, while others much more difficult. Now we are waiting anxiously for our results.
On 17 March 2011, thirty two Polish students took part in the International Mathematics Test. Some problems were easy to solve, while others much more difficult. Now we are waiting anxiously for our results.
Friday, 1 April 2011
Math Kangaroo 2011 in Bucharest
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