-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Archives
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- January 2017
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- April 2015
- January 2015
Visitors around the world
Category Archives: Year 6
Stephen Hawking biography by Panda17
Stephen Hawking, (8thJanuary 1942 – 14thMarch 2018)
Stephen Hawking was born on 8thJanuary 1942 in Oxford and died on 14thMarch 2018 in his home in Cambridge.
Stephen Hawking was famous for discovering how the world was created: he explained how black holes compressed into a ball and exploded to make the universe. He was also famous for surviving with a fatal disease that meant he lived most of his life unable to move. He used a speech synthesiser and computer to help people understand what he was saying. For many people, he was an inspiration.
He had two younger sisters, Mary and Philippa, and an adopted brother, Edward. Luckily, for a physicist, Stephen was born and died on two famous scientists’ anniversaries: he was born on the 300thanniversary of Galileo’s death and died on the 139thanniversary of Einstein’s birth.
In school, Stephen had the nickname of Einstein but, as a young boy, he was not so successful at school. He much preferred playing with his friends, playing board games and making fireworks. Also, he enjoyed making model planes and boats. One of his favourite things to do was taking clocks apart but, funnily enough, he couldn’t put them back together again.
In 1959, he went to Oxford University and studied chemistry and physics. He passed his degree at 21. A few weeks after getting his degree, he was taken to hospital because he wasn’t looking himself. After having lots of tests done, he was told he had motor neurone disease; they said he was unlikely to live more than two years.
Surprisingly, he survived much more than two years and lived a life much better than most. When he was 23, he got married to Jane Wilde. They had three children together: Robert, Lucy and Tim. When Lucy grew up, Stephen used to write space stories for young children with her.
To make science more popular, he was invited to go on a lot of international TV shows including Star Trek, The Big Bang Theory, The Simpsons and Comic Relief. In 2012, he opened the Paralympics.
Stephen always loved space but when he got ill he realised he would never be able to go. People arrange for him to go on a plane simulator called the ‘Vomit Comet’. It was the first time Stephen had been out of his wheelchair properly in 40 years.
Science today is much greater thanks to Stephen Hawking. If he hadn’t achieved what he did, we wouldn’t know as much as we do about space. Because of his great work, we know how the world was created and what black holes really are. He was an extraordinary person.
Posted in Literacy, pupils, Science, Year 6
Leave a comment
Karen McCombie, Catching Falling Stars
Posted in Book Blog, Book reviews, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Snowboard maths game
Here’s another good game. You steer a snowboarder down the slope picking up maths questions as you go. You can choose different topics and speeds. The questions don’t start for a while to give you time to learn the steering. There are 10 questions in each game. You have to hit the snowball with the correct answer and miss the others before the time runs out. Maybe you could set each other challenges by posting in the comments the highest time left to beat on a particular game racing at a particular speed? I’m still working my way up to controlling the snowboarder well enough to manage it at high speed!
There are a wide range of games, e.g. multiplication tables, fractions of numbers, etc… to choose from.
Posted in Maths, Year 6
Leave a comment
Spelling help
Here’s another site that helps you to practise key spelling patterns and spellings. Click on the image to link to the website. Once in, you can choose which year group spellings you want to practise. Within each year group, you can choose a rule to then practise. There is also a test area to help you to check whether you have now got the spelling pattern. It is a well-organised site and well worth using.
Posted in Homework, Literacy, Year 6
Leave a comment