Science
HPE
Maths
Social Studies
English
100

What is a pathogen?

A pathogen is a microorganism that causes disease.

100

Which MYP criteria always look at Reflection?

Criteria D

100

If you throw a dice, what is the probability that it will land on an even number?

3/6

100

What is a TEXT paragraph? What do the letters stand for?

Topic sentence

Explain

Evidence

Tie back

100

What is a genre

Genre is a type of text with recognisable patterns.

Audiences learn to expect certain 

characters, conflicts and endings.

In film, genre is built through 

story, setting, costume, sound and camera choices.


200

Thinking about impacts of a medical discovery, what do we mean by an economic impact?

Who pays for it? Think about who benefits from the science. If it's a new medicine, who will pay for it? The people who need it, or the government? Maybe a company developed it and they want to make a profit.

200

What does the acronym SMART stand for when considering SMART goals?

Specific

Measurable

Achievable

Relevant

Time bound

200

Amelia bought a packet of party mix lollies. Inside the packet were 10 planes, 8 snakes, 12 milk bottles, 20 Jellybeans and 7 spearmint leaves. She offers her friend Kaiya a lolly.

8/57

200

Where and when was the The Treaty of Waitangi signed

It takes its name from the place in the Bay of Islands where it was first signed, on 6 February 1840.

200

What is a trope?

 A trope is a recurring theme, motif, plot device, character type, or visual cue that is commonly used in storytelling, literature, and media.

Think of tropes as the building blocks of storytelling. 

Tropes are the repeated story or character patterns that help audiences recognise the genre.

300

How can you work out the number of neutrons an element has by looking at the periodic table?

mass number – atomic number

300

What are the BEST principles of movement? What does the acronym BEST stand for?

Body

Energy

Space

Time

300

6x2 + 9x

3x(2x + 3)

300

What does the term annexation mean?


When a country officially takes over another piece of land or territory and claims it as its own.


300

Why is sound or silence used as a film technique?

To intensify emotion

400

Describe the term ‘Ionic bonding’

Ionic bonding is a type of chemical bond that occurs when there is a complete transfer of valence (outer-shell) electrons from one atom to another.

This transfer usually happens between a metal and a non-metal, resulting in two oppositely charged ions that are strongly attracted to each other.

400

What do we mean by a feedback sandwich?

1st - a positive comment

2nd - a constructive comment

3rd - closing statement reaffirming the positive comment

400

9² + (4 - 2) x 5 - 3

9² + 2 x 5 - 3

81 + 2 x 5 - 3

81 + 10 - 3

91 - 3

88

400

Dame Whina Cooper is most remembered for her land march. When was that and what was she marching for?

The march began on 14 September 1975 from Te Hāpua, the northernmost settlement in New Zealand. Led by a 79-year-old Cooper, a core group of 50 marchers walked over 1,000 kilometers down the length of the North Island. The central purpose of the hīkoi was to protest the continuous and systemic loss of Māori land (whenua) to European (Pākehā) ownership and Crown control.

400

Name two editing techniques in film making and explain what they are.

Cut:Two piece of film are spliced together to cut to another image

Fade: A scene can fade in or out, going from darkness to the light of the scene or from the scene to darkness.

Flashback: A cut or safe of some kind that shows a change to action that has happened in the past.

Cross- Cutting:Cutting to action that is happening simultaneously in another place to the main action. Often used in phone calls between characters.

Eye-Line Match: Cutting to an object or subject that the character is seeing, used to reveal a character’s thoughts.

Montage: Piecing together separate shots to condense time and create emotional impact.

500

Name the first 20 elements on the periodic table

Hydrogen (H) Helium (He) Lithium (Li) Beryllium (Be) Boron (B) Carbon (C) Nitrogen (N) Oxygen (O)Fluorine (F) Neon (Ne) Sodium (Na) Magnesium (Mg) Aluminum (Al) Silicon (Si) Phosphorus (P) Sulfur (S) Chlorine (Cl) Argon (Ar) Potassium (K) Calcium (Ca)

500

What do we mean by Whole - part - whole learning. 

When learning skills you try the skill as a whole and then break them down into parts before putting it back together again.

500

15➗(3² - 6 ) + (10² - 3³)

15 ➗(9 - 6) + (100 - 27)

15 ➗3 + 73

5 + 73

78

500

When doing a source analysis and you are looking at a source that you are reviewing, name 5 factors that could make a source limited. 

1. When it is not very current/recent/up to date

2. When the publication date is not clear

3. If it does not fully relate to the topic or closely answer your question

4. If it is not easy to read or understand or is over complicated

5. If it includes very little evidence &/or inaccurate evidence/detail/fact

6. If the writer/creator of the source has limited experience of the event/issue

7. When the sources were published/created by a source that isn’t reputable or reliable

8. When the source contains only one point of view

9. If we feel that the source is trying to sway or influence the audience

10.When the source contains a lot of emotion or bias without making their intention clear

500

There are 4 things that should be in body paragraphs of an essay. Name 3 of them.

  • My topic sentences directly address the question.               

  • I have at least one quote per body paragraph. 

  • I have explained the quotes and how they prove the points in my topic sentences.

  • I have made connections beyond the text like commenting on other literature,     human nature or modern society.