August 09, 2008

The Festival Queens of General Assembly 2008

 
The Festival Event would not be complete without the Festival Queen Competition.  This year it was really very exciting because all the girls fit the criteria of looks, talent , and poise, your teambloggista thinks  its just  a matter of taste. 

The Gold Team muse Tyrel Lozano had two changes of attire and looked wonderful in her Benjie Manuel costume.  Tyrel looked like a sparkling gem in the sea of Muro Ami divers.  She looked like their Queen indeed!
Green Team's Queen , Louise Adubal looked like a Goddess when she was presented to the audience with her mermaid tail and all , after some dancing and another change of outfit we see her with legs, coming out from a big clam.  Confident and Beautiful armed with great talent in dancing Louise glowed even more. The Silver Team muse , Kaye Arroylo represented a Muslim Princess and if my memory serves me right this girl had a couple of outfit changes with impressive head pieces. Of course her dance steps that made her look like she was floating were authentic and so were her movements. Kaye looked like a Muslim Princess and you could see her School Spirit members  beam with pride in watching her perform.

                                                                           The Results

                                                                 1st - Louise Adubal Green Team

                                                                 2nd- Tyrel Lozano Gold Team

                                                                 3rd - Kaye Arroylo Silver Team
 

Congratulations you all did a wonderful job!  


 

Congratulations Green Team!!!

 
August 2 was the Festival Spirit Competition and your Teambloggista Correspondent was there to witness the whole event first hand.  As always , the School Spirit  General Assembly was well attended! The show started with the Falcon Cheerleaders number , followed by the Gymnasts opening with Enter the Circus. The Performing Arts Group gave a wonderful show ! Congratulations Falcons!
The School Spirit Event  was a success , proud Falcons, their families, and the Alumni  were there to support their teams .
 
The first team to present was the Gold Team with the Muro Ami theme. The Gold team presented a strong number , with clean lines and synchronized moves they really started the competition.  Second to present was last year's champion - the Green Team . So prepared with their costumes , big props , and impressive drum beats . The Green team with their Panagatan theme really set the bar higher than ever.  The last to present but certainly not the least was the Silver Team. The Silver Team really Celebrated the Rhythm of Life with their presentation, authentic Festival Equipments were used,giving the Silver team a different and unique sound over the other teams.  The Lighting effects of the Silver Team also was different from the full lights and effects of Gold and Green. Silver had a more subdued lighting setting the mood for a very unique and interesting presentation that came out strong.
 
The Result 
1st place - Green Team
2nd place - Silver Team
3rd place - Gold Team 
 
 

August 05, 2008

Teambloggista at the cinema - A review on THE DARK KNIGHT

Your Teambloggista correspondent had a chance to watch the very much awaited last movie of Heath Ledger . Rumor has it that the painstaking hours of shooting and fatigue got Heath very ill and because of the medication he took he was found Dead at his Apartment. Such a tragic ending for the actor who has been recognized by the entertainment critques for the role he played as a gay Cowboy in Brokeback Mountain.
Armed with my ever favorite hotshots only from KFC and popcorn . I was ready to watch the Dark Knight ! 

The movie is like a thunderbolt  that is about to rip into the blanket of bland movies . The Dark Knight, director Christopher Nolan's absolute stunner of a follow-up to 2005's Batman Begins, is a potent provocation decked out as a comic-book movie. Feverish action? Check. Dazzling spectacle? Check. Devilish fun? Check. But Nolan is just warming up. There's something raw and elemental at work in this artfully imagined universe. Striking out from his Batman origin story, Nolan cuts through to a deeper dimension. Huh? Wha? How can a conflicted guy in a bat suit and a villain with a cracked, painted-on clown smile speak to the essentials of the human condition? Just hang on for a shock to the system. The Dark Knight creates a place where good and evil — expected to do battle — decide instead to get it on and dance. "I don't want to kill you," Heath Ledger's psycho Joker tells Christian Bale's stalwart Batman. "You complete me." Don't buy the tease. He means it.

The trouble is that Batman, a.k.a. playboy Bruce Wayne, has had it up to here with being the white knight. He's pissed that the public sees him as a vigilante. He'll leave the hero stuff to district attorney Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart) and stop the DA from moving in on Rachel Dawes (feisty Maggie Gyllenhaal, in for sweetie Katie Holmes), the lady love who is Batman's only hope for a normal life.

Everything gleams like sin in Gotham City (cinematographer Wally Pfister shot on location in Chicago, bringing a gritty reality to a cartoon fantasy). And the bad guys seem jazzed by their evildoing. Take the Joker, who treats a stunningly staged bank robbery like his private video game with accomplices in Joker masks, blood spurting and only one winner.  Bale is electrifying as a fallibly human crusader at war with his own conscience.

I can only speak superlatives of Ledger, who is mad-crazy-blazing brilliant as the Joker. Miles from Jack Nicholson's broadly funny take on the role in Tim Burton's 1989 Batman, Ledger takes the role to the shadows, where even what's comic is hardly a relief. No plastic mask for Ledger; his face is caked with moldy makeup that highlights the red scar of a grin, the grungy hair and the yellowing teeth of a hound fresh out of hell. To the clown prince of crime, a knife is preferable to a gun, the better to "savor the moment."

 Forget Freudian hints about a dad who carved a smile into his son's face with a razor. As the Joker says, "What doesn't kill you makes you stranger."

The Joker represents the last completed role for Ledger, who died in January at 28 before finishing work on Terry Gilliam's The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus. It's typical of Ledger's total commitment to films as diverse as Brokeback Mountain and I'm Not There that he does nothing out of vanity or the need to be liked. If there's a movement to get him the first posthumous Oscar since Peter Finch won for 1976's Network, sign me up. Ledger's Joker has no gray areas — he's all rampaging id. Watch him crash a party and circle Rachel, a woman torn between Bale's Bruce (she knows he's Batman) and Eckhart's DA, another lover she has to share with his civic duty. "Hello, beautiful," says the Joker, sniffing Rachel like a feral beast. He's right when he compares himself to a dog chasing a car: The chase is all. The Joker's sadism is limitless, and the masochistic delight he takes in being punched and bloodied to a pulp would shame the Marquis de Sade. "I choose chaos," says the Joker, and those words sum up what's at stake in The Dark Knight.

The Joker wants Batman to choose chaos as well. He knows humanity is what you lose while you're busy making plans to gain power. Every actor brings his A game to show the lure of the dark side. Michael Caine purrs with sarcastic wit as Bruce's butler, Alfred, who harbors a secret that could crush his boss's spirit. Morgan Freeman radiates tough wisdom as Lucius Fox, the scientist who designs those wonderful toys — wait till you get a load of the Batpod — but who finds his own standards being compromised. Gary Oldman is so skilled that he makes virtue exciting as Jim Gordon, the ultimate good cop and as such a prime target for the Joker. As Harvey tells the Caped Crusader, "You either die a hero or you live long enough to see yourself become a villain." Eckhart earns major props for scarily and movingly portraying the DA's transformation into the dreaded Harvey Two-Face, an event sparked by the brutal murder of a major character.

The haunting and visionary Dark Knight soars on the wings of untamed imagination. It's full of surprises you don't see coming. And just try to get it out of your dreams.

Ten tips for Academic Success at MdO

 

TEN STEPS TO ACADEMIC SUCCESS

 

 

1.     Set individual academic and personal goals.

 

 

2.   Choose carefully which subjects you should give more time, especially during the start of the year.

 

 

3.   Know and use resources.

 

 

4.   Meet and get to know faculty.

 

 

5.    Learn actively.

 

 

6.   Manage your time well.

 

 

7.    Know and actively use reading skills.

 

 

8.   Develop strong listening and note-taking skills.

 

 

9.   Develop and improve your writing and speaking skills.

 

 

10. Get involved in co-curricular activities; learn skills and   gain experience.

 

Sharpen your Memory with the help of y0ur Teambloggista Correspondent!


EIGHT WAYS TO AID YOUR MEMORY

It is more natural to forget something than to remember it.  If you intend to remember something, apply as many of the following techniques as possible.

 

1.     Be flexible.  Experiment with many learning procedures.  Be willing to abandon outmoded and faulty learning procedures so you will be free to acquire new and more efficient methods.

 

2.     Overlearn.  In order to retain anything learned, you must practice and reorganize it into your current ongoing activity.  One way to do this is to incorporate the learned material as part of your present habit system.  Use it in speaking and writing.  Act out the material as a rehearsal of a part in a play-a process known as role-playing.  This is especially helpful in learning a foreign language.

 

3.     Schedule.  Schedule your study time so that the time at which something is learned or relearned is close to the time at which it will be used.

 

4.     Rephrase and explain.  Try a little role-playing.  Take the point of view of the teacher, for a change.  Rephrase and explain the material, in your own words, to a classmate.  Allow your classmate to criticize your presentation.  Then let the classmate be the teacher, while you criticize.  If you can't explain something, you don't really know it.

 

Many students adopt the so-called warm-body attitude toward learning.  A "warm" feeling toward one particular answer becomes the basis for its selection, regardless of whether one really knows why the answer is correct.  This attitude is the result of classroom examining procedures in which true-false and multiple-choice items are used exclusively for testing.  Testing in this manner encourages the attitude that mere recognition of the most probable answer constitutes learning.

 

Even though a particular subject may not require adequate recall by using more penetrating recall-type questions, don't allow yourself to fall into this warm-body learning trap.  Insist on testing yourself!  If you can explain the material, most certainly you can pass any "objective" test calling for superficial recognition.  However, the reverse is most certainly not true.  Learning only to a point of recognition, and depending on your ability to ferret out the correct response, is insufficient for total-recall kinds of tests.  Sooner or later this habit will result in total failure in a demanding test situation.

 

5.     Eliminate accidental and unrelated associations.  A study situation in which a phone is constantly jangling produces breaks in the mental association process.  Remove the receiver.  The only suggestion that can be made for the elimination of television during the study period is to donate the set to a family that is not involved in higher education.

 

6.     Eliminate previous mistakes.  Take note of all previous mistakes and make every effort to eliminate them from future practice.  It has been shown experimentally that consciously reviewing mistakes, making note of exactly why they were incorrect, helps to reinforce the correct response.  This process is sometimes referred to as negative practice.

 

7.     Decide on an order of importance.  Some things are more important than others.  In a particular study unit, decide what these are and organize the important material into an outline or framework.  "Over-learn" this particular framework.

 

8.     Become emotionally involved.  Assume the attitude that you fully believe the viewpoint of the author.  Strive for perfection.  You may never achieve it, but you will most certainly improve your performance.  Learn to discuss your current beliefs calmly with people holding different attitudes.  Cite authorities to back up your position.

Enjoy learning its what matters most! I bet with the tips you just gotyou will do great in writing essays ang history classes!  

Surviving Math at MdO Highschool!

Making Math Interesting

Like many students, I didn’t like math . Memorization, repetitive worksheets, stressing about grades, cramming for finals — no wonder so many people hate math! But you have to take responsibility for your own education; only you can make yourself interested in a subject. Here are a few ways to help yourself enjoy learning math:

Know what math really is. Math isn’t about arithmetic or memorizing formulas. It’s about problem-solving, deducing truth, and exploring the concepts of change, quantity and structure. Take a glance at Wikipedia’s entry on Mathematics for more details — it’s actually an interesting read.

Learn to apply math. Like I said, math is all about problem-solving; so, use it to solve your problems! This is what makes math a creative subject as well as a logical one. Sure, applied mathematics is quite advanced, but identifying a use for it will motivate you to work your way up. Math classes generally teach students the formulas before giving any examples of how they can be applied, but perhaps it’d be more interesting if you started with a real-world problem that requires math and worked backwards, finding the formulas that you would need. I might try this myself.

Explore the history of math. This won’t help everyone, of course. “Ew, math and history? Are you trying to kill me?” I don’t like history much, either, but it adds another dimension to the study of mathematics. Take a break from math problems and do some reading. Try learning the origin of a formula before you learn how to use it. Who discovered it? How? Why? What I hated most about math class was not having time to answer those kinds of questions. The teacher have to finish the lesson plan every day, and I have to spend my time on homework every night. That’s why I highly recommend learning math (or any other subject) on your own; you can leave room for yourself to stray off topic.

Relate math to other subjects. Math relates to music, art, architecture, business, science, and even philosophy. If you’re interested in any of those, then learn about them while you learn about math. I’m hoping to write posts about all of those subjects in the future, and I plan to find out for myself just how well math can help with them. In the meantime, here are a couple interesting websites: Wolfram Tones: An Experiment in a New Kind of Music (interactive) and A Logarithmic Image Transformation (at least scroll through to see the cool images).

Surround yourself with math enthusiasts. Sure, you sit with a bunch of other students in math class, but the students rarely talk to each other about math. Most of them don’t want to be there, and it shows. Get inspired by joining a group of people that are passionate about math — people who truly want to learn and discuss it.

Hang in for the long haul. I was surprised at how many math enthusiasts said that learning math shouldn’t be fun. They brought up a good point, though: it can’t all be fun. enjoying math is like Enjoying chess; it becomes more interesting over time. Like learning a new language or learning to play an instrument, mathematics doesn’t become truly rewarding until you’ve made a long-term commitment to it.

So, tell me: what do you think of math? Love it? Hate it? How do you think we could make it more interesting? Its only up to you:-)

Falling in love with food at MdO!

Last Week MdO celebrated with a cookfest from Grade School to Highschool !
It was a Spirit Color competition and your teambloggista was there to witness the exciting event. Green , Gold and Silver had to consider their budget, menu, and ingredients among the many things they have to prepare. Of course , Healthy yummy food is what each of the team hoped to achieve.  The Grade School students were as prepared as ever , from table setting , to flowers , and plating . I think the Teachers did a great job teaching the students how to handle food in order not to contaminate the work area , down to preparing the table and of course table manners and clean - up .Nutrition Australia has a new focus with a new look to promote positive food and nutrition messages

Here are some tips to enjoy your food in a healthy way! 

Relax, prepare and enjoy healthy meals - fall in love with food.

It is time to value yourself and your health and start falling in love with food.

cherrybullet Discover the pleasures of sharing a meal
cherrybullet Enjoy fresh foods, cooked from scratch
cherrybullet Explore new tastes - savour the flavors
cherrybullet Choose a balance of foods that enhance wellbeing

The Nutrition Week this year focueds on preparing and sharing. So whether at home or at school , we want all MdO Falcons to appreciate the value in taking time to enjoy healthy meals together.

 

 

 

 

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