My Speech

Good morning honored guests, parents, Daly staff and of course 5th grade Class of 2013-2014.

Some people say leaving elementary isn’t a big of a deal. For me it is, why? Because, everything started here.  Although we first learn basic things at home with our parents and family, but it’s in school, where we learn the formal education. It is here where we first learn how to read and write, learn numbers, and meet new people.

When I started kindergarten in Sacred Heart of Jesus Montessori School I was so happy that I can finally start going to school, because I always get jealous of my 2 older sisters.  In 3rd grade my parents moved me to XUGS or Xavier University Grade School, where it is so advanced that I was so lucky to have a tutor help me with my lessons every day after school.

After I finished 3rd and 4th grade in the Philippines me, my sisters and my grandma, moved to America met our parents. We had been apart for 7 years. My sisters, and I finished the 2012-2013 school year in Boston, and it was so different that the school in our home town because we  usually have books, arm chairs and we usually bring huge roller bags so it was a huge change for us. Before 5th grade we decided to move to Maryland, and there it was I started 5th grade, with no help, just me trying to listen to the teacher and meet new people at the same time.

My 5th grade was amazing, especially if you have the funniest, weirdest, camera lover teacher which is Mr. Fitz. Every day I learned interesting stuff from him. The other day he told everybody in his class that tomorrow we can do the shaving cream stuff in our desk, and he saw a confused face from me and told me that shaving cream has an alcohol that actually cleans our desk so it was a fun way because we can play with it.  Also every time I wear a Norway flag vest, or a UK sweater, or a Boston sweat shirt, Mr. Fitz usually calls me a Norwegian, British, Bostonian and a Filipino girl, where it reminds me of him,  so I am so lucky to be in his class and having the funniest, best memories that I will always remember.

So I’m here leaving elementary, hoping to spend my middle school years in Boston Latin School or BLS, graduate high school, and study Mathematics, design, physics, and technology in college. Also I could participate at engineering style competitions with teams, such as model bridge building contest to be a Civil Engineer, but that’s still in the future.

So in a couple of months, we are going to be in middle school, I know we are all nervous and excited at the same time, but this is something we all need to remember, because we all know that this will be the next chapter of our life. Thank you everyone and have a great summer!

Three Times Lucky Book Blog #4 (4th Quarter)

Mo Lobeau considers herself three times lucky: her biological mother tied her to a makeshift raft during a hurricane; the Colonel happened to crash nearby the river she floated down and found her; and Miss Lana decided to take her in like she was her own. Although she has made a home with the Colonel and Miss Lana, this doesn’t stop her quest to find her Upstream Mother. She is on the sixth volume of her autobiography in which she tries to piece together the story of her life before coming to Tupelo Landing and has members of this small town drop messages in bottles further upstream so they  travel down the river.

Now it’s summer. When Mo and her best friend, Dale, aren’t helping out at the cafe serving up Miss Lana’s specials, they are helping Lavender, Dale’s older brother, fix up his race car and “borrowing” a grumpy neighbor’s boat for fishing. But soon a stranger shows up in Tupelo Landing, asking about a murder in Winston-Salem. His name is Detective Starr and he isn’t especially welcome. Real trouble comes when Mr. Jesse, that same cranky neighbor, is found dead in the boat that Dale returned. That’s right. Murder has arrived to this small North Carolinian town.

Dale and the Colonel quickly become suspects to the murder, but who is Mo to trust? Certainly, Dale is innocent — he was just returning the boat! Detective Starr links this murder with the one he was originally investigating but also to a bank robbery that happened eleven years earlier. The Colonel couldn’t be involved, could he? Mo and Dale decide to take matters into their own hands by forming the Desperado Detective Agency to prove who is actually guilty of killing Mr. Jesse. But things get even more out of control when the Colonel goes missing, Miss Lana is kidnapped and a doosey of a hurricane is headed their way.

Sheila Turnage writes a lyrical and heartwarming story that will please children and adults alike. THREE TIMES LUCKY is laugh-out-loud funny, and its hilarity lies in the details: Miss Lana enjoys creating theme nights for their cafe that are silly enough for kids to appreciate, but the themes nights also uses references that are recognizable to adults. Similarly, this small town is filled with larger-than-life personalities, which makes the story seem light and fanciful, while it is also filled with tough issues to tackle. The plot is driven by a murder investigation, Dale’s father is abusive and the reader witnesses him hitting his wife, and Mo faces the real fear that Miss Lana’s life is on the line, while her biological mother remains unknown.

Claws Book Blog #3 (4th Quarter)

When Emma sister turns up missing, their family relocates to a trailer part near a forest full of crags.  Here she meets a Jack the One-Eyed talking cat.  Jack swears he can help Emma find her sister, but in order to do so, she must eat a Pride’s Heart, transforming herself into a leader of cats. Together, along with her pride, they embark on a quest into the dangerous, dark forest, filled with evil creatures, to rescue Emma’s sister or die trying.

Number The Stars book blog #2 (4th Quarter)

Number the Stars is told from the point of view of ten-year-old Annemarie Johansen. The story is set in the city of Copenhagen, Denmark in September 1943, the third year of the Nazi occupation of Denmark. Annemarie and her best friend Ellen, who is Jewish, are stopped by soldiers on their way home from school. The two girls, who go to the same school and live in the same building, are unsettled by their first direct encounter with the Germans. Mrs. Johansen and Mrs. Rosen are concerned and ask the girls to take a new route to school. The encounter makes Annemarie reflect on what her father has taught her about Denmark and also about her older sister Lise’s death a few years before the start of the novel. Later in the fall, Annemarie and her younger sister Kirsti discover that Mrs. Hirsch’s neighborhood shop has been closed. This event further alarms Mrs. Johansen, though Annemarie does not understand why.

During a late night visit from Peter Neilsen, a member of the Resistance and the man Lise was to marry, Annemarie is told more about the war. Her parents and Peter explain that Jewish stores are being closed. The next day, the Rosens must flee. They leave Ellen with the Johansens. During the night, German soldiers come to the apartment demanding that Mr. Johansen disclose the location of his friends. He refuses and they search the apartment. Ellen pretends to be one of the Johansen’s daughters, but her dark hair causes the solider to be suspicious. Luckily, Mr. Johansen is able to show them a baby picture of Lise with dark hair, which convinces the soldiers.

The next day, Mrs. Johansen takes the three girls to her brother Henrik’s home in Gilleleje, Denmark, where Henrik is a fisherman. They spend a peaceful day in the house by the ocean before Henrik announces that their Great-aunt Birte has died. The service is to be held that evening. Annemarie knows that no such aunt exists, and demands the truth. Uncle Henrik explains the importance of not knowing too much when bravery is needed. That night the coffin arrives and they gather around it. Many more people arrive, but all are silent. Soon Peter appears with the Rosens, who are reunited with Ellen. Soldiers, drawn by the post-curfew lights, come to the house. They demand that the coffin be opened, a problem since the coffin is empty. Mrs. Johansen thinks quickly and says that her aunt died. The soldiers leave.

Henrik takes the first group of people down to his boat. Mrs. Johansen follows with the Rosens. Annemarie, who now understands that the people are being taken to safety in Sweden, awaits her mother’s safe return. When her mother does not appear, she discovers that Mrs. Johansen has broken her ankle. Because of this, Annemarie must take an important package to her uncle before they can leave. On the way to the boat, soldiers with dogs stop her. They search her basket and discover the package. But when they rip it open it contains only a handkerchief, and they let her go. Annemarie makes it to the boat in time, to Henrik’s evident relief.

That evening, Henrik is safe at home having dinner with Annemarie, Kirsti, and Mrs. Johansen, whose ankle has been taken care of by the local doctor. After dinner, Uncle Henrik takes Annemarie to learn how to milk the cow. They talk about the events of the day. He explains that he hid his passengers in the bottom of the boat, and the handkerchief was essential because it kept the Germans’ dogs from smelling the human cargo. Uncle Henrik praises Annemarie for her bravery and reassures her that Ellen is safe and they will meet again someday.

The war ends in May, and Annemarie and her family watch from their balcony as people parade in the streets with the Danish flag. Annemarie thinks of the Rosens and realizes that they, along with all the others who were forced to flee, will soon be returning home. Peter Nielsen has died. He was shot in a public square for his involvement in the Resistance. Annemarie’s parents tell her that Lise was a member of the Resistance, too, and that she did not die in an accident, but was killed by the Germans. Thinking of Lise and of Ellen, Annemarie goes to the trunk of Lise’s things in her room and takes out the Star of David pendant that she has been keeping for Ellen. She says she will wear the necklace herself until Ellen returns.

Wonderstruck Book blog #1 (4th quarter)

Ben is half deaf. His mother has died and he feels all alone, even though he is living at his aunt’s house. One stormy night, he sneaks out . . . and eighty three steps away is his house. The one he and his mother shared before the funeral.

There he finds a book called Wonder Struck with red ink inside the front cover. It reads for Danny, Love M. Ben also finds a book mark with a phone number on it and he wonders if it might be a link to his long lost dad, who he never knew.

Ben calls the number as the storm rages outside, just as lightning hits the house and strikes Ben to the ground.

He wakes up in hospital with the realisation that he is now deaf in both ears. As he recovers, Ben wonders about the history of his dad and so he escapes and travels to New York where he meets a faithful friend called Jamie. Jamie’s dad works at the American Museum of Natural History – and this is where Ben discover some amazing links to his dad.

Rose is deaf and lives with her father and mother, movie star Lillian Mayhew. Life is sad for Rose because she never gets to see her mum and she’s locked in her house, unable to lead a normal life.

Like Ben, she too runs away to New York where she meets an old friend at the Museum of Natural History. His name is Walter and he takes Rose to his house and takes care of her.

When Ben’s and Rose’s stories meet, it ends in the least imaginable way possible.

The Seven Chairs “The fifth one ended up in France”

 

A spiritual person sent 7 chairs to 6 different churches, and one chair to a different place that wasn’t a church.

Sunday evening in St. Patrick’s Church the nuns, priest and the acolytes were getting ready for the 5:00 p.m. mass. Before people were getting in, a nun was wondering why a mysterious chair  was in the confession room because the chair should not be there.

After the mass the nun was waiting for people to leave. After they’re all gone, she went back to get the chair and when she put it down she saw a light coming from the ceiling. She kept staring at it, it got brighter until a face appeared and started to talk to the nun

harris flying chair

and she replied to it.

On the next day, in St. Mary’s Church the people who attended mass went home and the people who work for the church is going to get  lunch, a nun who is about to go get lunch got a phone call from somebody but she didn’t answer it, while she’s getting out from the church she stopped and looked at a mysterious chair that she never seen before, when she touched it a light coming from the ceiling was just so bright until she noticed a face appeared and heard something and replied to it.

 

The 3rd chair was in the St. Joseph Church and the 4th chair was in St. Stephen’s Catholic Church where the bright light with the face appeared when the nuns touched it

 

and sat on it.

The fifth one ended up in France.  Where the nun sat on the chair and then saw the bright light.  That shows some little babies on a church with a lady that she is familiar with.

The 6th chair was in St. Johns Church and the nun just saw the chair and sat on it so she can pray, right after she sat a light flashed and it kept getting brighter and brighter until a face appeared and heard a message that only the nun can hear it.

The 7th chair was in Lourdes, France, where a nun was about to go home but before she does she stop at the grotto where the statue of Mother Mary was under a rock cave and in front of those are some benches and beside that is a chair where the nun sat and

 

while praying a dazzling light and a figure all dressed in white gave a message to the nun.

After a week, all 7 nuns went to a particular church and when they are all in there they prayed and another nun came out from a room and inviting them to come in.

The nun asks them “Do you still remember me?”

 

The 7 nuns were so confused until the nun told them that they are all sisters.

 

The nun told them a story about their mom. She was her friend and that all of you were raised by nuns and being adopted by different families and that is why you don’t get to see each other.

And all of them ask the same question, why all of us get to come to the church at the same time?

 

 

 

New Year’s Resolution

It is important to set goals because, it helps your future, be a succesful person, and gives your life a challenge.

My first goal is to graduate “elementary” and be in “middle school” because I want to learn new things.

My second goal is to get in Boston Latin School, because my mom said it’s a Catholic School but still Public School, and it’s a historical school which I loved to know about, and a lot of succesful people graduate there, and there teachings is 1-2 years advanced of this year, and that really helps my future.

My third goal is to volunteer as an acolyte at church (a person who is assisting the priest during masses.) and attend confession (confession is the time to let God forgive your sins by telling the prayer that the priest told you.) because after confession God forgives you and helping people feels good.

I feel great and excited for 2014because starting a new year is tough for us but every step of the way, every hard work we do to reach our goals is a great way and helpful of our future.

Titanic Book Blog #6 (2nd Quarter)

The 100th anniversary of the tragic sinking of the TITANIC, a topic that continues to haunt and thrill readers to this day, this book is by Deborah Hopkinson weaves together the voices and stories of real TITANIC survivors and witnesses to the disaster — from the stewardess Violet Jessop to Captain Arthur Rostrum of the CARPATHIA, who came to the rescue of the sinking ship. Packed with heart stopping action, devastating drama, fascinating historical details, loads of archival photographs on almost every page, and quotes from primary sources, this gripping story, which follows the TITANIC and its passengers from the ship’s celebrated launch at Belfast.

A Wrinkle In Time Book Blog #5 (2nd Quarter)

Everything is wrong in Meg Murray’s life. In school, she’s been dropped down   to the lowest section of her grade. She’s teased about her five-year-old brother,   Charles Wallace, who everyone mistakenly thinks is dumb. Not to mention that   Meg wears braces and glasses and has mouse-brown hair. Before long, the trio discovers that Meg’s   and Charles Wallace’s father is being held prisoner by evil forces on the planet   of Camelot, an eerie place where complete conformity is expected in exchange   for personal freedom. There they engage in the fight of their lives against   a giant disembodied brain named “It.” And soon, Charles Wallace must   be rescued, too.