The Giver by Lois Lowry is a book that has made an impression on me. The Giver is a a story of a boy named Jonas who lives in a perfect city. In this city all forms of emotion, such as happiness, fear, pain, love and sadness, are removed. The emotions are all stored inside one person called the "Receiver of Memory" who holds memories of the past. The memories are kept away and brought out when decisions are needed to be made to prevent making similar mistakes. In this world there is no color and they kill off defective people. The book made an impression on me because it shows that you cannot have a perfect world. Our flaws are what help make us who we are.
engineering*robotics*blacksmithing*DIY*knives*time lapse film*unicycling*juggling
Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homeschooling. Show all posts
Sunday, December 29, 2013
Friday, May 3, 2013
Why 3D Printers are Useful
Who wouldn't want a machine that can make almost anything? 3D printing is useful for manufacturing because it is an additive process. It lets you make personal parts and gives you the ability to build quick prototypes.
3D printers are practical because 3D printing is an additive process. In other words, instead of starting with a block of material and shaping it until you attain your part, with 3D printing, the machine builds your part one layer at a time from the bottom up.
For the same price, and with the same machine, you can make personal parts. For instance, you can have a toy with your name on it and I can have a toy with my name on it for the same material cost.
Another useful application of 3D printers is the ability to make quick working prototypes. You can think of a product, design it on a computer with a CAD program, print and hold your idea in your hands.
3D printers are terrific for people who like to make things. The ability to hold your thoughts in your hands is going to change the manufacturing industry.
Friday, February 22, 2013
The City of Ember Book Summary
The City of
Ember, a science fiction novel by Jeanne DuPrau, takes place in an underground city that was made to keep the human race alive
after the war/plague. The underground city, Ember, is falling apart and running out supplies such as food, clothes, soap and school items. It is a dark, damp, mold filled, dying city. The people in the city have become less aware of what humans used to know and do not know how to fix broken things and only know how to replace them. This is why, when supplies start to run out, they are forced to leave the city because they do not know how to survive. In the book, the main character, a 12 year old girl named
Lina, finds a piece of paper with instructions. The instructions explain how to leave Ember once Earth becomes safe to live on again. While on her journey, Lina gets help from
a boy named Doon. In the end, the people of Ember get to the world
above, but have no idea how to survive. The book seems to be addressing that today we do not make our own things anymore and we are materialistic consumers.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Writing Workshop: The Super Sandwich
The Super Sandwich
At twelve noon on a sunny Friday, I was in my kitchen. I was very hungry and wanted lunch, so I decided to make a sandwich. I found two pieces of soft wheat bread and put them in the toaster. Ding! They were done. Rapidly, I took them out and put them on the counter. I put shiny olive oil, Swiss cheese slices and salty ham on the crispy bread. But I wanted more, so on went crunchy lettuce and juicy tomato. I fried up some bacon and added three sizzling strips. Hungrily, I wolfed down a big bite. But I felt like it was missing something. So I ran quickly to the cupboard and pulled out a green, squishy avocado and spicy red hot sauce. I added a thick layer of avocado and shook the hot sauce over the whole stack. As I was about to take a second bite from my now pretty large sandwich, I thought to myself, “I am so hungry I could eat way more than this.” So I decided to go all out and put anything I could find from the kitchen on it. I added a cooked hamburger patty, black olives, wavy potato chips, slices of onion, finely diced garlic, thinly sliced pineapple, green apple, red apple, strawberry yogurt, hummus and a fried egg. Now my sandwich was two feet high. I lifted it up, but I could not fit it into my salivating mouth. It started to fall apart, slipped from my hands and fell all over the floor. All the ingredients coated the floor at my feet. I looked at the pile of food and thought it was disgusting. I didn’t want it anymore. My dog came into the kitchen and started to lick it up. As she gobbled up the super sandwich, I was relieved that I did not have to clean it up. I went to the cupboard and got a bowl of cereal. My lunch was delicious.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
A Book Summary: The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick
The story takes place in a train station in Paris.

Hugo is twelve-year-old boy who lives inside the train station. Hugo's father, a watch-maker, finds an automaton in a museum, and in his free time, he tries to fix it. An automaton is a complex, gear-driven machine that does a task.Unfortunately, the museum burns down and the father dies. Hugo goes to the burned museum, finds the automaton and tries to fix it with found and stolen materials.
Isabelle is a girl who helps Hugo go on his adventures.
Papa Georges is an older man who works in a toy booth in the train station and is Isabelle's godfather.
The story ends with Hugo living with Papa Georges and Isabelle. he goes to school and makes his own automaton. The Invention of Hugo Cabret is over 500 pages but more than half of them are very detailed and descriptive pencil drawings.
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