This term we are learning about countries and cultures. We have studied all the countries that our students come from.
Brazil, China, Korea, India, Iran, Sri Lanka, Philippines, Japan, Jordan and of course New Zealand.
We have published some information about the countries and are all working on our own cultural posters. We will share these at the end of the term with our classmates and families as well as enjoying a cultural shared lunch.
Monday, 31 August 2015
Sri Lanka by Andy Zeng
Sri Lanka
Sir Lanka is
in Asia, there are 21 million people in
Sir Lanka.
They speak many languages including Sinhala, they like to eat curry, rice and
roti.
Sir Lankan
people like to play cricket.
There are
snakes, lions, lizards and elephants too. The capital City is Colombo.
They hold
their palms together in front of their chest to great each other.
Sir Lanka is
the world’s largest tea exporter.
Their flag
is the one of the oldest flags in the world.
By Andy Zeng 10 year old
The Phillippines by Aabid and Sehyeok.
The Philippines
The Philippines
is part of Asia.
85 million
people live in the Philippines.
They mostly
speak Filipino.
They like to eat
rice, mango, bananas and coconut.
They like to
play soccer and basketball and go sailing.
You might
see a turtle in the Philippines.
The capital
city is Manila.
You can say
Kumusta for hello.
There are
lots of volcanoes and islands.
Kyle, Stephen and Vivien come from the Philippines.
By Sehyeok and Aabid.
Japan by Catherine Gu
JAPAN
Japan is in Asia, Japan’s nearest neighbours are Korea, Russia,
China and the Philippines.
The capital city is Tokyo. In 1997 the population of Japan
reached 125 million people.Japan’s main language is Japanese. Japan’s national
people are Japanese. Japanese people
love to play basketball, baseball, skipping and marbles.
Japan is an archipelago of over 3000 islands.Japanese people
love to eat sushi, fish, vegetables and rice. Japan is special because it has
hot springs and underground trains.
*Archipelago means: a sea or stretch of water having many
islands.
By
Catherine Gu From Esol
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