Well, first off, our presentation was flawless, we had a few mishaps in it but it was still good. We still kind of struggled when we were trying to set things up on the poster board, we did forget some things that we managed to forget which was trade notes and I completely forgot to hand in the my rubric but I think my friend gave it to her, probably? I don't know really, i'm sure she did. Though our board was great, but when my friend put up the paper on the board she put the papers on parallel with the sides of the board which made the boards have less space even though we had a lot of other pages (this happened when i was absent and I gave her the board). Since we were missing all of these we didn't realize that we had a few missing parts so we didn't mind to notice to the near end of the presentation and probably now before I posted this.
The most important thing that I learned in the presentation was the emperor timeline because of the way it was placed and I told myself "How would anybody live for a thousand years an not even dying?" I quickly fond out that the family actually keeps the family heritage for a bunch of years until they "stop". Or something else. Well that's all of my explanation. And one more thing, did you know that the Han Dynasty invented paper? Surprising isn't it? Well, some of you out there think that it's not surprising at all because you already know it or you think that it's not surprising at all.
I went above and beyond on the criteria by trying to add as much detail to the facts or try to just try to make it fun but we didn't really make it fun, just a little speck of it. But at least we had fun with our work while doing work. We also added details on the papers of the work by burning it (not literally but on the sides of the pages). It looked amazing but we didn't put any amazing things just bunt paper and a map. That's it.
Hope you have enjoyed reading this (probably not) and enjoy the website!
The most important thing that I learned in the presentation was the emperor timeline because of the way it was placed and I told myself "How would anybody live for a thousand years an not even dying?" I quickly fond out that the family actually keeps the family heritage for a bunch of years until they "stop". Or something else. Well that's all of my explanation. And one more thing, did you know that the Han Dynasty invented paper? Surprising isn't it? Well, some of you out there think that it's not surprising at all because you already know it or you think that it's not surprising at all.
I went above and beyond on the criteria by trying to add as much detail to the facts or try to just try to make it fun but we didn't really make it fun, just a little speck of it. But at least we had fun with our work while doing work. We also added details on the papers of the work by burning it (not literally but on the sides of the pages). It looked amazing but we didn't put any amazing things just bunt paper and a map. That's it.
Hope you have enjoyed reading this (probably not) and enjoy the website!