Friday 9 December 2011

Easy Craft For Children

Melted Crayon Eggs

Melted Crayon Eggs

When the most humble of art supplies meets the shell of a just-boiled egg, the crayon wax softens, and the colors swirl together in a magical way. The results are fast, fun, and gorgeous.
Materials
  • white eggs
  • tongs
  • empty egg carton
  • crayons
Instructions
  1. Hard-boil white eggs. Remove them from the hot water with tongs or a slotted spoon, dry them, and rest them in an empty egg carton or on plastic bottle caps (an adult's job).



  2. null Color them with the crayons' tips or remove the paper coverings and use the crayons' sides. For a speckled effect, grate a crayon and sprinkle the bits over the eggs. The waxy eggs are very slippery, so take care when turning them to color the underside.

  3. When you're done coloring, leave them to dry for about an hour.

Recipe For Kids

Banana Split Ice-cream Cake

Banana Split Ice Cream Cake

Ingredients
  • 2 cups graham cracker crumbs
  • 1/2 cup butter, melted, plus 1/4 cup butter
  • 4 to 5 medium bananas, sliced into 1/2-inch-thick rounds
  • 1-1/2 quarts strawberry ice cream, softened
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts
  • 1 cup chocolate chips
  • 1 cup confectioners' sugar
  • 1 cup evaporated milk
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 (8-ounce) container nondairy whipped topping
Instructions
  1. In a small bowl, combine the graham cracker crumbs and the melted butter. Set aside 1/2 cup of the mixture, then press the remainder into the bottom of a 9- by 13-inch pan.
  2. Place the bananas in a single layer over the crust. Spread the softened ice cream on top and smooth. Sprinkle the nuts on the ice cream, then cover with plastic wrap and freeze until firm, about 1 hour.
  3. In a large saucepan, melt the chocolate chips and the remaining 1/4 cup butter and stir until smooth. Add the confectioners' sugar and evaporated milk. Cook, stirring constantly, over medium heat until slightly thickened and smooth, about 8 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the vanilla. Cool the mixture, about 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Pour the mixture over the ice cream and freeze until firm, about 45 minutes.
  4. Spread the whipped topping over the chocolate layer and sprinkle with the reserved crumbs. Freeze for at least 3-1/2 hours. Remove the dish from the freezer 10 to 20 minutes before slicing. Serves 18.

    Nutritional Information
    Per serving (1/18 of recipe): Calories 398 ● Total Fat 22 g (34% DV) ● Saturated Fat 12 g (60% DV) ● Cholesterol 31 mg (10% DV) ● Sodium 193 mg (8% DV) ● Total Carbohydrate 43 g (14% DV) ● Fiber 2 g (9% DV) ● Sugars 29 g ● Protein 5 g (11% DV)

    Percent daily values are based on a 2,000-calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.

Wednesday 7 December 2011

History of Santa Claus

Saint Nicholas - a brief history


St. Nicholas was born in 280 AD, in Patara, a city of Lycia, in Asia Minor. He became the gift giver of Myra. His gifts were given late at night, so that the gift giver's identity would remain a secret. St Nicholas was eventually named the patron saint of children, sailors, Russia and Greece.

St. Nicholas was a Christian priest, who later became a bishop. He was a rich person, and traveled the country helping people, giving gifts of money and other presents. St. Nicholas did not like to be seen when he gave away presents, so the children of the day were told to go to sleep quickly or he would not come! Nothing has changed and Santa Claus will not arrive this Christmas unless the children go to sleep early.

A famous story about St. Nicholas, is about a poor man who had no money to give to his three daughters on their wedding day. St Nick dropped bags of gold into the stockings which the girls had left to dry by the fire. The sisters found the gold and ever since, children have hung up stockings on Christmas Eve hoping that they will be filled with presents by Christmas morning.

Despite being quite young Nicholas had earned a reputation for kindliness and wisdom. In the year 303, the Roman emperor Diocletian commanded all the citizens of the Roman Empire, which included Asia Minor, to worship him as a god.

Christians believed in one god and one god alone, so their conscience would not allow them to obey the Emperor's order. Angered by their stubbornness, Diocletian warnd the Christians that they would be imprisoned. The Emperor carried out the threat and St Nicholas who resisted too was also imprisoned. For more than five years, St Nicholas was confined to a small cell. He suffered from cold, hunger, and thirst, but he never wavered in his beliefs. In 313, when Diocletian resigned, and Constantine came to power Nicholas was released, and he returned to his post as Bishop of Myra. He continued his good works and became even wiser and more understanding by the time of his death on December 6, 343.

In the eyes of the Catholics, a saint is someone who has lived such a holy life that, after dying and going to heaven, he or she is still able to help people on earth. They often become patron to different groups of people - one such was children and many legends sprang up to explain his presence.

By 450, churches in Asia Minor and Greece were being named in honor of him. By 800, he was officially recognized as the a saint by the Eastern Catholic Church.

In the 1200s, December sixth began to be celebrated as Bishop Nicholas Day in France.

By end of the 1400s, St Nicholas was the third most beloved religious figure, after Jesus and Mary. There were more than 2000 chapels and monasteries named after him.

In the 1500s people in England stopped worshipping St Nicholas and favored more another gift giving figure Father Christmas. Over the centuries, St. Nicholas' popularity grew, and many people in Europe made up new stories that showed his concern for children. The name Santa Claus was derived from the Dutch Sinter Klass pronunciation of St. Nicholas. Early Dutch settlers in New York (once called New Amsterdam) brought their traditions of St Nicholas. As children from other countries tried to pronounce Sinter Klass, this soon became Santa Klass, which was settled as Santa Claus. The old bishop's cloak with mitre, jewelled gloves and crozier were soon replaced with his red suit and clothing seen in other modern images.

Chinese Poem

诗与诗人

那远了又远了的,是他
    那近了又近了的,是他

    那重重的:
    由积雨云引爆雷电
    让普通的灵魂熠熠升华令
    诸神匍匐脚下的,是他
    那轻轻的:
    以风柳、以游香、以若有若无的手触
    在人生的暗川上签注隐语的,是他

    那痛苦的:
    沸水煮过三回,冷水浸过三回
    为所挚爱的人们无限期地放逐
    在失眠的绞架上像吊钟被敲打
    以热情自焚,以忧伤的明亮透彻沉默
    沉默在杀机四伏的阴影里的,是他

    那迷醉的:
    以温柔的双唇熨帖新伤旧创
    梦从狭缝扩展蓝天销魂
    胸口长出花株手臂栖满云鸟
    在已不期待的时刻从日夜
    牵挂的地方回声鹊起的,是他

    那脆弱的、卑微的、暗淡的:
    被蹂躏的岁月被蹂躏的感情,那
    被岁月和感情蹂躏的,是他

    那英勇的、崇高的、光辉的:
    不屈服的理想不屈服的青春,那
    被理想和青春呐喊在旗帜上的,是他

    借我的唇发出他的声音又阻止
    我泄露他的真名
    把人们召集在周围又不让人走近
    是他,是他
    诗是他
    诗人,也是他


Maths worksheet - Percentage

Name:____________________
Math is Fun Worksheet





Date:__________________
Do the following
1:
14% of 42
            
2:
29% of 79
               
3:
4% of 30
         
4:
55% of 36
            
5:
33% of 19
            
6:
31% of 61
               
7:
3% of 37
            
8:
93% of 36
               
9:
13% of 85
               
10:
14% of 74
               
11:
66% of 25
            
12:
59% of 40
            
13:
63% of 27
               
14:
80% of 61
            
15:
94% of 53
               
16:
55% of 15
            
17:
85% of 85
               
18:
83% of 90
            
19:
6% of 43
            
20:
18% of 44
            

Fun With Mathematics

Solid Geometry


Solid Geometry is the geometry of three-dimensional space - the kind of space we live in ...

Let us start with some of the simplest shapes:


Solids come in two types "Polyhedra" and "Non-Polyhedra":

Polyhedra :
(they must have flat faces)
tetrahedronhexahedronoctahedrondodecahedornicosahedron Platonic Solids
triangular prismsquare prismpentagonal prism Prisms
triangular pyramidsquare pyramidpentagonal pyramid Pyramids
Non-Polyhedra:
(if any surface is not flat)
sphere Sphere torus Torus
cylinder Cylinder cone Cone


Static Electricity Experiment

SAFETY NOTE: Please read all instructions completely before starting the projects. Observe all safety precautions.

Tip: Try to use the part of the charged object that has the biggest charge (the part that was rubbed the most) when doing these experiments. Also, Projects 1-3 work best on dry days.

PROJECT - Swinging cereal

What you need:
a hard rubber or plastic comb, or a balloon
thread, small pieces of dry cereal (O-shapes, or puffed rice of wheat)
What to do:
  1. Tie a piece of the cereal to one end of a 12 inch piece of thread. Find a place to attach the other end so that the cereal does not hang close to anything else. (You can tape the thread to the edge of a table but check with your parents first.)
  2. Wash the comb to remove any oils and dry it well.
  3. Charge the comb by running it through long, dry hair several times, or vigorously rub the comb on a wool sweater.
  4. Slowly bring the comb near the cereal. It will swing to touch the comb. Hold it still until the cereal jumps away by itself.
  5. Now try to touch the comb to the cereal again. It will move away as the comb approaches.
  6. This project can also be done by substituting a balloon for the comb.
What Happened: Combing your hair moved electrons from your hair to the comb. The comb had a negative static charge. The neutral cereal was attracted to it. When they touched, electrons slowly moved from the comb to the cereal. Now both objects had the same negative charge, and the cereal was repelled.