Make a copy of the perimeter/area blog post and highlight the sections you think you have completed
Making quizzes in Google Slides for your peers can be a lot of fun. It's also a great way to revise topics you've covered and you can spruce them up with all kinds of images that relate to the quiz.
Use the template below or create your own to make a quiz in Google Slides. Remember to put the slide deck into your Maths folder.
Make your quiz look cool by adding pictures, shapes and colour that relate to your quiz
We are learning how to create an animation with Google Slides.
Making animations with Google Slides is easy, you start by making your first slide then duplicating the slide and moving the parts a tiny bit. Repeat this process by duplicating slides, you will want at least 20 slides. Open the How to Balance slide to see how to do this.
Create an animation using google slides to show your understanding in your maths topic.
The slide above is an example to show you how to set up your slides.
Remember to create your slide in your maths folder and give it an appropriate file name.
Once you have created your animation you will need to publish your slide deck to the web. Choose embed, set the file size for small and adjust the seconds to suit. The shorter the seconds per frame the faster your animation will play.
Finally use the embed code to add your Digital Learning Object DLO to your blog post.
Click on the slide deck above to see how to structure your blog posts when writing a reflection on our work. On slide 5 there is a template you can copy for your own mahi, remember to take out the words 'copy of' and put your own name in there. Save your renamed file to your 9M9MAT folder in your Google Drive.