JSL REFLATION

  • What did you learn about leadership from the Jewish Supreme Leader (JSL) election project?
  • more leaders, not just Moses.
  • Through the stories of the leaders we studied, what are some positive ideas the Torah teaches us about leadership?
  • standing up for themselves.
  • What are some negative ideas the Torah teaches us about leadership?
  • killing things.
  • If you could create the ideal JSL, what would that person be like their qualities, their personal story, their weaknesses? Why?
  • strong forgiving leadership
  • How do you think leadership has changed from Torah times to modern times?  How is it still similar?
  • better leaders
  • How does the JSL election change the way you think about leadership?  Why? it did not change my thought

ogs Adventure

  • What did you notice or observe during the challenge? How hard it was to find the websites.

 

  • What kind of questions did you ask yourself (meta)? where were other people at in their challenge and the answer

 

  • When did you first begin drawing connections between the different puzzles and pictures? first problem because we were under pressure.

 

  • What were those connections? bonding with other people.

 

  • What were your biggest clues? hints from teachers

 

  • What was the most challenging? 9-word lock

 

  • What was your biggest ah-ha moment? Why? 9-word lock because it was challenging. 

 

clue post

 

  • What thinking moves did you use when playing this game (questioning, connecting, listening, observing, deducing, reasoning, etc? Looking at people bleeding their cards.

 

  • How did organizing your information impact your experience playing the game? I have played clue before with my parents.

 

  • Where else do you use these thinking skills (at school, at home, on sports teams, etc)? finding who murdered someone with what and where. 

 

  • When might you need this kind of thinking? if someone was murdered like someone in my family. So I would be the detective.

causes of slavery

Answer the following questions in your blog. Take your time, and answer each question with at least two sentences.

 

What were 3 causes for slavery? (this answer can be bullet points) rivalry racism trickery

What did white slave owners use their slaves for? Why? work and to make more slaves

What crops did slaves harvest? Why these crops? because they need food

Where were most slaves from? Why? Africa because they were Africans

Why did so many slaves move to the colonies? Was this their choice? Explain. so that thay dont have to do work

Why were there so many slaves in the colonies? to get out of slave work

First Clue

  • What did you notice or observe during the game? I notice that after someone asked a question to you, you don’t show everybody your card.
  • What kind of questions did you ask yourself (meta)?   What did other people have card wise and if I was the murder or not.
  • When did you first begin drawing connections between different characters, clues, pieces of information? When people suspected me and others.
  • What were those connections? They were people that had the same theory as me.
  • What were your biggest clues? knowing the weapon and who.
  • What information seems most important to collect? The most important information was knowing who and with what weapon.
  • *What is the difference between an observation and information? Observation is sort of like a guess. Information is what we know for sure.