JSL Reflection

  • What did you learn about leadership from the Jewish Supreme Leader (JSL) election project? I learned a lot about my project or person Yitro or Jethro.
  • Through the stories of the leaders we studied, what are some positive ideas the Torah teaches us about leadership? That if someone does something beyond rude or mean you don’t go back and do the same thing.
  • What are some negative ideas the Torah teaches us about leadership? Like Balaam when he wrestled and angle.
  • If you could create the ideal JSL, what would that person be like: their qualities, their personal story, their weaknesses? Why? They would make mistakes, Be a good person, and have knowledge.
  • How do you think leadership has changed from Torah times to modern times?  How is it still similar? I don’t really think that it has changed that much.
  • How does the JSL election change the way you think about leadership?  Why? It changed when you think of something better

Og’s Great Adventures Reflection

  • What did you notice or observe during the challenge? I observed that this was harder than I thought. 

 

  • What kind of questions did you ask yourself (meta)? Where can I find the Links?

 

  • When did you first begin drawing connections between the different puzzles and pictures? Sometimes I feel like different colored Dinosaurs, Red is mad, blue is sad, yellow is fun.

 

  • What were those connections?  Those connections were to me.

 

  • What were your biggest clues? The letter “A”

 

  • What was the most challenging? The 9 number lock

 

  • What was your biggest ah-ha moment? Why? When I solved the puzzle. Because of me and my team.

Final game of Clue

  • What thinking moves did you use when playing this game (questioning, connecting, listening, observing, deducing, reasoning, etc? I sometimes only tried to find the weapon or any item for that first and then I could find the whole set.

 

  • How did organizing your information impact your experience playing the game? It showed me that documenting and taking notes is only for the better and then you get to look back and say how much better you can do.

 

  • Where else do you use these thinking skills (at school, at home, on sports teams, etc)? I use them probably everywhere for strategy and the art of what I’m doing.

 

  • When might you need this kind of thinking? At school during a test or a sports game.

 

Causes of Slavery

I think that slavery was caused by people being lazy and having people doing stuff for them without getting payed, I think its because people were racist specifically against African American’s because they didn’t like the color of there skin, and last but not least I think that people are just wanting people/African Americans to not live the life that they wanted. White slave owners thought that they were so much better than African American’s that they would whip there slaves if they weren’t working because they were lazy and very Racist. Slaves grew corn, tabbaco, potatoes,  sugar cane, etc. Slaves moved to colonies because it was not there choice the masters would load them up on a ship and have barely any room to breathe and send them across the ocean so they could suffer. Mostly slaves were from Africa but some were from England and around the U.K.. There were so many slaves because the masters needed for them to get work done and so that they could sell the slaves.

First Clue

 

  • What did you notice or observe during the game? That ocayle is good at guessing who it is.
  • What kind of questions did you ask yourself (meta)? What ever I’m thinking think the opposite.
  • When did you first begin drawing connections between different characters, clues, pieces of information?Well I recorded on google sheets.
  • What were those connections?The ones that I relate to.
  • What were your biggest clues? I didn’t really have any. It was a short game.
  • What information seems most important to collect? The one that stands out
  • *What is the difference between an observation and information? Fact and think