Monday, May 3, 2010

Annoying Orange 7: Passion of the Fruit

Have nothing to say about this video.

2 comments:

  1. Judges' Criteria

    Frequency (20)
    You will earn .5 points per post. If, for example, you have published 4 posts, you will have earned 2 points (4posts x .5points=2 points). You can win, at most, 20 points for this category (equivalent to 40 posts).
    Quality of Content (20)
    Your blog posts will be evaluated according to the following criteria: Relevance, Depth, Length, Flow, Maturity.
    Punctuation (20)
    Everyone will start with a full twenty points. You will be allowed up to one punctuation mistake PER POST without being penalized. For each additional error (more than one) you will be penalized one point. For example, if you have 4 punctuation errors, you will be penalized 3 points (the first is a freebie, and the next three would count against you).
    Grammar (20)
    Everyone will start with a full twenty points. If there are more than two grammatical (e.g., subject verb agreement, capitalization, etc.) errors PER POST, you will lose a point for each additional error. Basically, you have TWO freebies (unpenalized errors) per post.
    Shout outs (10 points)
    You will get one point per shout out (positive comment) that you write on your classmates’ blogs.
    Reader Comments
    You can earn up to five points for any comments left by a reader other than your classmates or Blog It teachers. Each reader comment will be worth .5 points. (e.g., 3 comments =1.5 points)
    Widgets (Max 5)
    You will receive one point for each widget you install on your blog (up to 5).
    EXTRAS
    As an added incentive to publicize your blog, you will earn one point for every “follower” of your blog (other than Ms. Fung, Mr. A, Mr. Goodman and Mr. G).

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  2. Punctuation
    Commas—We use commas when: we are listing a series of things (like I’m about to do), when you introduce a phrase (For example: “If Team Booker maintains perfect attendance, Mr. G will buy everyone Slurpees.”), and when you combine two sentences using “but” or “and” (For example: Sentence 1 “Mr. G is the coolest teacher ever.” Sentence 2 “His students are even cooler.”
    New Sentence: Mr. G is the coolest teacher ever, but his students are even cooler. )

    Grammar
    Let’s focus on subject verb agreement here. If you have any questions, Mr. A, Ms. Fung and I are all ready to help.

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