Week 4 #evomc16
Last week’s unexpected six-day winter vacation completely derailed my schedule and plans for work and study. Who wants to work when there’s a blizzard and homemade chili in the kitchen? Not me. So, I was not as efficient as I could have been, but I did drink a cup of tea for three hours Monday morning, caught up on sleep and thought about homework and reports. Most of which I got done in an exhausting 48-hour marathon on Thursday and Friday.
Saturday was an interesting day; I woke up to read that the White House had announced a $4 billion computer science initiative for K-12 students. Computer literacy is now a basic skill. We’ll see how it plays out.
Later in the morning, I went to Microsoft’s #HacktheClassroom , which I feared would be a two-hour advertisement, but it was not. There was, as usual, a lot of data, but I took away two new things that I want to use in a future classroom: Code.org and OneNote. Code.org has online computer science fundamentals and an “hour of code” with Minecraft https://code.org/mc. I have always ignored OneNote on my computer, but it apparently can be extremely valuable in a classroom (with computers), and I would like to explore how to use it.
This morning, I took a tour of Thorsten Groß and his students’ Minecraft Ricarda-Huch-Schule. Impressive but very intimidating. However, I did learn how to jump, which I did not even know was possible because I always fly. I want to add a basketball court to my ranch before we go into survival mode.
Later, I spent hours in survival mode alone. My first try was ended by a zombie on the first night. Oh well. In my second try, I lasted for five days and five and a half nights and then was killed by a zombie. I could not find coal for fire, only diorite, and the nights were spent huddled in a hollow with a sword. And I didn’t eat at all because there were only rabbits which refused to be food. They just got mad and jumped away.
On the last night, with only half a heart, I knew it was over. A zombie was jumping up and down on the ledge in front of me, and then a second one came at me from the right. All I had was a stone sword, and it didn’t work to my advantage this time. I learned a lot about gathering and crafting, and realized I am at a real disadvantage without a mouse. I am really clumsy right clicking with my touch-pad mouse while crafting, and I need to practice before going into multiplayer survivor.
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This is about the best I've been able to do so far.
This is about the best I've been able to do so far. I can't get comments to upload consistently to blogger. It might be a bandwidth ...
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That sounds similar to my own beginning experiences in survival. A mouse is essential! That's awesome that you're getting in there, allowing yourself to fail, and learning from it!
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