lunes, 28 de agosto de 2017

Nutriendo el conocimiento

Se nos fue asignada la tarea de realizar una presentación sobre los carbohidratos, su digestión, sus funciones, su composición, etc. Este fue nuestro producto final.


jueves, 24 de agosto de 2017

Dos para uno, y uno para dos

Para mí el título es “ está en nuestras manos “ ya que es decisión de uno, cuidarse, en este caso ante un acto sexual. Por eso el título dice que está en nuestras manos; ya que usar un preservativo es muy, muy importante y depende solamente de nosotros y en cualquier caso de nuestra pareja. 


martes, 22 de agosto de 2017

Dos aparatos Distintos

Se nos fue asignada la tarea de buscar las partes y funciones de ambos sistemas reproductores ( masculino y femenino )








martes, 8 de agosto de 2017

This are the answers to the questions se where given in the history clases.

1)      Which countries are part of eastern Europe?
The countries that are part of Eastern Europe are:
·         Warsaw – Poland
·         Berlin – East Germany
·         Prague – Czechoslovakia
·         Budapest - Hungary
·         Bucharest – Romania
·         Bulgaria
·         Belgrade -  Yugoslavia
·         Albania
2)      Stalin used a "carrot and stick" approach to controlling Eastern Europe. What does this mean?
This means that, he use them (E.E people) to obtain more land by persuading them with the idea of having a great economy, AND THIS WORKED!
But the problem was that E.E factories were producing what the USSR needed not what they needed ( E.E people )

3)      How could Stalin gain control of Eastern Europe? Explain in which ways the panorama was favourable for him to take power. ***
What Stalin did to gain control over eastern europe was promised them power and a stable economy by the continuous trade with the soviet union.
In this case the panorama for Him was very positive because after the wars Many countries were devastated and the dream of a stable economy was an everyday dream, so for Stalin earning controle over this devastated countries was relatively easy.

4)      What are the Cominform and the Comecon?
Cominform
Comecon
  • Cominform stands for the Communist Information Bureau.
  • Stalin set up the Cominform in 1947 as an organisation to co-ordinate the various Communist governments in eastern Europe.
  • The office was originally based in Belgrade in Yugoslavia but moved Bucharest in Romania in 1948 after  Yugoslavia was expelled by Stalin because it would not do what the Soviet Union told it to do.
  • Cominform ran meetings and sent out instructions to Communist governments about what the Soviet Union wanted them to do.
  • Comecon stands for the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance
  • It was set up in 1949 to co-ordinate the industries and trade of the eastern European countries.
  • The idea was that members of Comecon traded mostly with one another than trading with the West.
  • Comecon favoured the USSR far more than any of its other members. It provided the USSR with a market to sell its goods. It also guaranteed it a cheap supply of raw materials. For example, Poland was forced to sell its coal to the USSR at one-tenth of the price that it could have got selling it on the open market.
  • It set up a bank for socialist countries in 1964.

5)      Expectation versus reality: explain what ordinary people thought about Communism what actually happened afterwards.


What People Thought
What Really Happened
  • People from eastern Europe thought that Communists brought hope.
  • As the Soviet Union had achieved amazing industrial growth before the WW2, maybe by following the Soviet methods they could do the same.
  • Soviet-style Communism also offered them stable government and security because they were backed by one of the world’s superpowers.
  • Faced by shortages and poverty after the war, many people hoped for great things from Communism.
  • The reality of Soviet control of E.E was very different from what people had hoped for
  • Countries that had a long tradition of free speech and democratic government suddenly lost their right to criticise the government.
  • Newspapers were censored.
  • Non-Communists were put in prison for criticising the government.
  • People were forbidden to travel to countries in western Europe.
  • The factories did not produce what ordinary people wanted.
  • People were short of coal,milk and meat.
  • Clothes and shoes were VERY expensive.
  • They have little choice to protest.