TED TALKS UCLA

The stage is set - TED TALKS at UCLA today 







many thanks to Scott,Alex and all at UCLA for the oppotunity to share my story............

Go Solar



Come visit the Solar Knights at the second annual Go Solar Fest at the Broward Convention Center. We will be showing off our awesome go-kart, as well as sharing more information about our team. There's no charge to come. The dates for this event is June 6-7th. We hope to see you there! 

Justin Bell -race car driver & photographer stops by

its always a good time when Jb stops by , and today was even better than usual as he brought his wife Sarah & her parents along to keep things calm & in order...

now Justin is quite the photographer & he dropped off a couple of great images that will appear in his upcoming book

GENTLEMEN OF SPEED....

Its quite the honor for me to be included in such great company in the upcoming book

ALL pictures are shot on Film by Justin -just like they did in the ol days.....

Justin takes photos as well as he drives ....

cheeRS -mate -many thanks for the support ..

Going Round In Circles

Whenever I start talking about circles with my students, I use this little wager.

I get students to pick one of the three choices and work the room, looking for a brave student I know will deliver my nachos. I talk up the nachos (and the circumference) as much as possible. Anywhere from 90 to 100 percentage of students will say the circumference is shorter than the height of the water bottle. Let's see if I win nachos or I let my students go to lunch early.


Okay, so double or nothing? I don't bring in this glass, but I do use a taller cup with a really small circular base. Where do you stand on the double-or-nothing wage? Did I give you enough information to take the bet? With a glass like this, you should get at least one student to keep you honest and ask which circumference of the glass you'll be measuring.


This little wager (activity) allows me a quick introduction and fun application of circumference. Somewhere I'll discuss vocabulary and formulas with students while giving them a graphic organizer they can fill out.

I'll usually do an activity where students measure the circumference and diameter of objects in order to discover the relationship of Pi. Stuff very similar to Fawn's Friday Bubbles. Note to self, use Excel (or a spreadsheet) to keep track of those measurements. I've also explored Rolling Tires in the past. This year, I brought the wheel to the class for a small activity. A physical wheel. The wheel from my son's wheelbarrow.

The small activity was for students to guess how many rotations this wheel (8-inch diameter) would make from one wall of my class to the other wall. Students were able to see how circumference can take on the meaning of a tire rotation, hence the graphic I made above. It was sweet to see students roll the wheel across my 21-foot long room and actually get 10 rotations like the math predicted. If you have a wheel like this, bring it in and do this activity.

We also did these awesome lessons. And. I. Mean. AWESOME!
Pizza Pi by Mathalicious and
Penny Circles from Team Desmos and Dan Meyer.

There's so much to do with circles and so little time. 

Round and round,
945

DESERT OUTLAW





 many thanks to Tamir Moscovici and his crew




Fun With A Sticky

Earlier this year, I wrote about Fun With A Dot and A Line, a Math 6 lesson I loved because it had:
  • A simple question/task.
  • A competition.
  • Student creativity.
  • Students assessing the work of each other (accountability).
  • Students defining the necessary vocabulary/rules.
  • Students determining the necessary tools to help solve the task. 
As my 7th graders approached surface area, I prepared a few activities in preparation for File Cabinet. Here is one of those activities. I give you Fun With A Sticky:

Launch:
Hand each student a 3” x 3” sticky as they enter. Post the following on the board:
Explore (creativity):
A few students might do something like this.

Give the class a hint or two (if they need it):
  1. This can be done with four lines.
  2. Think Tic-Tac-Toe
Here's what we're going for:

If a student is still clueless, encourage them to look around and see what their classmates are doing. As the teacher, keep your eyes peeled for students who are approaching this with some creativity. Sarah and Pricila used the straightedge of their binders to draw lines. Gerardo tried folding the sticky in thirds like this.  

Student accountability:
When done, have each student write their name on the back of the sticky. Have each group of 3-4 students decide who has the best 9 squares and bring that one sticky up to the teacher. In no particular order, place them under the document camera for all students to see. Without sharing, ask each student to quietly (mentally) pick the top 2 stickies they feel have the best 9 squares. 

Vocabulary/Rules:
Ask students for input. 
Me: "Without telling me which stickies you’ve picked, how are you determining which sticky has the best 9 squares?" 
Jesus: They drew straight lines.
Carla: They are perfect squares.
Have the class define a perfect square.
Carla: Each side is the same length
I now had students take their top 2 and pick their favorite one. Somehow get your students to vote; little sheets of scratch paper, SmartBoard Responders, iPads, etc. I labeled each sticky alphabetically to avoid “this” sticky and “that” sticky. I had each student stand up. I then said, "Sit down when I say the letter of your sticky with the best 9 squares."

Necessary Tools:
They narrowed it down to about 3 stickies and gave great rules for finding the best 9 squares.
Me: What tools can I use to make it even more precise?
Student: A ruler. 
Me: Ok. What do I measure and what am I looking for on these stickies?
Here’s where you get students to discuss (or discover) how each square should have a width of 1 inch and a length of 1 inch. In other words, you’re defining a square inch with your students. Okay, there will be some "squares" that are just garbage and can be eliminated by eyeballing them. However, here's where you get to be dramatic with your students. Get them worked up. Ask them which ones you should measure. Mess with them a little and joke with them how they're unable to determine the correct "squares". Have fun with it. Either way, make sure students see the squares being measured. If I had more time, I could have redistributed the stickies and passed out rulers for the students to measure each other's "squares". You can see from this picture that the winning sticky note had a total of 3 "perfect squares."

Congratulations to my winners! They received a brand-new whiteboard marker.

Here’s the icing on the cake (and lesson design telling me something wonderful just happened):
  • Itzco wanted a chance to do it again. He'd been sleepy in class all week.
  • Genesis wanted a ruler if we did a second round. Let's just say her attitude toward math all week was subpar and she has difficulty being a self-starter.
  • Students wanted a chance to improve and try again. Especially students who initially drew ridiculous "squares".

There it is, Fun With A Sticky. Here's that list one more time:
  • A simple question/task.
  • A competition.
  • Student creativity.
  • Students assessing the work of each other (accountability).
  • Students defining the necessary vocabulary/rules.
  • Students determining the necessary tools to help solve the task. 
Sticky,
846

SHARWERKS VISITS -AGAIN !

it was great to have Alex & James from SHARKWERKS stop on by for a visit with their blue porsche....

the fun loving duo were in town for  appearances  on Matt Farah -Smoking tire show and  Joe Rogan and his Podcast


THE GT3RS 4.1 is one of the best cars i have ever driven

for more info click here.

http://www.sharkwerks.com/main.php 

 

With a little help from my friends



Matty receives help communicating with the motor controller from an Audi racing engineer by the name of Marcus Haselgrove. We are very grateful that we have awesome mentors to help when we need. 

car 277

car 277 heading east on sixth street bridge.

 


Motor Issues



We are having motor issues. But worse than that, there is no information anywhere to help us fix it. We know that the motor timing is off. We are either having energy fire too early or too late. Hopefully from the help of some mentors and other solar car teams we will be able to fix this isssue. 

78 SCHR ON STANCEWORKS

MY 78SCHR AS PHOTOGRAPHED BY ANDREW RITTER FOR STANCEWORKS ...


SHOT ON LOCATION IN THE CITY OF VERNON .CA 




READ THE ARTICLE HERE..

http://www.stanceworks.com/2014/05/magnus-walker-78schr/


MANY THANSK TO ANDREW RITTER FOR THE GREAT PHOTOS ,WELL WRITTEN ARTICLE AND SUPPORT


cheeRS

newer PORSCHE wanted


ANYONE OUT THERE GOT A PORSCHE TO SELL ?


i am on the search for something a little newer 


930 -951 -964 -996 GT2 & GT3 OWNERS NEED APPLY.
LET ME KNOW WHAT YOU HAVE VIA E-MAIL TO 

magnusporsche@gmail.com

 

cheeRS

 

magnus

Mr RWB -Nakai -San visits the garage

it was an honor to have RWB founder Nakai -San visit the garage this week..


Nakai -San is a cool dude who builds cool cars..

showing him some details on my next build -67S -R inspired.

Nakai & his buddy Masami checking out some details on my 76-930 

whats in there ?

checking out car # 277 

another memorable day

78 SCHR SPEEDHUNTERS

78 SCHR AS PHOTOGRAPHED BY LARRY CHEN FOR SPEEDHUNTERS..............


SUNSET IN ACH.............



DRIVEN IN ACH..............

INTO THE RED......................





CHECK OUT THE FULL STORY HERE............

http://www.speedhunters.com/2014/05/magnus-walker-urban-outlaw-everyday-budget/


MANY THANKS TO LARRY ,ROD ,MIKE AND ALL AT SPEEDHUNTERS FOR THEIR SUPPORT


CheeRS