Welcome!
Here you can see all the lecture presentations and print lecture notes. You can also use the links provided to go to other usefull websites. If you have any suggestions for the site, please let me know! :)
How to print a presentation:
Ok, so we tried printing these documents and it does not seem to work as it's supposed to... so, email the powerpoint presentations to yourself and I will try to print it for you as well. I have taken off the documents, so copy the text from the webpage and paste it into a word document and print it from there.
Use the map below to locate countries, cities ect.
What's NEW?
NCV LEVEL 4: Assignments for the year have been published on each subject page.
All subjects' lecture notes have been uploaded for last week.
NCV Bloom's is uploaded, please download the presentation and familiarise yourself with it.
Did you know?
Dr. James Barry was one of the most interesting figures in South African medical history. He performed the first Caesarean section at the Cape, and as payment just requested that the baby be named after him. On his death in 1865 it was discovered that 'he' was, in fact a WOMAN!
You can read more on: http://www.winemag.co.za/article/the-eerie-cloetes-and-a-constantia-transvestite-2009-07-10
After a year's testing, South Africa got the television on 5 January 1976. When the test-programs were screened in the middle of the day, people sat in screening rooms and in front of shop windows to look. It was not possible for every household to have a television and only years later the television made it's way into people's living rooms.
Braai(vleis) was only recognised as a social event when a newspaper artice wrote about a braai where money was raised for warfunds. A Dictionary of South African English at Oxford University Press.
Antarctica is one of the most uninhabitable places on the planet - it can easily get colder than minus 50 degrees celsius. Paul Prinsloo was part of the expidition Antarctic Program in Antarctica. What he missed the most from home was Pro-Nutro. Courtesy of the Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Directorate: Antarcticca and Islands.
Birds have 3 kinds of feathers. Down feathers, Body feathers and Flight feathers. Body feathers cover mostg of a bird's body. Down feathers are usually hidden under the body feathers. Birds grow a new set of feathers every year. Small, soft, downy feathers keep birds warm and chicks often have lots of down feathers. Flight feathers are in the wings and tail and help birds to fly.
South African rabbi, Warren Goldstien said: "Our lives are full of significance here. It may not always be 'pleasantville', but it's always 'meaningful'. South Africa: Reasons to Believe" by Guy Lundy and Wayne Visser.