Assessment Task 2 PE PDF

Title Assessment Task 2 PE
Course Accountancy
Institution Laguna University
Pages 3
File Size 64.8 KB
File Type PDF
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PE AT 2...


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Assessment Task 2 A. Write your answers in a separate piece of paper for submission. Research for the following activities and explain each function. 1. Juan Camote dance The Juan Camote Dance is a Funny/Comedic primitive dance meant to imitate the movements of a man attempting to steal yam. 2. Canao Cañao or Kanyaw is a festival or a ceremony of the indigenous mountain people of Northern Luzon. It is a socio-religious ritual where chickens, pigs and/or carabaos are butchered as a sacrifice and feasted on. This is usually a thanksgiving to their god Kabunyan. These indigenous mountain people believe in the existence of supernatural beings that they call Anito which have power over man. With the use of prayers and material offerings in the ritual, the people believes to win the favors of these spirits.The festival was an ancient tradition celebrated long before Spain reached the Philippines. Today, Igorots and Filipino of Igorot ancestry a still practice this traditional feast wherever they are.Grand Cañao is celebrated by the Igorot people of the Cordilleras yearly. 3. Sta. Cruz de Mayo or Santacruzan The Santacruzan (from the Spanish santa cruz, "holy cross") is the ritual pageant held on the last day of the Flores de Mayo. It honors the finding of the True Cross by Helena of Constantinople (known as Reyna Elena) and Constantine the Great. Its connection with May stems from the May 3 date of Roodmas, which Pope John XXIII deleted in 1960 due to the trend at the time to abolish holy days. The Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross on September 14, which commemorates the recovery of the relic by Emperor Heraclius from the Persians instead of the finding by Saint Helen was all that was retained in the calendar of the New Order. 4. Pabitin Pabitin is a Filipino physical game in which participants try to pick up items (often small toys, coins, or candy) from bamboo sticks ("balag") placed high above their heads. This game is a festive event, and is often played by young children at birthday parties. The bamboo sticks are hung from the tall ceiling, and are raised or lowered quickly, with participants jumping to grab the items when the balag is lowered to a height that they could reach. Some versions are played with teams, where the “captain” of the team will attempt to jump and grab the items while other team members attempt to block the opposing captain from reaching those items. In some situations, a small child will be placed on the shoulders of a taller participant, and that child is in charge of grabbing the items. The game typically ends when all of the items are taken, though some versions have bonus prizes for the people or teams who snatch the most items. 5. Juego de Annillo Juego de Anillo (Game of Rings) is a traditional game of Spanish influence. Its original version required its players to ride a horse while holding a dagger which will then be used to catch a ring hanging at a tree or similar structure. Later, Filipino children adopted it and changed the horse into broomsticks or bicycles. 6. Juego de Prenda Juego de prenda (lit. game of looking for the missing bird): There is no limit to the number of players that can play. Players sit in a circle with the leader in the middle. Each player adopts a name of a tree or flower that is given by the leader. The leader recounts the story of a lost bird that was owned by a king. He or she says. The bird of the king was lost yesterday. Did you find it, Ylang-Ylang? The player who adopted the name of the Ylang-

Ylang tree at once answers that he or she has not found it, so the leader continues to ask the other trees whether the bird has hidden in them. If a player cannot answer after the third count, he or she is made to deposit a thing he or she owns to the leader until the leader has been able to gather a lot of things from the members. The Boy is choosing a tree. The Girl is choosing a flower. The one participant will be a king. 7. Duplo Duplo is a "tulang pandulaan" used during ancient times, it was said to have been used to replace the ocean. It is a competition to see who is better at defending/reasoning a poem. It is used to commemorate the dead. 8. Panguingui Panguingue (pronounced pan-geen-ee), Tagalog Pangginggí, also known as Pan, is a 19thcentury gambling card game probably of Philippine origin similar to rummy, first described in America in 1905. It used to be particularly popular in Las Vegas and other casinos in the American southwest. Its popularity has been waning, and it is now only found in a handful of casinos in California, in house games and at online poker sites. 9. Moro-moro The collective term Moro people or Bangsamoro people refers to the 13 Islamized ethnolinguistic groups of Mindanao, Sulu, and Palawan, native to the region known as the Bangsamoro (lit. Moro nation or Moro country). As Muslim-majority ethnic groups, they form the largest non-Christian majority population in the Philippines, and comprise about 5% of the country's total population, or 5 million people. 10. Cockfighting Cockfighting—a blood sport in which roosters are placed in a ring and forced to fight to the death for the “amusement” of onlookers—is illegal throughout the United States. ‘Tested With Steel’ Roosters are born, raised, and trained to fight on “game farms.” Breeders (also called “cockers”) kill the birds they deem inferior, keeping only the birds who are “game,” meaning willing to fight. Many of these birds spend most of their lives tethered by one leg near inadequate shelter, such as a plastic barrel or small cage. Breeders “condition” the birds to fight through physical work, including attaching weights or blades to their legs for “practice fights” with other roosters, a process that cockfighters call being “tested with steel.” Breeders often pluck the birds’ feathers and hack off the roosters’ wattles and/or combs (the flesh at the top of their heads and under their beaks) to prevent other roosters from tearing them off in the ring. Since roosters do not have sweat glands, losing these body parts deprives them of the ability to cool themselves. Some “cockers” cut off the birds’ spurs, which are the natural bony protrusions on the legs, so that more deadly, artificial weapons can be strapped to their legs. Law enforcement officials have found performance-enhancing drugs during raids.

B. Explain the following briefly: Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Which era in the development of Physical education, affected the lives of the Filipino. Give some activities. 1212 AD, Physical education in the Philippines dates back to primitive society when physical activity was very important for survival, making it necessary for the adult to teach physical skills to the young. With the fast-changing times, it is quite interesting to note the strides made by physical education and how it has affected the lives of the

people. The aborigines of the Philippines, the Negritos and Aetas, had a way of life the same or similar to any other people living in a primitive society. They were nomadic or wandering tribes who lived mainly by hunting with an expert use of bow and arrow. The only motivations for physical activities were survival in connection with their quest for food and for protection against a hostile environment. They had to run, leap, jump and climb and these activities kept them physically fit (Andin, 2004). A Negrito chieftain was selected by physical prowess. The Negrito living in the mountains of Batan, Zambales, and Tarlac are found to be fond of music and dancing. They possess crude musical instruments made of bamboo and mountain cane with abaca fibers and played like a violin.

2. In your opinion, do you think ROTC and CAT are very relevant in our educational system? Why? Yes, due to the fact that it not only helps students learn more and better help the communities that they live in, but also teaches discipline and good character. It can also be beneficial to well behaved students as it can have a slight effect or pull to a student’s grade. And it can also improve the Philippines’ Youth and the following generations that are to follow....


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