There are sliding doors in two layers, front and back. Slide the front panels right until you reach the 2nd door, and slide the back door left, then work your way back right, sliding the back doors left out of the way.
As of 2013, there is no Me and the Key 5. There are 3 sets of the puzzle games: - Me and the Key (on level 12, rotate the penguins until one appears with the key) - Me and the Key 2 (on level 12, leave the letters that spell key) - Me and the Key 3 (when the penguins are in a circle, the one with the key pops up)
I found this on the QCA site below: " The majority of pupils are expected to work at: * levels 1-3 in key stage 1 and attain level 2 at the end of the key stage * levels 2-5 in key stage 2 and attain level 4 at the end of the key stage * levels 3-7 in key stage 3 and attain level 5/6 at the end of the key stage." It appears to be deliberately confusing when you try to find out more. Firstly there are Key Stages. These Key Stages apply to different age groups. I.e. Key Stage 1 = Ages 5 - 7 Key Stage 2 = Ages 7-11 Key Stage 3 = Ages 11-14 Key Stage 4 = Ages 14-16 Then there are the levels. The levels are level 1-3 = Key Stage 1 (i.e. Ages 5-7) level 2-5 = Key Stage 2 (i.e. Ages 7-11) level 3-7 = Key Stage 3 (i.e. Ages 11-14) All of the above taken from http://curriculum.qca.org.uk/ and page 7 of the National Curriculum document on English from the same site. Below just my opinion However, I have also read that a student achieving level 7 is equivalent to a GCSE pass at grade C. I have left out the average expected attainment level for each Key Stage. These are level 2 at age 7, level 4 at age 11 and level 5/6 at age 14. These were the only indicators provided. Looking at the above it appears that level 3 is appropriate to both Key Stage 1 and Key Stage 3. And given that level 7 is equivalent to a GCSE pass then it is not clear what would be in Key Stage 4. There are sub levels a - c in each level 2a, 2b etc. This is to help assess progress for example if a child moves from a 2c to a 2a in a year they are obviously improving despite being the same level. Basically children are expected to move half a level a year in Key stages 1 and 2 (Primary School), these are the expected levels; Year 1 - 1c Year 2 - 1a Year 3 - 2b Year 4 - 3c Year 5 - 3a Year 6 - 4b
The two key elements of Level 5 leadership, as identified by Jim Collins, are personal humility and professional will. Level 5 leaders have a strong combination of humility and determination, putting the organization's goals above their own ego while also demonstrating unwavering commitment to success.
Type in the the colour green on the key board. If you can't do this by your self you are going to struggle.
Constraints put conditions at table level. There are 5 database constraints: 1. unique 2. not null 3. primary key 4. foreign key 5. check
press the shift key five (5) times.
You need to head to Level 5, you will see a Pokeball, use the warp panel Back and Forth, the Pokeball will have the Key Card.
The tree grows on level 4, and the key is in the "fruit" that you pick. On level 14, you can shake a key out of it.
Um, Can you maybe write the questions down?
There are no lettered levels on Me and the Key 2.
(only works in your saved worlds) click the modify level button in your level then click change key and type what you want the key to be.
Click the penguins so that their words change to "me and the key three." (The third one already has the right word.)