 We're going to start off with a really simple activity, the Coke bottle, and finding out how much information we can get about Coca-Cola from this Coke bottle. I noticed that the shape is made to feel good as you're holding it. I noticed that it's made out of glass, so it could be recycled. The Coke bottle we were thinking about incorporating into our daily morning meeting routine, where that's kind of the activity. And they pass an object and really have to think about what they're noticing, why they're noticing that, and how it's used in the function and design of it. There's another image on here. There's an image of a Coke bottle printed on the Coke bottle. Maybe that's something to do with standing or something. Going on this shape of it, seeing that it comes out of the fifties-ish time, it's kind of got an hourglass shape of a slender woman's body. That's great. It reminds me of Barbie or something like that. So the hourglass figure type of idea? Whether that was implicit or not. So why do you think that is? Let's just go with that. Can I tell them why? Because that was fun. This is a joint thing. Why do you think they might have made use of that shape, that hourglass shape? It's advertising, because if I drink it, I'm going to be, I'm not looking like a barbie. It has a date on it, 11th, February 12th, so I'm assuming it's either expiration date. What is the expiration date? What do we think about that? That it expires next year, like eight months from now. Lots of preservatives. That it has an expiration date that would go up. Better than if it doesn't. We talked a lot about visual literacy today, and trying to incorporate that in a meaningful way in the classroom is my hope. I've been writing down how she's been teaching us, because that's something that she's modeling for us. I don't know if she knows that, but she is. Okay, it was made in Mexico. What does that tell us? I think sometimes we can just get so caught up in the day-to-day things that we don't take the time to look at the outside of the building or just see what does this tell us, what does this mean. Taking the time to just slow down and observe and analyze, that's something that I've learned. I notice the label that it's red, and the way that Coca-Cola's written, it kind of looks like a ribbon almost. It's a script, and it's like a repeating sound. It's like a catchy sound, Coca-Cola. It's like the same. Okay, so I wanted to point out that it took us 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 people to get to the logo that's written on it, because that's something that we expect to see, so we don't really think about it very often. I have some discs that I'll give you at the end of the day in electronic form, so you can use it again if you want to, and it's got the reason behind some of the design parts. They did go for the curvy bottle on purpose for both easy gripping and attractiveness, because it looked like a woman, and the red and white, because it was bold colors. So there's a reason behind even the smallest details of a Coke bottle, and the same thing goes with buildings. Even the smallest detail in a building has importance and has meaning.