15 May 2015
Who do you think you are?
Next week, we embark on five days of learning about identity, diversity and community. Your child is required to think about themselves and what makes them who they are.
Can they talk about:
- important people in their life?
- a special event in their life?
- what qualities they think they have?
For homework this week, could your child draw a picture of themselves and their family.
Welcome back!
I hope everybody’s had a great Easter holiday and are ready to return to school fresh-faced! This half term darkness will descend on Year 2 as we take a look at night time. We’ll delve into the depths of space to look at the planets, moon and stars before plummeting back to Earth to think about the jobs people do at night and animals that have become adapted to night time.
This week (20.04.15)…
Maths
This week, we’re exploring number by looking at rounding to the nearest ten, doubling and halving, place value (hundreds, tens, units) and knowing inverse operations (add-subtract, multiply-divide). Our tables focus will be 2s so lots of counting in 2s at home, walking to school, going up stairs will be very helpful. We’ll then think about how knowing our 2 times tables means we know our 20 and 200 times table, too.
I got 7 Easter eggs but my friend got double that amount. How many eggs did my friend get?
English
English will be very closely linked to our night time topic as we learn how to write information texts. Organising our writing using a title, introduction, subtitles and matching information will be important this week so, when reading at home, choose a non-fiction book and discuss how it is organised and why this is useful.
Topic
Night time will kick off with a trip into space to explore what it is we see in the night sky. We’ll learn about our solar system and its planets as well as what stars are and the Greek legends that tell the story behind the constellations of stars we see at night. At home, stay up late and do some star gazing. See what questions the children have and ask them to write them down (using the correct punctuation) and bring them in for us to discuss.
Fascinating fingerprints
As part of our themed week, Year 1 found our whether they had loops, arches and/or whorls on their fingerprints.
Puzzling puzzles
Reception class and Year 1 began our current themed week with some problem solving mathematical puzzles with The Happy Puzzle Company.
With lots of teamwork, thinking skills and resilience, we enjoyed the challenge of all the puzzles.
23 March 2015
Below (in orange) are some more sentences for your child to write at home. It’s helpful to follow this process…
- Read the sentence to your child.
- Ask them to repeat the sentence several times. They could whisper it, shout it or say it in a silly voice.
- Count the words.
- Say the sentence word by word for your child to write.
- Remind them to use a capital letter, a full stop and finger spaces.
- Ask your child to read the sentence back to check they have written every word.
- Write the sentence together, modelling how to read back.
- I must not tramp on the flowers.
- I kept bumping into things in the dark.
- A crab crept into a crack in the rock.
- Milk is good for children’s teeth.
- A drip from the tap drops in the sink.
- The clown did tricks with a chimpanzee.
- I can hear twigs snapping in the wind.
20 March 2015
The homework this week is creative and is due in on Wednesday 25 March.
I can show what I have learnt about persuasion.
The children have been learning about the art of persuasion in English lessons recently, writing some pretty persuasive emails and letters! For the homework, I’d like them to show me what they have learnt about persuasion. As a class, we thought of some ideas:
- Write another persuasive letter/email persuading me or someone else to do or change their mind about something.
- Create a poster showing off the features of Persuasive writing. The children have learnt this as READER (see attached photo).
- Have a structured argument – using connectives (see second photo) – with a parent, sibling, friend, etc.
06 March 2015
I can respond to a book
As it’s recently been World Book Day, please read and talk with your child about their favourite book.
Perhaps they could draw a picture and write about why they like it.
Polling station is open!
Today, we are voting for who our new school councillor will be. We have 23 potential candidates!
09 February 2015
Here are some sentences for your child to write at home.
- Read the sentence to your child.
- Ask them to repeat the sentence several times. They could whisper it, shout it or say it in a silly voice.
- Count the words.
- Say the sentence word by word for your child to write.
- Remind them to use a capital letter, a full stop and finger spaces.
- Ask your child to read the sentence back to check they have written every word.
- Write the sentence together, modelling how to read back.
- Lots of shops sell chicken as well as fish and chips.
- I will soon visit a farm.
- We can all run to the park.
Forces homeworks!
Here are a couple of sets of fantastic forces homeworks the class have done this half-term:
These were all great but I did have a favourite: Ethan’s very scientific idea of getting his hamster to test the friction of different surfaces by getting him to walk across them. “His legs were splayed” was a comment I particularly liked about Rex’s difficulty walking across laminate flooring!
These homeworks are examples of our Forces in Action homework.