Home Learning Warriors!

Happy Friday everyone! I hope you’ve all had a good week. I am massively impressed by how many children are staying so dedicated to their home learning. Some aren’t always finding it easy, but you are all showing resilience and perseverance – well done!

Thank you to everyone who sends their work in. I love seeing what you are getting up to at home and it looks like you are enjoying the home learning.

Charlie has sent his report in about Covid 19. I like the fact that he has thought about the layout and presentation of his report. It shows great awareness of audience and purpose.

William has sent in his amazing illustration of an alien. He has really thought about his vocabulary choices. I particularly like the ‘puddle of drool.’

James has been working hard on producing some information about sea defenses, following Mr Freeman’s lessons this week.

Jessica has put a massive amount of effort into her writing this week and has produced an amazing report about her new planet. I like the vocabulary choices and the presentation, as well as the illustrations. Well done.

Imogen sent in her writing skills work. She had a go at producing a sentence tree and completed 15 lines – amazing! That’s definitely beaten my score.

Again, thank you to everyone for sending your work in. Make sure you remember to go on TT Rockstars as much as possible and find a quiet time in your day to do a bit of reading too. If you haven’t been on any Zoom meetings with your teachers yet, please get yourselves on there. We love to see your smiling faces. I have some children that attend daily and it cheers me up massively to have a chat with them.

I hope you all have a lovely weekend. Get out for some fresh air, do some baking and make sure you have a giggle at some point.

Take care.

Happy Friday!

Hello everyone!

I hope you’re all ok today and feeling happy. You’ve made it through another week of home learning and lockdown, so congratulations. Some of you might be finding it hard to get motivated to complete your home learning, but remember that it’s still important to do your work and that we really care about what you’re producing at home. We think you’re amazing to adjust to this strange new way of living.

The weather has been rubbish this week – so much rain! I hope you managed to get outside for some fresh air at some point each day as this is so important for you mental health.

Don’t forget that each class has a Zoom at 2pm daily. Thank you to those people who attend regularly. We love to see you and hear about what you’ve been up to. It cheers us up too! If you haven’t been on a Zoom yet, give it a go!

Remember you can contact us at any point via email. We love to hear about what work you’ve produced, what you’ve been doing, what you’ve been baking or eating and anything else you want to tell us about. If you’re finding any learning tricky, just let us know and we will support you.

We can’t wait to get you all back in the classroom and make sure you keep in touch.

Have a great weekend everyone.

Mrs H.x

Home Learning 5/6S

Hello 5/6 S!
How are you all? I hope you are all well and that you’ve managed ok with your home learning. I’m missing you all lots and I can’t wait to have you all back in the classroom with me.

A few of you have emailed your work in for me this week. However, I would like to hear from more of you. Well done to Alfie, James and Imogen for sending your work through to me – you’re stars!

Alfie sent me some sentences that he worked on in the Reading Fluency sessions. He really thought about his use of vocabulary. Here are his sentences:

The rocket launched before the snow drift could catch it. Inside, people were wandering around as though they had been imprisoned. The glittering rocket, crusted in ice, was now in space.
The words Alfie picked out himself were:
trusted
courage
rippling
rumbled
fierce
The fierce sea water rumbled. As if by magic, everything quietened down and it started rippling instead. The ship’s captain thanked his trusted crew for their courage during the storm.
Imogen has sent me the writing she has been working on. She has thought carefully about the audience and purpose of her writing and her vocabulary – well done!

 

James sent me a photo of the learning he had been doing in Reading. He has obviously enjoyed the treasure hunt this week and created a very strange alien from pennies, a torch, a watch and a teddy, among other things.

Make sure you all keep working hard and stay in touch. Remember we have our daily Zoom at 2pm – it’s lovely to see all your faces on it, so please join when you can.
Have a lovely weekend and take care.
Mrs H.

A quick message from Mrs Hogarth

Miss Fallon and I would like to say a huge thank you for all the gifts  we received today. It’s really generous of you and greatly appreciated. It appears that some parents know me quite well!

Thank you to all the parents of 5/6 S for your positive comments , emails of support and kind messages that we receive. It really does help to keep us going.

The class have had a great term and I can’t wait to see them all again in the new year.

I hope you all have a lovely Christmas and a very happy and healthy new year.

Mrs Hogarth.x

5/6 S Certificate Celebration

This weeks certificate winners are…

For great learning…

Ellis- for great learning in all subjects. You put 100% into everything you do and you’re a great member of our class. Well done!

For sport and physical activity…

Connor- for demonstrating perseverance during WUSU. You’ve finally grasped that tricky dance! Well done.

For living and learning…

William W – for being a great member of my class. You make me giggle every day and our class wouldn’t be the same without you. Thank you!

Well done everyone!

5/6 S Christmas Party

We’ve had a great afternoon at our Christmas party. There were lots of games, bad singing and crazy dancing! We even managed to link one game to our Topic learning on Ancient Egypt – who can mummify a friend the fastest?

Thank you to all the parents for sending party food in. It was consumed very quickly and they are heading home full of beans! Fingers crossed they’ll all sleep tonight!

 

Week beginning 14 December 2020

Hi everyone

We hope you’re all well and managing to stay happy, healthy and safe. We are really missing you at school and we hope to see you soon. You’re still a hugely important part of our school community.

Here’s a video message from Mrs Hogarth.

Here’s your home learning for this week…

Maths 

This is a review week with a look back at some of the areas we covered this term. These five lessons will roughly match the teaching and learning happening in class.

Lesson one: video, activities, answers

Lesson two: video, activities, answers

Lesson three: video, activities, answers

Lesson four: video, activities, answers

Lesson five: video, activities, answers

You don’t have to print the worksheets. Your child can write or draw their answers on paper. Your child’s learning will be most effective if you sit with them to pause the clip and check / praise / support your child as the clip moves on.

Don’t forget to practise times tables on Times Table Rock Stars, too. Even rock legends need to keep their fingers and brains sharp. Email your class teacher if you need your child’s login and password details.

(Suggested time: 30 minutes of Maths and 15 minutes of Rock Stars daily)

Reading fluency

This is the fluency text on another extract from A Christmas Carol. In school, we generally follow this sequence:

  • Day 1: Read the text aloud with your child listening. Read it clearly and slowly, pointing to each word as you read. Have a chat about any unfamiliar words.
  • Day 2: Read aloud each sentence (a full short sentence or part of a longer sentence), and have your child read it back to you. Do this ‘echo reading’ for the whole text.
  • Day 3: Read the text and talk about the effect of the punctuation on how you read it – pauses for full stops and expression for exclamations (!) or questions (?). Your child reads the text aloud.
  • Day 4: Read together with expression (just like you practised on Day 3).
  • Day 5: Your child reads independently and fluently.

(Suggested time: 15 minutes daily)

Reading comprehension

  • Day 1: Read the fluency text from the previous week. Watch the video clip too. Can you think of some questions you could ask Scrooge? What answers would he give?
  • Day 2: Read this extract again. List the main events of the extract. How is Scrooge feeling at each point in the story? What emotions would he be feeling?
  • Day 3:  Re-read A Christmas Carol. Can you draw a summary of the extract? Maybe as a cartoon strip?
  • Day 4: Re-read A Christmas Carol. Summarise the story in 20 words, 10 words, 5 words and finally words.
  • Day 5: Book Club. Once a week, we have a relaxing lesson where we sit and read quietly, often with an adult. At home, we’d like you to read your favourite book or text, too. If possible, discuss the book with an adult, talking about some or all of the sections of this grid.

(Suggested time: 30 minutes daily)

Writing

Follow these lessons on narrative writing from Oak National Academy. There’s a whole series of lessons, but start at Lesson 1 and work through, doing one (or maybe even two) each day. (If you’re self-isolating in your second week, stick with the series of lessons you’ve already started and aim to complete the full series.)

(Suggested time: 30-40 minutes for each)

Spelling

This week’s spellings are on our spelling page. Complete one task each day:

  • Day 1: Generate more words linked to the spelling pattern or ‘rule’. (You could look out for the words in the book you’re reading at home, or any other text, like a website linked to our learning.)
  • Day 2: Practise the spellings using two of the ideas in our Super Spelling Strategies Guide. (Set yourself and others at home a challenge of using some of the words when you’re speaking, too!)
  • Day 3: Write separate sentences, each containing one of the spellings. (Don’t forget to show off really neat handwriting and make sure you sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a full stop, exclamation mark (!) or question mark (?).
  • Day 4: Repeat Task 2 or 3.
  • Day 5: Get an adult at home to test you on your spellings. Practise any you spell incorrectly – you could write them out carefully until you’re sure.

(Suggested time: 15-20 minutes daily)

Topic

Our topic this half-term is about history – all about prehistoric Britain compared to Ancient Egypt, an advanced ancient civilisation.

Follow these lessons on pre-historic Britain from Oak National Academy. There are ten lessons in total, but start at the first lesson and work through, doing two or three in the week.

(Suggested time: 30-40 minutes)

Science 

Our focus this half-term is forces.

These six lessons from Oak National Academy link closely to what we’ve been doing in class. Start at Lesson 1 and work through, doing two or three in the week.

If Science really motivates your child, you could also use look at these lessons all about practical Science.

(Suggested time: 30-45 minutes)

PE

Don’t forget to do some daily exercise!

Do two or three of these Five Minute Moves from Joe Wicks each day – spread them across the day as if they were playtimes, maybe! 

Try working through this series of 25 lessons from the Association for Physical Education – do two or three in the week.

(Suggested time: 5 minutes daily, plus 30 minutes for the longer PE lessons)

Extra stuff…

As an extra (or as an alternative, if this helps to motivate your child)…

Geography isn’t a topic-driver this half-term, but you could brush up on your locational knowledge – something that was missed when schools closed earlier this year. You could explore some online maps and try to memorise some new countries, capitals, rivers and mountain ranges. These three lessons about Europe are worth checking out.

What about some Living and Learning? While you’re away from school, you could check out these lessons on money!