Reception Home Learning – 04.05.20

Good morning everyone,

I hope you had a wonderful weekend.  I thought a nice start to our learning week would be to share a special message to the children and families of St. Adrian’s.

Many thanks to those children who suggested a story.  Over the next couple of weeks I will try to include some activities related to your favourite stories.  I have picked two for this week – Little Red Riding Hood and Smartie the Penguin.  Here is my proposed timetable for this week.

Communication and Language/Literacy

Family Tree

This is an idea which generated a good discussion about different family members and how they connect to each other.  It’s a lovely way to teach your child about how everyone in the family is special.  The activity also developed into a writing activity whilst making the tree.

Easter Garden

Here is a story box based on the Easter story.  Children can use story boxes to retell a story or make up their own stories.

Outside stories

I have had several examples of children retelling stories whilst out on their daily exercise.  This picture involved a retelling of Jack climbing the beanstalk.

Letters and Sounds

Scavenger Hunt

This activity involved hiding sound flash cards around a room.  If you do not have any flashcards, just write the sounds on pieces of paper.  Focus particularly on the sounds in Phase 3 on your sound mat (digraphs 2 letters/1 sound and trigraphs 3 letters/1 sound). 

After the sounds were found, the children looked on a list of sounds (you could use your sound mat or Letters and Sounds book) and checked they had all the sounds on the list.  The children also found objects relating to the sounds.

Dinner list

After my suggestion to write a bean list last week, I thought this was an excellent idea.  Write a list of food for dinner tonight.  The more frequently you can encourage your child to do this, the more progress your child will gain. 

Remind your child to use their ‘whoosh’ writing and knowledge of sounds learnt so far.  For example, if you meal is ‘meat pie’ then I would expect your child to write ‘meet pigh’ because these are the sounds he/she knows.  As mentioned before, confidence in being able to independently write is the most important skill. 

Perhaps your child could be in charge of informing the rest of the family what the meal is for tonight by writing the list and pinning it up in the kitchen somewhere.

Maths

Bean chart (sweet chart)

Here is a super example of creating a chart suggested last week – a sweet chart.  Making charts provide a great opportunity to make comparisons eg. how many more? how many less?

Beanstalk

This idea was inspired as an alternative to growing a real beanstalk.  Over the course of last week, the beanstalk grew its leaves and got taller and taller.  I thought it would make a great family height chart.

3D Shapes

This is a brilliant activity to explore 3D shapes.  Perhaps you could gather some objects from around the house to compare and talk about how many corners and faces.

Knowledge and Understanding of the World

Bubble Snakes

This is a fun science experiment.  I have posted on the Activity section of Tapestry a ‘how to do’ video.

Hunting for fossils

This activity involved digging bones out of plaster and remaking a model of a dinosaur.

Learning about plants

Here is a brilliant drawing (and writing) to detail the main features of a plant.

Thank you for all your ideas.  Have a great day.

Nicola Palmer

Reception Home Learning – 01.05.20

Good morning Reception class,

Here are my ideas for today.

Communication and Language/Literacy

Tell a funny story – pass the story

I thought this game may provide an opportunity for your child to use all the imaginative skills we have been learning recently.  You can either use the Jack and the Beanstalk story for the underlying plot or make up an alternative story.  This is a fun game to play together – it works for just two people or the whole family.

What You Need:

A soft, large ball.  Inflatable beach balls are ideal.   Or you just use a soft toy or cushion etc.

How to Play:

The person with the ball starts by speaking those magical words, “Once upon a time…”.  The first person will then roll the ball to the next person who continues the story.  After the next person has added one sentence or a few sentences, he/she rolls the ball to the next person.  A cliff-hanger for the next person who catches the ball would add to the fun – I expect you will probably have to provide these.  Continue taking turns as the story evolves and until you’re ready to finish the story with an ending.

Letters and Sounds

Fee, fi, fo, fum (fee, figh, foa, fum)

This game plays on alliteration and will also help your child develop their ability to read nonsense words (letter sequences that follow regular phonetic rules and are pronounceable, but have no meaning).  This is an important skill and supports your child’s use of phonics.

What to do:

  • Show your child how ‘fee, figh, foa, fum’ can be written based on the sounds they know eg.  ‘ee’, ‘igh’ ‘oa’.
  • Introduce a different letter at the beginning eg. see, sigh, soa, sum.
  • Play this game verbally first, taking turns to change the first letter at the front of the words.  I normally find using a ‘b’ brings about much hilarity.  You will see what I mean.
  • Challenge your child to choose a letter and write The Giant’s phrase eg. if your child chooses a ‘t’ then ask your child to write ‘tee, tigh, toa, tum’.

Adding a vowel (a, e, i, o, u) as the first letter will not work so avoid these.

This game will also really help your child consolidate their knowledge of ‘ee’, ‘igh’ ‘oa’.

Maths

Jellybean graph

You will need to buy some jellybeans on your next shopping trip for this game.  Before the jellybeans are gobbled up show your child how a graph could be made – see picture below.

Religious Education

Blessings for those we love

What to do:

  • Provide pictures of individual people – perhaps family members or friends.
  • If you don’t have any pictures to hand, provide a people template for drawing/colouring.  Or your child could just draw a picture of a friend or family member.
  • Ask your child to hold the picture or drawing in their hand.
  • Ask your child to quietly think of the person and picture the person in their mind.
  • Ask your child to say ‘God to bless …….’.
  • Perhaps write a message:  God bless….. God look after …..
  • Stick the picture on your wall or fridge.

I’d also like to recommend the Sunday Liturgy for Families created by Ten Ten Resources in response to church and school closures.

https://www.tentenresources.co.uk/sunday-liturgy-for-families

Wishing you all a wonderful weekend.

Nicola Palmer

Extra activities to keep your minds and bodies active at home

Ideas of activities that can be done as part of your day together can be found here. Please do contact me through the googleclassroom stream to let the class know of any activities that have worked well for you and your family.

There is obviously an understanding relating to the activities listed below that these are only suggested activities as resources may well be reduced or unavailable at this time.

Some ideas, all on a handy A4 sheet can be found here: https://mcusercontent.com/35a57192e9ec6a559eaaa6cf9/files/ca721c01-dadb-4434-89ff-be64f1f19aa8/20_Activities_to_try_at_home.pdf

Being creative

This is an task to do when you are feeling in the mood for a peaceful, creative activity.
Design a rainbow piece of artwork that you can put up in your window to make your neighbours smile as they go past doing their daily exercise.
You can let your imagination run wild by using paint, pens, coloured pieces of paper or card (these could be cut off your magazines, paper or boxes before they go into your recycling box if you don’t have any paper), sequins or anything else that you think would make a wonderfully beautiful rainbow to bring happiness to your families and neighbours.
If you upload your photos onto the Year 2 stream of the googleclassroom, I will add them to a class slide presentation, so that we can enjoy each other’s artwork.

Prayerlife

I have asked the children to keep one another in their daily prayers and suggested that at the end of the day, they could name each of the children who sit at their table in their prayers. We reflected on how lovely it would feel to know that every day, we are all being prayed for. Please support your child to remember their friends, including those on their learning table in their prayers each night.

Daily prayers can also be found here https://www.tentenresources.co.uk/primary-subscription/prayers-for-home/

The Scouts have produced a list of 100 free activities, games and craft ideas. All the activities are designed to have a clear positive outcome, such as developing communication skills or learning how to solve problems.
https://www.scouts.org.uk/the-great-indoors

Cook/prepare meals with your child and as you do so, think about the following:

  • Talk about the different parts of the meal and how they fit in with the Eat Well Plate, which can be found here: https://www.nhs.uk/live-well/eat-well/the-eatwell-guide/.  What types of food are you eating? Is it protein, carbohydrate, fruit, vegetable or dairy? Talk about the healthy and not so healthy parts of the meal.
  • Make sandwiches with your child.  Let them think about the different fillings that they could include?  How could they vary the content?  Encourage children to make their own fillings such as …
  • egg with mayo (try growing your own cress to go into these sandwiches)
  • tuna with mayo
  • meat and salad
  • grate cheese/chop tomatoes for cheese and tomato etc. etc.
  • Use scales and measuring jugs to measure out ingredients, encouraging pupils to read the measures and think about what each unit of measurement is worth.  Questioning could include How much more do we need?  If we double the recipe, what ingredients will we need?  The bread will prove for two hours and then bake for an hour and a half.  What time will the bread be ready?
  • Read the packaging on your shopping.  What is the country of origin?  How do you think that this product arrived in this country?  Trace a product’s journey on a world map.  Which has travelled the furthest?  etc.

The Change for Life website has activities for all the family, including fun food facts, and recipes.   https://www.nhs.uk/change4life 

Learn to tell the time to the nearest five minutes. 

  • The best way to do this is by frequently referring to an analogue clock throughout the day, asking what the time is and further questions such as:
  • We’re going to have lunch in twenty minutes.  What time will we have lunch?
  • The cake will take two hours to cook.  What time will it be ready?
  • We have been playing with the Lego for forty five minutes.  What time did we start? etc etc. etc.

Sow seeds

  • Great seeds to grow at this time of year are cress (perfect for those egg sandwiches), salad leaf, marigold and pea seeds.   Talk with your child about what the seed will need to germinate and then measure/monitor the growth of the seedlings.  A key element of Year Two learning in Plants is considering what happens if plants don’t have water or light, so consider doing an investigation by putting some seedlings in the dark or don’t water some seedlings and see what happens to them.  Take some photos to show the growth/changes etc.

Keeping active

Joe Wicks is doing a daily PE workout at 9am. This is uploaded to his youtube channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAxW1XT0iEJo0TYlRfn6rYQ

If you join imoves at the following address, you will have access to videos, music and lesson plans for activities to do with your child. https://imoves.com/imovement-signup

Why not have a go at indoor monopoly?  This looks great fun.  If you don’t have access to a printer, your child could make a portable set that consists of cards written out with each of the activities which could be lain out in a board shape (or any shape your wish!) to travel along using a counter and dice.   Just do the action when you land on your written card.  Amend the activity as you wish and enjoy! https://mcusercontent.com/35a57192e9ec6a559eaaa6cf9/files/0852e3f0-ec76-494d-b704-f7d33a23f0b6/Active_

Reading

Hertfordshire Online library services:  You can borrow eBooks and audiobooks FREE from Hertfordshire Public Libraries using the BorrowBox app, your library card number
and your PIN. Anyone can join Hertfordshire Libraries if they live, work or study in the area.
If you’re not already a member, you can join online (google ‘join
Herts library’) then email libraries.information@hertfordshire.gov.uk

Go to: https://www.booksfortopics.com/year-2 to find recommendations of good reads for Year Two children.

Go to https://stories.audible.com/discovery and listen to some smashing stories together. If at all possible try to listen to them first to check that you are happy with the content.

Go to Curriculum Visions to access books suitable for your child to read with you. Go through the library shelves, looking for books that are at a similar colour to your child’s book band. A guide to the book banding can also be found on the site. Please note that this certainly does not replace sitting and reading a real book, but is somewhere that you can find limited, additional reading material, should you have exhausted your own supplies of lovely books to read at home. I will continue to search for sources of other reading material that you may be able to use.

Go to https://www.curriculumvisions.com/indexHomeScreen.html

Username: stadrians/0001
Password: jungle

Well being

Please see the Wellbeing post below to find lots of activities that will support your child’s wellbeing.

Maths

There is a wealth of maths activities on the Year 2 googleclassroom. Once you have completed all of these, please do feel free to complete any of the tasks on the Fluency Teaser blog which can be found in the menu on the right.

Y3 Home Learning

Welcome back and welcome to the beginning of the Summer term! I hope you had a lovely break. I would love to hear all of your stories from Easter so please do share them with me over in our Google Classroom 🙂

As before the Easter holidays, each day at 9:00am a Maths, English and a Topic piece of work will be set. When you choose to complete the work during the day depends on when suits your routines and depends on your families circumstances.

Miss Costello’s English and Maths
Please log into Google Classroom to see today’s lessons.

Ms McCarthy’s English and Maths
Please log in to Google Classroom to see today’s lessons.

Year 3 Topic
Please log into our shared Year 3 Google Classroom to see today’s topic lesson.

TIP: If you are having trouble seeing images on a google document: check you are in a google chrome browser!

I am looking forward to when we can be back in the classroom together but, until then, I am hoping and wishing you and your families are well.

Miss Costello



Further Activities
PE with Joe Wicks every Monday- Friday at 9:00am https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAxW1XT0iEJo0TYlRfn6rYQ

The Scouts have produced a list of 100 free activities, games and craft ideas. All the activities are designed to have a clear positive outcome, such as developing communication skills or learning how to solve problems.
https://www.scouts.org.uk/the-great-indoors

Duolingo are a free online language learning program with more than 30 languages, designed to help ages 10 and up learn through “bite-sized” lessons. https://www.duolingo.com/

Audible is launching Audible Stories, which offers free educational, entertaining and immersive children’s and family audiobooks.

Try touring museums, parks and national icons from the comfort of your couch. Thanks to Google Arts & Culture, you can check out virtual tours of the largest temple complex on Earth, Yellowstone National Park, Champs-Élysées, the gardens of Versailles and more.

Extra Activities

RE in Year Two

Summer term

As part of our RE in the summer term, the children learn how early Christians Spread the Word about Jesus’s resurrection.  

Key words are: risen resurrection Holy Spirit Ascension witnesses blessing Pentecost promise Good News 

As part of this topic, we will think about ‘Why should we spread Good News’?

The children will read from the bible to find out how the women at the tomb were asked to tell the disciples that Jesus has come alive again.  We will hear Jesus’s message that he would give them a special helper called the Holy Spirit and then find out about the effect of the arrival of the Holy Spirit on the disciples at Pentecost as they then went out to spread Jesus’s word on the streets of Jerusalem.

RE home learning

As part of their home learning, the children will think about how they can pass on the Good News that Jesus is alive in each and every one of us.  Read John 14: 18-19 and Acts 2: 1-4 together and talk about how the Holy Spirit helps and guides us.   On your child’s summer home learning grid, you will find a flower with the phrase ‘Jesus is alive in me’, with a space on a petal for a beautiful, named self-portrait.  

Talk to your child about the different things that they do which show that the Holy Spirit is working through them.  These things can include 

  • reading the bible, maybe about the experience of Jesus and the disciples after the resurrection
  • telling other people about the life and message of Jesus
  • examples of how your child follows Jesus’ message to love other people through their actions and service
  • talking about your child’s prayer life and what they pray about
  • talking about ways in which your child contributes to the Common Good by giving time or money to charities so that they can do good works

Through a combination of images and writing, ask your child to fill in each petal with a different way in which they show that Jesus is alive in them.  Please ensure that all handwriting is neat and joined correctly as the flowers will all contribute to a classroom display.

We are looking forward to seeing the finished flowers!

Autumn term

In the autumn term, we learn about the rite of baptism through the theme of Signs and Symbols.

We will be considering the big question Are signs and symbols important?  Why?  Please talk about this question with your child, looking for the signs and symbols that the children encounter on the way to and from school. 

The children will learn to describe and sequence the baptism service and we will explore the different parts of the sacrament and their significance.  We will focus on important symbols associated with baptism, such as the sign of the cross, white garment, font, candle, chrism and Easter candle.

Key words for the topic are: white garment, Easter candle, font, chrism, Good News

http://stadrians.herts.sch.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/baptism-candles-2.jpg

Please talk to your child about their own baptism artefacts and how they were used within their baptism.  For their RE home learning, the children will design a baptism candle.  Encourage your child to think about what signs and symbols they would like to include on their candle.  It would be great if your child could write a key to go with their candle, that explains what each of their chosen symbols mean.  Please ensure that your child takes pride in their candle as it would be lovely to make a display of them.

Spring term

During the spring term, our first RE topic is based around the theme of Books.http://freecoloringpagesite.com/coloring-pics/bible-coloring-18.gif

Key words for the topic are: 

Scripture, lectern, Gospel, Bible, New Testament, Old Testament, genre, thurible, missal, Church, parish family

In particular, discuss the meaning of the words thurible and missal.  When you visit church together, see if you can find the church thurible or missal to talk about with your child. 

We will be considering the big question Why do we need books?

The children will read Matthew’s gospel (Matthew 3; 13-17) to find out about the Baptism of Jesus.

RE home learning

Let’s enjoy reading the bible: Share stories from the bible with your child.  Talk about stories that are particularly important to you.  What stories are important to your child?  Create a poster about this story that can be shared in class.

Easter 2020

It is nearly time when we are going to go for the Easter break.

I am not setting any formal work over the holiday but suggest the following:

Do as much or as little of the following as appropriate.

The following is taken from the most recent post on the Year 5 Google Classroom (Google Class Assignment also contains some attachments and links to images to inspire etc)…

-1) Read ( If you can’t get to a library , use Curriculum Visions ( they also have a selection of fiction books too)).

2) Yesterday I gave information on how to access books on dissolving and changing materials (see yesterday’s post for details) – these books cover a lot of the National Curriculum for year 5 so it is worth being familiar with it .  Also, there are lots of videos and experiments ( follow any safety guidelines) for you to try at home which are linked to these books when you open them up on Curriculum Visions.

3) Here is a link to a great website that Mrs Butterworth found

There are some great pictures that might inspire you to do your own art work or creative writing.

After the holiday, I will post anything you want to share with the class (within reason!).

EASTER

As Catholics, Easter is the most important time of the Year in the Church’s Calendar. I suggest that you and your family use some time to contenplate the true meaning of Christmas.

Here  are some things that you may wish to do with your family.

Many churches have their own youtube feeds so that you can share Mass even though, at present, we are not allowed to attend. I suggest you find the website of a local Catholic church and check it out for this facility.

The Way of the Cross (revisit Jesus’s journey to Calvary )

https://drive.google.com/a/stadrians.herts.sch.uk/file/d/1c97WjlmFgDQVey8NUDoVO-cm5yzUTAMi/view?usp=sharing

A message from Mr Bedford

You could say the Rosary ( or a decade of the Rosary) – see the attachments.

You could produce  some Easter artwork/ make an Easter card or similar .

Have a safe and holy Easter Break.

You are all  in my prayers,

Mr C

Year 1 Easter Project

Over the next two weeks, I would like you to research and collect information about a country which you can compare to The UK. This can be any country of your choice. I would like you to spend time thinking about how you are going to present this information, whether on a poster, a fact file, maybe even a video. You can choose how you would like to show off all your information.
As you have two weeks to complete this, I am hoping that would will be able to show lots of facts and information off. Take pride in your learning and presentation.

Once everyone has submitted, I shall add them to one section of the classroom. You will then be able to look at other’s learning to find out interesting facts about other countries.

Keeping active

Alongside your daily home learning tasks I would encourge you to try and stay active!

You may also want to take this opportunity to become Master Chefs.

Imoves

Imoves is available to access from home.  No login is required and no password. sign up using the link:. http://join.theimovement.com/

Change for life

Change for Life website has activities for Early Years, KS1&KS2.  It has fun food facts, recipes to make and activities for inside and outside for all the family.   https://www.nhs.uk/change4life