Year 6 Preview Learning Archive 22-23

 

 


03 July 2023

English

This week in English, we will be continuing to consolidate our skills of performing by rehearsing our year six upcoming production of “I’m a year six … get me out of here.” We will be considering the use of playscripts, in terms of stage directions and making our own suggestions as to how these can be altered or improved.  We will also be ensuring that we are able to recall text, paying attention to volume, tone and intonation so that we bring the character and scene alive for our audience. There is a little taster of the songs for us to practise at home on the link below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFA5mhVZWqY

Spelling

We will thinking about words with unusual spellings and creating mnemonics to help us remember them. For example: Rhythm – rhythm helps your two hips move.

Please continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. The complete lists of 3/4 and 5/6 spellings are in your spelling folders, on the class webpage and on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/primary-grammar-glossary-parents

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet

If you have not already completed it, please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 – Practice SAT – 2018.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: The Dragonfly. Please complete the fact retrieval and inference questions on pages 34-35 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be using calculators to explore different investigations, for example can you make your calculator ‘Laugh Out Loud’ by finding calculations with an answer of 707?

The following website has a selection of resources from previous ‘Calculator Crunch’ competitions aimed at year 6 children in this time of transition: https://mei.org.uk/resources/?terms=Calculator%20Crunch

Remember, if you feel that there is an area of Maths from this year which you are still struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you of our year six learning:

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

 

Please can you also make sure that you are continuing to learn your words for our upcoming key stage 2 production.

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


26 June 2023

English

This week in English, we will be practising performing our play and learning poetry by heart. We will be considering how we can perform; showing understanding through intonation, tone and volume so that the meaning is clear to an audience.

We will also be discussing what we think poetry is. Do we have any favourite poems? Do we know any poets? Do we like poetry? Why or why not? What is it like to watch or perform poetry? How did it make you feel?

It may be useful to watch some poets performing their poems to give you some inspiration as well as searching for poems which you yourself like and would like to learn and perform. The following links should give you some inspiration:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RvV23xoZRkI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ByAg5aoyAN4

https://www.bbc.co.uk/teach/class-clips-video/english-ks1-ks2-understanding-poetry/zdwxbdm

 

Spelling

We will thinking about rhyming words in poetry and how it is important to look for spelling rules. In poetry, there are two types of rhyme: perfect rhyme, and imperfect rhyme. Perfect rhyme is a type of rhyme scheme in which a stressed vowel in two words or phrases that are close to one another is either similar or exactly the same. Looking for rhymes in poetry and exploring their spellings can be an interesting and useful task.

Please continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. The complete lists of 3/4 and 5/6 spellings are in your spelling folders, on the class webpage and on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/primary-grammar-glossary-parents

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet

If you have not already completed it, please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 – Practice SAT – 2017.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: Welcome to York. Please complete the word meaning, summary and structure questions on pages 30-31of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be consolidating many problem solving skills and elements of the year 6 curriculum by completing tasks related to questions with multiples solutions.

For example, a simple example would be looking at the equation 100 = B + C and finding many possible solutions. Or, consider a rectangle with an area of 48 cm², what could the lengths of the sides be?

The N-Rich website is a fabulous resources for some interesting and challenging problems which you may like to explore.

https://nrich.maths.org/9803

 

Remember, if you fell that there is an area of Maths from this year which you are still struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you of our year six learning:

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

 

Please can you also make sure that you are continuing to learn your words for our upcoming key stage 2 production.

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.

 


19 June 2023

English

This week in English, we will be focussing on diary writing. We will be considering diaries which have historical significance as well as those which are personal. We will be writing our own imaginary entries, within a clear context, attempting a clearly defined tone.

The following link will help you to recap the features of a diary and will suggest some additional activities which you may like to complete at home:

BBC Bitesize : Writing a diary

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/primary-grammar-glossary-parents

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 test 2016.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: Welcome to York. Please complete the fact retrieval and inference questions on pages 28-29 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Please could you also be learning your lines for our upcoming KS2 production.  

           

Maths

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues:  

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

If you wish to complete any additional maths at home, I would like to recommend taking a look at White Rose – Barvember Problems 2019.  You may like to complete the problems from 25th- 29th November which are on the link below:

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.

 


12 June 2023

This week we will be enjoying outdoor adventurous activities at the Andrew Simpson Sailing Centre. The children will have the opportunity to take part in many water sports, including: sailing, windsurfing and paddle boarding. 

The centre will provide a wetsuit and buoyancy aid. Children will need to bring:

  • A packed lunch and drinks.
  • Closed-toe shoes (which stay on their feet – we had incidents with lost shoes in the lake last year!)
  • Swimwear for under the provided wetsuit.
  • A towel.
  • Sunscreen (it gets washed off very easily.)
  • A sunhat (if required.)

 

Please arrive in casual clothes e.g. shorts / leggings / jogging bottoms and t-shirts which you are prepared to get wet in!!!!!! A second set of dry shoes for the way home is also a good idea.

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/primary-grammar-glossary-parents

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 test I.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: The Clans. Please complete the word meaning and summary questions on pages 24-25 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Please could you also be learning your lines for our upcoming KS2 production.  

Maths

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues:  

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

If you wish to complete any additional maths at home, I would like to recommend taking a look at White Rose –Barvember Problems 2019.  You may like to complete the problems from 25th- 29th November which are on the link below:

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


05 June 2023

English

This week in English, we will be learning to write persuasive texts based on attracting visitors to a holiday home. Persuasion texts have the following features:

Language features: uses second and third person, asks the reader rhetorical questions, appeals to the senses, exaggerates positive points, describes facilities and features, includes persuasive language such as powerful adjectives and memorable phrases.

Structural features: includes a catchy title or slogan, includes a short introduction that directly addresses the reader, uses interesting layouts such as headings and bullet points to make information easy to find, includes important information such as directions and contact details, entices the reader by showing visitor comments, special offers and awards.

Consider locations from children’s literature that could be promoted as ideal holiday stays e.g. Hogwarts, Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory, Little Weirwold as well as other (less obvious suggestions) e.g. Camp Green Lake.

You may also like to support this work at home by trying to persuade your parents to award you something as a treat for finishing SATs e.g. an earlier bedtime, half an hour extra on a device, your choice of dinner.

Spelling

We will also be revising how we can use apostrophes for possession. In singular possession, where we add an s to show something belongs to a person or object, the apostrophe is placed before the s. However, when we add an apostrophe to show something belongs to more than one person (plural possession), the apostrophe is generally placed after the s. Rule – if the plural of a word does not end in an ‘s’, the apostrophe is placed at the end of the word and an ‘s’ is added e.g. children’s in the same way as singular possession. Try to draw the scenes described below:

The castles were cold.

The knight’s castle was cold.

The knight’s castles were cold.

The knights’ castle was cold.

The knights’ castles were cold.

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 test H.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘The Clans.’ Please complete the fact retrieval and inference questions on pages 22-23 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In maths this week, we will be consolidating our understanding of the concept of nets of 3D shapes. The net of a 3D shape is what it looks like if it is opened out flat. A net can be folded up to make a 3D shape. There may be several possible nets for one 3D shape. You can draw a net on paper, then fold it into the shape. See the image below for the nets of a cube and square-based pyramid:

There are videos and quizzes to support your understanding on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zt7xk2p/articles/z247tv4

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


22 May 2023

Don’t forget our whole school trip to Kew Gardens on Friday!

English

This week in English, we will be continuing our exploration of explanation texts. We will be focussing on the year six requirements for a range of higher-level punctuation: commas, colons, semi-colons, ellipses, parenthesis, dashes, hyphens. (Inverted commas) Do we know what all these piece of punctuation are for?  We will also be thinking about relative clauses and passive verbs before publishing a ‘perfect’ version of our text. There is a video and example of explanation texts on the link below:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-explanation-text

Spelling

We will also be revising how we can use apostrophes for contraction – where two words have been shortened and pushed together. For example, the shortened form of ‘she has’ is ‘she’s.’ Which letters have been removed? Try to think of any other words that could be shortened with have, e.g. I have. Explore other words that can be contracted, e.g. do not, is not, have not which become don’t, isn’t, haven’t. You could construct a chart of examples of shortened words, alongside the original two words.

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 test G.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘If You Can’t go Over or Under, Go Round.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and structure questions on pages 18-19 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be continuing the topic of algebra. We will be thinking about how to find pairs of numbers that satisfy an equation with two unknowns. For example, if a + b = 6, what possible solutions can we think of? Taking this further, think about the following example: 𝑋 and 𝑌 are whole numbers. • 𝑋 is a one digit odd number. • 𝑌 is a two digit even number. • 𝑋 + 𝑌 = 25. Find all the possible pairs of numbers that satisfy the equation. We will also be solving formula such as: 4x+2=22 or 2n+3=11

 

There are videos to help on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zghp34j

There is also the video to help you and your parents at home, explaining how algebra is taught through the White Rose scheme. (See programme 6 – algebra.)

https://whiterosemaths.com/maths-with-michael

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


15 May 2023

English

This week in English, we will be beginning an exploration of explanation texts. Explanation is a non-fiction genre and therefore must be factual and impersonal. The basic structure of an explanation text is: introduction, themed paragraphs, and conclusion. What is needed in a successful explanation text?

* A question as a title.

* Structural features: an introduction to the subject, further information about the topic in themed paragraphs, ends with a conclusion / advice / summary.

* Informal language to amuse / entertain.

* Cohesive devices (e.g. time conjunctions and adverbials) to show the order and link events.

* Diagrams or illustrations with captions.

* Organisational devices to structure the text.

* A range of high-level punctuation to add extra information. 

There are videos and activities to support your learning on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/z2yycdm/articles/zpsjkty

 

Spelling

We will also be revising how we can use hyphenated words. Here are some ways that hyphens can be used:

  • Hyphens are to join numbers between twenty-one and ninety-nine.
  • We should also use a hyphen when joining two colours before a noun, e.g. snow-white dove, blood-red jacket, light-brown hair, sky-blue dress or bluey-grey sky.
  • Some common word phrases that are linked with hyphens: t-shirt, half-sister, ten-year-old, six-pack, custom-made, stick-in-the-mud, x-ray, semi-final. It is useful to be aware of these.
  • When two adjectives are used together (compound adjectives) before a noun, they need a hyphen to shown their connection. For example: dairy-free diet; mind-blowing experience; double-page spread or meat-eating animal.

Grammar

In grammar, we will be continuing to consolidate our use of grammatical terminology. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/primary-grammar-glossary-parents

http://www.st-jo-st.dudley.sch.uk/Files/Download/fdb3ec03-aee1-4da5-97f5-80cb75a5a48c/df71c9a8-9513-4f68-bceb-668c9e3d5f62/YR6%20Grammar%20terminology%20booklet.pdf

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Year 6 test F.’

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘If You Can’t go Over or Under, Go Round.’ Please complete the fact retrieval and inference questions on pages 16-17 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be introducing ourselves to the topic of algebra. We will begin by considering the use of function machines and how they can be used to calculate with an unknown variable. Here are some examples:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The function could be x3 or +12.

 

There is also a video to help you and your parents at home, explaining how algebra is taught through the White Rose scheme. (See programme 6 – algebra.)

https://whiterosemaths.com/maths-with-michael

 

If you wish to complete any additional maths at home, I would like to recommend taking a look at White Rose –Barvember Problems 2019.  You may like to complete the problems from 11th – 15th November which are on the link below:

https://whiterosemaths.com/resources/barvember#problems

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


09 May 2023

Remember, we are not in school on Monday due to the coronation of King Charles.

It’s finally here, key stage two SATs week. The timetable is as follows:

Tuesday 9 May:

English grammar, punctuation and spelling (GPS) papers 1 (questions) and 2 (spelling)

Wednesday 10 May:

English reading paper

Thursday 11 May:

Mathematics papers 1 (arithmetic) and 2 (reasoning)

Friday 12 May:

Mathematics paper 3 (reasoning)

 

Please look after yourself this week. Here is some helpful advice:

English

This week in English we completing our official KS2 SAT tests for reading, grammar, punctuation and spelling.

Spelling

We will continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists as they are likely to figure heavily in our end of key stage spelling SAT. The complete lists of 3/4 and 5/6 spellings are in your spelling folders, on the class webpage and on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

 Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6 by continuing completing some previous key stage 2 grammar and spelling SATs. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: A Trip to the Circus. Please complete the word meaning, prediction and language questions on pages 12-13 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be completing this year’s KS2 SAT papers – Arithmetic 1, Reasoning 2 and Reasoning 3.

Confidence is key when it comes to SATs. Remember, to ASK – adults in school can read questions to you. Hearing it aloud, sometimes helps it to make more sense.

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues. 

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

Again, you can also download and attempt any previous SAT papers of your choosing on this link:

https://www.sats-papers.co.uk/ks2-sats-papers/

 

Good luck! We’ve got this!

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


02 May 2023

English

This week in English we will be continuing gaining familiarity with the SAT tests for Reading and Spelling, punctuation and grammar. Top tips:

  • In the reading paper, tackle one text at a time. Not all three at once!
  • Tackle each question, one at a time, giving each one a go.
  • Read the questions carefully so you know what to do.
  • Use the clues and information in the question to help you, e.g. it might tell you to look at a particular paragraph or phrase. The key words in the question are always in bold.
  • Only answer what you have been asked. If it asks you to write two words, then do just that!
  • Follow the instruction. If it says ‘tick’ or ‘circle’ make sure you do it! If it says choose two, then do just that, not three!
  • Look out for the marks. If a question has two or three marks, you may need to do more than one thing!
  • Move on to the next question if you are stuck, move on and come back to it later if you have time. It might be impossible to answer ALL the questions.
  • Read through your answers carefully if you finish in time. This means reading each question again and making sure you have answered it correctly.
  • Don’t worry if you can’t answer all the questions.

 

Spelling

We will continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists as they are likely to figure heavily in our end of key stage spelling SAT. The complete lists of 3/4 and 5/6 spellings are in your spelling folders, on the class webpage and on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6 by continuing completing some previous key stage 2 grammar and spelling SATs. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

Here are some reminders of the top tips for the test itself:

  • Write clearly – make sure punctuation marks are correctly formed.
  • Always use capital letters in the correct places. Even if the question doesn’t specify it – always use them correctly.
  • Punctuation – make sure you use it at the end of every sentence you write.
  • Try to also spell words correctly.
  • Process of elimination – in multiple choice questions, read each option carefully and tick / cross at the side to say if it could be that or not.
  • Read the instruction carefully is key: circle, tick, draw lines to, etc.
  • Fill in the gaps – if a question is asking which sentence needs a ? for example, read each sentence and put the appropriate punctuation at the end of each one, then you can see clearly which is correct.
  • ASK TO HAVE QUESTIONS READ ALOUD – if you aren’t sure what it means or are a bit stuck, you should ask the teacher to read it to you as it might help – sometimes you can HEAR where a piece of punctuation should go
  • Answer every single question. Just have a try.
  • If you finish early, go back over EVERY question and imagine you are seeing the questions for the first time.

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

Please login to SPAG.com and attempt the 2022 SPAG test in full.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: A Trip to the Circus. Please complete the fact retrieval and inference questions on pages 10 -11 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be consolidating our learning from across the key stage and completing last year’s KS2 SAT papers – Arithmetic 1, Reasoning 2 and Reasoning 3.

Confidence is key when it comes to SATs. Remember, to ASK – adults in school can read questions to you. Hearing it aloud, sometimes helps it to make more sense.

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues. 

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

Again, you can also download and attempt any previous SAT papers of your choosing on this link:

https://www.sats-papers.co.uk/ks2-sats-papers/

 

Good luck!

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


24 April 2023

English

This week in English we will be continuing focussing on our preparation for the forthcoming SAT tests by attempting previous Reading and Grammar papers. We will be reminding ourselves of some of the following strategies:

  • Highlight useful information, facts, interesting words etc as you go along so you can find information easily
  • Make sure you are looking at the right page in the booklet to answer the questions – read the bit they are talking about to refresh your memory and to make it clearer what they are talking about!
  • Decide what type of question it is – a find and copy, your opinion or an explanation.
  • Remember the booklet goes easy questions, harder questions and BACK to easier questions so don’t give up if you can’t do a question.
  • Look at the amount of marks that are on offer – 2 and 3 mark questions will need you to explain your answers fully AND use DIFFERENT reasons or examples – don’t repeat the same thing but in different words!
  • If you have time, go back to the higher mark questions and check them – add more, change things and decide if you have been clear enough with your answers.
  • Remember – explain everything clearly, even if you think it is obvious.
  • Don’t use phrases that are too general like ‘they are all powerful words’. You need to be more specific – why that word or phrase in particular?  How does that phrase make the reader feel? 
  • If it says use the text to help you, you will need to say something about the text AS WELL as giving an opinion of your own.
  • If you can’t do a question – move on.
  • Finally – ASK! ASK! ASK! We will help you where we can and sometimes you feel better just by having a question read aloud. You are not on your own!

Please note you can access all past papers on the link below so practise as much as you want:

https://www.sats-papers.co.uk/ks2-sats-papers/

 

Spelling

We will continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists as they are likely to figure heavily in our end of key stage spelling SAT. The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6 by continuing completing some previous key stage 2 grammar and spelling SATs. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

In these final weeks before the test, please login to SPAG.com. and revise any areas which you are still feeling unsure of. Complete the 2019 SAT. (Remember, an adult at home can read aloud any questions to you.)

Here are some top tips for the test itself:

  • Write clearly – make sure punctuation marks are correctly formed.
  • Always use capital letters in the correct places. Even if the question doesn’t specify it – always use them correctly.
  • Punctuation – make sure you use it at the end of every sentence you write.
  • Try to also spell words correctly.
  • Process of elimination – in multiple choice questions, read each option carefully and tick / cross at the side to say if it could be that or not.
  • Read the instruction carefully is key: circle, tick, draw lines to, etc.
  • Fill in the gaps – if a question is asking which sentence needs a ? for example, read each sentence and put the appropriate punctuation at the end of each one, then you can see clearly which is correct.
  • ASK TO HAVE QUESTIONS READ ALOUD – if you aren’t sure what it means or are a bit stuck, you should ask the teacher to read it to you as it might help – sometimes you can HEAR where a piece of punctuation should go
  • Answer every single question. Just have a try.
  • If you finish early, go back over EVERY question and imagine you are seeing the questions for the first time.

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Alternative Santa.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and comparison questions on pages 6-7 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be consolidating our learning from across the key stage and practising previous SAT papers in Arithmetic and Reasoning.

On the following link, you have access to all of the workbooks for year six which we have covered this year. This may be a good place to consolidate your learning and practise any areas of difficulty.

https://whiterosemaths.com/parent-resources

Try to choose the topics which you are feeling less confident about e.g. fractions as well as those which you are happier with. Change your mind set from: “I can’t do fractions” to “I don’t know the answer to this fraction question yet, but I am going to figure it out.” Confidence is key when it comes to SATs. Remember, to ASK – adults at home and in school can read questions to you. Hearing it aloud, sometimes helps it to make more sense.

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues. 

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

Again, you can also download and attempt any previous SAT papers of your choosing on this link:

https://www.sats-papers.co.uk/ks2-sats-papers/

 

Good luck!

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


17 April 2023

English

This week in English we will be focussing on our preparation for the forthcoming SAT tests by attempting previous Reading and Grammar papers.  Will be reminding ourselves of some of the following top tips:

  • Short answers: Some questions are followed by a short line or box. You need only write a word or phrase as your answer.
  • Answers on a few lines: This means that you are expected to write more words or one or two sentences.
  • Answers in a large box: This is space for you to give a more detailed answer and room for you to explain your answer. You should write in full sentences.
  • 3 point questions – Write your answer and make sure you use the word BECAUSE to explain it!
  • Read the questions carefully – if it says tick three then TICK 3!. If it says ‘find and copy’ – a word or phrase DO JUST THAT (but NOT the whole sentence.)
  • If you are being asked to comment on words, do NOT repeat the word or phrase they have used!!!! E.G. What does the word burst tell us about the movement? DON’T SAY- because it was bursting through. Find synonyms instead e.g. ‘The word burst makes the reader think that the lava is moving very quickly and is so powerful that is can break the hard rock.’
  • Spell names and places correctly especially if they are used in the text. Remember: all proper nouns need a capital.
  • Use clear handwriting… There is no point showing off your best reading comprehension and we can’t read it.
  • Punctuate correctly for each and every sentence.
  • Finally – ASK! ASK! ASK! We will help you where we can and sometimes you feel better just by having a question read aloud. You are not on your own!

Please note you can access all past papers on the link below so practise as much as you want:

https://www.sats-papers.co.uk/ks2-sats-papers/

 

Spelling

We will continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists as they are likely to figure heavily in our end of key stage spelling SAT.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6 by completing some previous key stage 2 grammar and spelling SATs. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

Now is the time to revise any areas which you are struggling with. Please ask if you need any specific additional help. Please use this week to login to SPAG.com. and revise any areas which you are still feeling unsure of. (The timetable for the whole term is also on this class webpage.) Try the 2018 Grammar test again as a good benchmark. (Remember, an adult can read aloud any questions to you.)

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Alternative Santa.’ Please complete the fact retrieval and inference questions on pages 4-5 of your poetry comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be consolidating our learning from across the key stage and practising previous SAT papers in Arithmetic and Reasoning.

On the following link, you have access to all of the workbooks for year six which we have covered this year. This may be a good place to consolidate your learning and practise any areas of difficulty. Try to choose the topics which you are feeling less confident about e.g. fractions as well as those which you are happier with.

https://whiterosemaths.com/parent-resources

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues. 

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

Again, you can also download and attempt any previous SAT papers of your choosing on this link:

https://www.sats-papers.co.uk/ks2-sats-papers/

Remember, to make sure that you are clearly demonstrating all of your working and thinking and focus on clear and full explanations when asked for. For example,

Answer: If the distance from P to R is 800m and the distance from P to Q is 4 times the distance from Q to P, P to Q must be 4/5 of 800m. Therefore Olivia is wrong as 4/5 of 800 is 800  5 = 160, 160 x 4 = 640m.

Or

Alternative answer: Olivia says it is 600 metres from point P to Q. However, the distance from P to Q is 4 times the distance from Q to P, so Q to R must be 600 ÷ 4 = 150. The total length would be 600 + 150 = 750m not 800m. Therefore, Olivia is not correct.  

 

Remember, we can read any questions to you if it helps.

Good luck!

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


EASTER BREAK


27 March 2023

 

English

This week in English, we will be completing our class novel of ‘Holes’ and thinking about our reflections and perceptions of the book as a whole.

We will be comparing the novel to the film and discussing our opinions. We will also be creating pieces of writing based on this novel.

 

Spelling

Please use this week and the Easter holidays to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come as they are likely to figure heavily in our end of key stage spelling SAT.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

 Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

Now is the time to revise any areas which you are struggling with. Please ask if you need any specific additional help. Please use this week and the Easter holidays to login to SPAG.com. and revise any areas which you are still feeling unsure of. (The timetable for the whole term is also on this class webpage.)

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is:

https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please complete the final word meaning, summary and comparison questions about Detective Nimble and the Falcon Fugitive (pages 40-41.) We will be discussing the answers on our return to school after Easter.

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

If you wish to practise further comprehensions as home (this week or over the Easter holidays) then the following link takes you to a complete book of examples.

Y6 Comprehension Pack

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be consolidating our learning from this term. On the following link, you have access to all of the workbooks for year six which we have covered this year. This may be a good place to consolidate your learning and practise any areas of difficulty. Try to choose the topics which you are feeling less confident about e.g. fractions as well as those which you are happier with.

https://whiterosemaths.com/parent-resources

If you find an area of Maths which you are particularly struggling with, then you can choose a video from the following link to remind you how to solve particular issues. 

https://whiterosemaths.com/homelearning?year=year-6

If you wish to prepare yourselves for the upcoming SATs in May, it may also be useful to start looking at some past papers. They can all be found on the internet. There is an example link below:

https://www.satspapers.org.uk/Page.aspx?TId=5

 

Have a lovely Easter holiday.

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


20 March 2023

English

This week in English, we will be continuing our unit of work on biographies. We will be looking at biographies on people who are less well-known and thinking about how the author, therefore, convinces us that they are a significant / important person to read about. We will be researching a second figure, for example: someone who is famous or notorious for negative reasons, someone more unusual so that other people may not already know them, or someone who has made a positive change to society but is relatively unknown. You may like to think about who you feel has been overlooked in history but would deserve to be written about. The following website gives many different examples of biographies to ‘magpie’ from:

https://www.ducksters.com/biography/

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: sacrifice, secretary, shoulder, signature. This week we will also be thinking about homophones. A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another but is spelt differently, e.g. sum, some; to, too, two. Homophones often crop up in class spelling errors, e.g. their / there; you’re / your. Practise writing sentences containing two homophones in context e.g. She had to wait in a queue to find the weight of the bananas.

 

There are videos and explanations which supports this learning on the links below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/teach/class-clips-video/english-ks2-wonderful-words-homophones/z732t39

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-homophone.

 

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come. The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves (again) of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

Grammar Glossary – parents  

YR6 Grammar terminology booklet.pdf  

Now is the time to revise any areas which you are struggling with. Please ask if you need any specific additional help. Please login to SPAG.com and complete ‘SPAG tests A and B.’  Don’t forget to also complete any previously incomplete tests. (The timetable for the whole term is also on this class webpage.)

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Detective Nimble and the Falcon Fugitive. Please complete the inference questions from pages 38-39 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In maths, we will be looking at describing co-ordinates on the full co-ordinate grid, in all four quadrants. We will be consolidating plotting and reading co-ordinates as well as thinking about how we can discover missing co-ordinates in given shapes by using existing x and y values from other vertices. We will also be consolidating our understanding of translation and reflection across an axis.

                       

There are explanations, activities and videos on the following links:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zy72pv4/articles/zcy62v4

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zk7dg7h

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/z99n2v4

You can also download the Year 6 White Rose Position and Direction workbook for free on the link below:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Position-Direction

 

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


13 March 2023

English

This week in English, we will be beginning a new unit of work on biographies. We will be looking at existing examples in order to identify features of a successful biography text. We will also be planning our own text based on the life of an inventor. Think about an inventor who you may like to write about and the information which you may need to find out about them. You may also like to have a look at the features of a biography mat below to familiarise yourself with this genre and the requirements for this text type:

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: relevant, restaurant, rhyme, rhythm. This week we will be thinking about the etymology of words. Etymology is the study of words, including how they got their meanings and how words develop throughout history. Some of the words in our year 5 /6 spelling list are made up of morphemes that have come from other languages many years ago. E.g. secretary (from the Latin word secretus, meaning secret, and the suffix -ary, which means “connected with” (i.e. a place or person connected with something). So a secretary was someone or something trusted to hold your secrets. Can you think of any other words ending in -ary, such as library, and work out what it may mean (connected with books), or use an online dictionary of etymology to decipher the meaning behind trickier examples, such as veterinary (connected with cattle)? There is further information and activities on the link below:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/cbbcnews/hi/teachers/literacy_7_11/word/newsid_1681000/1681165.stm

 

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come. The complete lists of 3/4 and 5/6 spellings are in your spelling folders, on the class webpage and on the links below:

https://cdn.oxfordowl.co.uk/2019/08/29/13/54/08/76f1443d-9b6d-4030-be0d-25fcfef01438/SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf

https://cdn.oxfordowl.co.uk/2019/08/29/13/56/09/5a42eb6a-f57f-4dc4-a66e-bd4c5e27e4b7/SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of all of the terminology that we need to know in year 6. The following links gives a helpful summary of the vocabulary that you should be familiar with:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/primary-grammar-glossary-parents  

http://www.st-jo-st.dudley.sch.uk/Files/Download/fdb3ec03-aee1-4da5-97f5-80cb75a5a48c/df71c9a8-9513-4f68-bceb-668c9e3d5f62/YR6%20Grammar%20terminology%20booklet.pdf  

Now is the time to revise any areas which you are struggling with. Please ask if you need any specific additional help. Please login to SPAG.com and complete ‘Terminology Year 6 C.’  Don’t forget to also complete any previously incomplete tests. (The timetable for the whole term is also on this class webpage.)

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Detective Nimble and the Falcon Fugitive. Please complete the fact retrieval questions from pages 36-37 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

 Maths

This week in Maths, we will be finding the missing angles in a triangle and quadrilateral. All triangles have internal angles that add up to 180°, no matter the type of triangle. An isosceles triangle will have two angles the same size. In an equilateral triangle, all angles will be 60°. A right-angled triangle will have one angle that is 90°, which means the other two angles will have a total of 90°.

A scalene triangle will have all angles of a different size.

Example:

Look at this scalene triangle. How would you work out the value of a?

 

 

 

 

Since you know that all angles in a triangle add up to 180°, you have to add up the values of the angles that you do know and then subtract them from 180°:

 

40° + 60° = 100°                   180° – 100° = 80°                  Therefore: a = 80°

 

We will also be investigating the missing angles in quadrilaterals, using our knowledge that the angles in a quadrilateral total 360 degrees.

 

Please investigate the following links to help reinforce your learnng:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zb6tyrd/articles/z8twr2p

https://www.mathswithmum.com/angles-in-quadrilaterals/#:~:text=A%20quadrilateral%20has%204%20sides,subtract%20this%20from%20360%C2%B0.

https://www.blackheathprimary.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Properties-of-Shapes-4.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


06 March 2023

English

This week in English, we will be completing our work on villains. We will explore how to successfully edit a piece of writing a sentence at a time, considering the difference between proof-reading versus editing and the need for cohesion and clarity through the story as well as up levelling our writing to meet year six expectations. Time will be given, in pairs, to support each other in meeting both the toolkit and year six expectations for writing and grammar. We will try to meet the expectations of the following toolkit and look for opportunities to meet target card expectations for punctuation and grammar.

  • Use an interesting character name (proper nouns.)
  • Mirror the character’s feeling through the setting. E.g. sinister gloom crept over the decayed treehouse.
  • Explore the character’s inner thoughts: talk to the reader, first person narrative, informal.
  • Suggest character traits through inner feelings. (Abstract nouns, word waiter.) E.g. rusted greed assembled within.
  • Focus on the intricate and unusual details e.g. mannerisms, facial expressions, strange objects. (I am a … poem, twisting his beard to a point.)
  • Explore / exploit a character flaw e.g. erratic, naive, callous, greedy, and arrogant. Show not tell. Develop a back story (empathy?)
  • Develop contrasting characters. Explore how the characters react to one another.
  • Use dialogue to convey emotions and feelings.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: pronunciation, queue, recognise, recommend. This week we will be learning to spell words with unusual letter combinations. We will try to identify the tricky bit in each word (such as the rhy in rhyme or the c making a “sh” sound in ancient)? You can break the words down by colouring the predictable parts in one colour, and the tricky letters in another colour. Alternatively, you could look at the tricky letters, such as artificial articulation (con-ven-ience, fru-it) and create mnemonics or helpful combinations such as:

It is a nuisance when fruit bruises.          I guarantee to be your guide.

A queue of true blues.                                Rhythm: rhythm has your two hips moving.

 

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come. The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be reminding ourselves of the use of hyphens, dashes and bullet points. Hyphens are very useful. They can be used to link two words together, so the word or phrase makes sense and doesn’t confuse the reader. Look at how using a hyphen can completely change a sentence’s meaning: The superstar player decided to resign his contract. (This means the player is leaving the club.) The superstar player decided to re-sign his contract. (This means the player is staying at the club for longer.) Dashes can be used to add extra information within a longer sentence, so are a way of showing parenthesis, similar to the way brackets and commas can. Dashes shouldn’t be confused with hyphens as their job is very different! For example: The superstar player – who is loved by many fans – decided to stay at the club.

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘hyphens, dashes and bullet points A and B.

Don’t forget to also complete any previously incomplete tests. (The timetable for the whole term is also on this class webpage.)

You may find it useful to look at the following web page which has further explanations, videos and activities:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zvwwxnb/articles/zg8gbk7

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zmnwjhv

 

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Beneath the Waves.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and language questions from pages 30-31 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

This week, we will be looking at finding missing angles in a straight line and around a point.

Angles on a straight line add up to 180°. So if you had a missing angle on a straight line, you would subtract the known angles from 180. For example:

You know that one of the angles is 90°, represented by the right angle symbol, and another is 35°. And you also know that angles on a straight line add up to 180°.

To find the unknown angle, first add the known angles together:

90° + 35° = 125°  Now subtract from 180°: 180° – 125° = 55° The missing angle above is 55°.

Angles around a point total 360 degrees. See how you can calculate missing angles in the example below:

What can you see on this diagram? 168°, angle B and a small square. We typically represent a right angle with a small square. A right angle is always 90°.All these angles together must equal 360°. B + 90° + 168° = 360°. First add together the angles we know the value of: 90° + 168° = 258°. Then subtract this from 360° to find the missing angle. 360° – 258° = 102°. Therefore, angle B is 102°.

 

There are videos and quizzes to help support our learning on the links below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/z8twr2p

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zb6tyrd/articles/z7p4g7h

 

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


27 February 2023

This week in English, we will be continuing our work on villains. We will be exploring the physical appearance of our invented villains as well as their character flaws. A flaw in someone’s character is an undesirable quality that they have. This quality is often the thing that we despise as a reader. Great villains are often plagued with flaws, such as greed, jealousy, vanity, spitefulness or vengefulness. We are going to consider how we can build empathy for a villain by tuning in to their backstory. It forms the foundations of a character and often helps to explain their desires, fears and motivations. Finally, we will consider how we can write the same events from a different, contrasting perspective e.g. hero and villain.

                     

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: Prejudice, privilege, profession, programme. This week we will be learning to spell words using the letter strings ough, ight, eigh and augh. Ough is a difficult spelling pattern because this string of letters represents many different sounds, and there are relatively few words with this spelling pattern. You could try to create rhyming pairs with the same gh spelling patterns, e.g. weight / sleigh, enough / rough, although / dough, brighter / lighter. Alternatively, try the following game: Partner A writes down a word containing the digraph gh (without showing it) such as fought and tells Partner B. Partner B then has to come up with a rhyming word that uses the same pattern, such as brought. Compare spellings and check.

 

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be developing our understanding of the active and passive tense. A sentence is written in active voice when the subject of the sentence is performing the action. A sentence is written in passive voice when the subject of the sentence has something done to it by someone or something. For example: Active voice: The cat was chasing the mouse. In this sentence, ‘the cat’ is the subject, ‘was chasing’ is the verb and ‘the mouse’ is the object. Passive voice: The mouse was being chased by the cat. In this sentence ‘the mouse’ has become the subject which is having something done to it by the cat.

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘passive and active A and B.’

You may find it useful to look at the following web page which has further explanations, videos and activities:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-are-active-and-passive-sentences

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Beneath the Waves.’ Please complete the inference questions on pages 28-29 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

This week in maths, we will be consolidating our understanding of line graphs, bar charts and pie charts. We will be discovering how pie charts can show quantities, fractions and percentages. Take a look at the example below:

           

There are opportunities to consolidate your learning through the links below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zqgrd2p/articles/zcwfp4j

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/z7rcwmn/articles/zqv8bqt

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/z7rcwmn/articles/zrdm8hv

https://www.st-barnabas.kent.sch.uk/attachments/download.asp?file=1555&type=pdf

If you wish to consolidate your learning further, please continue exploring the White Rose Maths Statistics booklet. There is a link below:

Y6 – Statistics.pdf

 

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


20 February 2023

English

This week in English, we will be considering what makes an effective villain. The Oxford English Dictionary defines a villain as ‘an unprincipled or depraved scoundrel; a man naturally disposed to base or criminal actions, or deeply involved in the commission of disgraceful crimes.’ Almost every great story has a truly great villain. So, what makes a villain a villain? What is the makeup of a villain? How are they made? What is their physical, mental, and moral constitution? How do they act, feel and behave? How do they become ‘bad?’ We will begin manipulating words, creating poetical phrases and developing sentences to describe a villain. You could begin by brainstorming and describing your favourite villains from comics, books and films.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: opportunity, parliament, persuade, physical. We will also be revising further prefixes, suffixes and affixes.  Can we create pairs of related words by changing the affixes? For example: excellent/excellence, hinder/hindrance. Can we explain the difference in meaning between the words in each pair? Challenge: create a chain of related words such explain, explained, explanation, explanatory. What is the longest chain you can find?

 

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of semi colons and colons. We use colons and semi-colons to join independent clauses and make them part of one sentence. A clause is a group of words. An independent clause is a group of words that could make some sense when used on its own, but is clearer when it is joined to another clause. Look at these examples: 1. Hannah loves football; it’s her favourite sport. In this sentence, one of the clauses (‘it’s her favourite sport’) wouldn’t make full sense on its own. It needs the first clause to be completely clear, so we link the two clauses together with a semi-colon (;). 2. Jay loves to work on penalty shots: he does 20 minutes’ football practice every day. In this sentence, a colon (:) marks a longer pause when the sentence is read out. It joins two clauses that could be broken into two short sentences instead, but as the bits of information in the two clauses are so closely linked, we use the colon to connect them. Sometimes it can be tricky to decide when to use a semi-colon and when to use a colon. It’s often a matter of judgement.

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘semi colons and colons A and B.’

You may find it useful to look at the following web page which has further explanations, videos and activities:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zvjgf82

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Beneath the Waves.’ Please complete the fact retrieval questions on pages 26-27 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

This week we will be continuing work on are and finding the area of a parallelogram. The area of a parallelogram is the base x perpendicular height. The area of the parallelogram below is 7cm x 3cm = 21 cm².

We will also be calculating, estimating and comparing the volume of cubes, cuboids and other shapes using standard units, including cm3.  We will be discussing when it is appropriate to use a formula to find the volume of a shape, height × width × depth = volume.

There are videos and quizzes to help support our learning on the links below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zjbg87h/articles/zsqxfcw

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zjbg87h/articles/zcrxtyc

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zjbg87h/articles/z3jrxfr

 

If you wish to consolidate your learning further, please continue exploring the White Rose Maths Spring Block 5 Perimeter, area and volume learning booklet. There is a link below:

Y6 – Perimeter area and volume.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


06 February 2023

English

This week in English, we will be continuing our unit writing a non-chronological report or information fact sheet based around the topic of ‘fears.’ We will focus on animals or creatures which people are traditionally fearful of, whether real or mythical e.g. spiders, sharks, werewolves, dinosaurs. Why might people be afraid of this creature? How does the fear manifest itself? Is there a solution or cure? How will you present this information on a page?

We will remind ourselves again of year six requirements for a range of punctuation: commas, colons, semi-colons, ellipses, parenthesis, dashes, hyphens. We will also edit our texts to include the following year six expectations: simple and complex sentences, main clauses, subordinate clauses, adverbial starters, commas after fronted adverbials, colons, ellipsis.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: neighbour, nuisance, occupy, occur.

This week we will be looking at the meanings of various common affixes. Once we know how to spell a root word, the affixes can help them create several new words in the same family. E.g. appreciate, appreciating, appreciated, appreciative, appreciation, appreciatively, unappreciated, unappreciatively.

We will be thinking about the following list of affixes and exploring their meanings: con-, sub-, pre-, co-, uni-, bi-, ex-, em-, -ive, -ish, -ship, -ary, -ise, -ify, -ity. You could pick out one affix at a time and think of a word that employs the affix, e.g.: -ship – friendship; ex- – explain.

 

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of layout devices and paragraphing. When writers want to convey information in a way that’s clear and easy for readers to follow and understand, they will make use of different layout devices, such as the following: headings, sub-headings, columns, bullet points, tables or diagrams.

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘layout devises and paragraphing.’

You may find it useful to look at the following web page which has a little quiz:

https://www.educationquizzes.com/ks2/english/text-features/

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Chioke’s Chance. Please complete the word, summary and prediction questions on pages 20-21 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

This week, we will also be discovering that shapes with the same areas can have different perimeters and vice versa. We will be reminding ourselves how we find the area of a rectangle and a rectilinear shape, discussing when it is appropriate to use the formula length x width and when to count squares. To find the perimeter, we will be remembering that Percy Penguin patrols the perimeter and measuring around the total length of shapes. We will embed our understanding that same shapes can have different perimeters. There is a helpful video to watch on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/teach/class-clips-video/maths-ks2-as-the-crow-flies-perimeter-and-area-of-compound-shapes/znn76v4

If you wish to consolidate your learning further, please begin exploring the White Rose Maths Spring Block 5 Perimeter, Area and Volume learning booklet. There is a link below:

Y6 – Perimeter, area and volume.pdf

 

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


30 January 2023

English

This week in English, we will be beginning a new unit writing a non-chronological report or information fact based around the topic of ‘fears.’ We will brainstorm common fears e.g. spiders, dark, dinosaurs, scary films, heights as well as more unusual fears e.g. mobile phones, broccoli, baked beans, rain, jam etc. We will also discover their technical names, symptoms and possible causes and cures. We will then create a toolkit for an information text and plan our own information text. You could search information at home about your own fears.

Toolkit:

  • Sub-headings to show subjects / content of the paragraphs,
  • Expert opinions,
  • Technical vocabulary to add precision,
  • Brackets or dashes for extra information,
  • Use of provisional statements with words and phrases like usually…, seem to be…, tend to…,
  • Opinions as well as facts e.g. Some people still believe that… It used to be thought that…,
  • References to sources of evidence to add authority e.g. However, last year, a new variety was discovered…,
  • Colons to introduce lists.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: neighbour, nuisance, occupy, occur.

This week we will be looking at further words with silent letters or unstressed vowels.  We will discuss strategies for remembering and spelling the unstressed vowels in words with more than one syllable.

Possible strategies for remembering unstressed vowels/consonants :

  • Write the word out and use a highlighter pen to emphasise the unstressed part.
  • Look for words within words, e.g. remember the ‘ar’ syllable in separate because there is a ‘rat’ in the middle.
  • Use spell, speak for some words, to over-articulate the unstressed part, e.g. choc-o-late, fam-i-ly.
  • Think of the history of words, e.g. holiday comes from holy day, and when the two words are together, the y becomes i.
  • Think of the word family (e.g. definite, finite, infinity / family, familiar) because sometimes the unstressed vowel is clearer in other words in the family.
  • Look for prefixes or suffixes and think of the root word (e.g. differ+ence.)

 

Now is the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of parenthesis and commas.

Parenthesis is a word or clause added into a sentence to give extra information. It is particularly useful for adding more information about a setting or character. For example: The old man (who had hair as white as snow) peered curiously through the window. Brackets, dashes or commas are used to enclose the extra information.

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Parenthesis and commas (C).’

You may find it useful to look at the following web page which has more information, examples, activities and videos:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zcnbn9q

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘An Underground City.’ Please complete the inference questions on pages 18-19 of your comprehension homework book, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be continuing the topic of algebra. We will be thinking about how to find pairs of numbers that satisfy an equation with two unknowns. For example, if a + b = 6, what possible solutions can we think of? Taking this further, think about the following example: 𝑋 and 𝑌 are whole numbers. • 𝑋 is a one digit odd number. • 𝑌 is a two digit even number. • 𝑋 + 𝑌 = 25. Find all the possible pairs of numbers that satisfy the equation. We will also be solving formula such as: 4x+2=22 or 2n+3=11

There are videos to help on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zghp34j

 

There is also a video to help you and your parents at home, explaining how algebra is taught through the White Rose scheme.

https://whiterosemaths.com/maths-with-michael

Please complete your White Rose Maths Spring Block 3. Algebra learning booklet, questions 5-9. (You have a paper copy and the link is below.)

Y6 – Algebra.pdf

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


23 January 2023

English

This week in English, we will be continuing our narrative unit based on creating suspense. We will be creating a further suspense story and thinking about the purpose of dialogue in narratives. We will discuss how dialogue can be used to: move on the story, give a moment of clarity or present a significant thought from a character. We will also be considering how spoken English is different from standard written English, looking at the use of contracted forms in speech, possible slang or casual terms. We will also be watching a short film entitled ‘Almas.’ We will be discussing how the author / director creates suspense through this short film. We will then write our own version based on this stimulus.

You may like to watch the film on the link : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aw0uORumRts

 Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: interrupt, language, leisure, lightning.

We will also be discussing words with silent letters e.g. doubt, island, lamb, solemn,

thistle, knight. There are some teaching points that can help:

  • Silent b always occurs after m (lamb, thumb) and before t (doubt, debt)
  • Silent k and g are found before n (gnome or knight)
  • Silent l follows vowels a, o and ou – it produces a flat-sounding vowel (salmon, palm, could)
  • Silent w often precedes r (write, wrong)
  • Silent t is often found nestled in between s and le in words with a “sul” ending (whistle, castle, nestle) or between s and n (listen, fasten)
  • Silent n follows m (autumn, hymn, solemn).

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of subject verb agreement. In order for sentences to be grammatically correct, the subject and the verb must agree in number, whether singular or plural. This is referred to as subject verb agreement. In most cases, a singular subject will require a singular verb and a plural subject will need a plural verb. For example, ‘The pig was playing in the mud.’ In this case, ‘pig’ is singular, so we choose the corresponding singular verb ‘was’. The plural form of this sentence would be: ‘The pigs were playing in the mud.’

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘subject verb agreement.’

You may also find it useful to look at the following web page which has more information, examples, activities and videos:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/znfbf82

Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

 

and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: Chioke’s Chance. Please complete the fact retrieval questions on pages 16-17 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be recalling and using equivalences between simple fractions, decimals and percentages. Look at the diagram below and think about how you can find simple equivalents:

You may like to consolidate your learning by completing the following lesson or playing the following matching game:

 

https://classroom.thenational.academy/lessons/simple-fraction-decimal-and-percentage-equivalents-70t62e

https://mathsframe.co.uk/en/resources/resource/120/match-fractions-decimals-and-percentages

If you wish to consolidate your learning further, please continue exploring the White Rose Maths Spring Block 1. Percentages learning booklet. There is a link below:

https://Y6 – Percentages.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


16 January 2023

English

This week in English, we will be continuing our narrative unit based on creating suspense. We will be creating a further suspense story and thinking about the following:

  • Including –ing clauses as starters? (verb /adverb) E.g. grinning menacingly, laughing wildly, whispering softly, crying desperately.
  • Including year six requirements for a range of punctuation: commas, colons, semi-colons, ellipses, parenthesis, dashes, hyphens.
  • Using a thesaurus to improve vocabulary and grammar choices. What are we trying to make the reader think and feel?

We will also be watching a short film entitled ‘Road’s End.’ We will be discussing how the author / director creates suspense through this short film. What techniques are used? We will then write our own version based on this stimulus.

You may like to watch the film on the link below:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQN-KvFvTJg

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: immediate, immediately, individual, interfere.

We will also be exploring words with different suffixes, taught from year 1 to year 6. Choose one or two suffixes that would be familiar from earlier work, such as –y / -ly / -ous / -ness / -ally / -ation. Write out as many words as you can using these suffixes.

Now is also the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

 Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising tenses, with a focus on the present progressive and the past progressive as well as the present perfect and the past perfect.

Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘Verbs in perfect form.’

You may also find it useful to look at the following web pages which have more detailed explanations, examples and videos:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-are-present-continuous-and-past-continuous

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-are-present-perfect-and-past-perfect

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/. )

 

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘The Perfect Photo.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and structure questions on pages 10-11 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be continuing our work on decimals with all four operations. We will be looking at various problems involving decimals and thinking about how we can solve these using different methods and working.

The following questions will give you some helpful opportunities to consolidate your thinking about decimal numbers. (Answers are also attached.)

Y6 – Decimals.pdf

If you wish to consolidate your learning further, please continue exploring the White Rose Maths Spring Block 1. Decimals learning booklet. There is a link below:

https://www.smitham.croydon.sch.uk/croydon/primary/smitham/arenas/websitecontent/web/decimals(1).pdf

 

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


04 January 2023

English

This week in English, we will be introducing a new narrative unit based on creating suspense.  We will be thinking about how the author creates atmosphere by hiding the threat. For example:

It started with a creak. Just a small creak: a cat’s paw stepping on a wooden floor, an old barn door being moved slightly ajar…that kind of thing. And Jack could deal with that kind of thing.

The following website also offers some advice for writing scary stories:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zx339j6/articles/zy3sk2p

Spelling

Now is the time to continue to revise all the words from the year 3/4 and the year 5/6 spelling lists. This will really help to give you confidence in the term to come.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising expanded noun phrases. An expanded noun phrase adds more detail to the noun by adding one or more adjectives. An adjective is a word that describes a noun. An expanded noun phrase can also add detail by saying where a noun is. For example: a tree next to the house, some sweets on the floor, the castle by the ocean. Please login to SPAG.com and revise ‘expanded noun phrases.’

There are further examples and explanations at BBC bitesize:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zwwp8mn/articles/z3nfw6f

(Google is also always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.)

 

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three entries with parent signatures in your reading diary. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘The Perfect Photo.’ Please complete the fact retrieval questions on pages 6-7 of your fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In maths, we will be revising identifying the value of each digit in numbers given to 3 decimal places and reminding ourselves of the concepts of tenths, hundredths and thousandths. For example:

You can support your learning by looking at the following tool:

https://mathsbot.com/tools/placeValue

If you wish to consolidate your learning further, please begin exploring the White Rose Maths Spring Block 1. Decimals learning booklet. There is a link below:  https://www.smitham.croydon.sch.uk/croydon/primary/smitham/arenas/websitecontent/web/decimals(1).pdf

 

Many thanks for your continued support,

Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


12 December 2022

English

This week in English, we will be exploring a range of different Christmas adverts. We will be considering the overall structure, story and intention behind Christmas adverts and evaluating their effectiveness. We will then be planning, writing and performing our own Christmas adverts. You may wish to Google past Christmas adverts to watch for example: John Lewis and Partnership adverts.

Spelling

This week we will be revising and assessing all of the spellings from the year 3 / 4 and the year 5 / 6 word lists. We will be identifying those spellings which still cause us difficulties and think about ways in which we can change our errors and re-learn these words.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of the grammar we have looked at this term so far, with a focus on general terminology. There are suggestions for how you can revise the different grammar taught in year six on the following website:

https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/

Please complete the ‘Terminology Year 6 A and B’ tests on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary. Make sure you have chosen yourself a book ready for the Christmas holidays. Don’t forget to complete a book review each time you finish your book for a chance to be entered into the prize draw.

There is no specific page of comprehension for you to complete this week, just look over the ones we have done this term and see if there are any errors which you are still finding tricky. (The page at the back helps you to analyse this.)

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be consolidating our knowledge of the topics we have covered this term in year six. Can we show our thinking in a methodical way?  We will also be looking at our explanations of problems and our reasoning skills when trying to justify our answers. The following sentence stems are helpful to use:

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths booklets for the Autumn term. (Make sure you click on year six.) The link is as follows: https://whiterosemaths.com/parent-resources

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


05 December 2022

English

This week in English, we will be continuing to explore a range of different poems and attempting to follow the style of a specific poet. We will be studying Kit Wright’s poem: ‘The Magic Box’ and Miroslav Holub’s poem ‘The Door.’ You may like to find a poem of your own which you can bring into school and perform.

When choosing, think about the following questions:

  • What did you like about the poem?
  • What was your favourite line and why?
  • How did the poem make you feel?
  • Which line in the poem did you find the most interesting and why?
  • Are there any parts of the poem that leave you with unanswered questions?
  • What questions would you like to ask the poet?

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: foreign, forty, frequently, government.

We will also be discussing words with the ending -tion, -sion, -ssion, -cian. How do we know which ones to use (t, s, ss or c)?

  • -tion is the most common spelling. It is used if the root word ends in t or te.
  • -ssion is used of the root word ends in ss or -mit.
  • -sion is used if the root word ends in d or se.
  • -cian is used if the root word ends in c or cs, and these words generally link to a

profession.

You could always google ‘words ending in ….’ and choose one of the above endings. How many examples can you discover?

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

SpellingWordList_Y5-6.pdf (oxfordowl.co.uk)

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of suffixes and prefixes. A prefix is a string of letters that are added to the beginning of a root word, changing its meaning. Each prefix has a meaning (for example, un- means not, sub- means under mis- means wrong or badly). Year 6 Prefixes: bi-, aqua-, aero-, super-, micro-, audi-, trans-, prim-, auto-, tele-, re-, pre-  Example words: bicycle, aquarium, aeroplane, supernatural, microscope, audible, transport, primary, automatic, telephone, replay, prehistoric. A suffix is a string of letters that go at the end of a root word, changing or adding to its meaning. Suffixes can show if a word is a noun, an adjective, an adverb or a verb. The suffixes -er and -est are also used to form the comparative and superlative forms of adjectives and some adverbs.

There are further explanations, videos and activities on the following link:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-is-a-prefix

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-is-a-suffix

Please complete the ‘Suffixes and prefixes A and B’ tests on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Diving the Depths.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and prediction questions from pages 40-41 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be continuing to explore the concepts of scale factor and solving ratio and proportion problems. We will be learning that ‘similar’ in mathematics means that one shape is an exact enlargement of the other, not just they have some common properties. We will look at examples where we can use multiplication and division facts to calculate missing information and scale factors, finding missing lengths and areas of shapes. Look at the picture below for a simple example:

There is also useful support on BBC Bitesize:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zvmxsbk/articles/z2vm8hv

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths Ratio booklet.

Y6 – Ratio.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


28 November 2022

English

This week in English, we will be exploring a range of different poems and attempting to follow the style of a specific poet.  We will be looking at examples by Pie Corbett, Roger McGough and Michael Rosen and thinking about how the poets use: abstract nouns, alliteration, juxtaposition, patterns, couplets, similes and the use of rhyme.

You could look in advance at example poems ‘The Writer of this poem’ and ‘The hearer of this poem’ by Roger McGough. You can listen to them being read by the poet on the following link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/teach/school-radio/english-ks2-roger-mcgough-talking-poetry/zmqf2sg

You may choose to listen to the poet Michael Rosen read ‘Words are ours’ on the following link: https://www.bbc.co.uk/teach/school-radio/english-ks2-michael-rosen-talking-poetry/zn37rj6

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: excellent, existence, explanation, familiar.

In spelling, we will be thinking about words with -ant / -ent, -ance / -ence, -ancy / -ency. Try to create strings of words with the same root such as:

    • observe, observant, observation, observance
    • depend, dependence, dependable
    • independent, independently, independence
  • You could also sound out words and clap the syllables of the root word, e.g. de-pend / tol-er / con-fid before ending -ence / -ance.
  • You could always google ‘words ending in ….’ and choose one of the above endings. How many examples can you discover?

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

 Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of formal and informal language. We often use formal language when we write. However, there are times where writing can be informal, like when we’re writing text messages, emails, postcards or letters to friends. We use informal language more when we speak, but there are also times where it is expected that we speak formally. For example, in a classroom presentation or when meeting someone new.

There are further explanations, videos and activities on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zv7fqp3/articles/z498dp3

Please complete the ‘Formal and informal language A and B’ tests on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Diving the Depths.’ Please complete the inference questions from pages 38-39 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be exploring the concepts of ratio and scale factor. For example, Ron plants flowers in a flower bed. For every 2 red roses he plants 5 white roses. He says, “2/5 of the roses are red.” Is Ron correct? (No, 2/7 are red.) The ratio however, is 2:5. How can we show this in a pictorial way?  We will introduce the colon notation as the ratio symbol, and continue to link this with the language ‘for every…, there are…’ so that we can read ratios e.g. 3 ∶ 5 is “three to five” relating to the order of parts. For example, ‘For every 3 bananas there are 2 apples would be the same as 3 ∶ 2 and for every 2 apples there are 3 bananas would be the same as 2 ∶ 3.’

We will also be thinking about how to draw bar models / pictorial representations to represent further ratio problems. E.g. A farmer plants some crops in a field. For every 4 carrots he plants 2 leeks. He plants 48 carrots in total. How many leeks did he plant? How many vegetables did he plant in total?

Jack mixes 2 parts of red paint with 3 parts blue paint to make purple paint. If he uses 12 parts blue paint, how many parts red paint does he use?

Eva has a packet of sweets. For every 3 red sweets there are 5 green sweets. If there are 32 sweets in the packet in total, how many of each colour are there?

 

There are videos and quizzes to help support our learning on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zsq7hyc

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths Ratio booklet. A link is below:

Y6 -ratio.pdf

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


21 November 2022

English

This week in English, we will be completing a series of short writing tasks based on our class novel of ‘Goodnight Mr Tom.’ We will be exploring writing in character, with a particular focus on the language spoken by the characters and their particular dialects.

We will also be considering letter writing and the use of the third and the first person as well as ensuring that we are meeting the “all the time” expectations for year six writing.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: equipment, equipped, especially, exaggerate.

In spelling, we will be thinking about the “i before e except after c” rule which applies to words where the sound spelt by ei is “ee” /i:/.  (There are, however, words where i does indeed come after c, such as science, ancient, or glacier.)  We will introduce the mnemonic: “When an i and an e make the sound ‘ee’, use i before e except after c.” We will be exploring words using ei making an “ee” sound after a soft ‘c’: deceive, conceive, receive, perceive, ceiling. We will also consolidate ei words where ei makes an “ay” sound, such as weight or weigh.

There is a quiz on the following link:

https://www.educationquizzes.com/ks2/english/spelling-ie-or-ei/

There is also a lesson produced by Oak Academy on the link below:

https://classroom.thenational.academy/lessons/to-investigate-ee-sound-ie-or-ei-spelling-74t3jc

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of subordinate clauses and the use of conjunctions. A subordinate clause contains both a subject and a verb. A subordinate clause must be attached to a main clause as it would not make sense on its own. For example “I was hungry because I missed breakfast”. In this sentence “because I missed breakfast” is the subordinate clause to the main clause “I was hungry”. The subordinate clause may also appear at the beginning of the sentence, for example: “Unless it is the weekend, I don’t eat meat.” Here the subordinate clause is “unless it is the weekend.” Subordinate clauses often start with these words…after, although, as, because, even, how, if, now, once, since, so, than, unless, where, when, whenever, where, wherever, while. These words are known as subordinating conjunctions. There are further explanations on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zwwp8mn/articles/zqk37p3

Please complete the ‘Subordinate clauses and conjunctions B’ SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Diving the Depths.’ Please complete the fact retrieval questions from pages 36-37 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In Maths this week, we will be thinking about different units of measure and converting between them. We will be re-visiting metric units and the relationships between mm – cm – m –km, ml –l, g-kg. We will be converting between different units of measures and thinking about the place value involved. We will also be converting between miles and kilometres and having a brief think about some imperial measures.

There are videos and quizzes to help support our learning on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/z4nsgk7/articles/z63qdp3

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths Converting Units booklet. The link is below:

Y6 – Converting units

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


14 November 2022

English

This week in English, we will be completing our narrative unit with a focus on setting description. We will continue to discuss how we can improve our own writing, to develop or challenge the description.

  • Think about the need to ensure that the character (and the reader) has a strong reaction to this place and how we can enhance this feeling.
  • Remember to include all the senses.
  • Consider the effective use of synonyms.
  • Leave elements unsaid.
  • Include a well-placed line of dialogue from inside the character’s head.

You may wish to explore a thesaurus to extend vocabulary choices, making a word list of some possible, descriptive vocabulary. There are helpful suggestions on using a thesaurus on the link below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zcc2gdm/articles/zf96ncw

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: dictionary, disastrous, embarrass, environment.

In spelling, we will be working on -ous endings with straightforward adding of -ous to words like danger and poison, and then higher-frequency -ious or -eous endings such as various, curious. Think about breaking the words up into syllables and spelling each part, e.g. poi-son-ous. You could even write the -ous suffix in a different colour or highlight any tricky parts to the word. Year 3 /4 statutory words: famous, various. Year 5 /6 statutory words: conscious, disastrous, marvellous, mischievous. There is further information on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zqqsw6f/articles/zqcpv9q

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of synonyms and antonyms. Synonyms are words with the same or similar meaning: words such as happy, cheerful and merry or words such as sad, miserable and heartbroken. Antonyms are words with opposite meanings: words such as angry and peaceful or words such as funny and serious. You may like to use a thesaurus to find synonyms and antonyms for words.

You may like to watch the video and complete the quiz on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zfkk7ty/articles/z8t8pbk

There are further explanations, videos and songs on the ‘School Run’ website:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-are-synonyms-and-antonyms

Please complete the ‘Synonyms and antonyms A and B’ tasks on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary. Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘From Sketches to Cinema.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and comparison questions from pages 30-31of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be completing our unit of work on fractions. This week we will be consolidating how to find fractions of amounts with unit and non-unit fractions. One of the ways we will think about this process is through the use of the bar model. If we know that 1/5 of 40 kg is equal to 8 kg, how can we find 2/5 of 40 kg? To find 2/5, we need to find the total value of 2 of the parts. 2 × 8 kg = 16 kg therefore 2/5 of 40 kg = 16 kg.

You could also watch episode 5 – fractions – on the following link:

https://whiterosemaths.com/maths-with-michael

There are explanations, activities and videos on the following link too:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zt8dmp3/articles/zjtg47h

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths Block 3 – Fractions booklet (B.) The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-3-Fractions-B-2020.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


07 November 2022

English

This week in English, we will be continuing to write a narrative with a focus on setting description. We will be taking inspiration again from the text called ‘My Iceland.’

We will begin by creating a boxed up plan for our text, based on overall similarity to the initial text. In our story, we need to focus on describing the fantasy landscape.

Remember, the content of vocabulary and grammar choices are important in year six– aim high! Think back to how we developed the initial setting images by crafting the language and use a thesaurus to choose some really impactful vocabulary. It may be useful to google images of the country of Iceland or watch some online videos to give you some initial inspiration.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: definite, desperate, determined, develop.

In spelling lessons, we will be exploring words that end in the suffixes -able or -ible. We will be discussing the convention that we normally add -able if the root word is a complete, recognisable word, e.g. lock > lockable, consider > considerable. The -ible ending is generally used if a complete root word cannot be heard before it, e.g. poss > possible. We will also be thinking about the fact that we normally just add the suffix to the root word. However:

  • If the word ends in an e or consonant +y, then the usual rules of dropping the e or changing y to an i apply, e.g. excite> excitable, rely> reliable.
  • If the -able ending is added to a word ending in -ce or -ge, the e after the c or g must be kept, as those letters would otherwise have their hard sounds (as in cap and gap) before the a of the -able ending, e.g. change > changeable, notice > noticeable. There is further explanation on the links below:

https://www.ecenglish.com/learnenglish/lessons/when-use-able-and-ible

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhHuVWtMMbg

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of modal verbs (or probability words.) These are verbs that indicate likelihood, ability, permission or obligation. Words like: can/could, may/might, will/would, shall/should and must. In the sentence: “The Sea Monster should go away,” ‘should’ is the modal verb as it indicates the likelihood of the Sea Monster going away.

You may like to watch the video and complete the quiz on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zwwp8mn/articles/zps4pbk

There are further explanations, videos and songs on the ‘School Run’ website:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-are-modal-verbs

Please complete the ‘Probability Words’ task on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘From Sketches to Cinema.’ Please complete the inference questions on pages 28-29 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In maths, we will be continuing our unit of work on fractions. This week we will be learning how to multiply and divide fractions. To multiply fractions, you need to multiply the numerators together and multiply the denominators together. To divide fractions, we will be using the KFC method – Keep the first, Flip the second, Change the sign.

 

 

There are explanations, activities and videos on the following links:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zhdwxnb/articles/z8fyv4j

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides/z2b83k7/revision/3

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths Block 3 – Fractions booklet (B.) The link is below:

 

Y6 -Fractions

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


01 November 2022

English

This week in English, we will be writing a narrative with a focus on setting description. We will be exploring and interpreting a text called ‘My Iceland,’ as well as the wordless picture book ‘Journey’ by Aaron Becker. Here is a link to explore:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWqhNpjvcSs

You may like to practise writing about a setting by choosing a picture to describe in detail e.g. a door, a turret, the grass, the sky. What can you see? Choose three key words that describe that feature. Can you improve these initial choices using a thesaurus?

Change the word into a short phrase thinking about adjectives / nouns / verbs / adverbs e.g. towering trees were rising relentlessly, ghostly lanterns are glowing menacingly, cobbled paths wind furiously.

Think about how you can combine your ideas into an interesting or powerful sentence e.g. ‘The quivering leaves balanced precariously on the tree’s frail branches.’ Write short description for one of the images, including all the senses and / or examples of figurative language.

There is further support and suggestions about writing a setting descriptions on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zx339j6/articles/zdfytrd

 

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: convenience, correspond, criticise, curiosity.

In spelling lessons, we will be exploring words ending in -cial or –tial. We will be discussing the rule that we normally add -cial if the root word ends with a vowel, and -tial if the root word ends with a consonant. We will also be considering how we can turn these adjectives into adverbs by adding -ly in the same way as we have for other adjectives in the past. For example, the addition of -ly to words: confidential > confidentially, official > officially. There are some quizzes and games to support your understanding on the following link:

https://wordwall.net/en-gb/community/cial-tial

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of parenthesis and commas. Parenthesis is adding extra information to a sentence using brackets, dashes or commas. Parenthesis adds extra information to a sentence or a paragraph but the passage should still make sense without it. This can be done using: brackets, dashes or commas. For example: ‘The case was worn – and very full – and its straps struggled to keep in its contents.’ Here’s another example: ‘James (who was terrified of heights) was taking part in a charity skydive at the weekend.’ The sentence still makes sense without the words inside the brackets, it’s just a bit more interesting with the added detail.

You may like to watch the video on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zmfc7ty/articles/z7hppg8

There are further explanations, videos and activities on the ‘School Run’ website:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-is-parenthesis

Please complete the ‘Parenthesis and commas A and B’ tasks on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘From Sketches to Cinema.’ Please complete the fact retrieval questions on pages 26-27 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In maths, we will be continuing our unit of work on fractions. This week we will be learning how to add and subtract fractions with different denominators and mixed numbers, using the concept of equivalent fractions. When fractions do not have the same denominator, before we can add the fractions together, we must first create equivalent fractions that have common denominators. For example to complete the calculation 3/5 + 2/7 we could use the common denominator of 35 and make 21/35 + 10/35.  Now that the denominators are the same, we can add the numerators and put the answer over the same denominator e.g. 31/35.

There are explanations, activities and videos on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zhdwxnb/articles/z9n4k7h

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at some questions from the White Rose Maths Block 3 – Fractions booklet (A.) The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-3-Fractions-A-2020.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


17 October 2022

English

This week in English, we will be completing our unit of work based on discussion texts. We will be holding a formal classroom debate to finally answer the questions which are important to us. We will include our own knowledge as well as any facts we have discovered and can use to support our opinions. The following video explains what a debate is and how to present and evaluate facts and opinions when debating.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zxvv4wx

 

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: competition, conscience, conscious, controversy.

In spelling lessons, we will revising the year 5 / 6 words we have learnt this half term and testing our knowledge. Here is a reminder:

accommodate, accompany, according, achieve, aggressive, amateur, ancient, apparent, appreciate, attached, available, average, awkward, bargain, bruise, category, cemetery, committee, communicate, community, competition, conscience, conscious, controversy.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating our understanding of fronted adverbials. Adverbials are words or phrases that give more information to the sentence. E.g. “I discovered fronted adverbials earlier today.” ‘Earlier today’ is the adverbial. A fronted adverbial is when the adverbial word or phrase is moved to the front of the sentence, before the verb.” Earlier today, I discovered fronted adverbials.” So here, ‘earlier today’ is a fronted adverbial.

You may like to complete the quiz on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zwwp8mn/articles/zp937p3

Please complete the ‘Fronted adverbials A and B’ tasks on SPAG.com.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

There is no comprehension text for this week. Instead, please can you look over all the pages we have completed this half term and identify any areas you are more and less confident with.  Think about the preciseness of your answers.

Maths

In maths, we will be beginning our unit of work on fractions. This week we will be finding equivalent fractions, using common factors to simplify fractions, converting between mixed numbers and improper fractions and vice versa and comparing and ordering fractions including fractions greater than one.

There are explanations, activities and videos on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zhdwxnb/articles/zcdgxfr

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zhdwxnb/articles/zxcfjty

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could take a look at the opening questions from the White Rose Maths Block 3 – Fractions booklet (A.) The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-3-Fractions-A-2020.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


10th October 2022

English

This week in English, we will be continuing our unit of work based on discussion texts. We will be completing our texts, focussing on our conclusion. This is the point of the text where, as an author, you need to bring a sense of conclusion and balance, but also make a decision as to for or against. Try to include a variety of phrases for drawing conclusions e.g. In conclusion…, to sum up…, Having considered…, In the light of…, given these arguments …, On the whole…, By and large…, In the circumstances…, All things considered…

Time will also be given to edit your own and a partner’s work with attention to one element of the toolkit only. Have you fulfilled that criteria? This may require particular paragraphs to be re-written or key elements to be modified and improved e.g. vocabulary, grammar or punctuation.

  • Keep in mind what makes an effective text and think about power of vocabulary choices and impact of changes.
  • Consider modal verbs e.g. should rather than could.
  • Look for opportunities to include reported speech.
  • Find other opportunities to address readers directly from time to time to hold attention and draw them in to the arguments:  inviting them to speculate e.g. You may be wondering why…,    asking questions e.g. How would you like to meet one  of these creatures on your way home…  using exclamations e.g. …and they smell horrible!

We will also be beginning to plan a second discussion text thinking about whether or not something should be ‘given up,’ for example – homework, school uniform.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: cemetery, committee, communicate, community.

In spelling lessons, we will be thinking about the convention that we normally double a single consonant in a multi syllable word after a short vowel sound and how this can be helpful in learning some of the Y3/4 and Y5/6 spelling list words. We will be trying to identify the short vowels and double consonants and attempting to spell the words below:

Year 3 /4 examples: appear, arrive, different, difficult, disappear, grammar, occasion, opposite, possess, possible, pressure, suppose.

Year 5 /6 examples: accommodate, accompany, according, aggressive, apparent, appreciate, attached, committee, communicate, community, correspond, embarrass, equipped, exaggerate, excellent, harass, immediate, interrupt, marvellous, occupy, occur, opportunity, sufficient, suggest.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be consolidating the concept of cohesion and how to make a piece of writing flow.  We will be looking at particular grammar which aids cohesion, for example – adverbials or conjunctions. What does cohesion do?

  • It keeps order in the paragraph.
  • Related ideas are kept together.
  • It makes it easier for the reader to understand the text.
  • Ideas flow more smoothly.
  • It provides links between ideas.

 

You may like to watch the video on the following link:

https://youtu.be/CQBcWXO_oVQ

Please complete the ‘Linking ideas and cohesion A and B’ tasks on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘The Problem with Plastic.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and language questions on pages 20-21 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be thinking about how we can use estimation to check answers to calculations and determine, in the context of a problem, an appropriate degree of accuracy. Estimating the answer of a calculation serves as a sense-check on whether your answer is correct, and this can be done either before or after a calculation. We will also be considering how to work out other facts from a given fact using our knowledge of place value, inverse operations, commutativity and mental strategies.

There are further explanations and videos on the following links: https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zh8dmp3/articles/z874h39

 

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-estimate

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could look again at the questions from the White Rose Maths Block 1 – Four Operations home learning booklet (A) – but this time, make an estimate for each question. The link is below:

 

Y6 – Four operations

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.

 


03 October 2022

English

This week in English, we will be beginning a unit of work based on discussion texts. We will be discussing and debating various issues, considering view for, views against and our own personal opinions. We will be exploring examples of discussions texts and discovering how they have to put forward both sides of an argument before reaching a conclusion. As a class, we are going to answer the question – ‘Should daleks be allowed on Earth?’ and writing our own texts based on this discussion, linking ideas to our topic of ‘Time Travellers.’ You may like to start to think about how you would answer this question, ensuring that you consider both sides of the argument. The following table suggests some features which may be helpful in a discussion text:

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: awkward, bargain, bruise, category.

In spelling lessons, we will be continuing exploring rules for applying suffixes, this time, looking at those beginning with vowel letters: -ed and -ing / -er and -est / -y – . Do we keep, chop or change the ending? Look at the rules below, can you think of further examples?

When you add suffixes beginning with vowel letters, you either:

  • Do nothing, just add the suffix (where word ends in two consonants) – sort, sorting, sorted / long, longer, longest.
  • Drop e and add the suffix – dance, dancing, danced / nice, nicer, nicest.
  • Change y to i and add the suffix (where the word ends with consonant followed by a y and only for -ed) – reply, replying, replied / copy, copying, copied but play, playing, played / noisy, noisier, noisiest.
  • Double the consonant and add the suffix (where the word ends in a short vowel sound and consonant) – shop, shopping, shopped / fit, fitting, fitted / fit, fitter, fittest.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising apostrophes for possession and contraction with a further exploration of plural apostrophes. An apostrophe can be used to show that one thing belongs to or is connected to something. This is called a possessive apostrophe. Let’s take a look at some examples.

The cat’s tail was fluffy. Cat is a singular noun so you need to add an apostrophe and “s” to show that the tail belongs to the cat.

Charles’ cat was naughty. Charles is a singular noun that ends in an “s”, so you need to add an apostrophe to show that the cat belongs to Charles.

The brothers’ feet were muddy. Brothers is a plural noun that ends in an “s” so you don’t add another “s” after your apostrophe. You can just add an apostrophe to show the feet belongs to the brothers.

The children’s toys were broken. Children is a plural noun but it doesn’t end with an “s” so you need to add an apostrophe and “s” to show that the toys belong to the children.

You may like to watch the videos and try the quiz on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zvwwxnb/articles/zx9ydxs

Please complete the ‘Apostrophes and Plurals A and B’ tasks on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘The Problem with Plastic.’ Please complete the inference questions on pages 18-19 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be learning to divide, building to dividing four digit numbers by two digit numbers using the formal written method of long division. If the number which we are dividing by is quite large, it can be useful to write the multiples in a list before beginning. (See the example below.)

There are further explanations and videos on the following link:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-is-long-division

If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could complete questions from the White Rose Maths Block 1 – Four Operations home learning booklet (A). The link is below:

 

Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-2-Four-operations-A-2020

There are also a video for you to watch at home with your parents on multiplication from the link to White Rose, Maths with Michael, Episode 4 – Division below:

https://whiterosemaths.com/maths-with-michael

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


26 September 2022

English

This week in English, we will be continuing to look at stories which contain a ‘time slip’ or a ‘flashback.’ We will be continuing writing our own stories based on an extract with a flashback from the Pixar movie ‘Up.’ We will be finding clues which suggest the flashback elements and discussing how it evokes an emotional response from the watcher / reader. How can we get an emotional reaction from our reader? Focus on how the character is feeling / how they move in and out of the flashback. The use of dialogue could also feature here. This flashback text will be written in the first person – I – looking back on events through the central man’s eyes – putting themselves into his shoes.

The flashback for ‘Up’ is available on the following link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2bk_9T482g

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: appreciate, attached, available, average.

In spelling lessons, we will be exploring rules for applying suffixes beginning with consonant letters. -ment, -ness, -ful , -less, -ly.

  • The suffixes -ness and -ment will generate a noun from an adjective or verb, such as: A happy child is full of happiness, or I enjoy singing as it gives me enjoyment.
  • The suffixes -ful and -less will turn a noun into an adjective: If you do not have a penny, you are penniless.
  • The suffix -ly will convert an adjective into an adverb: When people are kind, they behave kindly towards others.

How many words can you think of with the suffixes -ment, -ness, -ful, -less and –ly?

You may like to watch the video below which explains how suffixes are added to the root word:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/teach/class-clips-video/english-ks2-wonderful-words-suffixes-part-2/zvjvrj6

 

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising direct speech and how to use full speech punctuation. Here are a few general rules for punctuating speech:

  • Start a new line for a new speaker.
  • Add a comma before the opening speech marks.
  • Open and close speech with speech marks (or inverted commas).
  • Begin what is spoken with a capital letter.
  • End the line of speech with a comma, exclamation mark or question mark.

 

There are further explanations of the rules, with videos to watch, on the link below:

https://www.theschoolrun.com/what-are-direct-and-indirect-speech

Please complete the ‘Direct speech punctuation A and B’ tasks on SPAG.com. Your logins will be in your reading diary.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘The Problem with Plastic.’ Please complete the fact retrieval questions on pages 16-17 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be learning about square and cubed numbers. A square number is a number multiplied by itself. The square numbers up to 100 are 0, 1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36, 49, 64, 81, and 100. A cube number is a number multiplied by itself 3 times. The cube numbers up to 100 are 1, 8, 27, and 64. Cube numbers can be depicted as three-dimensional cubes.

We will also be revising the formal written method of long multiplication, moving up to multiplying a four-digit number by a two-digit number. If you wish to consolidate this work at home, you could complete questions from the White Rose Maths Block 1 – Four Operations home learning booklet (B). The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-2-Four-operations-B-2020.pdf

There are also a video for you to watch at home with your parents on multiplication from the link to White Rose, Maths with Michael, Episode 3 – Multiplication below:

https://whiterosemaths.com/maths-with-michael

If you need further reminders about written multiplication strategies, you could also watch the videos, try the quiz and complete the activities on BBC Bitesize:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/z4chnrd

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


20 September 2022

English

This week in English, we will be continuing to look at stories which contain a ‘time slip’ or a ‘flashback.’ We will be writing our own stories based on a video called ‘The Piano,’ by Aidan Gibbons and an extract with a flashback from the Pixar movie ‘Up.’ We will be considering how important it is to move the reader cohesively between the present time and the flashback.

 

 

The film ‘The Piano’ can be accessed on the following link:

https://vimeo.com/57315645

 

 

 

The flashback for ‘Up’ is available on the following link:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2bk_9T482g

 

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: aggressive, amateur, ancient, apparent.

In spelling lessons, we will be learning to distinguish between the spelling and meaning of homophones. A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another but is spelt differently, e.g. mail, male; to, too, two. We will be identifying some of the pairs of homophones from Y3/4 and Y5/6 teaching, where one of the words is a verb, for example: passed / past, missed / mist, guessed / guest, allowed / aloud. We will be discussing how we might recognise which of these is a verb in each case (-ed endings.) We will also be exploring the difference between verbs and nouns such as advice / advise, device / devise, licence / license, practice / practise, prophecy / prophesy, following the convention that nouns are generally spelt with a c and verbs with an s.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

 

SpellingWordList_Y3-4 

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising relative clauses. A relative clause can be used to give additional information about a noun. They are introduced by a relative pronoun like ‘that’, ‘which’, ‘who’, ‘whose’, ‘where’ and ‘when’. For example: ‘I won’t stand by the man who smells of slime.’ In this example, the relative clause is ‘who smells of slime’. It provides more information about the man. The relative pronoun, ‘who’, is used to connect these clauses in the sentence. You may like to complete the quiz below:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zwwp8mn/articles/zsrt4qt

Please complete the ‘Relative clauses’ task on SPAG.com. If you have lost your login details, please ask me.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Angel of the North.’ Please complete the word meaning, summary and prediction questions on pages 10-11 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be learning about factors, multiples and prime numbers.

A factor is an integer (whole number) that will divide exactly into another number. For example, 8 is a factor of 24 because 8 will divide into 24 exactly 3 times with no remainder.

The multiples of a number are the values in that number’s times table. For example, the multiples of 5 are 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and so on. There are an infinite amount of multiples of any given number.

A prime number is a number with exactly two factors. A prime number is only divisible by 1 and itself. Another way to think of prime numbers is that they are only ever found as answers in their own times tables.

There are further explanations, activities and videos on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zfq7hyc

Please complete your White Rose Maths Block 2 – Four Operations home learning booklet (B) – Questions 2,4,7,8 The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-2-Four-operations-B-2020.pdf

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


12 September 2022

English

This week in English, we will be continuing to look at stories which contain a ‘time slip.’ We will be writing our own stories and editing them to meet year six targets and expectations, completing the following process:

  • Editing for mistakes – Check writing for spelling, punctuation and grammar errors.
  • Editing against toolkit – Highlight key features of language e.g. historical vocabulary, rhetorical questions, short sentences.
  • Editing for improvements to vocabulary and grammar to create impact– focus on improvement of vocabulary and sentence structure. Focus on cohesion within and across paragraphs through sentence starters and use of nouns / pronouns. Consider changes of synonyms for effect and suspense. What changes can they make to impact the reader?

We will also be looking at texts where the character has a flash-back, rather than physically travelling to the past.

Spelling

Our year 5 / 6 words to practise this week are: accommodate, accompany, according, achieve.

This week, we will be continuing our work on revising the statutory spelling lists for years 3 / 4.  We will be highlighting any tricky words and thinking about strategies to learn them, such as splitting up into letter strings or creating mnemonics. A mnemonic is a tool that helps you to memorise something specific, like how to spell a word. For example, the following is a mnemonic for the word ‘necessary’ – ‘one collar and two sleeves’. This mnemonic could help you remember that the word ‘necessary’ has one ‘c’ and two ‘s’s’, which enables you to remember the tricky parts of this spelling.

The complete list of 3 /4 and 5 / 6 words to learn are on the links below:

 

SpellingWordList_Y3-4

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising main and subordinate clauses and conjunctions. A main clause is a clause that contains a subject and an object. Main clauses make sense on their own. E.g. The cat sat down. Sometimes a sentence is made up of two clauses: a main clause and a subordinate clause, which relies on the main clause. A subordinate clause contains a subject and a verb, but it needs to be attached to a main clause because it cannot make sense on its own. For example:

This is a complex sentence (also referred to as a multi-clause sentence). It has a main clause (‘I first met her in Paris’) and a subordinate clause (‘where I lived as a small child’), which relies on the main clause to make sense. The two clauses are joined by the conjunction ‘where’. You can watch the following videos for more information: https://youtu.be/pWS3Cbf5h9U  or  https://youtu.be/ErwKUGfBzhg

Please complete the ‘Subordinate clauses and conjunctions A’ task on SPAG.com. If you have lost your login details, please ask me.

Remember, Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Angel of the North.’ Please complete the inference questions on pages 8-9 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

 

Maths

In maths, we will be learning to: round any whole number to a required degree of accuracy and using negative numbers in context, calculating intervals across zero.

Please complete your White Rose Maths Block 1 – Place Value home learning booklet– Questions 4 to 11. The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-1-Place-value-2020.pdf

There are also videos, tutorials and quizzes to support your learning on BBC Bitesize on the following links:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/zh8dmp3/articles/zpx2qty

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topics/znwj6sg/articles/zxthnbk

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.


5 September 2022

English

This week in English, we will be looking at stories which contain a ‘time slip.’ We will be exploring how the differences in time are made clear to the reader and the type of clues that are given; how does the vocabulary used help suggest different time periods? We will also be creating our own tool kit for a time slip story:

* use well-chosen adjectives to build the description, e.g. white dust, smashed furniture, crazy angles;

* use historical details to bring the description alive, e.g. gas masks, ‘careless talks,’ Morrison shelters.

* describe what you can see but also use other senses, e.g. smelt of moth balls, the tormented sound of the siren

* use extended punctuation e.g. dashes, ellipses

* use well placed dialogue to set the atmosphere e.g. “God help us! Mum’ll be livid with Hitler.”

* use similes to help the reader imagine what something is like, e.g. his breathing sounded like Darth Vadar.

 

Examples of a Time Slip include:

‘Tom’s Midnight Garden’ – a popular children’s book first published in 1958. Tom discovers a grandfather clock that strikes 13 and then finds a secret garden!

‘A Christmas Carol’ – a very popular novel by Charles Dickens. The main character Scrooge is greeted by ghosts of his past, present, and future!

The popular films ‘Back to the Future’ include a time slip after the main character is accidentally sent back in time.

‘Jumanji’ – another popular film where a character is trapped in a board game.

‘Doctor Who’ – a long-running TV show about a time lord called ‘The Doctor,’ who travels through time in the TARDIS.

Can you think of any others? You may wish to research information about a time period of your choosing in preparation for your story.

Spelling

This week, we will be assessing our knowledge of the statutory spelling lists for years 3 / 4 and years 5 / 6.  We will be sending home a highlighted copy of our current knowledge so that you can see what spellings you still need to learn. The complete lists are in your spelling folders, on the class webpage and on the links below.

 

SpellingWordList_Y3-4

 

SpellingWordList_Y5-6

 

Grammar

In grammar, we will be revising grammar vocabulary from previous years, classifying: nouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs, prepositions, determiners and articles. Please login to SPAG.com and attempt Terminology Year 5 A and B. (Ask me if you have lost your login details.)

Google is always very useful for grammar definitions and reminders, as is the following site: https://home.oxfordowl.co.uk/english/primary-grammar/grammar-year-6-age-10-11/.

Reading and Comprehension

Please ensure you are reading with your parents regularly, with at least three comments with parent signatures in your reading diary.

The comprehension text for the week will be: ‘Dare to Dance.’ Please complete fact retrieval questions on pages 6-7 of your non-fiction workbook, we will then discuss the possible answers in class next Monday.

Maths

In maths, we will be learning to: read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10,000,000 and determine the value of each digit. One way to remember the place value of each digit is through the use of a place value chart:

For example, the number in the chart above is made up of: 4 hundred thousands, 3 ten thousands, 4 thousands, 5 hundreds, 3 tens and 3 ones which makes 434,533. We will be discussing the use of commas to help represent numbers and consolidating our understanding of the value of each column.

To support your learning, you may like to complete the White Rose Maths Block 1 – Place Value home learning booklet– Questions 1 to 3. The link is below:

https://assets.whiterosemaths.com/web-pages/parent-resources/Y6-HL-Autumn-Block-1-Place-value-2020.pdf

There are also videos, tutorials and quizzes to support your learning about place value on BBC Bitesize on the following link:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zfjgf82

 

Many thanks for your continued support, Mrs Field and Mrs Parry.