Star writers – Katie Morag

We wrote imaginative stories using the setting and characters from Katie Morag today.  We continue to impress Mrs Duncan (and ourselves) when writing.

Today our main target was to make our story exciting.  We talked about what makes a story exciting to help us get some ideas.  We all definitely achieved this target! Many of us are beginning to write two sentences in our stories and our target continues to be putting full stops and capital letters in the correct places.  Some of us were introduced to openers – these are exciting starters for our stories.

We voted for the star writers today again.  This week Mrs Duncan hid the pictures from us as many of us were voting for star drawers rather than star writers.  Maybe next week we will try having 1 star drawer!

Here are our star writers:

Scottish fun

Today we had lots of fun exploring new Scottish words, music and objects in the dining room.  We played haggis, haggis, neeps and danced to Scottish music.  We also played Scottish corners to help us become familiar with important Scottish pictures.  Our favourite activity was singing Heids, Shooders, knees and taes.  We really enjoyed using the Scottish words in the song!

 

 

You can clearly see that we have been learning about Scottish dance over the last few weeks.  The children can now clearly recognise what types of moves people do to Scottish music. Well done everyone! 🙂

Scotland

We continue to learn about Scotland.  Our Scottish touch table is now full of lots of different Scottish objects.  If you have not done so already, please bring in something Scottish to share with your friends.

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During free-play sessions we have also been making our own tartan using cars and paint, and have been making Scottish flags at the art and craft table.  Angus suggested that we should make Scottish flags in the computers so some of us have been doing that too. 🙂

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Homework wb 26.1.16

We will be learning about Scotland this week as part of our Rabbie Burns celebrations.  Our dinosaur topic will resume next week.

We will be having a Scottish themed maths day on Wednesday.  This means that reading will only be heard once this week.  Reading books will still be sent home on Wednesday – please see the ‘reading tips’ post that was posted last week.

  • Please try bringing in something small and Scottish for our Scottish touch table.  The children should come home with some ideas.  Please send all items to school by Wednesday at the latest.
  • Help your child to discover their favourite Scottish word.  They could ask Grandparents, friends, football coaches etc for ideas if you are not familiar with the lovely Scottish dialect.  Please get your child to write this down with the meaning and bring it to school on Friday.  We will be making a wall display of all of our favourite Scottish words.
  • Try enjoying some Scottish songs together.  We will be learning three craws – you can listen to it by clicking here.

Additional homework

  • New sounds and new words.
  • Reading homework – please see diaries
  • Optional: find out more about Katie Morag by exploring the CBeebies website.  We will be writing imaginative stories about Katie Morag on Tuesday.  We will be comparing how her island is different from Cults.  Click here to access the website.

 

Reading Tips

As all children are now becoming increasingly confident readers I thought it might be helpful to share some top reading tips for the current stage of the children in the class.  Some parents have expressed confusion over reading expectations at this stage – hopefully this will provide some clarity. 🙂

Please remember that the main focus of all reading in Primary 1 is reading for enjoyment.  We want the children to develop a love for reading at an early age that will remain with them for life.  Reading sessions should be fun and achievable for all children without too many difficulties or ‘stumbles’ on words.

These tips can be used for all books, magazines, websites, menus etc that the children come into contact with.

Top tips

Please do not attempt all of these tips in one reading session.  These are suggestions that you could try out over a period of weeks.

If your child is feeling confident you could try getting him to read the independent books quietly by himself or to a sibling/teddy.  This encourages confidence and independence.  Look on the back of the books to see whether they are recommended for ‘guided’ or ‘independent’ use.  I have even known of some families to Skype Granny’s, Grandpa’s etc to allow the child to independently read his/her book.

Before Reading

Talk about the front cover.  What might it be about?  Is it fiction or non-fiction?  What does the title say?  If the title is a tricky title try getting your child to find some words or sounds that they know and encourage them to use the pictures as a clue.  You could tell them one word from the title and see if they can find that word – this can help to break down tricky titles into more manageable chunks. Relate the front cover to their own experience.  For example, if the story is about dogs you could chat about dogs that they have had experience with.  Ask them to predict what might happen.

On occasions you may wish to begin or end the reading session by reading the entire book to your child.  I often do this in class.  It allows children to hear an adult modelling expression, use of punctuation and reinforces key vocabulary.

During Reading

At this early stage in reading please encourage the children to look at and discuss the pictures before reading the words.  Please do not cover up the pictures – this gives children the message that using the pictures is cheating.  We do not want them to have this view.  We want them to learn that pictures can assist with reading.

Try relating the pictures to the words.  For example, if the picture shows a wet dog ask your child to find the word ‘wet’ in the text.  This reinforces that the pictures can help us and develops important skills in scanning text and most importantly encourages confidence.

Ask your child to read the words.  If they find it difficult ask them to look at the picture for a clue.  You may need to remind them of some of their tricky words like my, the, he, she etc.  You could give them some clues like ‘a’ and ‘i’ make ay or ‘s’ and ‘h’ make ‘sh’.  This can help them attempt to sound out trickier words.

Encourage your child to use feelings when they are reading.  If the story is sad they could use a sad voice or a happy/scared/baby voice. We do this in class regularly.  They can also use punctuation to give them clues how to say words and sentences too.  This is always a favourite part and all of the children love exclamation marks!

Try improving a sentence with your child.  We have just started doing this in class.  If a sentence says, ‘I like the wet dog,’ your child might suggest that ‘I like the hairy wet dog’ would be better.

Please remember that your child may have read their books twice in class before they are sent home.  It is natural for him/her to memorise some parts of the book.  This teaches him/her that there is often a pattern to stories with lots of repetition.  Much of reading is actually based on memory and the children are simply experimenting with this new skill.

After Reading

The most important thing to do after reading is to praise your child.  Even if they struggled, please try to find something that they did that was very positive.  Another very important question to ask is did they enjoy it?  Why/why not?

You could chat about their favourite part or character or, if it is a non-fiction book, you could ask them what new facts they found out.

Ask some questions about the book.  You could ask what happened first in the story, how it ended, what sad/happy/scary thing happened.  You could ask what the characters were like.

Get your child to ask you questions.  They always enjoy doing this to check you have been listening.  We have lots of teachers in the making in our class! 🙂

Word/punctuation hunt – we often finish with this at the end of a reading session because it reinforces key areas of learning and most importantly, is fun!  Ask your child to close his/her book.  Give him a word to find in his book as quickly as he can.  You could extend this by getting him/her to find a certain type of punctuation or a spelling rule e.g. magic ‘e’, ‘oo’ sound etc.

For more information please click here.  This will take you to further literacy advice provided by Education Scotland.

 

Measurement

We stared a mini maths topic on measurement today. We will participate in several measuring activities related to the theme of dinosaurs over the next few weeks.  Today we measured in T-Rex feet.  These feet were more than a meter long! We worked in small groups to measure a range of large objects in the classroom.  We had to do good teamwork to make sure we were doing accurate measuring by not leaving any gaps in our measurements.  The biggest thing we measured was the whole classroom.  It was 19 T-Rex feet long!

We recorded all of our measurements in a table. We did a fantastic job of sounding out the different objects we were measuring – look closely at the photographs to see our adorable (and logical) spellings!

Olympics 2016 here we come!

We have been doing gymnastics in PE.  Today we learned how to correctly perform forward rolls.  We then tried these off a bench or down a slight slope.

Apologies for the poor photography skills today.  We were so quick that Mrs Duncan found it difficult to capture us!

Star writers

Today we continued our writing theme of non-fiction dinosaur stories.  We tried to write  one or two true facts from a film and book we shared together.  They were all about dinosaur babies.  We found out that a dinosaur mummy would lay 100 eggs in a nest.  We were shocked to learn that many dinosaur mummies abandoned their eggs before they hatched.   Many of us are now writing two sentences independently!

We chose the stories that we thought had met the targets and then chose four star writers.  It was tricky for us to remember that we were looking for the best writing and not the best drawings – we will continue to work on this.  Here are our star writers for this week…

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