7A/D Cults Primary

Mrs Allan and Mrs Danielian – Session 2018 – 2019.

Homework – Monday 29/10/18

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Sorry for the delay in posting Mrs D’s Monday homework – one or two technical issues, but we are sorted now!! 🙂

Homework instructions  Monday 29th October 2018

Choose one of the poems that you have been given to learn. You will be asked to recite it in class from Monday 12th November. We will be expecting you to perform it in a clear voice, with expression and good eye contact. IF you want to use props you may, but you do not have to. Part of this task is learning how you learn things best. Here are some strategies to try –

  • repeating the poem out loud over and over again
  • writing it out over and over again
  • taking each line and using ‘Look, Say, Cover, Write, Check’
  • use different colours to write each line in
  • drawing pictures next to each line or a few lines
  • recording it spoken onto an electronic device and then listening and repeating

Get an adult to help you try some of these. It will be very useful in the future to know which strategies work best for you.

Thank you, Mrs Allan and Mrs Danielian P6A/D J

 

 

Song of the Witches:

“Double, double toil and trouble”

BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

(from Macbeth)

 

Double, double toil and trouble;

Fire burn and caldron bubble.

Fillet of a fenny snake,

In the caldron boil and bake;

Eye of newt and toe of frog,

Wool of bat and tongue of dog,

Adder’s fork and blind-worm’s sting,

Lizard’s leg and howlet’s wing,

For a charm of powerful trouble,

Like a hell-broth boil and bubble.

 

Double, double toil and trouble;

Fire burn and caldron bubble.

Cool it with a baboon’s blood,

Then the charm is firm and good.

 

Source: The Random House Book of Poetry for Children (1983)

Color

BY CHRISTINA ROSSETTI

 

What is pink? a rose is pink

By a fountain’s brink.

What is red? a poppy’s red

In its barley bed.

What is blue? the sky is blue

Where the clouds float thro’.

What is white? a swan is white

Sailing in the light.

What is yellow? pears are yellow,

Rich and ripe and mellow.

What is green? the grass is green,

With small flowers between.

What is violet? clouds are violet

In the summer twilight.

What is orange? Why, an orange,

Just an orange!

 

 

Source: The Golden Book of Poetry (1947)

Sunflakes

BY FRANK ASCH

 

If sunlight fell like snowflakes,

gleaming yellow and so bright,

we could build a sunman,

we could have a sunball fight,

we could watch the sunflakes

drifting in the sky.

We could go sleighing

in the middle of July

through sundrifts and sunbanks,

we could ride a sunmobile,

and we could touch sunflakes—

I wonder how they’d feel.

 

 

 

 

 

Source: Ring Out Wild Bells (1992)

 

Furry Bear

BY A. A. MILNE

 

If I were a bear,

And a big bear too,

I shouldn’t much care

If it froze or snew;

I shouldn’t much mind

If it snowed or friz—

I’d be all fur-lined

With a coat like his!

 

For I’d have fur boots and a brown fur wrap,

And brown fur knickers and a big fur cap.

I’d have a fur muffle-ruff to cover my jaws,

And brown fur mittens on my big brown paws.

With a big brown furry-down up to my head,

I’d sleep all the winter in a big fur bed.

 

Source: The Complete Poems of Winnie-the-Pooh (Dutton, 1998)

 

Sir’s a Secret Agent

By TONY LANGHAM

 

Sir’s a secret agent

He’s licensed to thrill

At Double-Oh Sevening

He’s got bags of skill.

 

He’s tall, dark and handsome

With a muscular frame

Teaching’s his profession

But danger’s his game.

 

 

He’s cool and he’s calm

When he makes a decision

He’s a pilot, skydiver

And he can teach long-division.

 

No mission’s too big

No mission’s too small

School kids, mad scientists

He takes care of them all.

 

He sorts out the villains

The spies and the crooks

Then comes back to school

And marks all our books.

 

Source: A Poem for Every Day of the Year (1999)

 

 

 

 

The night will never stay

By ELEANOR FARJEON

 

The night will never stay,

The night will still go by,

Though with a million stars

You pin it to the sky;

Though you bind it with the blowing wind

And buckle it with the moon,

The night will slip away

Like a sorrow or a tune.

 

Source: A First Poetry Book (OUP 1979)

 

Clouds

By AILEEN FISHER

 

Wonder where they come from?

Wonder where they go?

Wonder why they’re sometimes high

and sometimes hanging low?

Wonder what they’re made of,

and if they weigh a lot?

Wonder if the sky feels bare

Up there, when clouds are not?

 

Source: A First Poetry Book (OUP 1979)

 

A Dragonfly

By ELEANOR FARJEON

 

When the heat of the summer,

Made drowsy the land,

A dragon fly came

And sat on my hand.

 

With its blue-jointed body,

And wings like spun glass,

It lit on my fingers

As though they were grass.

 

Source: A First Poetry Book (OUP 1979)

 

Mud

By John Smith

 

I like mud,

I like it on my clothes,

I like it on my fingers,

I like it on my toes.

 

Dirt’s pretty ordinary,

And dust’s a dud,

For a really good mess-up,

I like mud!

 

Source: A First Poetry Book (OUP 1979)

 

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