Distance Learning – Day πŸ•’πŸ•–

How did you do in yesterday’s Teacher Name Emoji quiz? Lucy and Jamie did very well, guessing all 10 names correctly which is amazing considering some of the names were a huge stretch πŸ˜‚.

πŸ‘© ⚑ ❌T (sorry Mrs Curran)

We are discovering that we can use emojis in many different ways this week.Β  Just like learning any other language, once you have the rules you can decode anything. In Numeracy and Mathematics, we have been breaking the code and discovering that

😊😍+ πŸ˜₯πŸ€ = 97
Also in Literacy and English, we can decode emojis into to book titles by analysing characters or summarising plot. Change this,

 

πŸ‘¦πŸ‘¦πŸ‘¦πŸ‘§πŸ‘©β€πŸ¦½πŸ₯πŸ•›πŸŒ•

into Midnight Gang by David Walliams. Later this week, we will be accurately summarising whole novels just using emojis.

Today, I emailed Abi Elphinstone our interview question. The questions that the children came up with were amazing so 🀞 she replies back soon.

Distance Learning – Day πŸ•’πŸ••

As the title implies this is the start of Emoji Week πŸ˜€ We 🦡kicked off the week with a nice easy quiz, or at least I πŸ’­ thought it was until I started receiving lots of comments from the children on Google classroom πŸ˜‚.

Why don’t you give it a go?

Try to work out the πŸ§‘β€πŸ« teachers from their emoji clues. Sorry, the colours are ❌ not correct but this happened when converting the 🎁 πŸ“presentation file from Google Slides to Microsoft PowerPoint.

I will hopefully have lots more emoji fun to share with you in the next few days. πŸ‘