Primary 7 – Week Beginning 23/11/20

Hello Primary 7

Your Homework this week has 3 parts,

  1. This week we are looking at these common words. Your word list is – alliteration, neighbour, happened, during, conclusion, announcing, opposite, imagine, energy and competition. Write these words in alphabetical order, alliteration comes first, then write the letters for each word in alphabetical order ‘alliteration’ would be written as ‘aaeiillnortt.’
  2. This week we will be learning about the Moon and satellites, write a short description of what the Earth would be like if we had no Moon. How would it affect the tides, the wildlife, the plant-life and humanity?
  3. Calculate the area of these shapes.

Good Luck

Mr. McIntosh

Primary 7 – Week Beginning 16/11/20

Hello Primary 7

Your Homework this week has 3 parts,

  1. This week we are looking at the phoneme ‘dge’. Your word list is – edge, fudge, bridge, smudge, fridge, nudge, pledge, judge, and ledge. Practice these words in any way that you choose and then see if you can list 6 more.
  2. This week we will be learning about Apollo 11, but I want you to find out about Apollo 13.
  3. This week we are taking part in the North Lanarkshire Sumdog competition. Log in and score us some points!!

Good Luck

Mr. McIntosh

Primary 7 – Week Beginning 09/11/20

Hello Primary 7

Your Homework this week has 3 parts,

  1. This week we are looking at Common words. Your word list is – absence, material, finally, dialogue, brilliant, actually, mischief, furthermore, different and ceiling.
  2. This week we will be learning about space suit materials. What are space suits made from? How do the different layers protect the astronauts? Have space suit materials changed over time?
  3. This week we are looking at perimeter, the distance around an object, shape or area.

Log in to Sumdog and take part in the Perimeter Challenge that has been set for you there.

 

 

Good Luck

Mr. McIntosh

Primary 7 – Week Beginning – 26/10/20

Hello Primary 7

Your Homework this week has 3 parts,

  1. This week we are looking at double letters in spelling, Here are some example words – will, guess, embarrass, success, process, Motherwell, across, Inverness, football – Practise these words any way that you wish and find 9 more which fit this double letter pattern.
  2. This week we will be learning about the Saturn V rocket which carried the Apollo manned missions to the moon, but what can you find out about the Vostok rocket which carried Yuri Gagarin into space?
  3. Calculate the answers to these maths questions –

17 – -3=?

24 + -5=?

35 – +14=?

72 – -28=?

45 + -65=?

Remember ‘- -‘ makes ‘+’

Good Luck

Mr. McIntosh

 

Week Beginning 19/10/20

Hello Primary 7,

This week we are working on ‘ci’ making ‘sh’. I gave you these example words;

special, official, delicious, facial, musician, ancient, crucial, financial and conscious.

Practise these words in any way that you wish, in addition find another 9 words which also show this phoneme pattern.

This week we are beginning our new Space Science topic. Try to discover who Laika and Ham were. What do you think about what happened to them? Was there another way? Would you have been willing to take their place?

In Maths we are looking at multiples, factors and primes.

  1. What multiples of 13 are less than 50?
  2. What are the factors of 24?
  3. What are the prime numbers less than 50?

Email me your answers at gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk using your Glow email.

Good Luck,

Mr. McIntosh

 

Primary 7 – Week Beginning 05/10/20

Hello Primary 7,

You homework this week is in 3 parts;

  1. There is a spelling challenge on Sumdog built around this week and last week’s spelling words for you to complete.
  2. Research the clothes worn by people during the renaissance and name each piece, a doublet for example.
  3. Complete these BODMAS problems

a. 4² + 3    b. 4 + 3²    c. 4² + 3 – 2    d. 4 + 3² – 2    e. 4³ – 3 + 2    f. 4 – 3 + 2³

g. 5² + 4 x 3 + 2    h. 5 + 4² x 3 + 2    i. 4² + 3²     j. 4² + 3² – 2²

Email your answers to me using Glow.

Good luck,

Mr. McIntosh

 

 

Primary 6 – Friday 5th June – Answers

Here are your maths answers for today.

  1. £802,649+£100,876 = £903,525,  £903,525÷3 = £301,175
  2. £467,330-£126,309 = £341,021,  £341,021+£366,892 = £707,913
  3. 24×86 = 2,064 sweets,  2,064÷8 = 258 sweets each
  4. 1836 children+264 teachers = 2,100 people,  2,100 people÷5 = 420 cars
  5. 200,000-106,848 = 93,152,  93,152+329,404 = 422,556 points
  6. 1,230,868 fish fingers-355,712 fish fingers = 875,156 extra fish fingers.   2,416,092 chips-832,909 chips = 1,583,183 extra chips.  875,156 extra fish fingers+1,583,183 extra chips = 2,458,339 extra fish and chips.
  7. 576,175 Lego bricks-216,175 = 360,000.  360,000÷8 = 45,000 bricks in each box
  8. 17x£18 = £306,  After selling 17 he had 31 left, 31x£47 = £1,457, He collected £306+£1457 = £1,763, Profit is £1,763-£576 costs = £1,187
  9. 430,242+639,242+1,620,942 = 2,690,426 visitors
  10. 4,400 invites -2,842 no-shows = 1,558,  1,558÷3 = 519.333 so for each guest to have 3 bottles Bruce Wayne would need to buy 520 bottles and would have 2 bottles left over to share between himself and Alfred.

Have a lovely weekend.

Mr. McIntosh

Primary 6 – Friday 5th June

Good Morning Primary 6!!

It’s Friday, are you all prepared for Goldentime this afternoon?

Here are the answers to yesterday’s maths questions.

  1. 3,500-1,340 = 2,160-1,872 = 288 more stickers needed
  2. 12,840-8,570 = 4,270+20,320 = 24,590 loaves at the end of the day
  3. Change everything to pence,  138p+85p = 223p for both packets,  500p-223p = 277p or £2.77 change
  4. Change everything to ml, 30000ml+1250ml = 31,250ml,  50000ml-31,250ml = 18,750ml or 18.75l to refill the tank.
  5. 1,279 people -1,020 children = 277people -45 teachers = 232 parents left
  6. Change everything to pence,  575p-255p = 320p-75p = 245p or £2.45 left to save.
  7. 5,230-3,265 = 1,965-899 = 1,066 comics left
  8. £206,399-£96,250 = £110,149+£12,599 = £122,748 spent
  9. 630,242+439,242+1,320,942 = 2,390,426 people
  10. 466,209+316,819 = 783,028-181,201= 601,827 people after half time

Here are your questions for today.

  1. Jane wins £802,649 on the lottery one week and £100,876 on a scratch card the following week. She shares the winnings equally between her 3 children. How much money do they get each?
  2. Jae had £467,330. He went shopping and spent £126,309. If he got another £366,892 for his allowance, how much money does he have now?
  3. Scott bought twenty four bags of sweets with eighty six pieces in each one. He plans to divide all the sweets evenly among eight friends. How many sweets will they each get?
  4. The Headmaster is taking all of a secondary school on a trip to Alton Towers. There will be 1836 children and 264 teachers going along. How many 5-seater cars will he need to use?
  5. Filbert was playing a video game and had a score of 200,000. In a hard part of the game he lost 106,848 points. If he got 329,404 more points in the next level, how many points would he have?
  6. The school ordered 1,230,868 fish fingers and 2,416,092 chips for a very hungry school. But, if 832,909 chips and 355,712 fish fingers did not get eaten. How many extra fish fingers and chips did the school end up with?
  7. Joe loved Lego. He had 576,175 Lego bricks before selling 216,175 of them. He split the remaining bricks equally into 8 boxes. How many bricks were in each box?
  8. A salesman bought a case of 48 backpacks for £576. He sold 17 of them for £18 to friends, and the rest were sold to a shop for £47 each. How much was the salesman’s profit?
  9. Bristol zoo recorded its visitors over a four week period. In the first week there were 430,242 visitors. In the second, 639,242 people visited the zoo. In the third and fourth week, a combined total of 1,620,942 people visited the zoo. How many people visited the zoo in the four week period?
  10. Bruce Wayne invited 4,400 friends to a birthday party, but 2,842 couldn’t come. If he wanted to buy enough Irn-Bru so each person could have exactly 3 bottle each, how many should he buy?

Remember, decimals make no difference to how you add, subtract, multiply or divide you only have to remember to keep the decimal points above one another, in a straight line.

This is not how we would write out sums to find the answer so don’t write them this way in your jotter. Use place value, carrying and decomposition (borrowing) to find your answers.

I’ll post the answers to these later today or you can send me your answers at:

gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk

A special North Lanarkshire Sumdog competition begins today. We qualified last time and finished 40th overall thanks to amazing performances by Dylan, Safeia, Olivia D, Harris, Olivia C, Niall and Shay. They were our only class members who completed the competition.

More people in our class took part than in any other class but because only 7 of us finished 4 other classes finished higher than we did on the Leaderboard.

Primary 1b beat us by 5 places!

For spelling this week I want to look at another spelling rule.

The sound ‘sh’ represented by ‘ci’.

Some words use ‘ti’ to make ‘sh’. Words like station, nation or education.

When a longer word is formed from a root word, however, the ‘sh’ sound is represented by ‘ci’.

It’s the day of your spelling test. Give this list of words to someone in your family and ask them to test your knowledge.

musician, spacious, financial, optician, official, sufficient, facial, gracious, tactician, electrician

I’ve assigned you some reading in Scholastic Books.

I’ve now received buddy letters back from most of the class.  If you haven’t sent me your’s yet, now is your time to get it written.

Here is a link to the announcement.

Primary 6 – Important Announcement!

Here are the answers to yesterday’s comprehension exercises

Submarine Answers

Grizzly Answers

Man comprehension

Today I want to give you a writing task. I’m going to give you some headlines from local newspapers. I want you to pick one and write the article that accompanied them:

Local Police Hunt Seagull Thief

Missing Chair Found Up Tree

Police Close Pub After Domino Riot

Fury Erupts Over Noisy Gate

Dream Wedding Ruined by Angry Duck

Cursed Toilet Strikes Again

‘Hooligan’ Granny Terrifies Sailors

R.E.

As today would have been our final First Friday Mass of the school year I would like you to follow Father Campbell’s mass at 10.00 am on Facebook (with an adult’s permission).

Remember to have your SSP (Special Sneaky Playtime).  Hopefully the sun will be shining.

H.W.B

Let’s get active with some more Yoga practice.  Remember all the good advice Mrs McFall gave on Monday!  Enjoy and make sure you drink plenty.

Well done – we have definitely kept our bodies well looked after this week! 👏👏

You can email me any of your work at:

gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk

 

Mr. McIntosh

Primary 6 – Thursday 4th June

Good Morning Primary 6!!

It’s Thursday, the week is nearly over.

Here are the answers to yesterday’s maths questions.

  1. 6,470,920-2,847,936 = 3,622,984
  2. 12,825,087-8,596,729 = 4,228,358
  3. 26,444,561-8,823,000 = 17,621,561
  4. 36,570,818+11,630,999 =48,201,817
  5. £96,832,790-£12,670,889 = £84,161,901
  6. 20,000,000+12,530,547 =32,530,547
  7. £11,068,086-£6,500,990 = £4,567,096
  8. The smallest 8-digit whole number is 10,000,000 and the greatest 7-digit whole number is 9,999,999. The difference between them is 1.
  9. $357,115,007-$257,698,183 = $99,416,824
  10.  1,000,000÷20,000 = 50 (the same as 100÷2),         50x£25 = £1,250

Here are your questions for today.

  1. Alice is trying to complete a sticker book. It needs 3,500 stickers overall. She has 1,340 in the book and a further 1,872 ready to stick in. How many more stickers will she need?
  2. A supermarket has 12,840 loaves of bread at the start of the day. During the day, 8,570 loaves are sold and a further 20,320 loaves are delivered. How many loaves of bread are there at the end of the day?
  3. In a garden centre, rose seeds cost £1.38, lily seeds cost £1.15 and daffodil seeds cost 85p. Jan buys a packet of rose seeds and a packet of daffodil seeds. How much change does she get from a £5 note?
  4. Barry has 50 litres of fuel in his car and his petrol tank is full. On a journey to Wales, he uses 30 litres of fuel. On a journey to the shop, he used 1,250ml of fuel. How much fuel will he have to put back in to fill the tank?
  5. On a school trip 1,279 people visit a museum. There are 1,020 children and 45 teachers. How many parents are there?
  6. In a week Josh saves £5.75. On Monday, he has £2.55 and on Wednesday his mum gives him 75p. How much does he save the rest of the week?
  7. Charles has 5230 comics. He lends 3265 to Jim and 899 to Ryan. How many does he have left?
  8. A car costs £206,399. In the sale, it has £96,250 off. Harry buys the car and a new Rolex watch that costs £12,599. How much does he spend in total?
  9. Bristol zoo recorded its visitors over a four week period. In the first week there were 630,242 visitors. In the second, 439,242 people visited the zoo. In the third and fourth week, a combined total of 1,320,942 people visited the zoo. How many people visited the zoo in the four week period?
  10. At the start of a football match there were 466,209 people watching on TV. After kick off, another 316,819 viewers tuned in to watch the game. However, at half time 181,201 viewers stopped watching the match. How many viewers were still watching the match after half time?

Remember, decimals make no difference to how you add, subtract, multiply or divide you only have to remember to keep the decimal points above one another, in a straight line.

This is not how we would write out sums to find the answer so don’t write them this way in your jotter. Use place value, carrying and decomposition (borrowing) to find your answers.

I’ll post the answers to these tomorrow or you can send me your answers at:

gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk

For spelling this week I want to look at another spelling rule.

The sound ‘sh’ represented by ‘ci’.

Some words use ‘ti’ to make ‘sh’. Words like station, nation or education.

When a longer word is formed from a root word, however, the ‘sh’ sound is represented by ‘ci’.

List these words alphabetically

musician, spacious, financial, optician, official, sufficient, facial, gracious, tactician, electrician

Then write a short sentence which explains each of their meanings.

I’ve assigned you some reading in Scholastic Books.

I’ve now received buddy letters back from most of the class.  If you haven’t sent me your’s yet, now is your time to get it written.

Here is a link to the announcement.

Primary 6 – Important Announcement!

Here are the answers to yesterday’s comprehension exercises

Cushion Answers

Harry Answers

Carve Answers

Here are three new comprehension exercises for today. You can choose to do as many of them as you wish.

I’ll post the answers tomorrow.

Submarine comprehension

Grizzly comprehension

Man comprehension

R.E.

As we know things just now are very different from what we are used to.  By now our new Primary 1 children would have been in to visit the school but, like you, they have not been able to come in for their visits.  We are thinking that it would be a lovely idea for you to say a little prayer for them.  In order to make them feel welcome to our school in August, I would like you to choose the word for your stage below, write/colour it on a sheet of paper, hold it up and ask an adult to take a picture of you holding your word with a big smile and if it is possible you could wear your uniform.  Please email your picture to gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk . We will use these to make our Primary 1’s feel very welcome to our school.

A    Great   Big      Welcome     To     St.     Barbara’s!

Primary 1 – A; Primary 5 – Great; Primary 4 – Big; Primary 6 – Welcome; Primary 2 – To; PRIMARY 3 – St. (remember the dot); Primary 7 – Barbara’s!

Do you remember our Easter Message?

We still miss you lots!!

H.W.B

We we’re talking yesterday about how important it is to look after our bodies. Drinking plenty especially during exercise and warm weather to keep us hydrated.  Our bodies are amazing things.

Here is a little activity to keep you busy and at the same time learn about all of the parts that make up ‘US’!!

Have you got a roll of wallpaper lying around or if you have been receiving lots of packages (did you know all our posties are busier than their busiest time of the year, Christmas!) during lockdown and have cardboard boxes around I want you to lie them flat on the ground and get someone in your house to draw round you.  (The weather’s not looking that good today but should be dry so even do this task outside)

Here we have our template!!  Can you label and identify as many parts of the human body, all the organs?  See if you can have a good guess at where they are located.  Our heart 💓 Should be easy, what about our lungs, liver etc.  Try to see how many you can find.  You could even put your artistic talents to good use and draw them in.

Remember to email your marvellous pictures to gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk or upload it onto Twitter with an adult’s permission.

You can email me any of your work at:

gw09mcintoshdavid3@glow.sch.uk

 

Mr. McIntosh

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