“The pencil floated and the rubber sank.” – Cole
“The paperweight sank and the lego floated.” – Jessica
“My stone sank to the bottom of the basin.” – Ava
“The pencil floated and the rubber sank.” – Cole
“The paperweight sank and the lego floated.” – Jessica
“My stone sank to the bottom of the basin.” – Ava
We have written a story about a character who goes under the sea on an adventure. First of all we wrote one chapter each week in our taught writing lesson. Next we redrafted each chapter, then we painted the outside and drew pictures. Finally we assembled our books with the help of our teacher and our student teacher Mrs Small. To finish off, we invited our families in to see and hear
our stories.
P2 have been weighing lots of items. They have used cubes to measure the weight of various things around the classroom.
Look at what P2a have discovered while researching a favourite underwater creature for their own personal project. These photos show fantastic effort. Well done to all.
“The smallest shark is the size of half a ruler and the biggest shark is almost as big as three classrooms.” – Eilidh
“Some jellyfish sleep during the day and they are awake at night.” – Harvey
“A blobfish just opens it’s mouth and the food falls in.” – Abira
“You can see the bones of an x-ray fish right through it’s skin.” – Jessica
“Fish are cold-blooded” – Ellie-Mae
“A shark will eat you if it mistakes you for a seal.” – James
“Jellyfish will sting you.” – Sophia
“The blue shark has five gills.” – Mitchell
“There are two sharks that won’t eat you, the basking shark and the whale shark.” – Liam
“Fish lay eggs.” – Kady-Anne
“The Crown of Thorns starfish has toxic spines.” – Ava
We are learning to find one quarter of a number. We are having fun learning about fractions.
We are learning to half a number. We are having fun learning to half a number.
“Half of 10 is 5” said Cole.
“Half of 100 is 50” said Harry.
“Half of 12 is 6” said Abira.
“I learned that a sea cow is a mammal and it’s proper name is a manatee.” – Ava
“There are many different types of fish. There are jellyfish and angelfish which are brightly coloured.” – Harvey