North Roe Primary School

May 9, 2016
by Mrs Johnson
0 comments

Primary 2 & 3 WWII topic homework

Last week primary 2 and 3 had great fun doing their topic homework. Their task was to choose a recipe from the wartime recipe book and make it! Lots of foods were rationed during WWII because the German submarines cut off most food supplies to Britain by attacking the ships that brought food. Before the war, Britain imported 55 million tons of food, a month after the war had started this dropped to 12 million! So British people were issued with a ration book to make sure that everyone had a fair share of food. Items such as eggs, meat, fruit and milk were all rationed. Food was rationed for 14 years, food rationing ended in 1954, 9 years after the end of the war!

picture2 picture3

May 9, 2016
by Mrs Johnson
0 comments

Thomas’ topic homework

Thomas chose to bake the eggless sponge. He said the most difficult thing was choosing which recipe to make and the best bit was stirring the ingredients. Here is master chef  Thomas with his assistant, peerie brother Lewie, hard at work! 🙂

Untitled2DSCN1765

DSCN1768DSCN1770

DSCN1776

May 6, 2016
by Mrs Johnson
0 comments

Happy 8th Birthday John!

IMG_1621

Hope you have a super fun birthday John!

From everyone at North Roe Primary School 🙂

IMG_1246

Mairianne brought her fiddle into school to play happy birthday to John. John said ‘this is the best birthday ever!’

 

May 4, 2016
by Mrs Johnson
0 comments

Dig for Victory!

IMG_1551IMG_1552

Primary 2 and 3 chose WWII as their topic this term. They have been learning about the home front during the war and how food in Britain was rationed. This was because Germany was torpedoing the ships that brought food to Britain. The British government put up posters everywhere, encouraging people to ‘Dig for Victory’

embargoed-0001-thursday-2-april-dig-for-victory-e28093-grow-you-own-vegetables-credit-imperial-war-museum

So many people in Britain grew vegetables in their gardens. Lots of people also built Anderson Shelters in their gardens to protect them from enemy planes dropping bombs. Primary 2 and 3 had to imagine they were living in Britain during the second world war. They had to design a garden that they could use to ‘Dig for Victory’ and also for protection from air raids. Using a variety of materials the children created wonderful gardens. There was a prize to be won for the best war time garden.

May 4, 2016
by Mrs Johnson
0 comments

Thomas’ WWII garden – The Winner!

IMG_1609IMG_1608

Thomas’ WWII garden was the winner. All the gardens were fantastic but Thomas had put a lot of thought into his, especially his Anderson Shelter. You cannot see inside on the pictures but inside his Anderson shelter Thomas had created benches for his family to sit or sleep on. He also put a box into his Anderson Shelter that was filled with essential items his family would need if they had to stay inside the shelter for a while like tinned food, water and toys for the children. The shelter had a door that folded down once everyone got inside and Thomas had grass growing on the roof of the Anderson shelter to disguise it so that enemy planes could not see it from the air. His vegetable plot and pond were very neat. Thomas covered his pond in glue to make it look like water – very clever ideas Thomas, well done!

Report a Glow concern
Cookie policy  Privacy policy