Author Visit from Will Wood

As part of book Week Scotland we had an author visit from Will Wood, the author of The Fairy with the Broken Wings.  He worked with P4, 5, 6 and 7, exploring his novel and sharing how he became an author.

Thank you so much to Ms Cook for organising this visit and to Mr Wood for his time.

He sent us this very thoughtful and inspiring message:

Deep in the heart of West Lothian is a small town named Livingston. On the very edge there is two smaller areas, Pumpherston and Uphall Station and in their midst they share a building. The building itself is not very big, but what it lacks in size it gains in potential, for within its walls it contains something very special. 

Future Doctors, Scientist, Medics, Nurses, Fire and Police men and women. Movie stars,singers and dancers, musicians, Olympians and sports idols. Prime Ministers and MP’s, soldiers, sailors, tinkers and tailors, bankers and backers, the Jacks and Jills of all trades and walks of life.

They are not aware of this yet but the vacancies will be theirs to fill fifteen or twenty years from now. Their responsibility is to learn and fulfill their dreams, their teachers’responsibility is to provide the basic tools and the encouragement they require. 

I wish you the very best that life can offer, behave, be good, be patient and most of all, believe in yourself.

Remember what you wrote beneath your names and go for it.

Thank you all for having me and sharing a little bit of your life. It was an honour and a privilege. I take with me  a little sample of your imagination, your enthusiasm and most of all your smiles.

All the best in life and study,

Will Wood

Book Week Scotland Assembly

On Friday we had an assembly to celebrate Book Week Scotland.

https://www.slideshare.net/PUSCPS/book-week-scotland-198894049

We presented the Sum Dog Reading Competition winners with a certificate.

The Literacy Leaders also presented the winning authors with their certificate and book tokens.

We also dressed up as characters from our favourite books.

Congratulations to our Living our Values children.

Anderson shelter update from P7

Today we had a very special delivery to the school from Burton Roofing Manufacturers.  Primary 7 wrote letters to Burton Roofing to ask if they could help us for our project – to build our own Anderson shelter as part of our WW2 topic.  They were kind enough to offer their support and have very generously supplied us with sheets of corrugated metal and all the fixings.  We have spent a number of weeks digging out the base, with the help of Sarah-Jane, for the shelter and we are at the point of almost being ready to build it.  Primary 7 and Mrs Andison owe Burton Roofing a huge thank you for the materials.  It is great to know we are supported by local businesses.

We will keep you posted on our progress.

Be a Book Week Author

As part of Book Week Scotland our Literacy Leaders launched a free writing competition – Be a Book Week Author.

On Friday at assembly we announced our winners and presented them with a certificate and book gift voucher.

A big well done to our winners and thank you to the Literacy Leaders, Ms McLaughlin and Mrs Mooney for organising the competition and selecting the winners.

https://www.slideshare.net/PUSCPS/be-a-book-week-author-results

 

P4-7 Author Visit

As part of continued Book Week Scotland celebrations, Primary 4-7 are very lucky to have an author visit from Will Wood on Wednesday 27th November.

Mr Wood is the author of The Fairy with the Broken Wings. The Fairy with the Broken Wings is a magical, fantasy adventure, embarked by an eight-year-old as she closes her mind to the surrounding world and its conflicts and opens the door of her imagination.  Join Esperanza as she ventures through the Underground, the Blue River, the Whistle-Blowing Forest and the Crystal Mountain and meet the characters she encounters on the way. This is a story of determination, resourcefulness, love and unconditional trust.

If your child enjoys the book, it is available to purchase on Amazon and we can arrange a signing of the book after.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1786232480/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_Zda3DbQXM4N18 

Thank you very much to Ms Cook for organising the visit.

Club Wild – Remarkable Rosehip

This week at club wild we headed to the hedgerows to harvest the bright red hips of the wild dog rose (Rosa canina). The rosebush is so jaggy it nearly caught us. Liam says it needs to be this jaggy to protect itself from birds eating the rosehips.
Rosehip syrup became very popular during World War II when government scientists discovered that weight for weight they have 20 times more vitamin C than oranges. The Department of Food recommended rosehip syrup and a generation of children began to have a daily dose.
During World War II, a national week for the collection of rosehips was established in late September. In 1941 this produced a 200 ton haul of hips which made 600,000 bottles of commercially produced syrup.
The syrup was traditionally boiled but Hurriyiah pointed out that in boiling the vitamins might be lost. To keep all the Vitamin C, and also Vitamins A, D and E, we can make a raw syrup. Here is our recipe for Raw Rosehip Syrup.
• Rosehips topped and tailed, scored or pricked with a fork
•Caster sugar
•Sterilized jars
Make a layer of rosehips at the bottom of the jar then cover with a layer of caster sugar. Keep doing this until the jar is full.
Leave the jar for about two weeks on a sunny window, turning every day. The sugar will draw out the liquid from the hips and make beautiful red-orange colour of syrup.
After two weeks or longer if it needs, strain the liquid through a fine muslin cloth and pour into sterilized bottles. The rosehip syrup can be taken as medicine but tastes amazing on pancakes, waffles, yogurt and ice cream 😊
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