Please share this mental health assembly with your child(ren). Hosted by Blue Peter’s Lindsey Russell, and CBBC Presenter and Place2Be Champion Rhys Stephenson, the assembly is a great way to help children to explore the creative ways they can share their thoughts and feelings. We would love to see some of the creative ways the children have been doing to make themselves feel good!
It's Children's Mental Health Week! We will be signposting you to various activities during the next few days but to start you off, here is a message from The Duchess of Cambridge. Your children should know what positive mental health is as we have talked about it in school.
Today's exciting writing is to write instructions to make a jam sandwich.
Today we are comparing stories using a venn diagram/grid.
Today we are using conjunctions to join two sentences together.
Today's exciting writing is to write instructions to make a jam sandwich.
Today we are comparing the stories from Julia Donaldson.
Today we are looking at repetition.
Miss Bleakley introduces today's lesson video.
Miss bleakley introduces today's lesson video.
Miss Bleakley introduces today's lesson video.
Miss Bleakley introduces today's maths lesson on months of the year.
Miss Bleakley introduces today's lesson video.
This week we are comparing the human and physical features between the UK and South America.
This week we are making collages made of patterns, sketching and silhouettes.
Mrs Whiting with your PSHE lesson, this week we look at how love makes us feel.
Mrs Whiting looks at 'The boy the mole the fox and the horse' to ask us a new question.
Today we are looking at a balanced diet.
Miss Kelly looks at the physical and human features of South America.
Ms Smith reads parts of The Great Fire of London - Anniversary Edition of the Great Fire of 1666 by Emma Adams and James Weston Lewis
Mr Nelson reads part of the book The Great Fire of London
Mr Nelson reads part of the book The Great Fire of London
Mr Nelson reads part of the book The Great Fire of London
Mr Nelson reads part of the book The Great Fire of London
In this question you have been asked to work out the area of a shaded shape. This requires you to work out the area of the larger shape and then subtract the area of the smaller shape. This will result in the area of the shaded area.
Two examples using a two digit number divided by a single digit number
This video shows the method of adding fractions with different denominators.
This video shows a written method that would be used in class - column method
This is a very informative video from YouTube that explains how these puzzles can be calculated