Learning Activities- Stage 2 (23/8 – 27/8) You will need access to a digital device and help from a parent/carer to complete some of the following activities. If you are unable to access a device, please record and complete work in a notebook/ workbook of your choice. Keep this book at home ready to bring into your teacher when face to face learning resumes. You may also take a photo and email your teacher. Work through what you can and just do your absolute best.
Session Monday 23/8 Tuesday 24/8 Wednesday 25/8 Thursday 26/8 Friday 27/8
Morning Reading Read Chapter 6 of Misery Guts. Write 3 – 5 sentences summarising this chapter. Do we meet any new characters? What happens? How are the characters feeling? 10am Livestream
Mathematics
Year 3 and 4
• Number Busting: our number for the day is 11. Draw and write everything you know about 11 (you can use any operation you like).
Year 3
• Unit 21: 3-digit addition, p86
Year 4
• Unit 21: 4-digit addition, p86
Spelling Sound search activity on Google Classroom Spelling Menu – 20 points
Reading Log on to Reading Eggs and complete 30 minutes of lessons. 10am Livestream
Writing Chose a fact file from a pack and learn how to turn dot points into proper sentences. Write sentences on a scaffold planning sheet to write an informative text.
Spelling Sentences activity on Google Classroom Spelling Menu – 20 points
Reading Misery Guts - Answer the Chapter 6 comprehension questions, remembering to use full sentences. Feel free to re-read Chapter 6 first to refresh your memory. 10am Livestream
Spelling
Online Sound Waves activities for unit 25 Spelling Menu – 20 points
Reading Log on to Reading Eggs and complete 30 minutes of lessons. 10am Livestream
Writing Proofread and edit informative text written in previous lesson.
Reading Vocabulary – from the list of words that appeared in Chapter 6, select at least five and use a dictionary to record the definition of and use each word in a sentence. 10am Livestream
Mathematics Year 3 and 4
• Number Busting: our number for the day is 111. Draw and write everything you know about 111 (you can use any operation you like)
Year 3
• Balancing Act - Investigation 13
• From the Mountains to the Sea - MT7
Year 4
• Paving patterns – Investigation 14
• Gardens – MT 10
Session Monday 23/8 Tuesday 24/8 Wednesday 25/8 Thursday 26/8 Friday 27/8
Break
Middle 11:30am Class Zoom
Spelling Spelling Menu – 20 points
11:30am Class Zoom
Mathematics
Year 3 and 4
• Number Busting: our number for the day is 99. Draw and write everything you know about 99 (you can use any operation you like)
Year 3
• Unit 21: Calculating Change, p87
Year 4
• Unit 21: Revising decimals, p87
11:30am Class Zoom (wear your pyjamas!)
Mathematics
Year 3 and 4
• Number Busting: our number for the day is 100. Draw and write everything you know about 100 (you can use any operation)
• Unit 21: Cross-Sections, p88
Year 4
• Unit 21: Classifying angles, p88
11:30am Class Zoom
Mathematics
Year 3 and 4
• Number Busting: our number for the day is 500. Draw and write everything you know about 500 (you can use any operation you like)
Year 3
• Unit 21: Litres, p89 Year 4
• Unit 21: Millilitres, p89
11:30am Class Zoom
Spelling test – your teacher will test you during your class Zoom.
BTN Watch BTN (Behind the News) and complete the interactive quiz online
Break
Afternoon
Music
Activity from Mr Stevens on Google Classroom.
Library
Activity from Miss
Compton on Google Classroom.
STEM/Mindfulness/ Wellbeing Complete one of the STEM activities or enjoy some Wellbeing time this afternoon. Choose some off-screen activities that focus on your well-being and having some fun. You can even do them together with your sisters/brothers.
Visual Art Create your own Emoji! Design a new set of emojis to represent different emotions or foods that are missing and should be added. You may even want to make some changes to existing ones to create a new emoji. How you choose to do this is completely up to you.
PDHPE
Activities from Mr K.
Year 3
List Words
saw
small
more
talk
horse
door
short
story
sport
water
sure
warm
draw
caught
bought
Extension
Words
astronaut
audience
automatic
corner
course
daughter
dinosaur
enormous
exhausted
fortune
naughty
ordinary
organise
quarter
reward
Year 4
List Words
wall
talk
fork
lawn
before
because
order
corner
fourth
towards
autumn
transport
caught
brought
thought
Extension
Words
awful
course
coarse
explore
enormous
ornament
audible
awkward
keyboard
organisation
distraught
naughty
untoward
thoughtfully
cautiously
Week 7 Reading
Monday
Misery Guts Read chapter 6 of Misery Guts. You can watch the video with Mrs Cahill or use the PDF on your Google Classroom. Write 3 – 5 sentences summarising this chapter. Do we meet any new characters? What happens? How are the characters feeling?
Tuesday Reading Eggs Login to Reading Eggs and complete 30 minutes of your lessons. After that you might like to play some of the fun games!
Wednesday Misery Guts Answer the following Chapter 6 comprehension questions, remembering to use full sentences. Feel free to re-read Chapter 6 first to refresh your memory.
Comprehension Questions 1. What did Keith do to the slide show? 2. Why does Keith calculate the cost of things in potatoes? 3. Is there such a place as Timbucktoo? If there is, which country is it in? 4. Why do Australians put white zinc cream on their noses? 5. Was Mum’s idea about going to the seaside a good one? Why or why
not? 6. List all of the plans Keith had to try and cheer his parents up. 7. Which of Keith’s efforts to cheer his parents up is the weirdest? Why? 8. Why did the fish shop burn down?
Thursday Reading Eggs Login to Reading Eggs and complete 30 minutes of your lessons. After that you might like to play some of the fun games!
Friday Misery Guts – Vocabulary Here are some words that appeared in Chapter 6. Select at least five words and use a dictionary at home or online to record the definition of the word, and then use each word in a sentence. quiver, growled, wearily, expanse, turquoise, blimey, peered, cassette player, locomotive, persuasive voice, idyllic, fragrant, murmur, choirs, exotic, proclaim, stunned, thrust, dandelion, gazing, spatula, sagged, liable, drastic, overcast, clench, purposely, shivered, frostbite, telepathic, lagoons.
Informative Texts- Using a Fact File (Lesson 7)
Learning intentions: Today I will learn how to use a fact file.
Success criteria: I can translate a simple dot point information from a fact file
into a full sentence then use this sentence to write an informative text.
Now, try the following activities:
Activity 1: Chose one fact file from the pack- Animals, Objects, People.
Translate each dot point from the chosen fact file into a full sentence.
You can use a book or the internet to find extra information about your chosen
topic if you like. (text, YouTube video etc…)
Activity 2: Use the sentences you have written to write an informative text on
the scaffold planning sheet provided.
Activity 3: Use the information from the scaffold writing sheet to write your
own informative text. Illustrate your text with your own picture, photo, drawing
etc…
Don’t forget to refer to the checklist sheet regularly during your writing.
Do not worry too much about spelling, grammar and punctuation yet. We will see
to that in the next lesson on Proofreading and Editing.
Informative Texts- Applying proofreading and editing skills
(Lesson 8)
Learning intentions: Today I will learn how to proofread and edit my own
writing.
Success criteria: I can proofread and edit my own writing to make the
information I have found accurate and the grammar and spelling correct.
Now, try the following activities:
Activity 1: Chose a slide from the Editing Passages PowerPoint -Year 3 or 4.
Rewrite the chosen passage correctly in your workbook.
Activity 2: When you are finished, open the answer slide and check your own
work. Think:
• What strategies did you use to find the correct spelling and missing
punctuation?
• What else can you use to help you with the spelling of some words?
• Why is proofreading and editing so important?
Activity 3: Use your editing and proofreading skills to check the informative
text you wrote in the previous lesson.
• Read the text aloud to see if it sounds right when spoken.
• Underline or circle any words you suspect are misspelt.
• Use a bright pen to ensure your editing stands out.
• Just check one aspect at a time: ex: only spelling in red, then
punctuation in green, grammar in blue.
Week 7 Visual Art
Create your own Emoji!
Design a new set of emojis to represent different emotions or
foods that are missing and should be added. You may even want to
make some changes to existing ones to create a new emoji. How you
choose to do this is completely up to you.
You can create as many as you like. Below I have attached
some emojis to spark your creativity!
Don’t forget to upload your finished piece for your classroom
teacher ☺
Week 7 - Music
Bucket Drumming Set yourself up by finding a ‘drum’ and ‘drumsticks’. You could use a large thick plastic bucket or storage container and some sticks or chopsticks. If you have a choice of vessels, experiment with the drum sound you like best.
Skeleton Buckets #1 Yellow Belt
Play body percussion to this skeleton dance video . Use these body percussion sounds: Handdrum: Stomp Tambourine: Clap Claves: Click Triangle: Vocal sound (eg ding)
Skeleton Buckets #2 Red Belt
Play along to this skeleton dance video on your homemade trash drum or body percussion. There are four different symbols in the video, find four sounds on your drum and assign one to each symbol.
Skeleton Buckets #3 Black Belt
Play along to this skeleton dance video on an instrument you already play. Hint: try using the notes F, G, Ab and C to start you off
Think about: - How did your arrangement sound? - What was the most challenging part? Why? - Which part did you enjoy playing the most? Why?
Offline option: Practise this rhythm on body percussion or bucket drum.
Week 7 - :Library
Hello everybody!
Week 7 is Book Week, always an exciting week on our learning calendar. The theme for
Book Week 2021 is “Old Worlds, New Worlds, Other Worlds”
The Children’s Book Council of Australia (CBCA) have decided not to postpone Book
Week this year which means we need to find a new way to celebrate books and have
some much needed fun!
Book Parades have been a long-standing tradition at our school, and we would hate to
miss out, so, because everyone in the Narraweena Public School learning community is
so Resilient, Resourceful, Adaptable and Creative we are going to go ahead with our
Book Parade… with a twist!
Scrambled Eggs and Kooky Potatoes!
This year, instead of making PEOPLE sized costumes for a book parade … everyone is
invited to dress up a HARDBOILED EGG or a POTATO!
Children in all Stages, your Library Work for this week
is to think of your favourite book, the characters in that
book and make a little magic with your egg or potato.
The idea is NOT to pester family to go out of their way
to get supplies… please use whatever you can find
about your home and (with permission) get ingenious
and inventive!
Please take a photo and send it
[email protected] and I will put them all
together into a montage to view our ‘parade’ in Week 8!
Here are some eggs and potatoes I have dressed up
based on some of the books you all might have been
reading and like as a little bit of inspiration for each stage.
As you can see, they DON’T HAVE TO BE PERFECT, I
hope you have a lot of fun!
Stage 2
Pippi Longstocking Astrid Lindgren (Potato)
PDHPE Home Learning Term 3 – Week 7
Exercise Circuit
Warm up 20 x High Knees Running
on the Spot 10 x Slow Star Jumps
20 x Heel Flicks Running on the Spot
Get a drink of water
Circuit 20 x Star Jumps 10 x Push ups
10 x Sit ups 10 x Side to Side Jumps
30 x Shadow Boxing Punches
10 x Bodyweight Squats 10 x Reverse Lunges Get a drink of water
Repeat x 3
Challenges
In a safe area in your yard or at a park with your parents or guardian, try the following two challenges.
Racquet Hit It Up
Using either a tennis racquet or the bottom of a frying pan, how many times can you continuously hit a ball
up into the air before it touches the ground?
Use a tennis ball or similar sized small ball.
What was your best score?
Kicking a Small Ball
In week 5 you were kicking a ball as high as you can and catching it.
This week how many times in a row can you kick a smaller sized ball such as a tennis ball above your
head and catch it before it hits the ground.
Remember if it touches the ground, start your count again.
Reminder: This is not a challenge on how high you can kick the ball!
Tips
• Take your time and focus on your ball drop.
• Always keep your eyes on the ball.
• Try find a rhythm and be consistent and make your kicks catchable.
What was your best score