Year 2 Home Learning - 22nd February 2021
Date: 21st Feb 2021 @ 3:04pm
Monday 22nd February 2021
We hope you all had a wonderful half term. We are very excited to read your Seesaw posts for this week. Remember, you have done some amazing work so far and we are very proud of everything you have achieved. Now it is time to start our home learning again and we are sure you are all ready to go. We are starting a new book in English and we will be looking at 3D shapes in Maths along with a range of different activities, so please read this post carefully. I know home learning is very different to school but you are all doing a fantastic job. Try to remain resilient and persevere with all the tasks set. Little and often is always the best policy.
Keep going, we are proud of you all!
We will explain the structure on here each day but please refer to the additional uploaded documents for each specific lesson guidance and resources.
Reading
It is ESSENTIAL that children continue to read every single day. This should be for a minimum of 20 minutes.
Reading challenge - I spy - Play ‘I Spy’ games. Can you find words beginning with...? Can you find a picture of a ...? How many ... can you see?
Resources for questioning your child while they are reading - VIPERS
Maths
This half term for our maths starters we are focusing on spotting patterns whilst we are counting and when they are written down.
To find patterns it is important to think about these things:
- What’s happening to the numbers?
- Can you spot the jumps between the numbers?
- What’s happening to the tens in the number?
- What’s happening to the ones in the number?
- Is it a single digit number?
- Is it a two-digit number?
- Can you notice a change in the ones/units when you are counting?
Use a hundred square to help you look at the patterns whilst you are counting. I have attached one to the blog.
If you want an interactive hundred square press this link.
Count in 2s up to 60. Repeat this 4 times.
Write your numbers in 2s to 60.
Using the questions at the top can you write down 5 patterns that you have found?
Look at the numbers carefully to see what is happening to the numbers.
This week our lessons focus on 3D shapes. Please watch the video on White Rose maths and complete the worksheet attached. https://vimeo.com/508435282
We have uploaded an additional document named 'CHALLENGE'. This is only intended as extension work to challenge and push your learning. You are not required to complete this sheet.
English
We are starting a brand new book called The Day the Crayon’s Quit by Drew Daywalt.
You can find a PowerPoint version of the story attached to this blog or watch the following Youtube video.
Try to find an old box of used crayons or look at the picture below – some broken, some stubby, some whole, and some with the wrappers taken off. Talk to someone in your house. Why do the crayons look like this?
What has happened to the crayons to make them this way?
Why are some crayons much shorter than others?
Which crayons do the children think are the most popular?
Are there any crayons that seem never to have been used? Why might this be?
Please see the attached Word document with details for today’s lesson.
Phonics and Spelling
Phonics play have made their website free to use throughout January. Login -> select the resources tab -> select phase 6 phonics and have a play!
You may log in with the following details:
username: jan21
password: home
This week we will be focusing on the phoneme /j/ spelt with '-dge' and '-ge' at the end of words.
Please see the spellings below, which we would like you to learn this week. Children in school will be given a spelling quiz on Friday 26th February. These spelling can be practiced on Sumdog by selecting the ‘Spelling Quiz’ challenge.
badge edge bridge dodge fudge
age huge change charge village
Spelling rules for /j/ spelt with '-dge' and '-ge'
The letter j is never used at the end of words.
The spelling -dge is used straight after short vowel sounds. Example: badge
Use –ge in words with all other vowel sounds and short vowel words that
have a consonant sound before the /j/ sound. Examples: cage, fringe
In other positions in the words, it is spelt g before e, i and y. Examples: giraffe, Germany, gymnastics
It is spelt j before a, o and u. Examples: January, job, jump
Please work through today’s PowerPoint presentation.
Once you have done this, have a go at the word search and see how many -ge and -dge words you can find.
Science
Can I explore the properties of a variety of balls?
Resources
A variety of balls
Paper
Would you choose a ball of plasticine to play tennis or table tennis? Why not?
Do you think the squashy ball will bounce well? What sort of balls do you think will bounce best?
Why do you think balls bounce?
Balls bounce because they are elastic. When a ball hits a hard surface its shape changes – the part touching the ground flattens slightly. It gets back into its original shape quickly and bounces back up.
Watch this video of a ball bouncing in slow motion to show how the ball flattens and goes back into shape.
How are we going to test the bounciness of these balls? How will we make it fair so that we treat all the balls the same?
Try one of the following experiments:
Experiment 1 - If you have a variety of balls
Think about dropping the balls (not throwing) from the same height onto the same surface. You need to decide how to do this (two balls could be dropped together by the same person and their bounces compared, or a few people in a line drop a ball each at the same time). Then we need to think about measuring the height of the balls when they bounce back. You could stick paper to the wall and draw lines on the paper to denote the height of each bounce. Try to predict which ball will bounce the highest then test them by dropping them and recording the bounces. When you have tested the balls and marked the bounces on the paper on the wall, talk about your findings so far and see if they can explain what happened.
Experiment 2 – If you only have one ball available
In this variation you will need to find out which surface is good for bouncing.
Do you think balls bounce well on sand? Do they bounce well on wood? Take just one ball – a fairly bouncy one if possible – and drop it onto different surfaces, e.g. carpet, wood, tiles, and note the height of the bounce. Try to keep the ball and height the same but changing the surface onto which the ball is dropped.
Have you discovered anything interesting? Have you been surprised by anything today?
Record your results in your home learning journal.
Can you imagine what life would be like if we bounced like balls? What surfaces would be best to walk on? How could we decrease the bounciness?
Sumdog Challenges
Multiplication – x2, x3, x5 and x10 tables
Maths – 3D Shapes
Spellings – /j/ spelt -ge and -dge
We hope you have a fantastic week of home learning.
Year 2 team.