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Welcome to Year One

Welcome to Year One. Year 1 staff. Class Teacher: Miss Lee. Teaching Assistant: Mrs Ritson. Teaching Assistant: Mrs Rodgers (Tuesday). Our routines. Maths No Problem everyday. English 4 times a week Daily Phonics. Daily Guided Reading Science - Monday afternoon

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Welcome to Year One

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  1. Welcome to Year One

  2. Year 1 staff Class Teacher: Miss Lee Teaching Assistant: Mrs Ritson Teaching Assistant: Mrs Rodgers (Tuesday)

  3. Our routines • Maths No Problem everyday. • English 4 times a week • Daily Phonics. • Daily Guided Reading • Science - Monday afternoon • Topic - Thursday afternoon. • Computing – Wednesday mid-morning. • PE – Wednesday - Tuesday in January • Reading books – change books on a Monday and Thursday. • Spellings – Friday • Homework – reading books, spellings, topic books.

  4. Reminders • Clothing (names!) • P.E kit – named and in school all the time. • Toast money – to be paid weekly on a Monday morning. • Ear rings – taken out or covered for P.E

  5. What you can do at home. READING - Please read as much as you can (even if it’s just ONE page a night!) Remember to sign reading record book. WRITING – labelling objects around the house, helping to write shopping lists, writing instructions, writing simple sentences using capital letters, full stops and adjectives. MATHS – counting, forming numbers, adding groups of objects together (number bonds to 10).

  6. This term... • English – using adjectives, capital letters, full stops, using sounds to spell simple words (Phonics), lists, labels and captions, instructions and rhyme and patterns. • Maths – counting in 2’s, 5’s and 10’s, adding, subtracting. Number bonds to 10. • Guided Reading workshops • Topic – the weather and animals in hot and cold countries. • Science – Animals • Music – exploring the pitch, rhythm and beat. • PE – Games • RE – Harvest, God’s creation.

  7. Maths No Problem • In Focus Task • Lets Learn • Guided Practice Every lesson is split into 3 parts.

  8. E – Safety

  9. What could they be doing online? • playing games • talking to people (Skype) • sharing information • searching for information • sending messages • social networking • making friends • purchasing goods/ apps/ services

  10. Risks children face online • cyber-bullying • accessing inappropriate websites • losing control over images and videos they post • viruses • hacking of files • grooming • fines for using photos/ images without permission • slander or contempt of court for reposting tweets and posts

  11. Tools to protect your children – Parental Control Every parental control package is different, but most provide services such as: Filtering – content to restrict access to particular sites Time limits – restrict the amount of time your child can be online, or set periods of time where your child can access certain sites Monitoring – where you are informed of certain sites that your child is attempting to gain access to. Reporting – where you are provided with information about what sites your child has used.

  12. Let them teach you The people who know best about what your children are up to online, are your children! Get them to tell you about the sites they’re using. Ask them questions such as: ◦Why do they like the site? ◦What can they do on it? ◦What’s so fun about it? ◦Who uses it at school? ◦Who you can talk to? ◦Who are their friends on it? This is a good way to develop a trusting relationship with your child about what they are up to online.

  13. E-Safety (Messages) Your children may have their own mobile phone, email account or social network page, so it is important they know what to do when things go wrong. 1.Do not delete the message 2.Don’t show the message to other children 3.Go to a grown up to tell them, not a friend 4.Do not respond to any messages

  14. Thank you for coming

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