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Family Learning Grammar Mrs R Forrester St. Mary’s Catholic Academy 12th November 2015 Aims of the Session • To understand the new expectations for spelling, grammar and punctuation. • To understand some of the terminology which the pupils will be using in class. • To understand how to support your son/daughter at home with their grammar, punctuation and spelling. SPAG (Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar) National Testing: At the end of Key Stage 1 (Year 2) May 2016 At the end of Key Stage 2 (Year 6) May 2016 School Testing: Weekly and Half Termly tests (Year 1 – Year 6) Writing Encourage writing when they have a proper pencil grip: Develop finger strength by: * Write in the air, in sand, water * Paint – large paper * Use scissors * Mark make * Matching games – use both hands to move shapes/letters (magnetic) * Pick up pencil and put it down. * Play do – squeezing/rolling etc Basic Skills * Children need to be sitting properly. * Letter formation (from top) and printed * Ready for cursive when letters are recognisable and formed accurately. * Encourage accurate use of capitals and lower case from the start. (Writing name) * Use correct tools for homework and insist on neat handwriting and presentation. Basic Skills * Letter formation, use of capital letters and punctuation will be marked and focused on. Corrections are insisted upon – to embed basic skills. * Linked to reading – children are encouraged to look at how words are put together in sentences and how punctuation helps the reader. Spelling School: * Year 1 and 2 set for Phonics (Daily) Phonetic spellings and ‘Quick’ words. Given out on a Monday and tested as a dictation on a Thursday. * Year 3 and 4, 5 and 6 are set for Spellings Phonics groups and spelling rules/patterns matched to ability. Tue, Wed afternoon (20 mins) – spelling games and activities – recapping and learning new spelling pattern. Thurs morning – Dictation of 6 weekly spellings and 4 more which follow same rule/pattern. New spellings given. Star spelling card - personalised Home * Practise weekly spellings and those with a similar pattern/rule. * Play games – see Website links for ideas. * Word searches, crosswords, board games – Scrabble, Yahtzee * Recap previous spellings. * Homework – same expectations as school work. * Check yellow spelling book (brought home on a Friday. Score will be /6 + extras ) “Grammar to a writer is to a mountaineer a good pair of hiking boots or, more precisely, to a deep-sea diver an oxygen tank.” Year Group Expectations • Share handout and discuss • Word Class Game • Slides which follow are from training which staff received by Ros Ferrera. Word classes Conjunctions Nouns Adverbs Verbs Determiners Pronouns Adjectives Prepositions © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Nouns Common nouns: cows, milk Collective nouns: herd, class Proper nouns: Jasmine, London, January Abstract nouns: truth, goodness, mercy © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Label the nouns correctly The party of schoolchildren entered the Natural History Museum. Anxiety filled the court as King Henry delivered the sentence . The policeman was awarded a medal for bravery. The choir filled the church with a glorious sound. Pass me that pile of books, please, Sally. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Key Stage 1 Questions (Y2) Circle the three nouns in the sentence. A whale has an enormous heart that can weigh as much as a small car. Why do the underlined words start with a capital letter? King Fred had a party at Greystone Palace on Sunday afternoon. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Pronouns Pronouns are another word class • They are words that can stand in place of a noun or indeed a whole noun phrase. • Pronouns help us avoid repeating ourselves too often… © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Personal I we you he she it they © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Possessive mine ours yours his hers its theirs Relative who whom whose which that when where why Circle all the pronouns in the sentence below. They bought new jumpers for themselves and a warm scarf for Dad. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Determiners the, a, an the – definite article. That specific one. a/an – indefinite article. More general – one of many. A before a word that starts with a consonant – a bike, a shoe, a pen An before a word that starts with a vowel – an egg, an ice cream, an umbrella © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 But... a unique event a European a football match an unusual event an Egyptian an FA Cup Final It’s all about the way you say it... © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Circle all the determiners in the sentence below. Two apple trees screened the open windows on one side. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Adjectives © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Er More Est Most Comparative and Superlative Short adjectives + Er – older, taller, happier, thinner Est – oldest, tallest, happiest, thinnest Longer adjectives (2 or more syllables) + More intelligent, more beautiful, more surprising Most intelligent, most beautiful, most surprising © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 KS1 What type of word is brave in the sentence below? The brave mouse marched up to the lion. Tick one. an adverb an adjective a verb a noun KS2 Complete the sentence with an adjective formed from the verb create. The artist was very ____________________ and produced many original works. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 KS2 Complete the sentence with an adjective formed from the verb create. The artist was very ____________________ and produced many original works. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Conjunctions Conjunctions are words which can join two parts of a sentence. Some conjunctions join words or phrases. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 and…but...or words: fish and chips phrases: one of the teachers and all of the children clauses: The clouds rolled in and it began to rain. words: phrases: clauses: basic but clean out of sight but not out of mind I tried my best but I did not win the race. Words: phrases: clauses: right or wrong the top of a mountain or the bottom of the sea We can stay in Rome or we can visit Milan. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Circle all the conjunctions in the sentences below. Once Harry had checked the weather forecast, he set off on his walk. Whilst climbing up the mountain, he was unaware of the dangers ahead. He needed to turn back immediately since a storm was coming. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 A verb is a word (or words) that tells you what is happening in a sentence. Not necessarily a “doing” word. But it could also be thought of as a ‘being’ word e.g. am, is, were, will be, A verb is at the heart of a clause. Verbs often occur in ‘chains’ of more than one word, e.g. ‘was living’; ‘were playing’; ‘have been working’. This is known as a verb phrase. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Verbs Present Tense – simple and progressive Simple: walk, walks Progressive: is walking, are walking Progressive form indicates the action over a longer period of time. Past – simple and progressive Simple: walked Progressive: was walking, were walking Progressive form indicates the action over a longer period of time. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Key Stage 1 Questions (Y2) Write one word on the line below to complete the sentence in the past tense. I __________ to Scotland during the school holidays. Circle the verbs in the sentence below. Yesterday was the school sports day and Jo wore her new running shoes. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Which pair of verbs correctly completes the sentence below? Pluto ______ now called a dwarf planet, but once it _____ classified as a planet. Tick one. was is was was is is is was © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Tick to show which sentence uses the past progressive. Tick one. After Ali finished his homework, he went out to play. Gemma was doing her science homework. Jamie learnt his spellings every night. Anna found her history homework difficult. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Modal verbs • Will, may, can, must, ought (to), shall, might, could, would, should.) © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Adverbs Tell you about how, when and where something was done or happened. • Often end in -ly - eg. ‘quickly’ - But not always - e.g. ‘fast’ • You can put them in all sorts of different places in a sentence! © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Circle the adverb in the sentence below. “Soon,” he thought, “I’ll be able to see my family.” © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Prepositions A preposition is a word like with, at, in, over. It indicates the relationship between 2 words or parts of a sentence. It is usually followed by a noun phrase. • at that moment • in the garden • over the moon © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Tick all the sentences that contain a preposition. Ali locked the door before he left. The shops are beyond the main road. My brother is behind me in the race. Barry is below Andrew in the register. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 It’s more about the job they do... An orange An orange fish He likes his run. He likes to run. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 What is a sentence? A sentence is a group of words which express an idea and, together, make complete sense and usually contain a subject and a verb. Sentences are made up of Clauses which are made up of Phrases which are made up of Words © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Phrases A phrase is a group of words which act as a unit, but is not a complete clause or sentence. They help to add detail to sentences. Expanded Noun Phrases Expanded noun phrases add information to nouns. They add detail to sentences and help to build a picture in the reader’s mind. Expansion can happen before and/or after the noun. The derelict house The derelict house with an overgrown garden © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Statement to question – question tags The weather is fine today. isn’t it? Children should go to bed early. couldn’t it? Joe did his homework. or do they? The dragon could not fly. didn’t he? Superheroes do not exist. shouldn’t they? © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Simple The stressed teacher was crying. Please don’t make me go to school tomorrow! © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 But you’re the teacher. Compound The stressed teacher was crying and the children ran riot. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Compound sentences 2 equally weighted clauses which are linked by a conjunction. The 2 main clauses can stand alone. The Iron Man ate the metal fence but he was still hungry. Called co-ordinating conjunctions © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 When main clauses are linked by co-ordinating conjunctions , it is a compound sentence. The clauses have equal weight. for and nor but or yet so © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Complex While the teacher was crying, the children ran riot. Main clause – Can stand alone. Subordinate clause – needs the main clause to make sense. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Subordinating Conjunctions if when because whenever until so that © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 and many more… Relative Clauses • Act like adjectives – they modify a noun or a noun phrase. • Start with a relative pronoun – who, whom, which, that, whose Or a relative adverb - where, when, why • Can be embedded in the sentence Poppy, who was watching the race, could not believe her eyes. I live in Cambridge which is a university city. The gate, where the policeman was standing, was completely covered by a web of ivy. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Active and Passive Voice A sentence can be active or passive. A sentence is active when the subject is carrying out the action. A sentence is passive when the subject of the sentence has an action done to it by someone or something else. Active - Rain interrupted the tennis tournament. Passive - The tennis tournament was interrupted by rain. Passive - The tennis tournament was interrupted. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Rewrite the sentence below so that it is written in the passive voice. Remember to punctuate your answer correctly. The pouring rain drenched us. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Fronted adverbials Simply means that the adverbial is positioned at the beginning of the sentence. Far in the distance, the mountain peaks were outlined against the darkening sky. With a heavy heart, Blue kangaroo hopped down the stairs. Seconds later, the van bumped down the lane. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Punctuation • Helps readers make sense of written text • Helps writers convey their message clearly and accurately ‘chunks’ text up into meaningful units, marking a variety of grammatical boundaries © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Commas In a list to separate items, but not before the final and: My favourite fruits are raspberries, strawberries, peaches and figs. After a subordinate clause at the beginning of a sentence: If the train arrives on time, I will not be late. Tired of waiting, Rose crawled into the dimly-lit tunnel. With many connecting (conjunctive) adverbs: However, the playground will be closed. The playground, however, will be closed. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Inverted Commas • • • • Inverted commas mark the beginning and end of direct speech. They enclose the actual words a speaker has said. Any punctuation at the end of the speech goes before the closing inverted commas. Each new speaker starts on a new line. The dialogue word/speech tag /reporting clause is separated from the speech by a comma. “It has rained every day for a month,” Clare complained. Anna sighed, “You are going to Spain next week. The sun will shine there.” © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Mrs. Owl sighed are you still afraid of the dark I prefer the daytime answered Plop I did think the fireworks were exciting though © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Mrs. Owl sighed, “Are you still afraid of the dark?” “I prefer the daytime,” answered Plop. “I did think the fireworks were exciting though.” © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Semi-colon •Separate 2 closely related main clauses The moon was gleaming silver; it looked like an enormous lantern. •Separate items in a list where the items are longer phrases I need several ripe tomatoes; a jar of black olives; a kilo of fresh tagliatelle; some diced bacon and a bottle of good quality olive oil. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Colon • Introduce a list There were a lot of things on Anna’s floor: clothes, books, magazines, shoes and the remains of a pizza she had eaten on Friday night. • Add further explanation to a point previously made. The climate is undergoing changes: summers are wetter and cooler and the sun rarely shines. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Insert a colon in the correct place in the sentence below. The school offered three clubs for its pupils art and craft, dance and chess. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 The apostrophe • Show possession • Show omission What are the rules? © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 The apostrophe of omission The apostrophe is also used when letters are omitted (left out) from a word or words. The apostrophe always goes in the place where letters are missing. For example: . have not becomes haven’t because the ‘o’ is omitted. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 The apostrophe of possession: singular ‘owner’. The first use of the apostrophe is to show possession (when something belongs to someone). The apostrophe always goes after the last letter of the word describing the person to whom something belongs (the ‘owner’). If the ‘owner’ is singular, the apostrophe is followed by an ‘s’. The book belonging to the boy becomes The boy’s book The bike belonging to Joe becomes Joe’s bike. The computer belonging to my friend becomes My friend’s computer © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 The apostrophe of possession: plural ‘owner’ When the ‘owner’ in a sentence (the person or thing to whom something belongs) is plural (more than one) AND ends in an s (boys, ) there is NO ‘s’ after the apostrophe. The books belonging to the boys becomes The boys’ books The toys belonging to the babies becomes The babies’ toys The bowls belonging to the cats becomes The cats’ bowls © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 However, when the ‘owner’ in the sentence is plural but does not end in an s (children, people) there is an ‘s’ after the apostrophe. The games belonging to the children becomes The children’s games The opinion belonging to the people becomes The people’s opinion The field belonging to the sheep becomes The sheep’s field © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Playing with punctuation The boy’s like pop corn. The boys like pop corn. Were here to help. We’re here to help. Watch the boy’s box. Watch the boys box. The friendly dog’s home. The friendly dogs’ home. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Hyphen A hyphen is used to link words and parts of words. They are found in compound words. They also join prefixes to other words. Compound adjectives before nouns: a well-known author an English-Italian dictionary sweet-smelling flowers the bad-tempered ladybird Words beginning with the prefixes co-, non- and ex-: co-ordinator non-smoking ex-soldier © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Compound nouns where the second part is a preposition: a break-in a write-off a go-between a hold-up Which sentence uses the hyphen correctly? Tick one. There are thirty seven year-olds in Class 2. There are thirty seven-year-olds in Class 2. There are thirty-seven year olds in Class 2. There are thirty-seven-year-olds in Class 2. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Dash A dash is used mainly in informal writing. It often replaces commas, semicolons, colons and brackets. Rebecca - our best player - scored the goal. The moon was gleaming silver - it looked like an enormous lantern. The climate is undergoing changes - summers are wetter and cooler and the sun rarely shines. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 What is the name of the punctuation mark used between the two main clauses below? My sister loves team sports; my brother, on the other hand, prefers individual sports – such as athletics. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Ellipsis Three dots that usually mark where a word/phrase/sentence has been omitted intentionally . It is also used to show an unfinished sentence which raises a question or creates tension . Something was coming... James swallowed hard. “Maybe you could…talk to her?” I wanted to show you but… © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Brackets Brackets are used to separate text in a sentence to explain, comment on or give more information. They can be used in the place of dashes and commas. Rebecca(our best player)scored the goal. Along the banks of the Amazon(the longest river in the world) many extraordinary creatures can be found. Insert a pair of brackets in the correct place in the sentence below. Lisa who had been playing the piano since she was nine had achieved Grade 7. © Focus Education UK Ltd. 2015 Standard English Common Errors to correct * were/was is/are * could/would/should of * been/bin/being haf to past/passed * We went Hanley. * The books what we wrote were good. * Me and my sister … Thank you for coming today and supporting your child’s education.