Holy Cross Catholic Primary School Leicester - Year 5 and Year 6
Wednesday 23 May 2018
gabriella and shania
ENGLISH
In English, this week we have been learning about some interesting poems.
We have learnt today how to use expanded noun phrases. A couple of days ago, we learnt how to act out a poem in groups of 3 and 4s.
When we do our English work, we always do a cold task at the beginning and a hot task at the end. A cold task is when we write what were supposed to and a hot task is when we write it again but use what we've learnt over the week.
In our English work we have been learning about a poem called The Magic Box.
When we do our English work, we always do a cold task at the beginning and a hot task at the end. A cold task is when we write what were supposed to and a hot task is when we write it again but use what we've learnt over the week.
In our English work we have been learning about a poem called The Magic Box.
Wednesday 2 May 2018
VANESSA AND ASHLEIGH
RULES OF HOW TO STAY SAFE
1.DO NOT TELL ANYONE YOUR DETAIL {SCHOOL, PHONE NUMBER,ADDRESS].
2.IF SOMEONE TEXT YOU AND YOU DON'T KNOW WHO IT IS DON'T DELET IT SAVE IT AND DON'T ANSWER BACK.ALSO,SHOW AN ADULT THEY WILL DEAL WITH IT AND DONT WORRY.
3.Dont give your full name .
1.DO NOT TELL ANYONE YOUR DETAIL {SCHOOL, PHONE NUMBER,ADDRESS].
2.IF SOMEONE TEXT YOU AND YOU DON'T KNOW WHO IT IS DON'T DELET IT SAVE IT AND DON'T ANSWER BACK.ALSO,SHOW AN ADULT THEY WILL DEAL WITH IT AND DONT WORRY.
3.Dont give your full name .
Monday 15 May 2017
PARLIMENT$
Parliament
What Parliament does?
Parliament has a variety of roles in helping the UK to run efficiently as a country. So what exactly happens in Parliament? Read on to find out more.
Introduction Video:
What happens in Parliament?
The main work of Parliament is to make laws, debate topical issues and look at how our taxes are spent to help run the country. The issues discussed in Parliament affect us all: health, the environment, transport, jobs, schools, crime.
Who gets to work in Parliament?
We live in a democratic country, which means we all have a say in how the country is run. We do this by electing Members of Parliament (MP's) to represent our views in the House of Commons. This part of Parliament has the greatest political power. The second part of Parliament is the House of Lords, whose un elected members complement the work of the House of Commons. The third and final part of Parliame What happens in Parliament?
What happens in Parliament?
The main work of Parliament is to make laws, debate topical issues and look at how our taxes are spent to help run the country. The issues discussed in Parliament affect us all: health, the environment, transport, jobs, schools, crime.
Who gets to work in Parliament?
We live in a democratic country, which means we all have a say in how the country is run. We do this by electing Members of Parliament (MPs) to represent our views in the House of Commons. This part of Parliament has the greatest political power. The second part of Parliament is the House of Lords, whose unelected members complement the work of the House of Commons. The third and final part of Parliament is the Monarch who signs the laws that Parliament votes for.
Where is Parliament?
The Houses of Parliament, also known as the Palace of Westminster, is in the centre of London. As well as the home of the UK Parliament, it is also a royal palace and former residence of great kings. The Palace is one of the most iconic buildings in the world and includes the green-coloured House of Commons Chamber and the red-coloured House of Lords Chamber where political decisions are made to this day. It also includes the famous Clock Tower, popularly known as Big Ben.
To give the people of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland more say over what happens in their countries, the UK Parliament has devolved (given away) some of its powers to other national and regional bodies. In Scotland, for example, there is the Scottish Parliament which has elected members who make some decisions for Scotland. Wales and Northern Ireland have their own Assemblies and there is also a London Assembly.
The main work of Parliament is to make laws, debate topical issues and look at how our taxes are spent to help run the country. The issues discussed in Parliament affect us all: health, the environment, transport, jobs, schools, crime.
Who gets to work in Parliament?
We live in a democratic country, which means we all have a say in how the country is run. We do this by electing Members of Parliament (MPs) to represent our views in the House of Commons. This part of Parliament has the greatest political power. The second part of Parliament is the House of Lords, whose unelected members complement the work of the House of Commons. The third and final part of Parliament is the Monarch who signs the laws that Parliament votes for.
Where is Parliament?
The Houses of Parliament, also known as the Palace of Westminster, is in the centre of London. As well as the home of the UK Parliament, it is also a royal palace and former residence of great kings. The Palace is one of the most iconic buildings in the world and includes the green-coloured House of Commons Chamber and the red-coloured House of Lords Chamber where political decisions are made to this day. It also includes the famous Clock Tower, popularly known as Big Ben.
To give the people of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland more say over what happens in their countries, the UK Parliament has devolved (given away) some of its powers to other national and regional bodies. In Scotland, for example, there is the Scottish Parliament which has elected members who make some decisions for Scotland. Wales and Northern Ireland have their own Assemblies and there is also a London Assembly is the Monarch who signs the laws that Parliament votes for.
Where is Parliament?
The Houses of Parliament, also known as the Palace of Westminster, is in the centre of London. As well as the home of the UK Parliament, it is also a royal palace and former residence of great kings. The Palace is one of the most iconic buildings in the world and includes the green-coloured House of Commons Chamber and the red-coloured House of Lords Chamber where political decisions are made to this day. It also includes the famous Clock Tower, popularly known as Big Ben.
To give the people of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland more say over what happens in their countries, the UK Parliament has devolved (given away) some of its powers to other national and regional bodies. In Scotland, for example, there is the Scottish Parliament which has elected members who make some decisions for Scotland. Wales and Northern Ireland have their own Assemblies and there is also a London Assembly.
Why do we have the House of Lords?
The Lords started off as an advisory council to the king. In 1215, King John was forced to sign the Magna Carta, sharing power with the nobility. Trade became more and more important which lead to the rise of a new merchant class, and by the 14th century Edward III had two groups of advisors divided into chambers, the Lords and the Commons, made up of lesser knights and merchants. This is why we have two houses in Parliament. As time passed, the Commons became increasingly dominant and the King became less powerful.
Who is in the House of Lords?
As society moved on and cultures changed, the question arose, how had these people earned their place? How can they represent the public? In 1958 the Life Peerages Act introduced women into the House and radically changed who was in the Lords. From then on, any man or woman could enter the House based on what they had achieved in their career. The Lords Act of 1999 reduced the number of hereditary members in the House and stopped them passing their seat to their own family.
Now the Lords is made up of people from all walks of life, political peers, cross-bench peers, as well as hereditary peers and bishops. They all use their experience from inside and outside of Parliament to check and challenge the Government.
What does the House of Lords do?
The House of Lords has three main functions. To question and challenge the work of the Government, to work with the House of Commons to shape laws and to investigate issues through committees and debates to help improve the way the country is governed.
The House of Lords is currently the second busiest legislative chamber in the world, right after the House of Commons. Each chamber is laid out in the same way as the Commons, the Government party on the one side, the opposition on the other. Members who don’t belong to any political party are known as cross-benches
Tuesday 9 May 2017
Grammar
GRAMMAR
English grammar is the way in which meanings are encoded into wordings in the English language. This includes the structure of words, phrases, clauses, and sentences, right up to the structure of whole texts. There are historical,
Grammatical structures: word, phrase, clause and sentence. Words, Phrases and Clauses. These are the three central grammatical structures which make up all sentences. A phrase consists of one or more words and is a part of a sentence. social, cultural and regional variations of English.
The history of English grammars begins late in the sixteenth century with the Pamphlet for Grammar by William Bullock. In the early works, the structure and rules of English grammar were contrasted with those of Latin. A more modern approach, incorporating phonology, was introduced in the nineteenth century.
An adverbial is a word or phrase that has been used like an adverb to add detail or further information to a verb. (An easy way to remember what an adverb is: it adds to the verb.) Adverbials are used to explain how, where or when something happened; they are like adverbs made up of more than one word.
These basic elements are called morphemes, and the study of how they are combined in words is morphology. The study of how words are organised into phrases, clauses and sentences is usually referred to as syntax. A longer stretch of language is known as discourse, the study of its structure as discourse analysis.
Students write and speak using conventional grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling. Page 1. Standard 3: Students write and speak using conventional grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling. Standards and Components.
Grammar - Parts of Speech - Articles. An article is a kind of adjective which is always used with and gives some information about a noun. There are only two articles a and the, but they are used very often and are important for using English accurately.
English has two articles: the and a/an. The is used to refer to specific or particular nouns; a/an is used to modify non-specific or non-particular nouns. We call the the definite article and a/an the indefinite article.
The language conventions tests assess spelling, grammar and punctuation. Literacy knowledge and skills are essential to effective communication across all learning areas.
WEBSITE WHICH MIGHT HELP YOU:
NAP - Language conventions=GOOD LITERATURE
https://www.nap.edu.au/naplan/language-conventions
What are the conventions of writing?
Writing conventions such as spelling, punctuation, capitalization, and grammar help make a student's essay clear and understandable. When the audience can finish reading, without having to stop to try to figure out what was actually intended, the value of learning these writing conventions becomes clear.
BIG QUESTION:What is usage in writing?
A customary way of doing something; a custom or practice: the usages of the last 50 years. 2. the customary manner in which a language or a form of a language is spoken or written: English usage; a grammar based on usage rather than on arbitrary notions of correctness.
Usage |[- Defintition-[-
What is meant by the mechanics of writing?
Mechanics are the conventions of print that do not exist in oral language, including spelling, punctuation, capitalization, and paragraphs. Because they do not exist in oral language, students have to consciously learn how mechanics function in written language.
Conventions - The five features of good - Learn NC
What is the definition of convention in literature?
A customary feature of a literary work, such as the use of a chorus in Greek tragedy, the inclusion of an explicit moral in a fable, or the use of a particular rhyme scheme in a villanelle. Literary conventions are defining features of particular literary genres, such as novel, short story, ballad, sonnet, and play.
What are some conjunctive adverbs?
Recognize a conjunctive adverb when you see one.
Conjunctive Adverbs | ||
---|---|---|
accordingly also besides consequently conversely finally furthermore hence | however indeed instead likewise meanwhile moreover nevertheless next | nonetheless otherwise similarly still subsequently then therefore thus |
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What punctuation should be used when two clauses are connected with a conjunctive adverb?
When a conjunctive adverb connects two independent clauses in one sentence, it is preceded by a semicolon and followed by a comma.
Grammar and Punctuation: Using Conjunctive Adverbs
writing.wisc.edu/Handbook/ConjAdv.html
What is moreover in grammar?
Showing Added Information. Conjunctive adverbs (which are sometimes also called. sentence connectors or transitional words) are commonly. used in serious business, technical, and academic writing. Conjunctive adverbs are.similar in meaning to other types.
grammar was originally orinated from mexio.
grammar was originally orinated from mexio.
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