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Year 5 News

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  • The greatest thing since sliced bread...

    Published 09/12/24

    ...is more bread! We have been very busy in Y5 designing, baking and evaluating breads. From baps to plaits, we have had everyone in the school salivating as the smell of freshly baked bread has wafted through corridors, infused with lashings of cheese, onion, rosemary, pesto and jalapeño. It tasted pretty good as well!

    We've also been busy in science, learning about hydrodynamics by investigating how the shape of an object influences resistance to its motion as it travels through a liquid. In addition, we've looked at the forces involved in levers and begun to develop an understanding of the concept of mechanical advantage through load/fulcrum/lever models.

    In maths, our unit of work on fractions culminates this week, and we look ahead to multiplication and division in the new year. Poetry and motivational speaking have been the order of the day in English through our current text, Shackleton's Journey.

    Finally, as the end of term approaches, we have been singing our socks off in preparation for the Christmas Carol Concert, which will surely be a wonderful and fitting conclusion to a fantastic autumn term.

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  • Keeping our cool in Antarctica

    Published 26/11/24

    In the last couple of weeks we have been keeping our cool in Antarctica with Ernest Shackleton and his crew aboard the Endurance, creating some pertinently polar poetry along the way. In science, we have been developing our enquiry skills and learning about air resistance - with the help of some parachutes.

    Watch out for mouth-watering recipes with some rather interesting ingredients in DT. Pupils have been getting creative and applying what they have learnt about different breads together with their own experiences to imagine their own baked masterpieces that they will produce and taste next week.

    Mix all of this in with considering the pros and cons of living next to volcanoes, knead together with some work on fractions and you have just another week in Y5!

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  • A force to be reckoned with

    Published 11/11/24

    The second half of the Autumn term got off to an explosive start as we have discovered how plate tectonics are involved in the formation of volcanoes. In science, after briefly considering volcanoes that exist beyond the realms of Earth - including the extinct mega-shied volcano Olympus Mons on Mars - our attention has shifted from outer space to forces. 

    We have explored new number concepts including square numbers, cube numbers and prime numbers in our unit of work on multiplication and division, whilst in English we have petitioned Sir Ernest Shackleton to join him as crew members on his 1914 Trans-Antarctica Expedition. If you need a cook, photographer, champion swimmer, navigator, dog handler or able seaman, then you need look no further!

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  • What an impact!

    Published 23/10/24

    The first half-term of Y5 has been full of amazing discoveries and a lot of hard work. Well done to all of our pupils who have adjusted so well to the Y5 setting - we are tremendously impressed and hope you all have a restful half-term.

    In our final investigation as part of our unit of work on space, we investigated how speed of impact affects crater geometry - by making our own craters in the classroom!  In maths, we have finished our exploration of addition and subtraction and moved onto multiplication and division - learning for the first time about concepts such as prime and square numbers.

    In English, the children created some fascinating fact-files about Antarctica to help immerse us in Ernest Shackleton's Trans-Antarctic (Endurance) Expedition of 1914-1916. We have also journeyed even further back in time, comparing life in Roman and Anglo-Saxon Britain.

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  • Earth and Beyond!

    Published 09/10/24

    Year 5 enjoyed a fantastic visit from the Science Dome this week, where we learnt all about our solar system. It was brilliant to see our science topic come to life through immersive projections. We are also enjoying our weekly cricket sessions and have spent some quiet time reading in the library. In English, we have begun writing some creative narratives inspired by our core text 'Tuesday' - are those flying pigs?! In PSHE, we have also been building our team work skills by playing 'the floor is lava', helping each other to cross the playground without touching the floor. This week's theme has been kindness - have you paid an act of kindness forward this week?

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  • Lunar adventures

    Published 25/09/24

    It has been a busy couple of weeks in Y5 with children investigating the lunar cycle and considering the Moon's relationship with the Earth. The "space" theme has extended to art, where children have produced works using different and contrasting media, inspired by our solar system and beyond. 

    In English, frogs continue to fall from the sky, enabling the children to put their journalistic skills to the test, reporting on the strange events that befell a sleepy town in David Wiesner's Tuesday.

    Everyone has enjoyed the opportunity to play cricket on Fridays - despite the Great British weather's best attempts to delay play!

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  • We have lift off!

    Published 11/09/24

    After undertaking rigorous astronaut training, Y5 have well and truly embarked on the next phase of their educational journey. We kicked off with a tour of our solar system in science and have been checking our astronomical place values in maths - not forgetting that the Romans had their own numerical system - along the way.

    In English, we have been levitating in an altogether different manner, exploring the magical world of Tuesday, authored by David Wiesner. Watch out for flying frogs! We have also journeyed back in time to explore the causes and consequences of early Anglo-Saxon settlement in Britain and considered retrofuturism in art.

    The Year 5 teaching team have been delighted with how quickly the children have settled into Y5 life in their new classes and look forward to the exciting year ahead.

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  • The journey continues...

    Published 16/07/24

    We have been busy writers this week, finishing short stories linked to our work on Journey to Jo'burg by Beverley Naidoo. This creativity has extended to designing book covers using vector graphics in computing, which will adorn their completed stories in booklet format. We can't wait to see the final results!

    In maths, we are completing short units of work on converting units of measure and also volume and capacity before the end of term, whilst in History we have considered disruptions to schooling due to events such as WWII and the COVID-19 pandemic. 

    As the academic year draws to a close, we have enjoyed welcoming Y4 into our classes to share and celebrate this year's learning and to give them a taste of what is to come. We have also all enjoyed watching Y6 perform the dress rehearsal of their fabulous end-of-year production. Y5 made sure to take notes for next year's performance - when it will be their turn!

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  • On the up!

    Published 03/07/24

    The recent warm weather and sunshine have been a welcome addition to our weekly orienteering sessions, with the children focussing on successfully navigating the course, taking bearings and supporting each other as a team - as well as staying cool! Indoors, we have been preparing for the Y5 assembly later this week as well as continuing to explore human development in science and negative numbers in maths. 

    Monday saw pupils meet their new Y6 teachers and experience their classrooms for next year. It's fair to say there is a great deal of excitement and perhaps a little trepidation about moving up to the top of the school! 

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  • What a week on the IoW!

    Published 19/06/24

    Sun, sea and sand were the perfect backdrop for our visit to the Isle of Wight. Active learning opportunities were abundant - from fossil hunting at Compton beach to coastal features and erosion in action at the Needles and Alum Bay. The many months spent in captivity by Charles I were evident at Carisbrooke Castle and everyone was fascinated by the history of the HMS Victory and Mary Rose.  Perhaps most of all, it was wonderful to see the children develop their independence and resilience: organising and preparing themselves for each day's activities, braving themselves to take on new challenges, supporting their peers, and celebrating mutual successes. Whether it was riding on a chairlift for the first time, conquering the 4m jump at Tapnell water-park, travelling upside down on the terrifying/exhilarating Extinction ride at Blackgang Chine or enduring being away from home, every child embraced something new and achieved something to be proud of.

    Now that we've returned to school, the learning hasn't stopped! We've started a new topic in History - a post 1066 thematic study about schools and school life. In DT we've been investigating pulleys and mechanical systems. Decimals continue to be our focus in maths, and we are writing letters in English as part of our unit of work relating to the book Journey to Jo'burg. Careers week activities have also kept us engaged and very busy this week. A huge thank you to all of our parents who have supported this.

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  • Preparing for the Isle of Wight

    Published 04/06/24

    It has been lovely to see the children return to school after the half-term break, full of excitement about our imminent residential trip. There has been a decidedly Isle of Wight flavour to lessons this week! In maths, we have continued our work on decimals, which will prove very handy when considering how best to spend pocket money on the trip. We've also been busy orienteering, which will be useful in making sure that we get to all the right places at all the right times. In art, we've been finishing our landscape watercolours and finding out about the work of Turner, Cezanne and O'Keefe - which will help us to better appreciate the scenery from an artist's perspective, and finally, we've been making sure that everyone is up to speed with what to bring. Fingers crossed for some sunshine!

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  • Making the most of the sunshine

    Published 15/05/24

    We've welcomed back the sunshine by spending some time alfresco - making the most of our brilliant surroundings. In art, the children have been thinking about perspective and sketching views of Christ Church from the Orchard, in preparation for producing watercolours next week. This has been accompanied by outdoor exertion in PE, where “indoor” PE has become outdoor PE as pupils engage in orienteering activities around the school. 

    In English, we continue to develop our non-chronological report writing skills using the text Journey to Jo’burg, by Beverley Naidoo, to understand what life under apartheid was like.  We have also investigated metamorphosis and incomplete metamorphosis, using secondary sources, in insects and reptiles ranging from salamanders to dung beetles!

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