Year 4 Home Learning Spring Term & Easter Break

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Year 4 Home Learning Spring Term & Easter Break Please find below your choice of activities for the next week and holiday period. Please note that this is linked with what we have been or will be studying in class. English Activity: Recreate a myth or a legend in a creative way. i.e. create a storyboard; design a comic strip; make puppets etc. Maths Activity: Design your own board game which uses concepts about coordinates and position (think about battleships and treasure maps). Reading Activity: Please complete one of the attached reading comprehensions. IPC Activity: We will be sending home to each child a plaque disclosing tablet, which when used, will reveal the extent of plaque in and around their teeth and gums. **Please supervise your child whilst completing this activity. Reading: Each year, children are issued with a new reading record. Children are expected to read on a daily basis and should record the number of pages read in their record, alongside a brief description of the events that have happened. Please note, the records are to be completed by the children and should be handed in daily to classroom adults. Spellings: We will be sending home weekly spellings on Fridays to be learnt ready for the test which will take place the following Thursday. The spelling patterns and words being taught are taken directly from the National Curriculum expectations for Year 4. Children's end of year assessments will also be based around the words we send home for learning each week. Easter Writing Competition Over the Easter we would like you to put yourself in Roald Dahl's shoes and write a story in the famous author's style. Recently the Oxford English Dictionary added numerous new words and phrases made famous by him - including Oompa Lumpa' and witching hour - to their latest edition. Many previously added words have also been revised in association with Dahl, including Frightsome and Gremlin. With this in mind can you write your own original "Dahl style" story complete with original characters (kind, inspiring or down right loathsome - it's up to you). There are prizes to be won including most improved writer and best fictional creation (namely who can think of the most original character). So the competition is on as level a playing field as possible, please can this home learning be completely independent (help with word processing is of course fine, but we'd like the creative part to be done just by the children). Good luck and we look forward to reading your stories. Many thanks, Miss Honey, Mr Doyle, Mr Osborn & Mrs Long

Maud and the Dragon - Refine/Practise Comprehension 1 A long time ago, on the western wall of the old church in Mordiford, Herefordshire was once a poem and a painting of a gigantic dragon. The dragon shown in the picture was a fearsome creature with a massive body over twelve feet long, a powerful tail, three pairs of enormous wings, a terrible red mouth with a forked tongue, webbed feet and scales of green and gold. In the picture its great wings flapped and its great tail twisted back in anger. However, according to local mythology the dragon was not always so large or so threatening. One day, many years before the image was painted on the church wall, in a stretch of hilly forest north-east of the village of Mordiford known as Haugh Wood, a little girl called Maud was out picking blackberries. It was a warm autumn day. Suddenly Maud heard a strange noise and went to investigate. In the long grass and brambles she found the most charming little creature. The creature was the colour of the greenest grass, with gold flecks like the sun; it had a slender pointed tail but its most dazzling features were its flickering eyes, for they shone as bright as the stars themselves. Maud picked up the strange creature and carried it gently to her home. Her horrified father recognised it as a baby dragon but Maud pleaded with him not to kill it. Seeing her great distress he relented and allowed Maud to place the little reptile by the fireside. Here it lapped up a saucer of milk. Maud went to bed but could not stop thinking about the little dragon. Wide awake she crept downstairs to see it. To her horror, she overheard her parents planning to kill the creature in the morning. Maud quickly put on her warmest clothes, for the autumn night was very chilly, and took the baby dragon into the woods. In the undergrowth she made a mossy nest and promised aloud to come back and feed it and care for it. Maud kept her promise. She kept the dragon hidden and fed it on milk. For many years she would slip away whilst carrying out her errands and go to the woods and see the creature, so the dragon and the girl grew up together. But the dragon could not stay hidden forever. As it grew the dragon developed a taste for meat and began to eat the local farm animals. It would leave its lair in the woods and venture out along a nearby Lane in search of cows. After it had eaten its fill it would go down the wooded lane to the point where the rivers Wye and Lugg join to slake its thirst. The beast grew into a monstrous serpent. It soon devoured most of the local cattle and sometimes the people, who searched it out to try and kill it. Many brave young men tried to kill the creature but few returned and none succeeded. The local people became too afraid to venture into the woods or to walk down the Lane. Everybody, that is, except Maud as however hungry the dragon became and however strong its dragonish traits, it never harmed the young woman who had shown

it such kindness. Then, one day a condemned criminal, known as Garstone, offered to get rid of the dragon in exchange for his freedom. He had nothing to lose for it was either facing the dragon or the hangman s noose. The desperate locals promised him a pardon if he should succeed. The threat of execution had sharpened Garstone s wits, he knew he could never win a straight fight and needed to ensure that he had an advantage over the beast. A few hours later the locals watched puzzled as he rolled a cider barrel down to the water's edge. He jumped into the barrel and lay concealed waiting for the dragon to approach. The ambush worked. When the curious dragon went to look at the barrel the criminal Garstone jumped out and plunged a sword into the heart of the dragon. With a thunderous cry the dragon staggered a little way up the lane before dropping with an almighty thud to the ground. Garstone followed watching its death throes. He stood over the dragon victorious but he never lived to enjoy his triumph, for as he watched the trembling frame of the mighty breast, the dragon shuddered out one last mighty poisonous breath. The poison covered Garstone and soon the man and the beast lay dead together. There were many celebrations in the local area but seeing the once proud and fearsome creature slumped on the ground the beautiful Maud could not stop her tears flowing for her childhood companion. As a reminder of the great victory the church wall was painted with a picture of the great beast. When the church was restored around 1810 the western wall was demolished and rebuilt. The picture was never restored. However, the dragon was not forgotten for the path which led from the dragon's lair in the wooded hills to its drinking place at the river became known as Serpent Lane. And it is said that on the exact spot where the dragon breathed its last, and Maud shed her tears of sorrow, the grass never grew again.

Maud and the Dragon Refine/Practise Questions Read the given text carefully, then answer the questions using cursive writing and in full sentences. 1. There are many adjectives which describe the size of the dragon in the introduction. Write which one is your favourite (remember full sentences!).. 2. What was Maud picking in autumn?... 3. What was compared to the bright stars? 4. Why did Maud hide the baby dragon from her parents?.. 5. What other food did the dragon want besides the milk that Maud gave it? 6. Which verb word in the text describes to be scared of going into the woods?.. 7. Garston had nothing to lose if he got rid of the dragon. Explain what this means. 8. Garston killed the dragon. Did he really win and can you explain why?

Deepen Comprehension From World of Warriors A New Hero by Curtis Jobling Retrieving Information 1) Use a dictionary to find the definitions for a) resonating b) ritual c) terrarium 2) Find and copy one word that shows that Trick s blazer is old. 3) Find and copy one word that shows that Trick never forgets to buy his magazines Making Inferences 4) What type of creature lives in the terrarium and how do you know? 5) Why do you think Trick kisses his necklace? 6) Is Trick s room tidy? Give 2 pieces of evidence to support your answer. Writer s Choices 7) Why has the writer chosen to describe the knotted tie as like a noose? What does this tell us? 8) Why has the author selected words like shrugged and shambled to describe how Trick moves? Challenge Question (extended answer) 9) Describe what you think Trick might be like at school, using quotes from the text to support your answer.