Spelling Punctuation Grammar workshop Aim of the session

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Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar workshop

Spelling, Punctuation & Grammar workshop

Aim of the session • Explain the spelling system & why the home investigation

Aim of the session • Explain the spelling system & why the home investigation is so key • Give you an overview of SPa. G expectations for each year group • Explain how SPa. G is assessed in the school • Define a couple of the trickier terminologies!

Spelling • It’s about spelling patterns, their rules & exceptions rather than discrete spellings

Spelling • It’s about spelling patterns, their rules & exceptions rather than discrete spellings • The aim is to give children skills that they can use based on their knowledge & understanding of how spellings work, in order to have a decent go at any spelling…

Eg. Patterns that make a ‘shun’ sound: NEVER made by ‘shun’ except in the

Eg. Patterns that make a ‘shun’ sound: NEVER made by ‘shun’ except in the word shun/shunned/shunning…. The actual true suffixes are -ion or -ian. The clues about whether to put t, s, ss or c before comes from the last letter(s) of the root word: -tion is the most common spelling. It is used if the root word ends in t (invent) or te (hesitate) -ssion is used if the root word ends in –ss or –mit (omit- omission/ possess – possession) -sion is used if the root word ends in d or se (comprehend – comprehension/ tense tension Exceptions: attend – attention, intend – intention, nation -cian is used if the root word ends in c or cs (music- musician, politics - politician

How it’s taught in class… • Spelling pattern & rule introduced in class. Investigation

How it’s taught in class… • Spelling pattern & rule introduced in class. Investigation begun • Homework – further investigation – trying out words with the sounds & the patterns – seeing which fits best - checking in a dictionary. This is key as it’s their chance to try out the structures in class independently • Bring spellings back into class. Share findings, make a short list of spellings from these for next week’s test (not Y 6) alongside ‘unseen’ words • Practise for homework • Test & new investigation in following week’s session. • Morning work once or twice a week

Punctuation & Grammar • Handouts show terminology. In the start of the year, teachers

Punctuation & Grammar • Handouts show terminology. In the start of the year, teachers refresh previous learning then start adding onto this with their year group’s content. • Trickiest bit – the terminology • 2 nd trickiest bit – sometimes something can be more than one thing….

How it is taught • Discreet ‘teaching’ sessions where a specific SPa. G area

How it is taught • Discreet ‘teaching’ sessions where a specific SPa. G area is looked at • Embedded within writing sessions • Independent homework activity to consolidate learning

Assessment • Spelling, punctuation and grammar are assessed within writing – to be ‘age

Assessment • Spelling, punctuation and grammar are assessed within writing – to be ‘age expected’, children must be writing in correct sentences in neat, joined handwriting, with no significant spelling weaknesses • Standalone 3 termly assessments for SPa. G – involving spelling test, and short answer P& G questions (eg circle the noun, find an antonym, put the correct punctuation into the sentence)

Example of Content – Year 3 Using noun prefixes (eg- super–, anti–, auto–) Conjunctions

Example of Content – Year 3 Using noun prefixes (eg- super–, anti–, auto–) Conjunctions to express time/place/cause ( eg when, before, after, while, so, because) Adverbs – quickly, carefully Prepositions – through, over, behind

Example of Content in Year 4 The difference between plural use of –s (girls)

Example of Content in Year 4 The difference between plural use of –s (girls) and possessive use of –s (the girl’s bag) The correct use of plural possessive (the girls’ bags) Punctuation of direct speech (punctuation prior to speech, inverted commas to open, initial capital letter, closing punctuation, inverted commas to close

Example Year 4 Questions Underline the adverbial phrase in this sentence: In the afternoon,

Example Year 4 Questions Underline the adverbial phrase in this sentence: In the afternoon, the whole class went swimming. Write one suffix which can be used with all of these words: appoint agree pay Rewrite the following words as contractions with apostrophes: They have = We would =

Example of Content in Year 5 The use of relative pronouns Bracket, dashes &

Example of Content in Year 5 The use of relative pronouns Bracket, dashes & commas for parenthesis Commas within clauses to avoid ambiguity (A panda eats, shoots and leaves/ a panda eats shoots and leaves)

Example Year 5 Questions Circle the two prepositions in this sentence: There are two

Example Year 5 Questions Circle the two prepositions in this sentence: There are two good toyshops in my town and one of them is beside my house. Insert the correct relative pronoun to fill the gap in this sentence: Scotland, _____ my mother was born, is our favourite place to go on holiday. Underline the subordinate clause in this sentence While you were sleeping, I made you a lovely breakfast

Example of Content in Year 6 Synonyms and antonyms (Synonyms – two words that

Example of Content in Year 6 Synonyms and antonyms (Synonyms – two words that mean a similar thing e. g. happy & joyful Antonyms – opposite words e. g. happy/sad) Active and passive verb forms (the dog ate the bone/ the bone was eaten by the dog) 6 tense types

Example Year 6 Questions Rewrite this sentence using the passive voice Leila and Joshua

Example Year 6 Questions Rewrite this sentence using the passive voice Leila and Joshua tidied the whole classroom while the others went outside Add dashes to this sentence On the farm which is near out school there are pigs, goats and cows. Explain why a colon is used in this sentence. In the summer, we will visit a number of people in our family: aunts, uncles, cousins and grandparents.

Some of the trickier ones…. .

Some of the trickier ones…. .

Perfect form… • Can either be present perfect or past perfect • Uses a

Perfect form… • Can either be present perfect or past perfect • Uses a past tense verb and ‘has/had/have’ (dependent upon whether it’s past or present) She has played the piano (present perfect) She had played the piano (past perfect)

Progressive form Can either be Present progressive or past progressive. The progressive tense needs

Progressive form Can either be Present progressive or past progressive. The progressive tense needs an ‘-ing’ verb and ‘is/am/are’ in front of it depending on who is doing it: Leah is dancing (present progressive) He was working (past progressive)

The use of the subjunctive verb Subjunctive form sounds very formal. It often talks

The use of the subjunctive verb Subjunctive form sounds very formal. It often talks about something in the future: If I were to make a prediction… The travellers were advised to be aware… The driver advised that she be taken directly to the station…