school days reading writing and arithmatic - Bubbablue and me

School days – reading, writing and arithmatic

Last year, N was so chatty about his days at school. I’d get to hear about everything. But in Year 1, he’s a lot more forgetful…supposedly. We still chat about school after he’s had a story at bedtime, but he quite often can’t remember what they’ve done. I don’t know if this is due to him being across 2 classrooms and teachers – so he’s still in class 1 with foundation stage, but he and his fellow year 1s in that class go up daily to Class 2 to join the rest of the year 1s and year 2s.

school days reading writing and arithmatic - Bubbablue and me

Here’s the week 3 happenings.

Reading

Last year N was really slow at reading. Mostly because he wasn’t interested, the books were boring and he found it hard. As well as it being late (around 6pm) when he gets in from wraparound care. This year, after only a few weeks he’s really doing well and is much more fluent with words, being more confident in his ability as well. It’s still hard work getting him to actually do his reading but he now doesn’t take over 30 minutes to read a book. Now even with all his distracted looking at pictures and asking questions, he’s still usually done in 15 minutes.

Now I’m getting impatient though. He’s still on the same level books as he was in the summer, still level 3. I don’t know whether it’s because he tells me no-one’s really heard him read (although I’m not sure how true that is) since being back, or because he still hasn’t learnt the rest of the phonics that the other phonics group had learnt ahead of his group last year. But I can’t believe there’s still more books in this level to read before he can move up.

He gets 6 books a week, 2 books 3 times a week which is ok, because they’re only 12 pages long. One book this week came home for the second time despite him having read it well to me…and that one only has 5 pages with writing on. I compare that to Year 1 reading for those who moved up a class, and they’ve got 5 sentences a page in their books with a big step up. While I know N probably isn’t ready for that yet, I know he can do better than the books he’s getting at the moment. Hopefully he’ll be getting next stage books soon. I wouldn’t worry so much if he’d read his books at home, but he refuses.

I was surprised when he told me that the other day they did quiet reading when they went up to Class 2 with the others. N is still lazy about doing his own following the lines he’s reading, so I’d be amazed if he was actually reading and not just looking at the pictures, if they were left to their own devices. When he told me he chose a Roald Dahl book to read, I was even less convinced. Fingers crossed he gets to do more reading to others, because I’m not convinced he’d ready for reading in his head yet.

 

running to look at the new pick up

Maths love

N’s love for maths continues. It really makes a difference with him thinking he’s good at it. So much of education is about confidence. The only thing he told me they’d done was as long as number line as possible. He seemed pretty pleased although his explanation of what a number line was didn’t really help my understanding much.

Coats and jumpers

With warmer weather and him not wearing a jumper for most of the day, I lose track of how many N leaves at school. One day this week he came home with 3 jumpers. I thought he only had 2 at school. We also had 2 coats left there. It’s a relief that on a Friday I’m there to check and rootle around to find the missing forgotten items.

Profiles

What I love about N is how much joy he manages to find in things. Things that I wouldn’t ever find funny he thinks are hysterical. This week they’ve been completing profiles…of themselves and family members. Trying to get him to think of activities he liked doing was like drawing blood from a stone. He was pleased with what he wrote eventually, even though getting him to sit down and complete work relies a lot on negotiating and reasoning. He is coming round to understanding that if things aren’t done gradually each day, he will end up having to struggle through them at the last moment.

He’s already decided that he’s going to do a profile on his dad next week. So after his dad picked him up from after school tennis club for the second week running, there’s no denying that his dad does exist despite him having not been seen in the school vicinity until this year!

Friday lunch tables

N came home really excited on Friday. Not because of anything learning based, but about lunch time seating arrangements.

On Fridays, the children are allowed to choose where they sit for lunch rather than being on their house tables. So N was really pleased to have been sitting on the same table as his cousin, as well as his best friend sitting there too. Success all round.

New buddy

Each year, the younger children have a buddy, and this year it’s a new person. N had a girl buddy last year, this year he has a boy. Already he’s talked more about L his new buddy, than he did the whole of last year about the old buddy. This week he got excited about his buddy running the computer for the Friday assembly…and he got to sit with him. I’m not sure how it works with the buddies. According to N, they take the younger ones into assembly and sit with them. But we don’t see that on the class or target assemblies the parents go in to watch. For those they just sit in classes. So it’s a mystery to me.

I think the buddy system is great, not only for settling in new children, but also to give the younger children a role model student to look up to.

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9 Comments

  1. The older my girls have got the less I find out about what they do at school….They seem to talk less…It’s so frustrating.
    My girls are supposed to read school books every night but they find them boring. They will happily read their own books though. It sounds like N is doing well though.
    hehehe Make sure you keep track of the coats and jumpers…My girls used to leave them at school all the time and then they would go missing. Grr!
    The buddy system sounds great….Fab for the older ones to feel responsible and the younger ones that get a little help 🙂 x

    1. Yes, the buddy system is a great thing. Something to aspire to as well.

      He’s getting chattier this week. Hopefully he’s just easing into it. The school books are tedious – I was hoping they’d get more interesting books as they get older, but it sounds not.

  2. I feel the same about reading, they’re saying he’s on level 11 (they use a totally different system to any other school I know of!) which he was on half way through reception.

    We get to pick books with them on a morning, I got him a level 20 1night and he read it fine. He’s been reading Harry Potter to me tonight. I keep leaving notes in his reading log but they don’t seem to be doing anything.

    Jumpers also!! He’s somehow got 4 here at he moment. But I only brought him 3. But they’ve all got his name in!

    1. That’s impressive with the jumpers…one from last year?

      Very annoying on the levels. I debated getting level 4 Biff and Chip books, but they still seem really basic, but then the early readers sets in WHS level 1 seems quite hard! So hard to know.

      1. Possibly, but I’ve no idea where it’s appeared from.

        The books really confuse me, it would be much better if there was some kind of standard system, instead of everyone using different. someone asked me what colour he was on last week, I’ve got no idea how his level 11 compares to a blue band, or the biff and chip levels.

  3. Ah the buddy system sounds nice. I have to say that I find the books mind numbingly boring too! I am dreading Biff Chip and Kipper third time round!

    1. I bet. They’re bad enough the first time (thankfully we’ve not had too may of those as we have the set at home so I’m sick of it anyway).

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