It’s Book Week! This week we are celebrating stories, authors, and the joy of reading. We will explore exciting books, join in fun activities, and share our favourite characters and stories with each other.
Students will take part in special reading events, create book-inspired art, and discover new books to love. Book Week is all about enjoying stories, using our imaginations, and remembering that reading can take us anywhere!
Book Week Digital Taskboard
Book Week Activities Taskboard
This week we are learning to become confident readers! We will explore short, interesting texts about our world, including amazing animal superpowers, volcanoes, and extreme Earth facts. We will practise
Unpacking questions and finding key words
Skimming and scanning for information
Predicting tricky words
Summarising main ideas
Using evidence from the text to support answers
By the end of the week, we will be able to read carefully, think critically, and explain what they learn.
This week, we will focus on completing and polishing our Ancient Egypt factfiles. We will use the reading and research skills we’ve learned to organise information clearly, write in our own words, and use key topic vocabulary. We will also take part in short activities to review facts, practise summarising, and reflect on how factual texts help us understand real-world topics.
This week in reading, we will explore Ancient Egyptian gods, their roles, and how they influenced life and death. We will also learn about pyramids and why they were built for pharaohs. Students will practise identifying main ideas, summarising key facts, and building a vocabulary bank.
This week in reading, we’ll explore how the River Nile shaped life in Ancient Egypt. Through short factual texts about farming, food, and daily life, we will learn to find main ideas, spot supporting details, and compare information. We will build topic vocabulary and practise summarising key facts as we discover how the Nile helped the Egyptians live, work, and grow.
This week in reading, we will explore fascinating facts about Ancient Egypt. We will read short articles and texts about pharaohs, pyramids, gods, and daily life, learning how headings, captions, and diagrams help us organise information. We will practise summarising key facts, building a shared vocabulary bank, and recording ideas. By the end of the week, we’ll be able to explain main ideas in our own words and use new topic words confidently as we begin preparing for our Ancient Egypt fact files.
This week in reading, we will dive into short plays from the School Journal. We’ll follow the characters through funny and surprising situations, exploring how dialogue, stage directions, and timing bring the stories to life. We will practise reading with expression, developing character voices, and performing in small groups, while reflecting on teamwork, creativity, and how the characters’ actions make the plays enjoyable to watch and read.
This week in reading, we will explore short plays from the School Journal. We’ll follow the characters as they navigate funny, tricky, or surprising situations, and see how their actions, dialogue, and stage directions bring the stories to life. We will focus on reading with expression, building character voices, and understanding how humour and timing make the plays enjoyable. We will also practise performing in small groups, expressing the characters’ feelings and personalities, and reflecting on how teamwork and creativity help bring the stories to the stage.
Over the next 6 weeks, we will be doing a novel study on Oliver Twist, retold by Ross Stewart. Each week, we’ll focus on one chapter from the story. We’ll read together, talk about what’s happening, learn new words, and explore the characters and their choices.
I can’t wait to see what you notice, wonder, and create as we journey through Oliver Twist together!
This week in reading, we will follow Oliver as his story reaches a happy ending. We’ll see how he finds safety, friendship, and family, and how the people who care for him help him feel loved and valued. We will explore how the author shows happiness and hope through Oliver’s experiences and the actions of the other characters. We will also practise writing personal responses, expressing our feelings and opinions about the ending, and reflecting on the themes of hope, family, and resilience.
This week in reading, we will follow Oliver after he’s taken back by the gang and forced by Bill Sykes to help rob a house. We’ll see how the break-in goes wrong, and how Rose Maylie and Mrs Maylie rescue him and care for him while he recovers. We will explore how authors build tension and show bravery and kindness through characters’ actions and the setting. We will also learn to identify the main idea and practise summarising key events, while making inferences about characters’ feelings and motives.
This week in reading, we will see what happens to Oliver after he’s caught by the police. We’ll meet Mr. Brownlow, a kind man who begins to see that Oliver isn’t like the other boys. We’ll explore how authors show kindness and cruelty through characters’ actions and words. We’ll compare Oliver’s life in Fagin’s den to the warmth and care he receives in Mr. Brownlow’s home. We’ll also learn how to identify the main idea of a paragraph and practise using summaries to track key events. New vocabulary like trial, recover, and portrait will help us understand this part of Oliver’s journey.
This week in reading, we will follow Oliver as he leaves the workhouse and met new characters like the Artful Dodger and Fagin.
We will explore how authors use descriptive language to set the mood and help us visualise settings like Fagin’s dark, cluttered home. We will also learn how speech and behaviour can show us what a character is really like.
We will practise making inferences about characters’ thoughts and feelings, and use predictions to guess what might happen next. New vocabulary like beak, grub, and pickpocket helped us understand the world Oliver was in.
This week we will start reading Oliver Twist. We’ll learn about Oliver’s tough beginning in the workhouse and how unfairly children were treated in the past. We will practise using reading strategies like visualising, making connections, and asking questions. We looked at how the author shows us what kind of person Oliver is and how adults treated children like him.
We also learned new vocabulary like orphan, gruel, and matron, and start thinking about big ideas like fairness, resilience, and children’s rights.
Here is your student workbook in Google Slides. You’ll use this to complete your independent tasks after each chapter. These include reading follow-up activities and your create task for the week.
Work carefully, show your thinking, and have fun exploring Oliver’s story!
This week we are learning how speeches can sound different depending on the audience and purpose. We will examine how speakers use strong words, tone, and structure to share their message. We will read and compare speeches that use powerful language, and practise sharing our own opinions in group discussions. We are starting to understand what makes a speech clear, emotive, and convincing!
This week we are learning how to understand and respond to persuasive speeches. We are focusing on identifying the speaker’s opinion and purpose, making inferences about what they are really trying to say, and summarising the key message in our own words. We are also learning how to agree or disagree with a speaker’s ideas and explain our thinking using evidence from the text. As we explore what makes a speech strong or convincing, we’ll practise using our own voice to respond clearly and confidently.
This week we will be learning more about Matariki. Using our Matariki website, we will explore three key parts of Matariki:
What is Matariki?
Introducing the nine stars of Matariki
Maramataka – the moon phases of the Māori calendar and what they mean for us.
We’ll learn how these traditions help guide us, connect us to the natural world, and give meaning to this special time of year.
This week, we are learning about pūrākau (traditional Māori stories) that are significant to Aotearoa and Te Ao Māori.
Pūrākau help us understand Māori beliefs, values, and the way people made sense of the world around them. We will explore different pūrākau, choose one that interests us, and retell it in our own words. This helps us build our storytelling skills while showing respect for the stories and the culture they come from.
This week we are learning about Tū Te Rakiwhanoa, a legendary figure in Māori tradition. He was a powerful guardian and land shaper from Ngāi Tahu stories who helped form the mountains, lakes, rivers, and sea of Te Waipounamu (the South Island). We’ll explore his great works, the places connected to him, and how his story reminds us to care for the land and water as kaitiaki (guardians).
This week, we’re exploring the Māori Creation story.
We will learn how the world began according to Māori tradition, starting with Ranginui the Sky Father and Papatūānuku the Earth Mother, and how their children separated them to let light into the world.
We will also practise our reading skills by comparing and contrasting, noticing what is similar or different, just like comparing ice blocks and ice cream!
This week, we’re exploring the Creation story in Genesis. We will learn how God made the world in six days and rested on the seventh, and think about why the order of creation matters.
We will also practice our reading skills by comparing and contrasting parts of text or facts we read, looking for what’s similar and what’s different, e.g. comparing ice blocks and ice cream.
Reading Groups Term 2
Reading Groups Term 1