Skip to content ↓
Pear Tree Mead Academy

Pear Tree Mead Academy

Year 6

Introduction

Please open the following letter from the teacher for the 2023-2024 academic year

The attached PowerPoint will give you further information about the year group..

Teachers & LSAs

Miss Warner
UKS2 Teacher

 

Miss Burke
UKS2 Teacher

 

Mrs Hayden
UKS2 Teaching Assistant

Mrs Thorne
UKS2 Intervention Teaching Assistant
Mid-day Assistant

 

How can you help?-

Mathematics

It is incredibly important that by year 5/6, children are very fluent in their times tables. They are the key to successful calculation at this level.  Having sat the MTC (Multiplication Times tables Check) in year 4, they should all be ready to apply them with ease in their maths work and in preparation for taking SATs at the end of year 6.

Here are some ideas to help…

Reading

It is extremely important for year 5/6 children to read at home to increase their vocabulary and cement their reading comprehension.  Reading for pleasure is extremely important to develop fluency so the children should read regularly.  A wider range of texts should be encouraged to include non-fiction works.  Newspaper articles, biographies and autobiographies are all text types which will help the children to access the year 5/6 curriculum and aid in their written work for the year.  We will hear them read in school, but much of their reading practice should take place at home. 

Spelling

The children will have regular spelling tests to check their progress and prepare them for the spelling test in SATS.  They will be provided with a list of spellings every week. Here are some fun ways that you can get your child spelling at home…

1) Write them in the air. When they can do it with their normal writing hand, swap to the other hand (this engages both sides of the brain).

2) Write them with your finger on your child’s back, as you say each letter.  Then get them to guess what you are spelling.  When they are more confident, they can write on your back.

3) Do it in small chunks.  If your child is getting bored, cross or stressed, come back to it later.  This means that it is best not left to the night before the test.

4) Say them over and over out loud. Encourage the child to repeat after you in a soft/loud/high/low/silly voice.  The sillier the better – make them laugh!

5) Get them to teach someone else (younger brother or sister/grandparent).  The more people involved in the learning, the higher status it will have.

 

Use as many of the above as possible.  Mix and match and vary it.  They include visual, audio and kinaesthetic activities.  By varying the learning style, you will be engaging more areas of the child’s brain and they will be more likely to remember the words.

Information for parents-

 

Letters Home - Year 6 Letters & Whole School Letters