<p>Two days worth of comprehension based around ‘The Scarecrow’s Wedding’.<br />
Both days have a basic and extended set of questions. The first day’s are mainly retrieval based. The second mostly inference based.</p>
<p>16 sequenced activities based around this story, starting from a prediction using the front cover. Includes multiple reading disciplines.</p>
<p>Used with a higher ability Year 5 reading group.</p>
<p>Nine activities based around ‘The Hundred-Mile-An-Hour Dog’<br />
Covers chapters 1-6<br />
Includes inference, vocabulary and retrieval based questions as well as two related grammar activities.</p>
<p>Includes questions and activities based predominantly around the Highway Rat but also a similarities and differences activity involving ‘The Scarecrow’s Wedding’.</p>
<p>Activities involve skills of vocabulary, sequencing, summarising and identifying true and false statements.</p>
<p>There is also a vocabulary grid to discuss with children as a pre-read.</p>
<p>For the original Mr Majeika book, I believe, where he is riding a magic carpet on the front cover.<br />
8 sequenced activities from the start to the end of the book.</p>
<p>Mixture of retrieval and inference based questions from chapter 1 of the story.<br />
A following activity of dictionary/synonym work using vocabulary from the book.</p>
<ul>
<li>Comparing two numbers using the symbols < > =</li>
<li>Use of Numicon representation as well as expanded form</li>
<li>2nd part sorting statements into true and false</li>
<li>Used previously in Year 2</li>
</ul>
<p>You will need access to the original book to pair with this resource (Fireflies, Oxford Reading Tree).</p>
<p>Four days worth of activities based around the book, mostly identifying the functions of a non-fiction book.</p>
<ul>
<li>Initial task to represent 2-digit numbers pictorially</li>
<li>Following task to recognise which is greater from 2 numbers, addressing numeral reversal (15 and 51)</li>
<li>Progresses to identifying the greater number from two 3-digit numbers</li>
</ul>
<p>A choice grid of numerals and words (2 and 3-digit numbers).<br />
Children to choose two and write their own statement using the correct comparison symbol.</p>