Happy, kind and brave.
Together we learn, together we grow, together we soar.
Keep up to date with all the latest news happening in school at the moment.
This half term Year One have been concentrating on key P.E skills with Emily. They have worked on balance, ball skills and team work. The children have had lots of fun and particularly enjoyed the whole class parachute game!
Of course, this week was our annual Leeson House trip. We got lucky with the weather and had a great time. We'll let the photos speak for themselves.
Lots of fun in the sun was had on the playground at lunchtime today. Dance routines planned, table tennis tournaments and imaginative fun had with the scrap store.
In our maths lessons this week, the children have been learning how to calculate the values of missing angles.
This is a challenging maths objective, but the children have done exceptionally well. They have used their knowledge of the value of right angles, straight-line angles and angles around a point to solve a range of missing angle problems.
The children will continue to work on a variety of shape-related objectives before moving on to co-ordinates.
After a pretty good night's sleep, we were all ready for another day; it it has been another busy and sunny day here at Leeson House.
We have spent most of the day exploring the outdoors. We all really enjoyed pond dipping and found lots of great creatures which we learnt lots about.
We have also been working on our map and compass skills and taken part in orienteering around the site.
Lots of team building and games in the field.
On top of all of this we have found time to ensure our rooms are nice and clean and tidy and also enjoy the Leeson food.
We are all looking forward to tomorrow.
The first day at Leeson has been busy and exhausting but BRILLIANT!
The children were fantastic on the walk to Dancing Ledge. It was such a beautiful sunny day and the tales of smugglers, local wildlife and geology were all fascinating.
The children also took part in orienteering around the Leeson House site. Their map-reading skills were great!
Then came the job of bed making! Wow! That was an event in itself. The children were all very keen to get going as many of them had said about working on this at home. There were many children tangled up amongst their bedding at times, but they all got there in the end. What a great skill to have acquired.
They are all looking forward to day 2.
So much fun!
Last week the Year 2's, along with the rest of the school, enjoyed their afternoon of celebrating the King's coronation. The children enjoyed eating their delicious cakes. Thank you to all the parents for supplying the children with these ( and for supplying extras for other children and staff!)
The children have also been busy planting their sunflowers and investigating the difference between seeds, bulbs and tubers. There were a lot of runny eyes after Science this week!
Friday afternoon was full steam ahead, as the children began the making of the vehicles. Watch this space to see their finished products.
The children have been creating insects using natural materials.
They look fabulous. The brilliant thing about natural art it is can happen outdoors! Maybe make a natural piece of art and leave it for someone to find? Have fun.
Over the past few weeks, we have watched our runner bean seeds grow. With sunlight, warmth, water and some soil, most of our seeds have grown into young plants.
We have made our own plant pictures and labelled parts of the plants.
Quite a few of us got very sticky fingers but we all enjoyed it.
Why not have a look at the photos?
As part of our history topic on the ancient Egyptians, Year 5 ‘mummified’ some tomatoes.
Although the children didn’t actually wrap the tomatoes in bandages or place the fruit into a sarcophagus, they followed similar preparatory steps to those that were practised thousands of years ago. To mimic the removal of a pharaoh’s squishy innards, the children removed the tomato seeds and the surrounding pulp. They then covered the remains of the tomatoes in salt to preserve them, similar to the ancient Egyptian technique of drying and preserving bodies with natron (a mixture of sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate).
We will be checking the fruity pharaohs over the next couple of weeks, and, who knows, we may even get the bandages out!