Bartley C of E Junior School

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Winsor Road, Southampton, Hampshire, SO40 2HR

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Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar at Bartley

Being good at SPaG comes from hard work; great teaching; lots of opportunities to apply new learning and seeing SPaG being used well in great books.

We love finding fun ways for the children to remember rules, learn patterns and spot exceptions in school; but there are things you can do at home to help too! This page has all the resources we have sent home in the past and some fun games to help keep spelling practice interesting!

Towards the bottom of the page, you will also find individual year group support documents to support grammar, including a useful glossary of terms.

 

Spelling Games

Scrabble Sprint – race against the clock to create words with the letters given! http://poki.com/en/g/scrabble-sprint

Online Boggle – choose between a 4x4 board or a 5x5 and race against the clock to make as many words as possible! http://www.wordtwist.org/html5.php?u=97e29cf74cf3849ca44cc19cb2130d6d1513735077 

Hangman – play on your own or with a partner. An online version of this well-known classic! Why not use a dictionary to look up any words you aren’t sure of too? https://hangmanwordgame.com/?fca=1&success=0#/

 

Have you found a really great online game or even developed one at home? Please let Mrs Philo know - we are always looking for fun new ways to practise spelling!

Spelling Strategies

Below, you will find a range of strategies that you can use at home.  These are strategies that they will have been taught at school:

Look, say, cover, write, check

This is probably the most common strategy used to learn spellings.

Look: First, look at the whole word carefully and if there is one part of the word that is difficult, look at that part in more detail.

Say: Say the word as you look at it, using different ways of pronouncing it if that will make it more memorable.

Cover: Cover the word.

Write: Write the word from memory, saying the word as you do so.

Check: Have you got it right? If yes, try writing it again and again! If not, start again – look, say, cover, write, check.

 

Trace, copy and replicate (and then check)

This is a similar learning process to ‘look, say, cover, write, check’ but is about developing automaticity and muscle memory.

Write the word out on a sheet of paper ensuring that it is spelt correctly and it is large enough to trace over. Trace over the word and say it at the same time. Move next to the word you have just written and write it out as you say it. Turn the page over and write the word as you say it, and then check it is spelt correctly.

If this is easy, do the same process for two different words at the same time. Once you have written all your words this way and feel confident, miss out the tracing and copying or the tracing alone and just write the words.

 

Segmentation strategy

The splitting of a word into its constituent phonemes (sound parts) in the correct order to support spelling.

 

Quickwrite

This can be used to practise writing the words linked to the focus with speed and fluency. The aim is to write as many words as possible within a time constraint.

Children can write words provided by an adult or generate their own examples. For example, in two minutes write as many words as possible with the /iː/ phoneme.

If working with more than one child, this can be turned into a variety of competitive games including working in teams and developing relay race approaches.

 

Drawing around the word to show the shape

Draw around the words making a clear distinction in size where there are ascenders and descenders. Look carefully at the shape of the word and the letters in each box. Now try to write the word making sure that you get the same shape.

 

Drawing an image around the word

This strategy is all about making a word memorable. It links to meaning in order to try to make the spelling noticeable.

You can’t use this method as your main method of learning spellings, but it might work on those that are just a little more difficult to remember.

Words without vowels

This strategy is useful where the vowel choices are the challenge in the words. Write the words without the vowels and pupils have to choose the correct grapheme to put in the space. For example, for the words heart, look and cloak:

H_ _ r t

L _ _ k

 C l _ _ k

Pyramid words

This method of learning words forces you to think of each letter separately.

You can then reverse the process so that you end up with a diamond.

Other strategies

Other methods could include:

  • Rainbow writing. Using coloured pencils in different ways can help to make parts of words memorable. You could highlight the tricky part s of the word or write the tricky part in a different colour. You could also write each letter in a different colour, or write the word in red, then overlay in orange, yellow and so on.
  • Making up memorable ‘silly sentences’ containing the word.
  • Saying the word in a funny way – for example, pronouncing the ‘silent’ letters in a word.
  • Clapping and counting to identify the syllables in a word.

Support Documents

 We don't expect you to be an expert at everything...spelling, punctuation and grammar are hard to learn and even harder to apply in writing! Below we have saved some documents that will hopefully help you, help your child. As always, if you have any queries please contact your child's class teacher or Mrs Philo (English lead).

Please click on the link to open the relevant file.

Grammar Glossary of Terms

Year 3 and 4 Spelling List

Year 5 and 6 Spelling List

Parent Spelling Glossary