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Year 3

 

Our vision & values

Our vision is for all children to:

  • be knowledgeable, confident communicators;
  • grow in kindness and empathy;
  • be inspired, creative learners.

Our core values are:

Resilience - In year 3, this means not giving up when things are tough. Mistakes are OK and show that you are learning!

Kindness and empathy - In year 3, we build on our learning about kindness and start to think more about empathy:
How will my actions make that person feel?
How could I make things better?
Helping someone when they are hurt or sad.

Creativity - In year 3, this means sharing your ideas and trying new things; solving problems both with learning and relationships.

Our curriculum

READING

We use the CUSP reading curriculum and we use our literature spine (and related supplementary texts) to ensure our children are exposed to a wide range of stories, poems and non-fiction regularly.

Our Literature Reading Spine:

HANDWRITING

We use a programme called Letterjoin for our handwriting. It’s really useful for parents and carers to see how children learn letter formation using the app or desktop website. Children can also practise using a tablet at home.

In Year 3, we are continuing to practise the correct formation of letters and numbers, as well as learning to write more fluently using joins. This sometimes means children’s handwriting goes through a transition period during which time it may not look fluent. Please encourage practice

You can have a parent user manual as well. Just ask your teacher and we can give you a copy.

We encourage children to take care with their handwriting and use a simple motivation chart, which is stuck in the front of the writing books and teachers stamp each half-term. We have a special assembly each half-term to celebrate progress.

SPELLING

We teach spelling in Y3 primarily through the CUSP spelling programme. Below is an overview of the teaching sequence:

Alongside explicit spelling lessons, children learn two key things in relation to spelling:

  1. To spell new or unfamiliar words using their phonic knowledge;

This can mean children spell words incorrectly but phonetically plausible e.g. peepl (people), majick (magic). This is ok and part of the learning process for most children! Most children tend to rely less on phonics to spell as they get older and read more.

  1. To correctly spell high frequency words that don’t necessarily follow a simple phonic pattern. These are called the Y3&4 statutory words. To help us practise these in a fun and effective way, we make regular use of an app called Squeebles Spelling.  We strongly recommend it for use at home, though it costs £4.99.

 

Throughout school, we want children to apply their spelling knowledge in their independent writing. However, we also don’t want worry about spelling to prevent them from writing fluently. We teach them to ‘dotty underline’ a word if they are unsure of the spelling and an adult can help them when they are free.

If you do any writing at home, try the same approach. If your child says, “How do you spell …?”, encourage them to say the sounds as they write, then dotty underline. Praise a good phonetic attempt and then correct them.

WRITING

We use the CUSP writing curriculum.  

 

Below is an overview of the genres taught throughout the year:

We also use a motivation chart stuck in the front of the books, focusing on handwriting and proofreading. Teachers stamp each half-term and we have a special assembly each half-term to celebrate progress!

If your child does any writing at home, get them to proof-read for punctuation. It’s a really important habit.

MATHEMATICS

We use a maths scheme called White Rose Maths. Learning is blocked by topic and each lesson is broken down into small steps and led by the teacher using the interactive tools.

All children have a workbook for the independent phase of the lesson and each lesson  usually has 4 or 5 sections, which get progressively more challenging. Not all children complete each section every lesson, which is ok.

We also do something called a maths review, where we revise all the key knowledge that has been taught. If you would like a copy of this to work on at home, please ask your class teacher. Fluency in the maths review really helps.

We also do regulalar maths investigations , which is often open-ended and a good challenge for our more confident mathematicians. This is the coverage timetable for the year with White Rose:

We also use an app called TTRockstars. It’s an online times table practice tool that has several motivational features. The teacher can track progress and identify misconceptions using the teacher dashboard, as well as track time spent practising.

We expect children to use this at home regularly. Your teacher will have provided you with a login/password. Please ask if you need a reminder.

Science, Geography, History Art & DT

We use the CUSP curriculum for these subjects and a useful resource that we have for parents and carers is what is called a knowledge organiser for each subject.

Essentially they show all the things the children are learning in each subject across the year. It’s really useful for a dinner time conversation. You could ask each other questions to test your child’s (and your) knowledge. Due to copyright, we can’t publish these on our website. However, you can get a pack from your class teacher or from the school office.

We also learn gardening with Mrs Burns on Fridays, taking care of our school green spaces.

Computing

We follow the code.org curriculum for our coding sessions. The teacher sets the coding challenge and the children use their iPads to go through a series of problems to solve. 

In year 3 we also learn how to use Pages, data loggers and follow the Internet Legends online safety curriculum.

French

CUSP French is taught from Years 3 – 6. Each year group has 6 blocks of  teaching. Additional weeks are used for consolidation, revisiting or enrichment. French is usually taught in 2 x  15-20 minute lessons each week.

We have knowledge organisers for each block, also available for home reference.

RE

As a Church of England school, Religious Education is a core subject that children study each week. Our curriculum is designed to enable pupils to gain an increasingly deep understanding of both Christianity and a range of global religions and world views. RE at St. Margaret’s allows children to engage with challenging questions of meaning and purpose raised by human experience. Children are encouraged to think critically and nurture an appreciation of and respect for the differences, similarities and changes within all the religions and world views studied. Lessons contain a variety of learning activities, including debate, group work and drama, as well as studying Biblical text. They are planned around a key learning question for each half-term.  

Our learning questions are as follows:

Music

We have music with Mr Brown on Thursdays and some of us are in Rockband, which is on a Mondays.  We also learn the recorder on Fridays.

PE

We have PE on Thursdays with Mr Park and Dance on Thursdays with Mrs Burns. However, we are active every day, doing our playground runs every Tuesday and Thursday. On Thursdays, we often go to Manor House Gardens for our park run.

The year on  a page

Our weekly timetable

*this is our normal routine, but sometimes timings may change

Our home learning guide

What is the plan for curricular and extracurricular enrichment?

Please note that this is not exhaustive. We often add in more enrichment opportunities throughout the year. These are ones we have planned already.

Important things to remember in Year 3

  • Record reading at home in the Reading Record Book.
  • Only brief messages at drop-off. We want the teacher in class with the children once the bell has rung!If you need to speak to the teacher for a bit longer, wait until pick-up, send an email via info@stmargaretslee.lewisham.sch.uk or arrange a meeting with the teacher.
  • Trainers everyday please, no hoop ear rings and keep long hair tied back.

 

Year 3