Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional...

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Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company

Transcript of Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional...

Page 1: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Mind the GaPTeaching Grammar and Punctuation

Gill Matthews & Stephanie AustwickThe Professional Literacy Company

Page 2: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Key principles

• Use games and kinaesthetic approaches• Use problem solving and investigative

approaches• Use correct terminology• Teach across the school from YR• Teach in context through reading and writing

Page 3: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Rosie’s Walk by Pat Hutchins

YR – Y2

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Sentences

• A sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a full stop, question mark or exclamation mark

• A sentence contains a verb

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Verbs

• The hen walked across the yard.

Verbs tell us about actions

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Sentence types

• Statement : The hen walked across the yard.• Question• Command• Exclamation

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Verb tenses

PastPresent

(you are here)Future

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Progressive past and present tenses

• Progressive past – The hen was walking across the yard.

• Progressive present – The hen is walking across the yard.

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To bePresent tense Past tense

I am I

You are You

He/she/it is He/she/it

We are We

You are You

They are They

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Nouns

• The hen walked across the yard.

Top tipIf you can put a, an or the in front of a single word – it’s a noun!

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Adjectives and expanded noun phrases

• The little fat hen walked across the yard.

Adjectives give us more information about a noun

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Adverbs

• The little fat hen walked slowly across the yard.

Adverbs tell us how something happens

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Determiners

• The little fat hen walked slowly across the yard.

Determiners go in front of nouns (and their adjectives) to tell us which person or thing the

sentence is about or how much or how many of them there are

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Prepositions

• The little fat hen walked slowly across the yard.

Prepositions link nouns to other parts of a sentence. They often tell us about position or

direction

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Conjunctions

• The little fat hen walked slowly across the yard but she didn’t see the fox.

Conjunctions link words or groups of words

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Pronouns

• The little fat hen walked slowly across the yard but she didn’t see the fox.

Pronouns are used in place of a noun.

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A model sentence

• The little fat hen walked slowly across the yard but she didn’t see the fox.

• Determiner adjective adjective noun verb adverb preposition determiner noun conjunction pronoun verb verb determiner noun.

Page 18: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Grammar – a whole school approach

• Oral language, modelling • Extensive exposure to written language• Shared Reading and Booktalk• Shared Writing and Booktalk• Drama and Role Play• Language Games (sentence level and vocab)• Talking about Language (metalanguage)• Regular, enjoyable, purposeful practice

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Question Timeby Michaela Morgan

Y2 - 3

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• Who?• What?• How?• Where?

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What does a monster look like?

Well…hairy and scary,And furry and burly,And pimply and dimply,And warty and naughty,And wrinkled and crinkled ...

That’s what a monster looks like!

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How does a monster move?

It oozes. It shambles.It crawls and it ambles.It slouches and shuffles and trudges.It lumbers and waddles,It creeps and it toddles…

That’s how a monster moves!

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How does a monster eat?

It slurps and it burpsAnd gobbles and gulps And sips and swallows and scoffs,It nibbles and munches,It chews and it crunches… That’s how a monster eats.

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What does a monster eat?

Slugs and bats.And bugs and rats.And stones and mudAnd bones and blood.And squelchy squids…

And NOSEY KIDS! THAT’S WHAT A MONSTER EATS!

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Where does a monster live?

In garden sheds, Under beds,In wardrobes, in plug holes, in ditches.Beneath city streets,Just under your feet…

That’s where a monster lives!

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Grammar through a picture book – in the context of a Writing for Real Unit

Y3 - 4

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Teaching Grammar

• Descriptive, not prescriptive• Conventions, not rules• Implicit knowledge will always be greater

than, and will always precede, explicit knowledge

• Explicit knowledge helps when we want to talk about language

• Should enable, not disable

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The Storyteller’s Gift

Year 5 – Year 6

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Teaching grammar through reading and writing

• Reading aloud• Using Booktalk: Likes, Dislikes, Puzzles, Patterns• Text marking and highlighting• Grammar challenges• Cloze procedure• Messing about with sentences• Create a writer’s toolkit• Shadowing the text

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Cloze procedure

• Leave one or more deletion free sentences at the beginning to give reader an idea of what passage is about

• Deletions can be according to a numerical system

• Deletions can be particular word class(es)• Make sure there are enough cues left in the

text

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Modal verbs to show degrees of possibility

• Each of you will give a 5 minute presentation on your project to the rest of the class.

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Each of you will give a 5 minute presentation on your project to the rest of the class.

will wouldcan couldmay mightshall shouldmust ought

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Why use the passive voice?

• When we don’t know who did it or we want to hide that information

• To emphasise what happened rather than who did something

The window has been broken.

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Subject and object

• A guide led the class into a room.

The subject is the person or thing doing the action. It is the noun before the verb.The object is the person or thing that is acted on. It is normally the noun after the verb.

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Active and passive voice

• ActiveA guide led the class into a room.(The subject is doing the action)

• PassiveThe class was led into a room by the guide.(The subject is having the action done to it)The class was led into a room.

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Messing about with sentences

• Write up a sentence• Add adjectives• Change the verb• Change the final noun• Add an adverb• Extend the sentence by using ‘because’• Move the end to the beginning• Move the adverb

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Create a writer’s toolkit

• Look at the author’s techniques• What can we borrow?

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Stumbling blocks• Less and fewer - Use less with uncountable

nouns and fewer with countable nouns e.g. We have had less rain and fewer showers this year.

Page 39: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Stumbling blocks• I and me when talking about two people e.g.

John and me/I went to school. He gave the sweets to John and me/I.

Take out the other person. Which pronoun makes sense? I went to school. John and I went to school. He gave the sweets to me. He gave the sweets to John and me.

Page 40: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Key principles

• Teach in context• Use games and kinaesthetic approaches• Use problem solving and investigative

approaches• Use correct terminology• ‘Notice’ when reading• ‘Borrow’ when writing

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Punctuation

Page 42: Mind the GaP Teaching Grammar and Punctuation Gill Matthews & Stephanie Austwick The Professional Literacy Company.

Comma sense

• Lists – if the comma can be replaced with and or or

• Parentheses – either side of a phrase or clause that gives extra detail but which can be removed leaving the sentence gramatically correct

• Introduction to a sentence – adverbs, -ed, -ing words, time, place, condition, frequency, fact

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Commas in lists

• The little fat hen walked across the yard.• He has spiky grey hair, piercing blue eyes, a

sharp tongue and a dry sense of humour.• I went to the shop and bought bread, milk and

cheese.

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Commas for parenthesis

• He stood, as if waiting, by the chair.

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Suddenly he was falling, and his life went past in small, square pictures, framed in the windows of the cockpit. There were his family; his house; his friends; his wedding; his dog. There were pictures of the Past and pictures of the Future, too – all the things he had meant to do and now never would: bridges, faces, dawns, and sunsets.

Smile by Geraldine McCaughrean

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Stumbling blocks

• Its and It’sIt’s stands for IT IS or IT HAS and nothing else• Words ending in sThat is James’ book.• PluralsThose are the boys’ bags.

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Learning environment

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The Professional Literacy Company

• E-mail: [email protected]• Website: www.theplc.org.uk• @ProfLitCo