Measurement Archives - Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø Help your child to learn: reading and maths tips for parents Wed, 13 Dec 2023 11:45:44 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2022/06/cropped-Group-200-32x32.png Measurement Archives - Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø 32 32 Christmas activities for 5–7 year olds /christmas-activities-for-5-7-year-olds/ Tue, 12 Dec 2023 11:36:31 +0000 /christmas-activities-for-5-7-year-olds/ Whatever the weather this Christmas, you’ll find an activity here to suit your child. Wrap up warm and go out for a winter scavenger hunt, or stay inside and play party games with our range of festive activity ideas.

The post Christmas activities for 5–7 year olds appeared first on Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø.

]]>

Whatever the weather this Christmas, you’ll find an activity here to suit your child. Wrap up warm and go out for a winter scavenger hunt, or stay inside and play party games with our range of festive activity ideas.

51ºÚÁÏÍø is not responsible for the content of external websites.

 

±õ²ÔÌýKitty and the Moonlight Rescue, Kitty puts on a special mask when she becomes a feline superhero. Now you can be a hero too!

Christmas memory tray game

Your child will love this Christmas version of the popular memory tray game. Find a selection of Christmas objects – for example, a bauble, a mince pie, a small parcel, a satsuma – and arrange them on a tray. Keep the tray covered with a tea-towel or a piece of wrapping paper until you are ready to play the game. Vary the number of objects according to the age of your child. Uncover the tray and give your child a minute to memorise the contents of the tray, then cover it up again. Take the tray away and remove one object. Bring the tray back and ask the child to write down the object that is missing. You could turn this into a competition – perhaps the winner can eat the mince pie!

Baking together is great fun and a good way to get children practicing their measuring and counting skills. These snow-covered gingerbread trees are easy to make and your child will love decorating them.

Can you find the 10 Christmas words hidden in the wordsearch? A fiendish test of your child’s word-spotting skills, the words can be written any way – forwards and backwards, top to bottom and bottom to top, left to right and right to left, and even diagonally.

Go for a winter scavenger hunt

We all know that sluggish feeling in the Christmas holidays when you have been in the house for days and have eaten one too many mince pies! This winter scavenger hunt is a great way to get everyone outside burning some energy. Give your child or children a bag and a list of things to collect. If you are in the woods, this could be a pine cone, a conker, a twig, a feather, a leaf, a stone. If you are at the beach, they could search for a shell, a piece of seaweed, a stone. Alternatively, you could just have a challenge to see who can find the most of a certain item – pine cones, shells, stones. Another idea is that you could give your child or children a bag each and challenge them to see what treasures they can find.

Follow these steps to make a super snack for the birds in your garden, inspired by theÌýÌýbooks.

Everybody loves pugs, and they’re easy to draw! These activity sheets from the creators ofÌýÌýwill help you draw your own completely unique pug, as well as making a comic, designing a sea monkey, and much more!

The post Christmas activities for 5–7 year olds appeared first on Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø.

]]>
Fun books with maths /fun-books-with-maths/ Wed, 31 Aug 2022 09:00:26 +0000 /?p=50632 Lots of fun book ideas that introduce key maths concepts for children to read at home.

The post Fun books with maths appeared first on Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø.

]]>

Looking for fun ways to introduce maths to your little ones? Books that explore these ideas, like shapes, counting and size can be brilliant ways to help your child get to grips with early maths skills.ÌýÌý

Maths is an essential part of our daily lives. It makes our computers work. It helps us tell the time, buy our shopping, know how much we can fill the kettle, and lots, lots more.

But when it comes to introducing children to the world of maths, it can be difficult to know where to start. Counting? Shapes? Size? Weight? All of the above? Well, if asking your toddler to count out 100 shapes and sort them by size and weight sounds a little daunting, we’re here to help.

We’ve curated a list of our best maths-inspired picture books which help children learn about those important early maths skills in a gentle way. Think heartwarming stories, heaps of humour and a cast of vibrant characters that presents maths information in a subtle, age appropriate and easy-to-digest way.

 

Fun books with maths concepts

Please note that all links will take you to Amazon.co.ukÌý

Helen Mortimer / Cristina Trapanese

Suitable 2+

Using carefully chosen words in relatable settings from the world around them, this book creates a moment for children and adults to discover first counting words at a pizza party.

The engaging art style, fun characters and hardback picture book feel make this series accessible and perfect to share.Ìý

 

Helen Mortimer / Cristina Trapanese

Suitable 2+

This book creates a moment for children and adults to discover first sorting words through dressing up and having fun.

Written and illustrated by the same winning team as ‘Big Words for Little People’, this series is special not only because it focuses on maths in a child-friendly way, but also because it’s from Oxford, it’s packed with educational goodness that helps children develop and grow.

Naomi Jones / James Jones

Suitable 2+

Circle loves the tower that the squares and hexagons have built and wants to make his own.

But circles, diamonds and triangles are pointier, rounder and much wobblier – making a tower is not as easy as it looks! The shapes try and try but their tower just keeps tumbling down. Can Circle persuade them to have just one more try?

Leigh Hodgkinson

Suitable 2+

Martha LOVES drawing maps. She creates maps of everything-even her thoughts and dreams! Let Martha be your guide as she welcomes you to her world. Starting in outer space, we zoom in page by page, to our planet, Martha’s community, and beyond to her dreams of a future where ANYTHING is possible.

Full of quirky details and fun non-fiction labels that children will love poring over-they will discover cool new facts with every reading.Ìý

Tony Neal

Suitable 2+

Elephant is too heavy to play with Mouse on the seesaw. Their friends can help, but will it be enough to get Elephant’s feet off the ground? A great deal (of Elephant) hangs in the balance in this hilarious introduction to the maths concept of weight.

With engaging artwork and a very funny story, readers won’t even realize that they’re learning something while they laugh along with the animal friends!

Naomi Jones / James Jones

Suitable 2+

No matter how hard she tries, Triangle doesn’t roll like the circles, or stack like the squares…so she sets off to find friends that look exactly like her. But when she finds the other triangles, playtime isn’t as fun. She misses the shapes that roll and stack; she misses being different. So she starts a new quest, one that gets all of the different shapes playing and having fun together!

Tony Neal

Suitable 2+

Mouse is hungry, but that tasty cake is just too high! Is it a stretch too far, or will Mouse find his way to the top?

It’s a big problem for a small mouse in this hilarious introduction to the maths concept of height.

More from Oxford Owl

The post Fun books with maths appeared first on Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø.

]]>
Money, money, money /money-money-money/ Thu, 23 Apr 2020 06:00:51 +0000 /money-money-money/ Money isn’t everything, but being 'good with money' is undoubtedly a useful life skill. Read Fiona Lazenby's top tips for practising using money with your child.

The post Money, money, money appeared first on Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø.

]]>

We all want to teach our kids that money isn’t everything, but there’s no doubt that being ‘good with money’ will make their future lives a whole lot easier.

Handling coins and calculating with money in real-life situations outside the classroom can really help children see how important it is in daily life… and talking about money is the first step to great skills!

Read on to find out what your child will learn about money at school, and discover our top tips and activities to support their learning at home.

Please note: This advice was written before the lockdowns caused by coronavirus. Please take into account local government guidance on social distancing when trying these activities.

What do children learn at school?

In Reception, your child will use everyday language to talk about money.

During Years 1 and 2, your child will learn the different coins and notes, the symbols for pounds (£) and pence (p), and how to combine coins to make given amounts. They will solve money problems practically, adding and subtracting to give change.

In Years 3 to 6, your child will progress from making change by adding/subtracting pounds and pence separately to recording money using decimals (for example, ‘£1.52’ instead of ‘£1 and 52p’). This ‘£.p’ format is usually introduced in Year 4. Your childÌý will also solve money problems, including multiplying/dividing decimal amounts of money by whole numbers.

Activities to try at home

Here are some ideas for fun, practical activities to help develop your child’s understanding of money and boost their confidence using money in real life.

1. Set up shop

Playing shops at home is a wonderful way of introducing children to the idea of using money through creative play.

Together, decide what to sell – raid kitchen cupboards, toy boxes, or wardrobes to create different types of shop – and price up all the items with sticky notes. For younger children, set prices with penny amounts or whole pounds using numbers they can cope with. Use real or toy coins (or make coin rubbings with paper and crayons to create your own) and take turns to be shopper and shopkeeper.

Have younger children start by just buying one item and counting out the right coins to pay for it. Encourage older children to choose several items and work out totals and change.

Top Tip 1: More online shopping and contactless card or phone payments mean children often don’t see cash being used. Playing with real money can help them recognise different coins and their values.

Activity: Sort the coins

Order the coins by value.

2. Be super shoppers

How do you turn a supermarket shop with kids from frazzling to fun-filled? Playing money games that challenge them to be super shoppers might help!

Start by asking younger children to spot and read different prices. (Printing labels when weighing out fruit and veg is a great of providing non-round-number amounts.) As they learn to add amounts, ask your child to find, say, three items that total £5.

Encourage older children to calculate with money by finding the total of your shopping as you add new items to your basket/trolley. In larger supermarkets, handheld scanners offer a fun way to check, but a calculator on your phone works just as well for keeping track on the go. Or you could just challenge your child to see if their total matches the final amount at the checkout!

Top Tip 2: Decimal points in money amounts can be confusing, especially for younger children. Explain that the decimal point separates the pounds and pence, so £2.99 can be read as ‘Two pounds and ninety-nine pence’.

3. Manage a budget

‘Can I have an ice-cream? Will you buy me a new doll/car/dinosaur/hot-air balloon? Can we go to Disneyland, pleeeeease?!’

Even after children have learnt to calculate using money, they often have little sense of affordability! Involving your child in planning family celebrations, days out, or holidays (real or imaginary) can help them to understand the cost of items and activities. It might even encourage them to save for something they want!

Set a budget and research prices together. How much will it cost to get there? Is there a choice of ticket prices? What will lunch/drinks/snacks cost? How shall we divide the budget between party food, decorations, and presents? Don’t forget to talk about the difference between what they need and what they want!

Top Tip 3: When calculating with money, it can be helpful to convert amounts into pence first, before changing back to pounds and pence after the calculation. This helps your child keep track of where the decimal point should go. For example, to add £4.50 + £2.73, you could change the sum to 450p + 273p = 723p, which can then be turned into £7.23.

I hope these ideas have given you some inspiration for exploring money in a memorable way! Have fun!

Activity: My money

Learn how to organise money with this table.

More useful links

  • :Ìýa national activity week in June for primary and secondary schools that provides young people the opportunity to gain skills, knowledge, and confidence in money matters.
  • : resources for anyone teaching young people money management skills.
  • :Ìýfun activities, games, and videos to help your child ‘get money savvy’.

The post Money, money, money appeared first on Oxford Owl for 51ºÚÁÏÍø.

]]>