5 Language games for buzzing brains

These language games are great for developing and expanding a child’s vocabulary. Most are adaptable to children of different ages and the most equipment you’ll need is pencil, paper and a large imagination!

Amazingly, elephants only leave the house when the sun shines brightly in the sky. But when it rains, they choose to wear spotty underpants and hide under the blankets. Cold weather makes them sad and sluggish. During the winter, they hibernate in dens made out of duvets and old clothes.’

  1. Alphabet Sentences: This is a great game for playing round the breakfast table or even on a long car journey and is VERY simple for all but the very youngest children. Each player must take it in turns to say a sentence. Each sentence must continue on from the last sentence spoken, BUT each sentence must begin with the next letter in the alphabet (see the example above.) The game can stop once you reach the end of the alphabet, or you can go round again! Great for: young readers becoming familiar with letter sounds, or older children looking to expand their vocabulary. Level up: by challenging players to insert interesting adjectives, adverbials or clauses into their sentences.
  2. Rhyming Nonsense: Start off with one person thinking of a word. This word should be fairly short and simple, as this is a great game for younger children. For example, the word ‘cat.’ Each person then has 1 minute to write down as many words that they can think of which rhyme with this word. So, you might end up with a list which includes ‘sat, mat, hat, bat, rat, fat,’ etc.Next, everyone takes a piece of paper and has 5 minutes to write down sentences that include each of these words; the sillier, the better! You should end up with something like this: ‘As I sat on the mat, wearing my stripey winter hat, I thought I saw a bat. The bat had chased a rat, which was speckled, white and fat…’ If you are playing with younger children, then this game can be all done verbally instead.
  3. Mystery Object Game: This is a game which works well in different situations, where you’re at home, on a car journey, or sitting on a beach. It’s a slightly different take on I-Spy, where each person takes it in turns to use adjectives to describe an object that they can see. So, if I were thinking of a tree I might start off by saying ‘tall’ and then I might choose ‘rough‘ to describe the feel of its bark. Try to leave more obvious adjectives – such as those of colour – until the end, as they tend to give the game away too easily!
  4. Fronted Adverbials: Fronted adverbials are words or phrases that come at the start of a sentence and tell us something about when an action took place, where it took place, how often and the manner in which it happened. Put simply, each player works to create one story, where each sentence begins with a fronted adverbial. This works better with older children, but for younger ones you can have a prepared list of adverbials to chose from. Your story could sound something like this: Every Tuesday morning, I take my sloth for a walk in the park. Last week, we were walking by the duck pond when we had a big surprise. Out of nowhere, appeared a giant pink rabbit…’
  5. Fortunately/Unfortunately: This game is an old favourite and a great one for having everyone collapsing in giggles! It also helps children to think about the links between sentences and gets them talking (and writing) at greater length, with multi-clause sentences. Again, the aim is a collective story, but each sentence has to start off – in turn – with ‘fortunately’ or ‘unfortunately.’ For example: ‘Fortunately, the weather today is fine, so we can picnic outside. Unfortunately, our neighbour has just lit a bonfire and we’ll have to move inside. Fortunately, the food is delicious…’

Homework: top tips!

Whether setting or marking it as a teacher, or persuading (bribing!) my own children to complete it, homework has always been one of my least favourite aspects of teaching and learning. However, for most of us, it is as inescapable a part of parenting as scraped knees and snotty noses, so here are my tips for making it as painless as possible for both parents and children.

Mum….! I need a scale model of an Anglo-Saxon village, complete with raiding Vikings. Miss said it’s due tomorrow. Do we have any cereal boxes…?

1.Know your school’s expectations

Most schools should – at the start of the year – provide parents and students with some clear guidelines as to what subjects will be set and how often and also how long a student is expected to spend on each piece of homework. If they don’t provide this, then ask at your earliest opportunity. With a clear homework timetable, there should be no unpleasant surprises along the way…! Obviously, Primary school children will need more help and support with their homework and more prompting to complete it, but Secondary school children will have a heavier workload and will need more help managing their time, alongside other commitments. Having a clear ideas of what to expect, how much and when at the start of the year should avoid too much unnecessary stress.

2. Schedule

Try to schedule in a regular time each week for your child to complete their homework. This is easier to do in Primary than in Secondary, due to the amount of homework that is given. In our house, it has always been a Saturday afternoon after our dog walk, as then the children know they have the rest of the weekend ‘free.’ There should probably be some room for negotiation here: I’m very much a ‘work first, so you can relax completely’ type of person, but I am trying to recognise that my children don’t necessarily operate in the same way and that the work will still be done. Either way, setting a schedule that everyone can agree to means that you all become familiar with the routine.

3. A quiet (ish!), clear space

A lot of us don’t have the luxury of a quiet space in a busy home – nor an uncluttered desk space for each child – so often it’s a case of doing the best that we can with what we have available. Some things should always be avoided: for example, having a child write their homework in bed, leaning on their laps, as this doesn’t encourage a good writing posture, particularly in younger children who are just learning cursive. Try to at least have a flat, firm surface to write on and if you’re short of any sort of desk/dining table space, then a clipboard or lever arch folder would make a good substitute. Similarly, in a busy household it may not always be possible to have quiet, even for a short space of time. Some older children may actually find they work better with earphones in, listening to music, but if quiet is needed and is hard to come by, then consider a pair of noise-cancelling headphones, which can be picked up fairly cheaply these days. Here’s a link to some of the options available: https://www.techradar.com/uk/news/the-best-headphones-for-students-our-top-picks-for-back-to-school-cans

4. Time

Most schools will give you guidance about how much time a child is expected to spend on each piece of homework. If a Primary school child is mean to spend 20 minutes on their maths homework and after this time they’re still struggling through, then stop. If they’ve tried their best and the work is not completed in the allotted time, then this is a sign to the teacher that the work has not been set at the appropriate level and will need to be altered in future. A sure way to set up homework problems for the future is to spend hours on a piece of work that was intended to take 30 minutes: I have done this myself in the past with many tears and frayed tempers on both sides…! Conversely, if your child is whizzing through homework in 5 minutes that was intended to take half an hour, then it may be worth checking the quality of their work, or the level of difficulty with their teacher…!

Mum really struggled with the quadratic equations, Miss…

5. Help and Communication

We all take vastly different approaches to homework depending upon the age of our children, but also upon our own ability to help with what has been set. Whilst most of us would feel fairly confident helping our children across all subjects in Primary School, our confidence is likely to decrease once they get to Secondary School. If you do actively help your child with their Primary homework, it is worth jotting down a brief indication of what help was needed, so that their teacher can see clearly which bits they had support with. For example, ‘found this tricky’ or ‘unsure of fractions.’ Conversely, if your child sailed through, you might just indicate that they ‘completed the work independently.’ Obviously, by the time they reach Secondary School they are hopefully a lot more independent, but if there are real struggles, or if homework is causing lots of clashes at home, then this is also worth communicating to their teacher.

Finally, if you are struggling with any aspect of your child’s school work, please contact me at quercustutoring@gmail.com where I offer friendly, 1:1, confidence -building tuition in Primary and Secondary (English.)

5 ways to help your child learn to read (without them even realising)

berkocat's avatarQuercus Tutoring

As an English teacher and the mother of a boy in reception class, I know how hard it can be to strike the balance between supporting your child – and their teacher – with their early learning and becoming the sort of scary, deranged tiger-Mummy that teachers dread meeting on consultation days. Here are just 5 things – as both a mother and a teacher –  that I have found to be useful:

1. Don’t ‘help them with their reading’

Never ask your child to sit down and ‘do his/her reading with you’. This is likely to engender the same emotional response as someone asking me to sit through 90 minutes of grown men passing a ball back and forth to each other’s feet, as well as the same slim chance of it actually happening. The main thing wrong with this approach is that it treats reading as if it…

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