Maths
Good Morning Y3! Today we will be building on yesterday’s lesson and continuing multiplying 2 digits by 1 digit with exchanging.
Starter: True or False? Write your answer with a reason in the comments box on your Google Classroom.
Video: Watch the video on multiplying 2 digits by 1 digit using column method.
Worksheet: Complete the worksheet building on yesterday’s skills – make sure you read the reasoning questions very carefully! Remember for the final questions Odd numbers end in, 1, 3, 5, 7 or 9 and Even numbers end in 0, 2, 4, 6 or 8 – if you can’t work with your parent or sibling just have a go at doing it yourself and writing down the combinations you come up with.
Click to access Y3-Spring-Block-1-D4-Multiply-2-digits-by-1-digit-2-2019.pdf
English
Before you start today’s lesson make sure you have some paper, a pencil and your plan from Tuesday ready. Today’s lesson is very similar to yesterday but this time we are going to describe Heorot hall after Grendel’s attack. How will the hall be different? Remember to watch the video lesson before you begin.
Your task
You are going to write a description of Heorot hall after Grendel has attacked. Today you are going to try and include a list in your writing- don’t forget the punctuation. When you finish your paragraph make sure you check over it for capital letters, full stops and spelling mistakes.
There is a word bank of ideas linked below to help you with your writing.
Art
For our new art project meet David Hockney.
• Hockney is a British born, contemporary artist.
• He was born in Bradford, England, in 1937.
• He experimented with a variety of styles over sixty years including paint, photography and digital media.
• His work includes portraits and still-life, but also landscape painting.
After living in America, Hockney returned to England in the late 1990s. Living in Yorkshire, he admired the landscapes around him for their subtlety of colour. His painting became focused on colour, shape, pattern and texture.
Some aspects of a picture will be flat and without tone, but in other parts, Hockney uses brush strokes or dashes and dabs.
Take a look at a landscape painting by David Hockney. What do you think of it?
Activity 1 – Open to document below to see your activity for today. You can use paints, pastels or watercolours.


