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SPaG in Year 2 Welcome
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Spelling Punctuation and Grammar in Year 2
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KS1 SPaG tests consist of:
English grammar, punctuation and spelling Paper 1: spelling (expected that the test will take approximately 15 minutes to complete, writing the 20 missing words in the answer booklet) Paper 2: questions (focusing on pupil’s knowledge of grammar, punctuation and vocabulary expected that the test will take approximately 20 minutes to complete but is not strictly timed)
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SPELLING RULES Children working at the expected standard will
segment spoken words into phonemes and represent these by graphemes, spelling many correctly spell many of the common exception words knows the difference in meaning between taught homophones and near homophones e.g. their/there/they’re, quite/quiet spell some words with contracted forms , where the apostrophe represent an omitted letter or letters use the possessive apostrophe (singular) e.g. the girl’s book add suffixes to spell words correctly in their writing e.g. –ment, -ness, -ful, -less, -ly Year 2 spelling rules (see Appendix 1 of the new national curriculum)
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PUNCTUATION Children working at the expected standard will
demarcate most sentences with capital letters and full stops and with some use of question marks and exclamation marks use both familiar and new punctuation correctly most of the time, including full stops, capital letters, exclamation marks, question marks, commas for lists and apostrophes for contracted forms and the possessive.
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GRAMMAR Children working at the expected standard will
use sentences in different forms in their writing (statements, questions, exclamations and commands) use some expanded noun phrases to describe and specify e.g. the blue butterfly use present and past tense consistently expand sentences using co-ordination (and, or, but) and some subordination (when, if that, because) use appropriate adjectives and adverbs to give essential information e.g. plain flour, rather than ‘flour’ or ‘fluffy, white flour’
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GRAMMAR Children are expected to use grammatical terminology to talk about their writing noun, noun phrase, adjective, adverb, verb, statement, question, exclamation, command, compound, suffix, tense (past, present), apostrophe, comma
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Year 2 Terminology explained
noun a person, place, animal or thing noun phrase used to give more information about the noun and describe it noun + adjective adjective a word that describes a noun adverb a word to describe a verb e.g. He ran quickly. verb an action word e.g. jump sentence a sentence always starts with a capital letter, ends with a full stop (or question or exclamation mark), makes complete sense and has a verb statement a type of sentence (fact /expresses opinion) The car drove quickly. question a type of sentence (often begins with who, what, where, when, why, how, or do, and it ends with a question mark) Where are you going? command a type of sentence (tells someone what to do) Come here now! exclamation a type of sentence (expresses great emotion such as excitement, surprise, happiness and anger, and ends with an exclamation point) How amazing! compound (word) two or more words which are joined together play + ground = playground suffix a group of letters added to the end of a root word e.g. short +er = shorter tense tells you when an action took place, in the past the present or the future. apostrophe (contraction) used to show where letters have missed out when two words have been shortened or joined together e.g. do not = don’t (missing letter o) apostrophe (posession) used to show that something belongs to somebody or something e.g. Will’s jacket comma used to separate items in a list e.g. He took sunglasses, a picnic, a blue towel and sun cream to the beach.
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