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Toys in Space

Toys in Space

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Find out the cost of various toys and use the prices to make up some word problems. Can you ask a friend to answer these? Ask your class to plan a party, complete with traditional games, food, invitations and decorations. Talk abut the different tasks and assign pairs or groups of children to each task. Make a date for the party and allow each child to invite a toy as a guest. Stargazing What about aliens with other quantities of fingers or tentacles? Draw them, then show how they count and do their sums. This opportunity for connection and reflection prepares children to inhabit the emotional landscape of the book and makes the eventual reading experience richer and more relevant. Inviting a response Where could the Hoctopize come from? What might his planet be like? Generate ideas as a class and model note-taking for your children, as well as collecting good words to describe imaginary worlds.

KS1 Book Topic – Toys in Space - Teachwire

Gather children together to discuss the exercise. With you acting as scribe, ask children to collaborate on a piece of descriptive writing about the toys’ dreams.Make sure everyone understands the idea of a ‘story within a story’ and draw attention to the way the toys help shape the action. Did Wonderdoll invent everything? Or did the adventure really happen? Look at the spread showing the Hoctopize meeting the toys. What is the Hoctopize thinking and feeling? Write this inside your outline. Look at pictures of the amazing variety of life on earth and talk about the way creatures evolve to fit the place they live. What might creatures from another planet look like? Provide a collection of toys and invite children to choose their own audience. If you like, you can record each child so that they can listen to themselves (and each other). Perhaps you could create a CD of stories to share with another class? Lost dreams NASA explores the unknown in air and space, innovates for the benefit of humanity, and inspires the world through discovery.

resources for parents lovemybooks | FREE reading resources for parents

The toys explain to the alien that the toys should be returned to their real homes. Why is stealing wrong? Mini Grey is a significant illustrator and author who has won the Kate Greenaway Award and written an array of well-known, much-loved children’s stories. Toys in Space is a fun story that can open up discussion about space, the possibility of alien life and space exploration. It could also link with learning about the history of toys and looking after and sharing toys. Links and themes: Why is it difficult to understand another person’s point of view? Could we do better? How? Come up with ideas and test them in real life. Invite your class to create all sorts of different stories and provide special storytelling areas where they can tell or read them to an audience.

Create your own audio recording of this story, including the narration, the speech, music and sound effects. This book is very adorable with its concept of lost toys. It reminds me of Toy Story in a way since each toy clearly has a distinct voice and personality, portrayed with different fonts. Parents will find this story perfect for creating "voices" during story time. How are the toys introduced? Note the words describing them. What kind of comments does each toy make as the story progresses? Do they have distinctive characters? Which toy would you choose as a companion in a crisis? Why? Read the story aloud to your child and enjoy it together stopping to talk about what happens when your child wants to discuss the pictures or what is happening. Talk about the story

Toys In Space - Twinkl Toys In Space - Twinkl

In drawing on so many time-honoured themes and storytelling devices and illustrating them in such rich detail, Mini Grey has created a multi-layered and highly satisfying reading experience. While searching for his Cuddles, the Hoctopize takes toys that don’t belong to him. What is right for the Hoctopize is wrong for everyone else, but the Hoctopize finds it difficult to empathise and see the world from somebody else's perspective.Think dens - sheets draped over washing lines, enormous cardboard boxes – and decorate them with paints, cushions and bunting, Make some just large enough for a single child plus toy, and others bigger to accommodate a group. Can you design a gadget to weigh a toy? Use junk materials and/or construction kits. Something needs to move in response to a mass being added, but there are many ways of achieving this. There is a massive amount in this book for your class to engage with and they will be keen to talk about the story, as well as relate it to their own experiences. What did they think about the book and the way it was illustrated? Did it remind them of anything else they’ve read? Did anything suprise them? Look at pictures of the amazing variety of life on earth and talk about the way creatures evolve to fit the place they live. Investigate possible conditions on other planets and discuss how alien life-forms might adapt (or look at aliens in other books….) In searching for his Cuddles, the Hoctopize kidnaps toys that don’t belong to him. What is right for the Hoctopize is wrong for everyone else, but – in common with many children – the Hoctopize finds it difficult to empathise with others and see the world from their perspective.

International Toys in Space - NASA

If you have access to a safe, high location, drop the toys and time how long it takes for them to reach the ground. Collect data to analyse and display.Award-winning illustrator Mini Grey uses inventive layouts and zany humour to add energy to every spread of this much-loved picturebook. Strong characterisation and an engaging moral dilemma bring the toys’ world sharply into focus, and there’s plenty for readers to observe and question. Look at the illustrations showing the Hoctopize’s birthday, and share memories of your own celebrations. What does a good party need to be successful? In a large, clear space, ask children to copy the postures and expressions of these toys. How do we know they’re sleeping? What do people look like when they’re asleep?



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