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Camphill Primary School, Ballymena
P1 parents - last day to order your child's Camphill school bag for P2 is this Friday..... All pupils will receive their own bag on their first day of school in August.  | P4 parents - Have you paid your child's Class Trip to W5 next Tuesday? Last day to pay is this Friday. | P6 parents - a deposit is due before next Wednesday if your child is planning on going on the P7 Residential Trip in June 2027. | P1-P6 parents - Information out on Wednesday in the ‘End of year’ letter about an early closure at 1pm next WEDNEDAY 25th June.  | Have you completed the Safer Schools NI 'Digital Proficiency course' ? - there is still time to complete this - all details have been sent out via Parentmail last week.  | Have a look inside our school building by viewing our new 3D TOUR on the HOME page of our website..... go on a tour by clicking and following the little person icon... | 'Free School Meal and Uniform allowance' applications for the 26/27 new school year OPEN via the EA Connect portal - see NEWS - 2/6/26.. | School Uniform - online shop (under PARENTS area) now open for orders up until Friday 24th July.
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Primary 7BC write their own scene based on Kensuke’s Kingdom

14th Oct 2020

Mr.Clarke is an incredibly proud teacher! This week P7BC were tasked with the challenge of writing another scene based on the Michael Morpurgo novel Kensuke’s Kingdom. The class had learned about how the character known as Michael had just heard that his parents had been made redundant. They had to write a scene as if they were Michael, i.e. in the first person. 

Pupils had to tell the reader how miserable life is now for Michael, use repetition, talk to the reader using phrases such as “by the way”, “do you know” etc. The purpose of this scene was to make the reader feel sorry for Michael and empathise with him. 

Once they had written their scenes they shared these with their peers. As a class we conducted some peer assessment where pupils made comments about each other’s writing on small sticky notes. This was called two stars and one wish. The two stars represented what the reader enjoyed most about the piece of writing, while the one wish highlighted an area of improvement which could be made in the future. 

The pupils were terrific at this and were really engaged throughout the entire lesson. Several pupils were really brave and shared their scene with the class! Well done to Kathryn, Nicole, Ethan, Ben, Luke and Theo. 

The writers really helped the reader empathise with Michael. Michael Morpurgo would be very impressed! I think even Mr Clarke had a slight tear in his eye!