Year 4 Using Speech in Paragraphs Homework provides additional questions which can be used as homework or an in-class extension for the Year 4 Using Speech in Paragraphs Resource Pack. These are differentiated for Developing, Expected and Greater Depth.
More resources for Summer Block 2 Step 4.
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This pack includes:
English Year 4: Use of paragraphs to organise ideas around a theme
English Year 3/4: Draft and write by organising paragraphs around a theme
Differentiation:
Questions 1, 4 and 7 (Varied Fluency)
Developing Join the examples of speech from the text with its description. Texts contain the reporting clause at the end of the sentence and no more than two speakers.
Expected Join the examples of speech from the text with its description. Texts contain the reporting clause at the beginning and end to vary its position. Some use of indirect speech.
Greater Depth Join the examples of speech from the text with its description. Texts contain the reporting clause at the beginning, in the middle and at the end of speech sentences to vary its position. Texts also contain indirect speech examples.
Questions 2, 5 and 8 (Varied Fluency)
Developing Tick which sentence could be used to begin a new paragraph. Texts contain the reporting clause at the end of the sentence and no more than two speakers.
Expected Tick which group of two sentences could be used to begin a new paragraph. Texts contain the reporting clause at the beginning and end to vary its position. Some use of indirect speech too.
Greater Depth Tick which groups of two sentences could not be used to begin a new paragraph. Texts contain the reporting clause at the beginning, in the middle and at the end of speech sentences to vary its position. Texts also contain indirect speech examples too.
Questions 3, 6 and 9 (Reasoning and Problem Solving)
Developing Explain when a new line is required in direct speech. Texts contain the reporting clause at the end of the sentence and no more than two speakers.
Expected Explain when indirect speech has been used. Texts contain the reporting clause at the beginning and end to vary its position. Some use of indirect speech too.
Greater Depth Explain when indirect speech has been used rather than a descriptive sentence. Texts contain the reporting clause at the beginning, in the middle and at the end of speech sentences to vary its position. Texts also contain indirect speech examples too.
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