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Comparing their own homes with Jinnat’s house is a great way to develop children’s understanding of how different communities live.
Jinnat’s House
What you will need• Images of different types of
homes in the UK• ‘Life in Dhaka’ photographs • A tape measure23
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8. Jinnat’sFavourite ThingsJinnat’s favourite thing to play with is a
paper boat. Her favourite foods are eggs
and milk. Her favourite animal is a bird called a Bok.
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Jinnat loves playing clapping
games with her friends.
10. Playingwith Friends
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. This is Jinnat
Jinnat is 5 years old.
3.
Mathematics• Numbers – count with numbers from
1 to 20, place them in order• Shape, space and measures – use
everyday language to talk about size
Understanding the world• People and communities – know
about similarities and differences between themselves and others, and among families, communities and traditions
• The world – know about similarities and differences in relation to places, objects, materials; talk about the features of their own immediate environment and how environments might vary from one another
• Technology – recognise that a range of technology is used in homes
Expressive arts and design• Being imaginative – represent their
own ideas, thoughts and feelings through role-play
Early Years
Foundation Stage Links
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68 (E
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Activities
Top TipFor more great activity ideas, get your free activity pack from sportrelief.com/nurserypack
Talking about Jinnat’s house
Talking about our own homesExplain to the children that homes in the UK come in a wide range of shapes and sizes. Show them images of different housing on the interactive whiteboard, for example a detached house, a semi-detached house, a terraced house, a bungalow and a block of flats. In each case, ask them:
• Do you know what this type of home is called?• Does it have stairs?• What words would you use to describe it?
(e.g. old, new, modern, small, big, pretty, cosy, red, white)
Ask the children to put up their hand if they live in a detached house, a terraced house, a flat etc. With their help, count how many families live in each type of home and write the numbers on the board. Ask the children to put the numbers in order. Which type of home do most families live in?
Show the children the images of Jinnat’s home from the ‘Life in Dhaka’ photographs, in particular image 2 (‘Jinnat’s family’), image 4 (‘Jinnat’s house’), image 5 (‘Inside the house’), image 6 (‘Keeping clean’) and image 7 (‘Helping out’). You could either print out the photographs or display them on the interactive whiteboard.
Explain that Jinnat lives in a house with just one room in the slums of Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, with her mum, dad, brother and sister.
The family’s house is made from concrete, brick and corrugated tin.
Jinnat shares the only bed with her mum and sister. Her dad and brother sleep on the floor.
There is no kitchen – the cooking equipment is stored in a corner of the room and meals are cooked outdoors.
There is no bathroom – 10 families share a washing area at the back of Jinnat’s house.
Encourage them to tell you more about where they live:
• How many people live in your home?• How many bedrooms does your home have?• How many beds are there?• Which room are meals cooked in?• Where do you sleep?• Where do you wash?• Where do you play?
Role-play: inside Jinnat’s HouseJinnat’s house is 190cm long and 245cm wide.
Help the children to measure and mark out an area this size in the nursery. Explain that this is the exact size of the house that Jinnat lives in with her mum, dad, 20-year-old brother and 12-year-old sister.
Encourage the children to role-play living in the room in groups of five, taking on the roles of different family members. Where would they cook? Wash? Sleep? What would be difficult about living in such a small space? Would they like to live in a house as small as Jinnat’s?
5
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Learn ‘Step it up for Sport Relief’ Learn these six moves with your little ones. You can watch other kids doing it at sportrelief.com/nurserysong
Get sponsored to learn the Sport Relief dance.We’ve got six simple steps to learn for our Sport Relief song and dance. Watch the video at sportrelief.com/nurserysongPhotocopy and hand out the dance move instructions with the invites to parents and carers. They can learn the moves at home with their little ones. If you want to create your own dance moves, you can download an invite template at sportrelief.com/nurserysong
Step it Up for Sport Relief
2 3 465
Kick to the left
Back with a glide
Deep sea dive Limbo
forward
Hula hoolaKnees up high
Watch the video of children performing
‘Step it up for Sport Relief’ at sportrelief.com/nurserysong
Set up a room as your dance studio and set the scene with a disco ball,
lights and decorations.
Hold a dance party and get everyone showing off their moves!
Order a copy of the Sport Relief pack today to get ready-made dance party invites and instructions for the ‘Step it up’ dance moves! Visit sportrelief.com/nurserypack
Step it upGet sponsored to learn the Sport Relief dance.
for Sport Relief
Copy the ‘Step it up for Sport Relief’ page at
the end of this PDF, give it to parents/carers
and ask them to watch the video and practise the
moves at home with their little ones.
Practise the six simple dance moves with your little ones:
Ask families to collect sponsorship for learning and performing the dance.
• Kick to the left• Back with a glide• Deep sea dive• Limbo forward• Knees up high• Hula hoola
2.
Sport Relief is an initiative of Comic Relief, registered charity 326568 (England/Wales); SC039730 (Scotland). © Aardman Animations Ltd 2015. SR16_422.
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