Squirt wrote:
Mimi wrote:
The great fire of London his class’s large Yr2 project where they made a huge diorama, otherwise that would have made a great jumping off point simply because there are so many visual things you can do with that.
His interests are mostly space and science.
Could you do something sciencey or spacey and just smush some history over the top? Isaac Newton or Herschel and Uranus or the discovery of the structure of DNA or Charles Darwin or something.
Or Dinosaurs. Lots of dinosaurs lived in Britain, at some point.
All solid suggestions, although the uranus one is thin ice - or at least it is with my boys and their silly friends - but there's plenty of other space-science-history to cover.
Build a lego diorama? Print out some of those lovely pictures from the space telescopes (Hubble, Spitzer, Webb, and the others)?
How long it took to build the ISS, and the countries that collaborated?
Space Shuttle, or Apollo 11 are all history now.
How much is meant to be parent-driven? I'm never sure how much to help, as I always think it's pretty obvious when the kiddo has done very little of the actual work. I had a project in Year 5, we could pick our own topic, so I chose 'American cars' because my dad was thinking about buying a Firebird, so I bought a few magazines and cut out pictures, then stuck them in a book with a little bit of writing or something. It was VERY low effort and I got a good mark, I think I learned something significant about effort and reward, although perhaps the lesson I learned was not all that helpful later on in my life.
For this same topic, one of the other pupils (that i had a very bad relationship with) chose to do a project on 'everything I know' (I kid you not) and it was like a page and a half (on A5 paper) of writing about not very much.... oh how I laughed. Funny with stays with us. She probably still thinks I'm a little prick too, but hah, jokes on her as I got taller.