Cambridge Early Years Communication and Language (English as a First Language) Learner's Book 2C

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Learner’s Book 2C Cambridge Early Years

Communication and Language for English as a First Language

Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024.
Gill Budgell
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2 Contents Note to parents and practitioners 3 Block 5: Growing 4 Block 6: Animals 21 Acknowledgements 32 Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024. SAMPLE

Note to parents and practitioners

This Learner’s Book provides activities to support the third term of FLE Communication and Language for Cambridge Early Years 2.

Activities can be used at school or at home. Children will need support from an adult. Additional guidance about activities can be found in the For practitioners boxes.

Stories are provided for children to enjoy looking at and listening to. Children are not expected to be able to read the stories themselves.

Children will encounter the following characters within this book. You could ask children to point to the characters when they see them on the pages, and say their names.

The Learner’s Book activities support the Teaching Resource activities. The Teaching Resource provides step-by-step coverage of the Cambridge Early Years curriculum and guidance on how the Learner’s Book activities develop the curriculum learning statements.

Hi, my name is Rafi.

Hi, my name is Kiho.

Hi, my name is Mia.

Find us on the front covers doing lots of fun activities.

Hi, my name is Gemi.

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Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024. SAMPLE

Goldilocks and the Three Bears by Susan Price

Once upon a time, three bears lived in a house in a wood.

They were called Daddy Bear, Mummy Bear and Baby Bear. Every morning, they had porridge for breakfast.

But one morning, the porridge was too hot to eat.

“Let’s walk in the wood while it cools,” said Mummy Bear.

4 Block 5 Growing Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024. SAMPLE

While the bears were out, Goldilocks came to their house.

She was lost in the wood.

She knocked at the door to ask for help.

Nobody answered, so she opened the door and went in.

5 Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024.
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All about Fisher!

Point and write.

Point to the pictures and write what you see.

28 Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024. SAMPLE

For practitioners

Where possible, say a caption and ask children to point to the correct picture. Support them to ‘write’ their own caption for some or all of the pictures. Children may like to write a word or two about what they see, rather than making their captions full sentences.

29 Original material © Cambridge University Press & Assessment 2024.
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