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RSRT Y2 L4 First Big Book of Why

Literacy Counts

Created on March 19, 2026

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Transcript

Ready Steady Read Together

First Big Book of Why: Non-Fiction Lesson 4

What do you think you know?

What?
Who?
Why?
Where?
How?
When?

Book Talk: Let's explore this illustration.

Explore

What do you know and think?

A single spoonful can contain thousands of different moulds.

How might this extract link to the illustration?

From: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Licensed under CLA. Do not copy or share.

Today's Question(s)

A) What does mould do to food?

B) What are spores?

C) What happens to blood vessels in your mouth when you eat something cold like ice cream?

D) What might help stop an ice cream headache?

Explore

Let me read today's text

Follow as I read

Explore

Adapted from: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Adapted for accessibility under CLA Licence. Do not share.

Adapted from: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Adapted for accessibility under CLA Licence. Do not share.

Common Exception Words

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find

plant

most

cold

break

again

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Vocabulary

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Hover for definitions!

spoonful of soil

tiny particles

food waste

roof of your mouth

blood vessels

signals

From: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Licensed under CLA. Do not copy or share.

I will model the first.

Find the word or phrase Read the sentence Talk about it to a partner

tiny particles

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Find Read Talk

Reveal Vocabulary

Adapted from: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Adapted for accessibility under CLA Licence. Do not share.

tiny particles

Your turn

spoonful of soil

Find the word or phrase Read the sentence Talk about it to a partner

food waste

roof of your mouth

blood vessels

signals

Use your text

Explore

Vocabulary Check & Re-read

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Reveal Vocabulary

Adapted from: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Adapted for accessibility under CLA Licence. Do not share.

Reveal Vocabulary

Adapted from: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Adapted for accessibility under CLA Licence. Do not share.

Fluency

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Let me use my reader's voice...

If you look at mould under a microscope, it can look like tiny trees. Mould may be yucky to find on your loaf of bread, but in nature, mould helps the planet. It breaks down all sorts of things, including food waste and dead plants.

What did you notice?

Volume

Pace

Smoothness

Phrasing

Expression

From: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Licensed under CLA. Do not copy or share.

My Turn
Your Turn

Echo Read

If you look at mould under a microscope, it can look like tiny trees.

Mould may be yucky to find on your loaf of bread,

but in nature, mould helps the planet.

It breaks down all sorts of things,

including food waste and dead plants.

From: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Licensed under CLA. Do not copy or share.

Sound like a reader!
Stand up!

Choral Read

If you look at mould under a microscope, it can look like tiny trees. Mould may be yucky to find on your loaf of bread, but in nature, mould helps the planet. It breaks down all sorts of things, including food waste and dead plants.

From: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Licensed under CLA. Do not copy or share.

Strategy Focus

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Strategy: Look Around & Find and Take

Be a word thief and steal what you've been asked to find...

A) What does mould do to food?

What's the question asking? Now, what are you looking for?

Let me show you

Reveal Text Marks

If you forget about some leftovers in your fridge for a long time, or leave some bread in its packet for ages – uh-oh – you might find your food is covered in fuzzy stuff. That’s mould.

Reveal Explainer

A) What does mould do to food?

First, I ‘look around’ the text and scan for the word mould or food, because that will help me find the right part. Now I read the sentence carefully: ‘ ...you might find your food is covered in fuzzy stuff. That’s mould..’ I can see that this tells me what mould does to food - it makes it look fuzzy, so I can ‘find and take’ this as my answer.

From: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021. Licensed under CLA. Do not copy or share.

Strategy Stop

What else could you use to answer today's question(s)?

Teach

Your Turn

A) What does mould do to food?

B) What are spores?

C) What happens to blood vessels in your mouth when you eat something cold like ice cream?

D) What might help stop an ice cream headache?

Pairedreading first
Find the answers
Text mark

Explore

Acceptable Answers

it feeds on food and grows

A) What does mould do to food?

it breaks down food

Click on the evidence to reveal acceptable answers

Practise & Apply

Acceptable Answers

B) What are spores?

Text Mark Evidence tiny particles called spores that float around in the air

tiny particles that float in the air

Click on the evidence to reveal acceptable answers

Practise & Apply

Acceptable Answers

C) What happens to blood vessels in your mouth when you eat something cold like ice cream?

they tighten when it is cold

they widen again when warm air hits them

Click on the evidence to reveal acceptable answers

Practise & Apply

Acceptable Answers

D) What might help stop an ice cream headache?

Click to reveal...

pressing your tongue to the roof of your mouth

Click on the evidence to reveal acceptable answers

Practise & Apply

Quiz Time

Start

Picture Me

Which image is the best match for ‘tiny particles’?

Which One's Right?

Which word is closest in meaning to ‘signals’?

B) noises

A) messages

C) colours

D) shapes

True or False?

Blood vessels carry air around your body.

True
False

Tick Me

What does mould look like under a microscope?

Tick one:

A) tiny cars

B) tiny trees

Check

C) tiny rocks

Click if correct

D) tiny people

Feedback: Who did what well?

FindRead Talk

EchoRead

ChoralRead

ReadingStrategy

Answers & Text Marks

Other...

To be a book lover, you could...

dive intofact books.

Reveal

Read about science, animals, history or any topic you love.

Copyright Notice

This document has been supplied under a CLA Licence with specific terms of use. It is protected by copyright and, save as may be permitted by law, it may not be further copied, stored, re-copied electronically or otherwise shared, even for internal purposes, without the prior further permission of the Rightsholder. Extracts sourced and adapted for accessibility from: First Big Book of Why by Sally Symes and Stephanie Drimmer © 2021 Schools must purchase the original text for full content.