TEACHER GUIDE
The Fox And The Star
Written and illustrated by Coralie Bickford-Smith
Review link:the-fox-and-the-star/ /
Suits: / R / Y1 / Y2 / Y3 / Y4 / Y5 / Y6 / Y7 / Y8 / Y9
Notes: I have suggested younger years for this book although I believe its ability to be used to comfort children and teach lessons of loss, grief and hope can be extended up into older ages, particularly when used for P4C.
English
  • Poetry: topics could include stars, foxes, nocturnal animals, forests, night time, friendship, loneliness or loss. Children could create shape poetry, emulating pages of the book
  • Stories: The __ And The __. Children write their own stories using different nocturnal animals and objects such as The Hedgehog And The Moon
  • Diaries: from the fox’s point of view through the story
  • Letters: write to the fox to comfort him or write to the author
  • Non-chronological reports: fact files about different nocturnal animals or animals/plants from a forest habitat. Children could write fact files about stars and the night sky. Fact files for different fox species
  • Drama: freeze frames of the most important moments, thought tracking showing the development of the fox’s emotions
/ Maths
  • Shape: different shapes created from star constellations
  • Measurement: how tall the trees in the forest are. Volume of rain water during a storm
  • Word problems: number problems using forest creatures such as beetles and rabbits
  • Grid references: plot grid references to create different star constellations
  • Data handling: interpreting graphs and charts with data about nocturnal animals. Sort creatures into nocturnal / diurnal or by habitat using Venn / Carroll diagrams
  • Area & perimeter: measuring the size of the forest or Fox’s den
/ Science
  • Animals: distinguish between nocturnal and diurnal animals; how they are adapted; look at habitats and which animals live there at different times of day; food chains and webs; prey and predators and their adaptations; fox life cycles; different species of fox
  • Habitats: forest habitats; different types of forest; different types of plants; life cycle of trees and plants; what trees need to live
  • Space: learn about what stars are and why we can see them
  • Light: sources of light; how light travels; why some animals can see in the dark; how the eye works; how shadows are formed; compare the moon and stars
  • Materials: which materials come from a forest; what can be made from wood; renewable and non-renewable products; recycling
  • Make a clinometer

History
  • Learn how old different trees in local area are. There is a useful conversion chart at the link below that uses tree girth to estimate its age dependant on species:
  • What was happening through the life of an old tree? Track famous trees e.g. learn about the Romans in Britain with a link to Sycamore Gap in Hadrian’s Wall
  • Local trees with links to history
/ Geography
  • Different forest habitats around the world: compare a local woodland with a contrasting forest as well as the creatures and plants found there
  • Where in the world could this story be set?
  • Where in the world do foxes live and how have they adapted to life in different countries?
  • Stars in different hemispheres and which ones you see according to season and why this happens
/ Music
  • Compose music to sound like the rain or to represent the stars
  • Make a forest soundscape
  • Create music to represent the different emotions of the fox through the story
  • Create contrasting day time and night time music – is night time always scary?
  • Listen to animal sounds from day and night time

Art
  • Forest art work
  • Create pictures in the style of the illustrator, Coralie Bickford-Smith
  • Illustrate their own adapted stories e.g. The Hedgehog and The Moon
  • Artwork using negative space
  • Lino print beetles or rabbits
  • Hidden creature artwork like the rabbit art
  • Underground art work to show animals in their dens
  • Painting using bright colour or muted colour/black & white as a way of demonstrating emotion in an image
/ DT
  • Materials and products we get from trees
  • Woodwork project
  • Tie-dye space and star scenes
  • Sewing fox characters
  • Create 3D story diorama
/ Citizenship
  • Importance of friendship; how having a friend can help us; who we rely on and why; people who help us feel better
  • Dealing with loss and loneliness
  • Understanding why the fox felt so sad and scared without the star; children link this to their own real experiences
  • How we can make ourselves feel better when we feel scared or alone
  • Celebrating beautiful moments in life
  • How can we recognise if somebody feels sad? What can we do to help them?

PE
  • Tag Rugby: link this to rabbits and foxes
  • Hawks and blackbirds: adapt this game to rabbits and foxes. There are lots of explanations online but the premise is that the rabbits must collect a food source, which makes them and any unattended young vulnerable to attack from the foxes. Habitats can change to make this harder/easier for the two species
/ Computing
  • Leafsnap: a fantastic app that allows you to take a photo of a leaf and it will identify the tree and give you more information and images
  • Scratch: create a fox vs rabbit game or a game where the fox has to search through a forest to find a star
  • Create fact file leaflets for different animals or Science topics studied
  • Create spreadsheets and graphs to represent data found in different subjects
/ Languages
  • Learn animal and habitat vocabulary in a different language – you could link this to the language spoken in the country of your contrasting forest study in Geography