We had a trial afternoon in December before starting in January for reception. We were making a toilet roll Father Christmas which included us tracing round pieces and cutting them out. I accidentally cut out two left hands, went to do a right hand and did another left, and thought I might be in trouble so I hid it.
We were allowed to paint the windows one day. We were meant to be doing flowers, but I wasn't very good at painting, so I did some grass round my friend's flower and admired her painting, which was much better than mine.
Our first assembly, I can't remember what it was about, but we were all put in groups and made an animal mask. Mine was an elephant. We then were meant to say, I think it was a rhyming couplet about the animal, and were shown how to make eye contact and try to speak all together. My group all dried, and despite me trying to get them to speak, they all stayed silent, so eventually I said it extra loud to make up for them not saying it.
In the morning we were meant to write a sentence and draw a picture and do some maths, about 10 questions which I found ridiculously easy. One day I'd spent a lot of effort in doing the most wonderful sentence and drawing with it and had taken much of the morning. I was just finishing when the teacher (Mrs Burns) said "now you need to pack away your work. Everyone should be onto the maths by now. Table at the back go to wash your hands first."
One of the girls as she walked past said "you're going to be in trouble, you haven't started your maths". And I replied, "I'll have finished it before you've washed your hands". And I did. Seeing her face as she walked back and saw I'd finished was very funny.
The little milk bottles with the red straw and the feeling of importance the week you were "milk monitor".
The "big" girls from year 6 coming to play on the infant playground with us and singing "in and out the dusty bluebells".
Someone donated a huge box of (sweet) lollipops to the school, and we were told we could have one each, but it meant no running at playtime. Dm never let us have sweets if possible and this was amazing. We all sat round the edge of the playground sucking while a few of the boys who decided sitting still wasn't worth it ran races in the middle.