Y05W10RC Apostrophes That Matter

This week, you are focusing on apostrophes that show ownership. In this reading, you will see how small punctuation marks can change meaning in labels and names. You will also practise reading rules, examples and reminders carefully. Look closely at how one tiny mark can make writing much clearer.

Practical / transactional — Policy/rules extract

A policy or rules extract is a short piece of writing that gives clear directions about what to do in a real situation. Writers use this kind of text to explain practical information so people can follow it correctly and understand the reason for it. You will usually see headings, bullet points, examples and short reminders grouped by topic so the information is easy to find. The language is often formal and direct because it needs to be clear rather than chatty. As you read, you should notice the rules, compare the examples and work out how small changes in punctuation affect meaning.

Before You Read

  • Read the title carefully and notice that this text is about labels, names and school items.
  • Think about how a missing apostrophe can make writing look almost the same but mean something different.
  • Look at the headings and get ready to move through rules, examples and reminders in order.

While You Read

  • Use the headings to keep track of what each section is teaching you.
  • Read each bullet slowly so you can separate the rule from the example that follows it.
  • When you see two similar word groups, compare them closely and notice what the apostrophe changes.
  • Pay attention to the formal school-office style, because it helps show that the information is meant to guide people clearly.
  • Pause at the contact line and reminders to see how the text finishes with support, not just instructions.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice how apostrophes change the meaning of names and labels.
  • Pay attention to the difference between showing ownership and showing more than one.
  • Watch for examples that make the rule clearer than the rule alone.

Now read

The rules extract

~3 min read · ~328 words

Lost Property Labels and Names Policy

Purpose

This policy explains how students and families can label school items clearly so lost property can be returned quickly. A clear label helps staff identify who owns an item. In this policy, ‘possession’ means showing that something belongs to a person, class or group. Apostrophes matter because they can change the meaning of a name label.

Rules for Common Nouns

  • Use an apostrophe to show that one thing belongs to one person or animal.
  • Example: ‘the student’s hat’ means the hat belongs to one student.
  • Example: ‘the teacher’s clipboard’ means the clipboard belongs to one teacher.
  • If an item belongs to more than one student, the apostrophe changes place.
  • Example: ‘the students’ bags’ means the bags belong to several students.

Rules for Proper Nouns

  • Use an apostrophe with a person’s name to show ownership.
  • Example: ‘Ava’s jumper’ means the jumper belongs to Ava.
  • Example: ‘Marcus’s lunch box’ means the lunch box belongs to Marcus.
  • Proper nouns are special names, such as people, schools or places.
  • A label like ‘Riverbank Primary’s sports shed’ shows that the sports shed belongs to the school.

Examples for Labels

  • Write ‘Lina’s drink bottle’ if the bottle belongs to Lina.
  • Write ‘Noah’s library bag’ if the bag belongs to Noah.
  • Write ‘Room 12’s headphones’ if the headphones belong to Room 12.
  • Do not leave the apostrophe out when you are showing ownership, because ‘students bags’ is less precise than ‘students’ bags’.
  • Do not use an apostrophe for an ordinary plural. ‘Hats’ means more than one hat. ‘Hat’s’ means something belongs to one hat, which usually does not make sense on a label.

Reminders

  • Print names neatly so staff can read them.
  • Place labels inside hats, jackets, lunch boxes and pencil cases.
  • Check labels during the term in case writing has faded.

Contact

If you need help with a lost property label, please speak with your class teacher or the front office. Staff are happy to help families use clear, accurate names on labels.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

policy n.
a set of rules or guidelines
identify v.
recognise who something belongs to
possession n.
ownership of something
precise adj.
exact and clear
plural n.
a word form showing more than one