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Easter Ascension Powerpoint Plus Teaching Strategies Lent Vigil Explained
Nice powerpoint on the Ascension.
Plus Teaching Strategies Lent Vigil Explained.
Vigil four parts explained.
Ramadan Resources Islam Plus other useful bits of RE planning
Nice worksheet on Ramadam.
Plus other nice bits and bobs on Islam and other religions.
Easter Lessons Through Literature Planning Powerpoints Worksheets Road To Emmaeus
Materials for teaching Easter and Jesus and his disciples.
Planning powerpoints etc.
Road to Emmaeus board game.
Year 5 Maths Investigations Nice Short Pithy Exercises
A series of short but interesting Maths investigations.
Nice worksheets for year 5 pupils.
Bits on tally charts and graphs.
Nice powerpoint on reading scales.
Year 5 Literacy Planning Roald Dahl Material Poetry Iron Man Big Write
About a months work of year 5 Literacy planning.
Some nice Roald Dahl stuff in there.
sample :
Recap on the children’s knowledge of poetry i.e. alliteration, similes, metaphors and onomatopoeia as the Iron Man is rich in poetic features. Introduce the book to the children. Highlight the cover of the book. What do you think the book will be about? Discuss with partners, share ideas with the class. Read the blurb. Why do you think the book is described as a modern fairy tale?
Introduce that the author of the book is also a poet. Share that there are many poetic features in the text that are used to describe the characters and setting e.g. similes, metaphors and onomatopoeia. The children will have to take notes of these features. Read chapter 1 to the children. Ask the children to jot descriptions of Iron Man on their whiteboards while listening to the story. Use a PowerPoint to highlight the description of Iron Man on page 1-2.The children will create a mind maps on Iron Man. They will create a description his movements, his features and his personality.
Focus: Characters
WALT : To create a description of a character from a text.
WILF:
Use of adjectives, verbs and poetic features (i.e. similes, alliteration and onomatopoeia).
Use neat handwriting. Share sentences with the class and discuss the descriptions they have created. What type of character is he? What similes are used in the text?
Numeracy Maths Year 4 Planning Angles Protractors Perimeter Area
Some nice planning and worksheets for year 4.
Nearly 3 mb of stuff.
sample plannimng :
Draw rectangles and measure and calculate their perimeters; find the area of rectilinear shapes drawn on a square grid by counting square Perimeter, names of 2d shapes
Addition
Total
Mentally adding 4 numbers (single and two digit) WALT – draw find the perimeter and area of a rectangle
WILF – accurate measurements
Knowledge of what perimeter is
Knowing what area is and how to calculate
Good mental methods
Children will know how to find the perimeter of a rectangle. Pupils will also need to be reminded of units of measure that we may need to use – mm/cm.
Target maths P82 In real life situations, when would you need to know the perimeter of something? What unit of measurement might we need for the suggested things?
Back to School Year 5 Autumn Term Mathematics 4 Groups
Some nice planning.
In 4 groups so lots of differentation.
Example :
L.O
To order positive and negative numbers and find differences between numbers
(not set) Dividing by 10,100 and 1000 quick fire questions Must: I can order sets of negative numbers Share with the children an image of a thermometer, what is it used for? What do we know about temperature? Children to mark on the thermometer temperatures they know ie body temp, boiling point etc.
Can temperature go below zero? What do we call those numbers?
Share with the children -15, -2, -20, -9 and -21. Where on the thermometer do these go? Discuss smallest to biggest ordering, which number is smaller/larger.
In pairs order a set of numbers (+ and -) L/A
Children to order sets of negative numbers. Moving on to reading temperature problems.
(activity 1-2 on pg6 NPM 6a)
Number lines/thermometer to support?
Advent powerpoint Simple Introduction Time Filler Creative Art
Simple powerpoint.
Real product has no references on it i.e. it’s clean
Reception Short Term Lesson Plans 480 page pdf Year's Planning
480 page pdf.
Lots of little ideas for lessons.
Saves a load of planning.
sample :
Listen to stories with increasing attention and recall. [L&A]
Join in with repeated refrains and anticipate key events and phrases in rhymes and stories. [L&A]
Listen to stories, accurately anticipating key events and respond to what they hear with relevant comments, questions or actions. [L&A]
Read and understand simple sentences. [R] Remind chn about traditional tales: these were not written in books, they were TOLD. People remembered them and parents told them to their chn. Show/tell chn the story of The Gingerbread Man (see resources). Encourage chn to join in with repeating line, ‘Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me, I’m the Gingerbread Man.’ At the end of the story, write these sentences on f/c and then read them through together, matching words pointed to and said.
Join in with repeated refrains and anticipate key events and phrases in rhymes and stories. [L&A]
Listen to stories, accurately anticipating key events and respond to what they hear with relevant comments, questions or actions. [L&A]
Use language to imagine and recreate roles and experiences in play situations. [S]
Express themselves effectively, showing awareness of listeners’ needs. [S] Have pictures of the characters in The Gingerbread Man (see resources). Choose diff chn to be the diff characters in the story as you act it out from start to finish. Note 3 stages of the story:
Start: Mum makes gingerbread man & he runs away
Middle: Mum/dad/cow/horse chase gingerbread man to river
End: Fox carries gingerbread man over river and tricks him! Remind chn of the repeating phrase ‘Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me, I’m the Gingerbread Man.’ Use this phrase as you act out the story.
Spring Year 6 Maths Planning 13 weeks 36 page pdf
36 page pdf.
Maths for each of 13 weeks.
sample :
LO: To reflect shapes across a horizontal or vertical mirror line.
KEY QUESTION: DO I NEED TO USE A MIRROR TO REFLECT A 2D SHAPE?
Review the term reflection with the children. How would the children reflect a simple shape like a square across a mirror line? Show the children a more complex shape. How would the children go about reflecting this shape?
Explore the use of a mirror using a large version of a shape on the working wall. If you hadn’t got access to a mirror, how would you go reflect the shape?
Focus on process of identifying vertices within shapes, counting to the mirror line.
DS: Supports Triangles during teaching.
AG: Supports Squares during teaching.
LO: To draw and reflect a shape across a 45 degree mirror line.
Show the children a shape and have them model how to reflect across a vertical and horizontal mirror line. Show them a mirror line that is set at 45 degrees. Discuss possible strategies for carrying out the task of reflecting across the mirror line. Make sure the children stay on the grid lines and follow to the mirror line, then away from the mirror line to make a right angle.
MW: target high Focus Children within teaching. Check during lesson.
LO: To reflect a shape that crossing a 45˚ mirror line.
KEY QUESTION: HOW CAN I REFLECT A SHAPE THAT CROSSES THE MIRROR LINE?
Address misconceptions from previous lesson. Give the children an enlarged version of a triangle that crosses a diagonal mirror line. As a class, identify way in which the shape can be reflected across the mirror line. Take each point and reflect across a perpendicular set of gridlines. Model the use of start and end points. Whatever is in the upper part of the mirror line needs to be in the lower, vice versa.
DS: Supports triangles during lesson.
AG: Supports Circles during lesson.
Planning Year 5 Literacy Imaginary Worlds
Three notebooks.
Two weeks of plans.
Some worksheets.
Nouns ending in a consonant and y (e.g. party, army) change y to i and add es.
Nouns ending with a vowel and y (e.g. day, boy) just add s.
Whole Class Shared Reading - Mister Monday
Read Chapters 1 - 3
S & L opportunity
Pupils will discuss what a fantasy setting is. Most will have seen or read Harry Potter for example. The theme for lots of them is that the central character enters another world but lives in a world we can all relate to.
Pupils to give their opinion. What do they think is going to happen? How do they feel about the characters
Irregular plurals:
goose, man, mouse, woman, tooth, child, person, foot
test understanding of different endings during morning work Read chapter 4
WALT: know how an author creates mood and atmosphere. Pupils will focus on a passage of text that creates mood and atmosphere. What does the author do to build tension? How does he make us empathize with the character and be interested enough to want him to be safe. CT to work with MA to encourage deep thinking about language and sentence structure
Science Year 4 Planning Friction Habitats Moving and Growing Liquids
4 nice bits of planning.
3 notebooks.
Plus powerp0ints and worksheets.
Science Year 4 Planning Friction Habitats Moving and Growing Serarating Liquids and solids
example Sorting organisms
Elicit children’s understanding of ‘plant’ and ‘animal’. Introduce the term ‘organism’ as a general term for all living things.
Obtain a list of various types of organism and arrange them on the board into loose classes, e.g. birds, mammals, reptiles, shrubs, flowers, trees, moss etc. Finish by putting the classes into either plants or animals.
Use pictures of eg vertebrates, invertebrates(animals without a backbone), humans, small flowering plants, trees and challenge children to sort them according to their own criteria and then into plants and animals. Let children choose how to record their groupings. (numbers of legs, wings, no wings, leaves, shape)
Introduce the idea of some organisms being in more than one group – show using a venn diagram.
See photocopiable – PM1 for pictures of invertebrates.
More able children – encourage to sort into sets based upon something more scientific – e.g.how the animal moves, or the shape of the plant.
Pose questions – Is it possible for an organism to have wings and not have any legs?
Identifying different habitats
Introduce children to the word ‘habitat’ using pictures to illustrate meaning. Explain the meaning of ‘habitat’. Explain that it is the natural home of plants and animals and a place which offers them food, protection and shelter.
Explain to children that they will be studying local habitats.
Go for a walk round the school and/or immediate locality to find and make a list of habitats. (Pond, school field, wooded area, grass, trees) Sketch the habitats as we travel around the school grounds. Review the final list with the children and group habitats of similar scale or diversity together eg pond, field, wood, tree, hedge, flower bed, grassy patch, plant trough, under leaf, under stone. Ask children to record the habitats identified through illustrations.
Year 1 Planning English Maths Some Religion cc
Gathered together my plans from an excellent Catholic school.
sample:
Watch the story of Rapunzel with the children http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOgZkcs72oI
Also show the pictures (thorns, tower, hair, witch etc) that are being used in the lesson on PP. Make sure that everyone is clear on what the pictures are of. Explain that today we will be using our phonic knowledge to write some of the main words in the Rapunzel story, to prepare us for our sentence writing next session. Practise with a few words.
Ask the children to recap the story of Rapunzel with a talk partner. As a class verbally retell and order the story. Fill in the story journey of Rapunzel. Discuss the order and use of time connectives and language.
Ask the children to think about where the story was set. Today we will be thinking of words that describe the tower that Rapunzel was imprisoned in and different towers. We will start by describing the tower that Rapunzel was imprisoned in. Ask the children to give suggestions of their descriptive words, CT to write them up alongside the picture. Ask children to support CT in spelling the words.
Talk to the children about good and bad characters, remind them off the goats and troll from last week. Name each of the characters, discuss if they were good or bad. Explain that we will make a wanted poster for the witch as we did for the troll last week. To prepare ourselves we will think of as many words to describe the witch as we can. Display the picture of the witch and give the chn time to think, pair and share. CT to model how to put these words into sentences.
Matilda Road Dahl Literacy Lesson Year 6 plus types of noun powerpoint
nice easy lesson.
sample:
TTYP – why do authors use descriptive vocabulary? Take feedback and jot down ideas for the working wall – elicit the idea that, as a writer, it is our job to create an image in the reader’s mind.
Show the part of ‘Matilda’ where the main character approaches Crunchem Hall for the first time. 22 min 30 to 24 min 30.
Take part in ‘Book Talk’ on this visual text:
How did we feel about Matilda when we watched her walk into the school under the arch?
How did we feel about the school buildings and environment?
What impressions have we made about Miss Trunchbull?
How were we made to feel like that?
How did the director manipulate our emotions?
Show the ‘Likes, dislikes, patterns and puzzles’ board and explain the task .
Task 1 11am-11.10am
Engaging with the visual text.
A – Australia group (Level 3a/4c): Children to fill in an individual ‘like/dislikes’ board. Children to focus particularly on the ‘patterns and puzzles’ sections. Working independently. Extension task – children to annotate a still from the film with adjectives to describe the setting.
BA – Brazil group (Level 3b/c): Miss Greenwood to support and extend. Children to fill in an individual ‘like/dislikes’ board.
SEN/BA – Mexico group (Level 2): Working with Miss Noble on a guided like/dislikes board. Extending children to talking about the atmosphere.
Main Teaching 2 10 minutes (11.10am – 11.20am)
Share some ideas from the task and explain that now we are fully immersed in the text, we are going to start to transfer the clip into a written text.
TTYP – what does ‘atmosphere’ mean? Talk and agree that it means: a feeling or mood created by a particular place. I am going to attempt to describe the setting AND the atmosphere to the reader. I am going to write in third person and past tense.
Elicit the use of the senses for a setting description.
Model write with reference to s/c and sentence trick cards.
Back to School Morning Resources Powerpoint Maths Year 4 Year 5 Set 2
Some material that can be displayed on the board as they enter for registration.
Powerpoint.
10 simple questions per day
Three weeks worth. Watermark not on full product
sample ;
Double 24.
Half of 28 is 14. What is ¼ of 28?
What is an apple likely to weigh:
1g, 10g, 100g, 1kg, 10kg?
A garden path is 10m long. Half of it is weeded, how
much is still to be weeded?
How many grams are there in 1kg?
How many 10’s are there in 265?
How many 100’s are there in 265?
Which of the following are even?
12, 9, 6, 14, 17, 5.
Read these numbers to your partner 562, 784, 90, 106.
Write these numbers in figures, two hundred and seven, six hundred and twenty six, fifty.
Back to School Africa Project year 5 Geography History Art Fun Activities
Some great planning for a project on Africa.
Best spread over a half term. A little and often
Maybe you could do an assembly?
Fun activities.
Make a mask
Make a dance
Climate and history and social science covered.
Start off with this: So how much do you really know about Africa?
Begin with a quick question and answer session on Africa to ascertain how much the class already
know, for example: Is Africa a continent or a country? Is it an island? Is the equator near Africa?
What animals do they associate with Africa?
Watch the ‘Challenge the Stereotypes’ video after going through the questions
Class Input – Has anyone been to Africa? Using a map of Africa (visualiser, cut out, atlas?) ask children to come and label the places they have been in Africa and say 3 sentences about the area.
Challenge – How many countries can children label on the map in Africa? Show students a map of Africa. Explain how it is one continent that
has 54 countries. Find the UK on the map, discuss the differences in location, size etc. Explain that they are going to be finding out about Africa and looking into its problems and their solutions over
the next half term.
Think/Pair Share: Discuss where in Africa you might go as a tourist and why? Did they know Egypt was part of Africa?
Explain to the chn that Africa is so rich in its culture that the Earth’s oldest known stone tools (2,400,000 BCE) and first known species: homo erectus (1,900,000 BCE) and humans/homo-sapiens (200,000 BCE) inhabited Africa before any other continent! So genetic evidence suggests we all originate from a species in Africa
This lesson should highlight the minimal amount we know about Africa and encourage chn to find out more about the continent, the coutries and the culture over the coming weeks.
Writing about Flashbacks Dunkirk My Uncle's War
Planning for Literacy Lesson. Pupils will focus on a soldier who was fighting at Dunkirk.
Main character
Jimmy Jones
Medic in WW2. Lovable, friendly and family orientated but also proud and doesn’t talk about his experiences during the war.
Two daughters and several grandchildren. Grandson Bobby will be in the story briefly. Present Scene
A bonfire and fireworks event at the local park. Jimmy is enjoying himself with his family. Noisy, crowded, smells of hotdogs and candyfloss, feeling his Grandson’s hand in his.
Seeing a father piggy back his children, having fun, children squealing in delight at the sparklers in their hands.
Wishing his wife was there to experience this.
Past Scene
The beaches of Dunkirk, there were explosions here too as Luftwaffe bombed the boats.
People being carried here too, carried to me as a medic. How can I help them? I have no supplies, no way of easing their pain.
Soldiers scream in pain and give up on life. Gunfire and shells all around me, the chaotic sound of warfare. A ring of flames. Smell sweat on my bloody uniform. Damp clothes. Lice crawling over my body. Trigger
The sound of wood crackling on the bonfire brings a distant memory and the sound of an exploding firework causes the flashback to begin…
Ending
Bobby ‘Daddy, what’s wrong with Grandpa?’ Jimmy’s son gently on his father’s forearm ‘Dad?’.
‘It’s nothing Son, ‘ he cleared his voice gruffly and tried to come back to the present.
Back to School Literacy Year 5 Characterisation Powerpoint
A 46 slide powerpoint that details Characterisation and contains exciting group work.
The pupils create characters using the top tips.
SATS Year 6 Revision Month's Worth Mainly Literacy
Loads of planning. Great to reinforce sats work. About a month’s work.
sample: Short Activity One
Taught session.
Use the two contrasting passages (from lesson support materials in purple Ros Wilson book). One written at L4/5 and one at L2/3. Play ‘Spot the differences’ – what makes one higher than the other?
Use to establish the idea of levels and assessment. Identify differences in punctuation, openers, connectives and vocabulary. Use to establish that these are the four features that can easily make a difference to the level of pupils’ writing.
Show the Punctuation Pyramid. If you only use a full stop, you are punctuating at level one. Name all the pieces of punctuation – pick a few of the level 4 pieces and ask how it is used – exemplify if time permits.
Short Activity 2
Taught session
Read the text ‘The Monster’ from lesson support materials.
Highlight or underline examples of the four generic targets using a colour code. Children to continue this in pairs.
Discuss the passage sharing likes and dislikes. Emphasise the suspense. How does the writer achieve it? Talk about language and punctuation.
Literature Unit THE IRON MAN by Ted Hughes - Novel Study Reading Planning
Great planning and activities on the Tron Man.
sample Introduce the book to the children. Highlight the cover of the book. What do you think the book will be about? Discuss with partners, share ideas with the class. Read the blurb. Why do you think the book is described as a modern fairy tale?
Introduce that the author of the book is also a poet. Share that there are many poetic features in the text that are used to describe the characters and setting e.g. similes, metaphors and onomatopoeia. The children will have to take notes of these features.
Read chapter 1 to the children. Ask the children to jot descriptions of Iron Man on their whiteboards while listening to the story. Use a PowerPoint to highlight the description of Iron Man on page 1-2.The children will create a mind maps on Iron Man. They will create a description his movements, his features and his personality.
Focus: Characters
WALT: To create a description of a character from a text. WILF:
Use of adjectives, verbs and poetic features (i.e. similes, alliteration and onomatopoeia).
Use neat handwriting.
Recap on previous lesson. Ask what has happened so far in the text (Chapter 1 describes Iron Man stepping off a cliff and getting his body back together. In then walks into the sea).How has the author kept our interest so far? What have you enjoyed?
Read first half of chapter two to ‘The Iron Man had gone back to the sea.’
Discuss how the boy might felt when he saw Iron Man. How might it have been different if his family didn’t believe him? Why do you think Iron Man went back to the sea? What might happen next?
WALT: To create a description of a character and their actions.
Identify and discuss powerful verbs, adjectives and adverbs which describe the Iron Man’s movement. Create a mind map of those from the text and other suggestions.
Mind map to include similes.
Task: Children are to create a ‘Wanted’ poster for the Iron Man.
They give a detailed account of his description (using similes and metaphors.) They also must provide details for why he is wanted, listing crimes committed, reward, contact number etc.