A block of 6 VIPERS style lessons aimed at a KS1 Y2 class
Please note - this is designed to be used with the chapter book version of the story by Jill Tomlinson.
Lesson 1 - To write adjectives and nouns to describe things in the hotel
Lesson 2 - To write sentences with regular and irregular verbs about what Bear did at the hotel
Lesson 3 - To write a review about his stay at hibernation hotel using nouns, verbs and adjectives
2 worksheets based around the book Beegu
1 mini booklet designed to be used to create a guide to earth to help Beegu see all the nice things about living here e.g. going to the park, birthday parties, swimming etc.
Intended for Year 2
Useful for practicing suffixes NESS and MENT
Suggested use: give children wordsearch first, then either gap fill sheet, children use the words found to complete worksheet, matching root word to suffix sheet as extension
Similar to another spelling lesson I have for sale.
Cut out words (or let independent children cut them out) and children work in groups to complete activities.
I finished off my lesson with a spelling bee!
How do you make spelling fun? I asked myself and came up with this!
How I used it:
Input 5 spelling rules
Mixed ability groups of about 3-4 pupils
Cut up words and put them in envelopes
Children work through the words and sort them into the categories
some words don’t fit the spelling rules and therefore go in the bin section of worksheet
Blow sheet up to A3
I then finished off the lesson with a spelling bee competition - great assessment tool and they loved it!!
I created this resource as part of a carousel of homophone activities.
The children in my class LOVED this; it encouraged problem solving, group work and thinking logically about homophones.
I printed the cards onto coloured paper, laminated them and cut them out. Children used whiteboard pens to fill in the missing word.
Great fun and is a great way to make homophones fun!!
I created this worksheet as part of a carousel of homophone activities done during an afternoon ‘SPAG made fun!’ lesson.
There are 7 questions and is at least one mistake on each.
Children enjoyed telling me I got it all wrong and worked well to correct the teacher!
Lots of fun.