In this lesson, children will learn about the Palaeolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic Stone Age. They will understand how humans evolved over this period and facts such as what they lived in and what they ate. They will complete a short quiz on what they have learnt and be tasked to create their own timelines of the period until modern day with date cards.
All resources for this lesson are provided.
This lesson is intended for KS2 but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
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In this lesson students will learn how to find percentages of amounts and then how to problem solve with these.
Worksheet and answers provided.
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In this lesson, students will learn to use the column multiplication method, they will will practise this along with how to approach word problems.
The activity is a game in which students move around the board in a group, picking up word problems and completing them as they try to reach the finish line! Mastery concepts such as completing missing multiplication calculations are given as a challenge as well as higher-level problem solving.
This lesson is appropriate for Year 5/6 students.
3 levels of differentiation provided in the problems to play with the game as well as answer sheets.
Duration: 1-2 hours.
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In this lesson/s, students will revisit changing fractions into a common denominator and will then add or subtract them. They will have an opportunity to practise this skill before moving onto completing problems which require them to use their understanding of adding and subtracting fractions in context.
This lesson is appropriate for Year 6 students but can easily be modified to suit Year 5 or Year 7 students.
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In this lesson, students will learn how to divide proper fractions by whole numbers. They will be shown visual examples to help their understanding and will learn the switch and multiply method.
They will then complete a range of questions and a number of word problems on the worksheet provided. By the end of the lesson they should be confident understanding how they are used in different contexts and the methods to apply.
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In this lesson, students will work towards the objective: associate a fraction with division and calculate decimal fraction equivalents for a simple fraction.
They will first learn how to convert a fraction to a decimal using the short division method and will then convert a decimal to a fraction by multiplying by 100. They will have a number of differentiated conversions to complete to consolidate the skill and then will complete differentiated problems. These problems can be printed out and used as cards on tables.
LA/ HA & MA activity cards provided with answers are provided.
Duration: 1 hour
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In this lesson, students will identify prime numbers to 100 and complete problems which require them to use their understanding of prime numbers in context.
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These differentiated planning sheets can be used to help students plan their holiday recounts.
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A useful tool to support children when describing their characters. It covers physical traits and personality traits and can be printed as a display or as a useful hand out.
The Hobbit, or There and Back Again is a children’s fantasy novel by English author J. R. R. Tolkien. The Hobbit is set within Tolkien’s fictional universe and follows the quest of home-loving Bilbo Baggins, the titular hobbit.
This lesson looks at Tolkien’s narrative styles of writing: ‘All-knowing’, ‘Intrusive narrator’ and ‘expert giving information’. Students identify examples from the text and think about their effect on the reader.
Students identify his styles specifically in chapter 3 (text extracts provided) and then attempt to replicate his narrative styles in their own stories.
They
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Journalistic writing is the style of writing used to report news stories in newspapers, television broadcasts, on radio and on the Internet. This is a supportive resource to use when studying journalistic writing.
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The two resources give examples of possible questions that can be asked to help develop children’s comprehension skills. They link to the AF’s and are useful for any fiction or non-fiction material.
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In this lesson, students will be supported planning and writing their own stories. They will review the story mountain structure and how best to begin a story.
Plans for describing characters, settings and the plot are provided as well as a self-assessment grid for use upon completion.
This lesson is intended for KS2 but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
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In this lesson, students will look at examples of persuasive writing and identify the persuasive devices used using the acronym FREDEPTORS easily remembered by the fictional character- Mr Fredeptor:
F- facts and statistics
R- repetition
E- exaggeration
D- description
E- emotive language
P- personal pronouns
T- the rule of three
O- opinions
R- rhetorical questions
S- summary
They will look at analyse example texts discussing their target audience also.
This lesson is suitable to KS2 children but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
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In this lesson, students will learn to identify the value of the digits in a number, write numbers in words and partition them according to place value. The learning is put into context as students research famous landmarks and write numerical facts about them and they complete problems related to the objective.
Simply follow this presentation to cover the objective in a fun and engaging way. A lesson plan is not provided as it is expected that classes will move through the presentation at their own speed.
3 differentiated worksheets are provided with answers.
Duration: 1 hour
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Power point presentations and correlating worksheets for 1-2 weeks of place value with Year 6’s.
These lessons cover the national curriculum objectives:
-read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10 000 000 and determine the value of each digit
-round any whole number to a required degree of accuracy
-use negative numbers in context, and calculate intervals across zero
-solve number and practical problems that involve all of the above
Simply follow these presentations to cover all of the objectives in a fun and engaging way! all worksheets are differentiated and worksheets are provided.
The numerator and denominator of a fraction are called its terms. If we simplify a fraction, then we are reducing it to lowest terms. Reducing a fraction to lowest terms will not change its value; the reduced fraction will be an equivalent fraction.
In this lesson, students will learn how to reduce a fraction to its simplest form using factors. They will carry out a number of simplifying fraction tasks, including problem solving with fractions and word problems, and BINGO.
By the end of the lesson, they will be confident knowing how to simplify a fraction and will have an understanding of when we might simplify fractions in real life.
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