In this lesson students will learn the difference between direct and indirect speech. They will identify this in a newspaper report and write their own version of a newspaper report using both versions of speech.
This lesson is one of a block of lessons on journalistic writing. To view these please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-12170817
In this lesson, students will learn about the baby, toddler and child stage of the human life cycle.
They will be tasked to observe younger children in their school setting and give recommendations of how to support development using what they have learnt from the lesson and caregivers. Finally, they will create a leaflet for new parents on what to expect from their children age 0-10 and how they can help support development.
This lesson is 1/5 on Animals including Humans. To view the other lessons, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou/Primary science
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 that reproduction means to have babies or offspring and every animal, including humans, reproduce and have offspring. They will recap the six animal groups and look at characteristics of each before looking at how each group reproduces and comparing between. They will be quizzed on their understanding and knowledge retained before being tasked to write their own script for a nature programme which they can then record using what they have learnt.
This lesson is 1/5 on Living Things and Their Habitats, Year 5. To view the other lessons, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou/Primary science
“The Highwayman” is a narrative poem written by Alfred Noyes, first published in 1906. It tells the story of an unnamed highwayman who is in love with Bess, a landlord’s daughter.
In this lesson, students will write a diary entry from the perspective of a character. They will first look at the features of a diary and then look at WABOLLs (What a bad one looks like) and WAGOLLs (What a good one looks like). With the WAGOLL they will highlight it according to the features of a diary (example given).
Then they will ‘hot seat’ different characters from the poem to better understand their perspectives before writing their own diary entry using the writing frame provided.
This lesson is intended for KS2 but could be modified to suit KS3. This lesson is part of a sequence of 7 lessons on The Highwayman.
In this lesson, students will learn about the different Greek civilisations over time such as the Minoans, Mycenaean, Classical Age and Hellenistic period. They will learn how Greece was divided into individual city states but was one civilisation. They will then compare this to Greece today.
Their task will then be to order the key events of the Greek period on the timeline given and pick one event in particular to research in detail and present to the class.
Through teaching this lesson, students will gain a clear insight into Ancient Greek civilisation and will understand key moments in it’s history.
This lesson is intended for KS2 but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
In this lesson, students will understand what different narrative genres there are and will be tasked to guess the genre from the extract given. They will then learn what the different parts to a story are and what are the seven basic plots they can choose from. Finally, they will develop their own ideas for a story from the questions posed.
This is the first in a 5 lesson sequence on story writing. The following lessons are:
Setting description
Planning story structure
Character description
Writing and reviewing stories
All of the lessons include an engaging presentation and the relevant resources.
This lesson is appropriate for KS2 children but can easily be modified to suit KS1- KS3 students.
A help sheet to support children identify and use prepositions in their writing.
If you would like to see some of my other resources, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou
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 is based on The Hobbit, Chapter 2. It looks at the rules for speech punctuation and how to alter speech according to different characters. Students will add in the correct speech punctuation to an extract as well as write the dialogue for a clip of the trolls.
A great lesson for studying speech and/ or the novel.
This lesson is one of a sequence of lessons on the Hobbit. These lessons can be found here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/classic-fiction-the-hobbit-complete-teaching-sequence-12170346
This resource can either be displayed in the classroom or children can stick it into their books to remind them of the Golden Rules when answering comprehension questions.
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In this pack of activities, you will get the following task sheets in a 26 page booklet!
All about ‘me’ activity sheets
General getting to know my class and classroom sheets
Maths from Year 4 recap
Science topics from Year 4 recap
English- holiday recount writing
Art task to sketch a portrait of your partner
DT teamworking task to build a structure using spaghetti and marshmallows
Geography local area research task
History ordering dates on a timeline
This supportive resource will help students understand how to accurately write and punctuate speech.
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In this lesson, children look at poetic devices used- expanded noun phrases, onomatopoeia, alliteration and powerful verbs (examples are given). In pairs/ small groups, they then highlight the use of poetic devices in the poem on the printed sheet. As a class then discuss their use and the effect they have on the poem and the reader. The children then learn the poem off-by-heart considering rhythm, volume and expression.
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A supportive resource for building tension and suspense in writing.
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During this lesson students will learn to identify and calculate the radius, diameter and circumference of a circle. They will then complete a number of reasoning and problem solving questions on circles.
Worksheet provided with answers.
Duration: 1 hour
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This is an excellent resource to help students structure their stories. It follows the Story Mountain structure of opening- build up- problem- resolution and ending as well as giving prompts for what to include at each stage. Word document included also if you wish to edit.
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.
Comparing and ordering fractions is an essential part of developing number sense.
In this lesson, students will first compare fractions using bar modelling, then they will be taught how to compare fractions by expressing them in the same denominator and they will also look at how expressing fractions in the same numerator can be useful also.
This comprehensive resource clearly explains the methods in the engaging presentation and comes with activities to practise these methods. It finishes off with a range of problem solving activities to help consolidate the methods and apply the concept to real life.
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In this lesson, students will learn what square and cube numbers are, recognise relationships and patterns between them and problem solve using what they know in context.