I work in KS2 and love creating engaging lessons and resources for my children, as well as making my classroom a happy and positive learning environment!
I work in KS2 and love creating engaging lessons and resources for my children, as well as making my classroom a happy and positive learning environment!
A 3-4 week unit based on the book ‘The Egyptian Cinderella’. Great cross curricular links to Ancient Egypt.
The final outcome is the children writing their own traditional tale set in a different culture.
Follows the T4W approach of immitation/innovation.
Includes:
-T4W/story map to learn the text
-Boxing up the text/five-part story structure
Inverted commas for dialogue
Paragraphs
Comprehension (ERIC)
Similes
Fronted Adverbials
Complex sentences (FANBOYS)
Writing a story opening, build up, problem, resolution and ending
My children loved learning about this story and writing their own traditional tales.
A short poetry unit which we are using to start off our WWII history topic.
Looking at some example war poems including ‘Flanders Fields’, ‘Christmas Truce’, ‘The Wound In Time’, ‘High Flight’ & ‘A Gunner’s Day’.
COLD TASK - Write a poem about Life in Lockdown
LI: To analyse and comment on a poem. (ERIC)
LI: To use a thesaurus to find antonyms and synonyms.
LI: To use similes and metaphors.
LI: To use personification for effect.
LI: To plan and write a poem.
LI: To edit and perform a poem.
COLD TASK - Narrative
Two week unit based on ‘Ning Nang Nong’ but a Stone Age take on the poem.
Main focus is on language - prepositional phrases, noun phrases, rhyme. Touches on onomatopoeia/alliteration when looking at features - this could be expanded and be two separate lessons if you wanted to make the unit longer.
We’ve used this as a stepping stone to historical fiction.
Cold task - writing a poem based on The Stone Age
Learn ‘On a Grassy Hill’ - story map
Identifying key features
Noun phrases
Prepositional phrases
Rhythm and rhyme (creatiing a whole-class rhyming dictionary)
Planning a poem (with scaffold)
Writing Stone Age poem
Perform poem to class.
Each day there is a ‘teacher slide’ to explain each lesson.
All resources included.
PLEASE NOTE: I do not have PPT on my mac. I have copied the pages from the Smart Notebook file onto Keynote and have exported this into ppt. I therefore do not know what the formatting is like in this format.
-This works best if you are able to use the Notebook file-
8 lessons focusing on WWII poetry.
This is used with my Year Sixes but could work across KS2.
Starters range from games to recapping nouns, synonyms and expanded noun phrases.
Additional handwriting agreement lesson included.
Lessons include:
LI: To write a piece of poetry (cold task)
LI: To explore a range of poems.
LI: To use a thesaurus to find synonyms and antonyms.
LI: To explore and use figurative language.
LI: To class write a poem.
LI: To plan a WWII inspired poem.
LI: To write a WWII inspired poem.
LI: To publish and perform a poem.
Please note these lessons are in SMARTnotebook format. I have also included a PDF version of the slides.
Unit of work aimed at Year Three - time.
Differentiated resources for each lesson and lots of opportunity for AFL/talk partner work.
Unit starts with a cold task that can be repeated at the end of the unit.
Children make their own clocks at the start of the unit to help build familiarity.
Before each lesson is a teacher slide with information about each lesson. Lots of extra activities and further extensions/probing questions. :)
Cold Task – Time
LI: To know the number of seconds in a minute and the number of days in each month and year.
Success Criteria:
-I know how many minutes are in an hour.
-I can calculate how many hours in a week.
-I can calculate how many days in a month.
LI: To estimate a period of time.
Success Criteria:
-I know what estimate means.
-I can make relevant estimations.
I can justify my reasoning.
LI: I can create and label a clock.
Success Criteria:
-I can label the hands on a clock.
-I know what the marking on a clock are.
-I can represent given times on my clock.
LI: To read and write the time to quarter of the hour.
Success Criteria:
-I know how many minutes are in one hour.
-I can recognise quarter past and quarter to on a clock.
I know that the small hand is the hour hand.
I know that the long hand is the minute hand.
LI: To tell and show the time to the nearest minute using analogue clocks.
Success Criteria:
-I know what the different numbers and hands represent.
-I can explain whether it is ‘past’ or ‘to’.
-I can show the correct time on an analogue clock.
LI: To read and show time on 12-hour and 24-hour clocks.
Success Criteria:
-I know there are 24 hours in a day.
-I know that digital time has hours first, then minutes.
-I can explain what time is shown on a digital clock.
LI: To convert between digital and analogue clocks.
Success Criteria:
-I know the difference between analogue and digital.
-I can explain how to convert between different clocks.
I can successfully read different clock faces.
LI: To solve problems involving time.
Success Criteria:
-I know what the word problem is asking me to do.
-I can use a number line to see how much time has elapsed.
-I can carefully check my answers.
LI: To solve problems involving time.
Success Criteria:
-I can read a timetable.
-I can answer simple questions.
-I can use a number line to solve problems.
A short one week unit looking at diary entries inspired by Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone.
This could be expanded by using separate lessons to draft and then write their entries and then an extra lesson to edit and ‘publish’.
Aimed at KS2, went down a hit with my Year Six class.
Lessons include:
Cold task - To write a diary entry.
To explore the features of a diary entry.
To explore a characters thoughts and feelings.
To write a setting description
Hot task - To plan and write a diary entry.
Files include the Smart Notebook file, a pdf version of these slides, an example diary entry, unit targets for cold and hot tasks.
Drawing inspiration from Letters from the Lighthouse and Goodnight Mr Tom, the outcome of this unit is to write a story containing a flashback.
LI: To write a story with a flashback (cold task)
LI: To investigate and use a range of fronted adverbials.
LI: To write a story opening.
LI: To evoke an emotive response through my writing.
LI: We are accurately punctuating dialogue.
LI: To write a flashback.
LI: To create a character description (missing person poster)
LI: To plan a story with a flashback.
LI: To draft a story with a flashback.
LI: To edit and improve my work.
LI: To publish my work.
Work format is as a smart notebook file. I have provided a PDF of the slides also.
Harry Potter themed tray labels.
Including resources, subjects & blank ones. Perfect to be laminated to be used time and time again.
PDF format means they are ready to print and go!
A Year Five unit of work on quest stories inspired by Beowulf. (We used a short copy in class as our model text, and read the book by Michael Morpurgo alongside the unit). Three weeks worth of lessons as we used two lessons to write the story, one to edit and improve, and one to write a final copy.
Please note For two of the lessons, one on dialogue and one on character description, I used Twinkl PPTs (NOT included) so a Twinkl subscription is beneficial, however you can always just add to the slides.
Lesson objectives as below…
LI: To write a story with an imaginary creature. (cold task)
LI: To memorise a text to help support my writing. (T4W)
LI: To understand the meaning, structure and features of a story.
LI: To identify the 5 part story structure.
LI: To write different story openings using description, action and dialogue. x2
LI: To develop a character description. x2 (TWINKL PPT ON SUPERLATIVE/COMPARATIVE)
LI: To create atmosphere through my use of language.
LI: To use dialogue in my writing. (INVERTED COMMAS PPT)
LI: To plan a quest story.
LI:To write a quest story.
LI: To edit and improve a quest story.
The slides are a Smart Notebook file, not a PPT.
There is also a PDF version of the slides but this is, of course, not editable.
Topic overview and three weeks worth of plans for ‘All About Me’ unit.
Covers the different Early Learning Outcomes.
Mathematics, EAD, PSED, Physical, Communication and Language, Literacy/Phonics, Understanding the World.
Fun activities and ideas and engaging adult led activities.
A set of lessons for DT explaining how to design, make and paint canopic jars.
Includes: looking at patterns, shapes of jars and colours the Ancient Egyptians used.
Making a jar using papermache and mod roc.
Painting the jar.
Super, hands on lessons inspiring creativity. Goes well after looking at the mummification process!
‘Tweet about your learning’.
Fantastic as an end of unit summary or stuck on a class noticeboard for children to add to during the week to celebrate the weeks learning and achievements.
Available as editable word document or ready to print PDF.
A unit exploring flashbacks within stories, drawing inspiration from the Harry Potter books.
Taught to our Year Sixes as a three week unit.
Lessons include:
Cold Task - Write a story with a flashback
To define and identify a flashback
To write a flashback
To write sentences containing relative clauses.
To use a range of adverbials.
To plan my own pensive memory.
To write an example story opening.
To accurately punctuate dialogue.
To explore the language and techniques used within the Harry Potter books (ERIC/reading comp task)
To include emotive language and memories.
To include emotive language and memories.
To plan a story opening.
To write a story.
To present my work in a different way/to edit.
Aimed at Year Three, this Instructions unit is based on T4W’s ‘How to Build A Pyramid’.
It includes learning the text, boxing up, experimenting with different instructions (I used examples of Twinkl instructions, but you could just google ‘origami instructions’ and see what comes up.
Includes:
Prepositions,
Time conjunctions,
Inperative verbs,
Introduction,
Exploring different instructions,
Memorising a text,
Planning/Writing.
MTP contains key objectives and some notes.
Notebook has slides, learning intentions and content, resources included.
‘Teacher Noticeboard’ lettering - Harry Potter/Daily Prophet themed.
Includes ‘messages’ and ‘to do’ list sheets, perfect for laminating and popping on your noticeboard next to a dry wipe marker!
Inside Out inspired emotions thermometer.
Great to use for all ages.
Relatable characters great to help the children pin point how they are feeling and start to use the language of different emotions.
anger, disgust, fear, sadness & joy.
Emotion labels, thermometer and arrow. Great to be laminated and placed on a desk or wall.
A fun way to end the week and encourages the children to reflect on the week/their learning and set a target for the following week.
Slips could go home at the end of the day as a discussion point, stay in the classroom to be referred to or recycled!