Hi, welcome to my shop. I have over 15 years teaching experience and have enjoyed every moment of inspiration and achievement. Have a look at the different resources available, try the free stuff and get some ideas for yourself. I have tested all the resources with classes that I teach and refined them before publishing so that common misconceptions are addressed in the material or explained in the teacher notes.
Every step is explained as simply as possible without wasting time on repetition.
Hi, welcome to my shop. I have over 15 years teaching experience and have enjoyed every moment of inspiration and achievement. Have a look at the different resources available, try the free stuff and get some ideas for yourself. I have tested all the resources with classes that I teach and refined them before publishing so that common misconceptions are addressed in the material or explained in the teacher notes.
Every step is explained as simply as possible without wasting time on repetition.
Welcome… The first question: How long would it take you to organise a lesson plan for a great lesson? Here are 50 of them here covering a wide range of topics in Physics to get you started. Use them to create new lessons or breathe new ideas into your current resources.
The Word document you are getting has no protection and has been formatted using Titles, Heading 1, Heading 2, and Body text so you can edit it quickly to match your own style. This opens up the opportunity for people to share without buying it, but I would prefer to give you the option to edit freely and trust you would refer somebody to the resource. Please include this resource as a reference in the final lesson you create in accordance with copyright laws.
This set of lesson plans does not rely on a particular technology or presentation style as you will create the final resources. The level of challenge can be adjusted by the amount of help you choose to give. There are suggestions for a range of activities in each lesson and extension tasks along with assessment ideas, but how you implement them is completely up to you.
I have included a single lesson plan for ‘Simple Harmonic Motion’ so you can see it in preview as all the plans follow the same structure. You will also find the contents page so you know what topics are included.
My intention is that each teacher who uses these plans will come up with unique lessons that suits their own style of delivery and challenges students appropriately. A 104 page DOCX and PDF are provided which will allow you to copy and paste easily. That’s just over 21,000 words with each lesson plan taking up a page and a half.
I have taught for many years and developed countless lessons and projects over that time. Many of them required rewriting over time as technology and the curriculum changed. I have used lessons created by others on many occasions, but I often discovered I didn’t have access to the same resources or the level of challenge presented did not suit my students.
If you find this resource useful please leave a review to help other teachers discover it too.
Welcome… The first question: How long would it take you to organise a lesson plan for a great lesson? Here are 50 of them covering a wide range of topics in Mathematics to get you started. Use them to create new lessons or breathe new ideas into your current resources.
The Word document you are getting has no protection and has been formatted using Titles, Heading 1, Heading 2, and Body text so you can edit it quickly to match your own style. This opens up the opportunity for people to share without buying it, but I would prefer to give you the option to edit freely and trust you would refer somebody to the resource. Please include this resource as a reference in the final lesson you create in accordance with copyright laws.
This set of lesson plans does not rely on a particular presentation style as you will create the final resources to suit your classes. The level of challenge can be adjusted by the amount of help you choose to give. There are suggestions for a range of activities in each lesson and extension tasks along with assessment ideas, but how you implement them is completely up to you.
I have included a single lesson plan for ‘Understanding Probability’ so you can see it in preview as all the plans follow the same structure. You will also find the contents page so you know what topics are included.
My intention is that each teacher who uses these plans will come up with unique lessons that suits their own style of delivery and challenges students appropriately. An 84 page DOCX and PDF are provided which will allow you to copy and paste easily. That’s just over 16,000 words, with each lesson plan taking up a page to a page and a half.
I have taught for many years and developed countless lessons and projects over that time. Many of them required rewriting over time as technology and the curriculum changed. I have used lessons created by others on many occasions, but I often discovered I didn’t have access to the same resources or the level of challenge presented did not suit my students.
Wouldn’t it be nice if you could meet up with somebody at your local coffee shop and buy them a drink and a slice of lemon pie? In exchange that person has a chat with you about teaching and then gives you 50 lesson plans covering areas of the curriculum for students age 11-18. That is what I am offering here, but you don’t need to go to the shop or listen to me ramble on!
If you find this resource useful please leave a review to help other teachers discover it too.
Welcome… This is a simple example of some basic python commands that creates a basic Rock, Paper, Scissors game. The explanation lines have been commented out so you can simply copy and paste the whole document into IDLE (or similar) and see it working, or print to use as a help guide. There is plenty of scope to improve the code: Adding scoring, checking for a real choice instead of assuming a default value of ‘Scissors’, Correct the error if the user types ‘Rock’ or ‘Paper’ and lots more that I’m sure you’ll think of.
If you enjoy this free resource, please download the other ones and consider purchasing the Dungeon Escape to help support more free resources.
(If you find the resource useful, please leave a review as it helps other teachers find it)
HackDragn
Welcome… Here are 4 Help Sheets to support the programming examples up to the Dungeon Escape resource. They cover:
Help Sheet 1 - Print, Variables, Maths & Input
Help Sheet 2 - If, For, While & Random
Help Sheet 3 - Array, Modulus, Increment
Help Sheet 4 - Functions
If you find the resources useful, please leave a review to help others find it.
If you find it really useful, please consider purchasing the Dungeon Escape resource to help support all the FREE ones.
HackDragn
Hi… This is a simple example of some python commands that creates the start of a random number guessing game. The explanation lines have been commented out so you can simply copy and paste the whole document into IDLE (or similar) and see it working, or print to use as a help guide. Extension work could include adding a way to use the currently unused ‘playerScore’ variable, checking if the player gets it in 1 guess and gives a special message and lots more.
(If you find the resource useful, please leave a review as it helps other teachers find it)
HackDragn
Welcome… This is a preview of the first 3 YouTube tutorials to create a game using Scratch. The full 7 tutorials and teaching resources are also available.