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Free teaching resources from HarperCollins Children's Books, publisher of timeless classics such as The Chronicles of Narnia and The Hobbit, as well as perennial family favourites like Judith Kerr’s The Tiger who Came to Tea and Michael Bond's Paddington. HarperCollins Children's Books is also home to some of the most popular authors in children’s literature today, including David Walliams, Derek Landy, Michael Morpurgo, Louise Rennison and Oliver Jeffers.

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Free teaching resources from HarperCollins Children's Books, publisher of timeless classics such as The Chronicles of Narnia and The Hobbit, as well as perennial family favourites like Judith Kerr’s The Tiger who Came to Tea and Michael Bond's Paddington. HarperCollins Children's Books is also home to some of the most popular authors in children’s literature today, including David Walliams, Derek Landy, Michael Morpurgo, Louise Rennison and Oliver Jeffers.
David Walliams Bad Dad Dilemma and Debate
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David Walliams Bad Dad Dilemma and Debate

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(a) Choose a dilemma faced by one of the characters. Think about the different perspectives – what should the character do? What are the pros and cons? What might happen if they make a decision either way? Hold a debate with a group of friends to discuss the dilemma. Make a decision about what the character should do. Make notes about your final advice to the character. (b) Dilemma and Debate Grid
David Walliams Bad Dad Film Storyboard
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David Walliams Bad Dad Film Storyboard

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(a) Use the storyboard sheet to show the story of Bad Dad. Either draw or make notes in each section. Imagine you are planning on turning the written story into a film and you need to plan the scenes. (b) Storyboard grid
David Walliams Bad Dad Banger Racing Fact File
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David Walliams Bad Dad Banger Racing Fact File

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(a) Create a fact file on Banger Racing. Use information from the story, research from the Internet or library books as well as your own imagination. When you have made your fact file, you could use the information to make a leaflet, a website or a presentation to teach others about Banger Racing. (b) Plan and research your fact file here:
Oliver Jeffers Here We Are Kindness
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Oliver Jeffers Here We Are Kindness

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1. People are all different, but all people have feelings. Being kind to others is very important. But what does being kind mean and what does it look like? 2. NAMES OF CHILDREN IN THE CLASS & SOMETHING KIND TO SAY ABOUT EACH PERSON. 3. Kindness Poster
Oliver Jeffers Here We Are: Survival
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Oliver Jeffers Here We Are: Survival

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Taking inspiration from OliverJeffers' picture book Here We Are: Notes for Living on Planet Earth, a group activity on human survival. Children are encouraged to think about the items they NEED to live on Planet Earth and the items they WANT, helping them distinguish between the two.
Oliver Jeffers Here We Are Constellations
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Oliver Jeffers Here We Are Constellations

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A constellation is a group of stars that make an imaginary shape in the night sky. In different parts of the world, people have made up different shapes out of the same group of stars. It is like a game of connecting the dots. They are often named after mythological characters, people, animals and objects.
Oliver Jeffers Here We Are Stars
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Oliver Jeffers Here We Are Stars

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There are roughly 10,000 stars that are visible to our human eyes. However, only a few hundred stars have been given proper names in the history of astronomy. Play a guessing game with a friend. Look at all the words in the grid. Can you guess which ones are the names of star constellations? Draw a star next to the names you think will be the true constellation names. Then research each name and tick off the correct answers. The winner is the person who guessed the most correct answers.
Scarlet and Ivy: Mystery Story Writing
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Scarlet and Ivy: Mystery Story Writing

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Here is some more developed thinking about what can be found in a mystery story (some of these points may overlap with your earlier ideas). a) Tick any number of the ones you agree with and add more to the list if you can. b) With support from the points on the previous page, use the following line, taken from ‘Ivy and Scarlet, The Lost Twin’, to open your own mystery writing scene. Then in no more than 500 words either produce an entirely new opening to a story or a scene from the middle of a story.
Scarlet and Ivy: Diary Writing
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Scarlet and Ivy: Diary Writing

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Either: Write your own diary extracts, written in a chatty informal style using the first person ‘I’, based on some of your own school highlights – you plan to hide this secret diary hidden in a disused locker knowing it will not be found for many years. Or: Write some extracts of Scarlet’s diary written at Rosemoor Asylum for Young females. To help set a sense of place if you are writing as Scarlet (80 years ago) as a prisoner in an Asylum, look at the rough map Scarlet could have managed to draw based on what she can see from her tiny room, other rooms she has been taken to and sounds that she could have heard.
Scarlet and Ivy: Significant Moments in the Story
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Scarlet and Ivy: Significant Moments in the Story

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With a partner work on the graph below: 1. To begin this work you first of all need to discuss how you both feel about Ivy and Scarlet in each of the situations taken from the novel that are presented in the boxes. 2. Looking at your result do you empathise with one of the twins more than the other? Why do you think that is?