13 slide presentation on properties of 3D Shapes comparing them to real life objects.
Title Page
Differences between 2D and 3D shapes
Properties of 3D shapes - Faces, Edges and vertex (vertices).
Cube
Cuboid
Cylinder
Triangular Prism
Sphere
Cone
Square based pyramid
Triangular based pyramid
Hexagonal Prism
Overview of all shapes slide
Each slide discussing a shape has the 3D shape and it’s properties (which appear on click). They also contain an example of each 3D shape in real life.
I have also included 2 worksheets (one for lower ability and one for higher ability). Both worksheets are available in PDF and Word document for editing if required.
All resources designed by a fully qualified Graphic Designer (BScHons) with a PGCE in education.
I have combined material for 2 lessons on 2D shapes.
The first presentation talks about and identifies properties of 2D shapes including: edges (curved or straight), corners, symmetry, right angles and the key points of quadrilateral shapes. It is a visually stunning PowerPoint which helps to keep children engaged.
With this lesson I have included 2 worksheets. One for lower ability (LA) and one for higher ability (HA). Both worksheets ask children to gather data on the properties of 2D shapes.
The second PowerPoint looks at sorting 2D shapes into venn diagrams as well as a brief introduction on how to draw 2D shapes.
The worksheets included for this presentation are venn diagrams which need to be sorted. One for LA and one for HA.
Preview available on YouTube : https://youtu.be/Hh1YCzcJyfw
A fantastic resource which helps children visualise halves and quarters. This PowerPoint has a uniquely fun way of demonstrating halves and quarters to your class. It relates halves to the 2 times tables, quarters to the four times tables and allows for plenty of input from the children…all the while giving you the educator complete control of the lesson.
The lesson takes children on a journey as Shaggy and Scooby work out how to share cupcakes and pizzas between them with special guests Tom and Jerry.
I’m a fully qualified graphic designer (BSc Hons) with a PGCE in Primary education. You won’t believe what I have achieved with this PowerPoint - creating resources are my strong point!
I only ask that you leave me an honest review. The fonts I used are embedded to the ppt, therefore you’ll have no issues viewing it.
Here I have made 3 visually stunning PowerPoints to help you with the alphabet and phonics revision. These PowerPoints give you the educator complete control of how you deliver them as well as allowing opportunities for children to engage.
Each PowerPoint consists of 27 slides: A title slide and one for each of the 26 letters in the alphabet.
The 3 PowerPoints are titled as follows;
The Alphabet
The Alphabet_Only Uppercase
The Alphabet_Only Lowercase
Within PowerPoint 1 “The Alphabet”, each slide requires 5 clicks from the teacher;
Click 1 - shows the uppercase letter in a large precursive font at the top of the slide. e.g. ‘A’.
Click 2 - shows the lowercase letter in a large precursive font at the top of the slide. e.g. ‘a’.
Click 3 - shows a stunning clipart of something beginning with that letter (a list of the 26 items I selected are at the bottom of this description. e.g. an apple.
Click 4 - Shows the name of the clipart with an uppercase beginning letter. e.g. ‘Apple’.
Click 5 - Shows the name of the clipart with a lowercase beginning letter. e.g. ‘apple’.
The subsequent two slideshows (‘The Alphabet_Only Uppercase’ & ‘The Alphabet_Only Lowercase’) are identical however they only show either uppercase letters or lowercase letters. The same precursive font has been used and embedded to each slideshows - so it won’t matter if you do not have it on your computer.
The 26 cliparts which have been selected for each letter are;
A - apple
B - banana
C - cat
D - dog
E - eggs
F - fox
G - grapes
H - hat
I - ice cream
J - jam
K - key
L - lemon
M - mouse
N - nest
O - orange
P - pig
Q - queen
R - robot
S - snake
T - tap (faucet)
U - umbrella
V - van
W - windmill
X - x-ray
Y - yellow (colour)
Z - zebra
As well as being a teacher with a PGCE in primary education, I am also a Graphic Designer (BSc Hons). I firmly believe that what you are getting for your money is an absolute bargain and all I ask in return is for you to review the resource.
Please contact me if you have any suggestions.
Presentation focusing on the use of non-standard English (slang). This presentation focuses on the non standard English used in parts of Northern Ireland.
POSTERS, FLASHCARDS AND POWERPOINTS IN ONE DOWNLOAD
Posters
Here I have made 26 visually stunning posters each representing a different letter of the alphabet. These posters have been professionally designed by a graphic designer. Each poster contains the letter in uppercase and lowercase, an image to help represent the letter (a = apple) and the spelling of the word to show the title letter in use.
You will receive these posters in 2 formats, as an image and as a pdf. This will give you the freedom to print them what ever size you like! So they can be posters or flashcards.
The font used is a precursive infant font - ideal for learners of that age.
Presentations
Here I have made 3 visually stunning PowerPoints to help you with the alphabet and phonics revision. These PowerPoints give you the educator complete control of how you deliver them as well as allowing opportunities for children to engage.
Each PowerPoint consists of 27 slides: A title slide and one for each of the 26 letters in the alphabet.
The 3 PowerPoints are titled as follows;
The Alphabet
The Alphabet_Only Uppercase
The Alphabet_Only Lowercase
Within PowerPoint 1 “The Alphabet”, each slide requires 5 clicks from the teacher;
Click 1 - shows the uppercase letter in a large precursive font at the top of the slide. e.g. ‘A’.
Click 2 - shows the lowercase letter in a large precursive font at the top of the slide. e.g. ‘a’.
Click 3 - shows a stunning clipart of something beginning with that letter (a list of the 26 items I selected are at the bottom of this description. e.g. an apple.
Click 4 - Shows the name of the clipart with an uppercase beginning letter. e.g. ‘Apple’.
Click 5 - Shows the name of the clipart with a lowercase beginning letter. e.g. ‘apple’.
The subsequent two slideshows (‘The Alphabet_Only Uppercase’ & ‘The Alphabet_Only Lowercase’) are identical however they only show either uppercase letters or lowercase letters. The same precursive font has been used and embedded to each slideshows - so it won’t matter if you do not have it on your computer.
The 26 images which have been selected to represent each letter are;
A - apple
B - banana
C - cat
D - dog
E - eggs
F - fox
G - grapes
H - hat
I - ice cream
J - jam
K - key
L - lemon
M - mouse
N - nest
O - orange
P - pig
Q - queen
R - robot
S - snake
T - tap (faucet)
U - umbrella
V - van
W - windmill
X - x-ray
Y - yellow (colour)
Z - zebra
As well as being a teacher with a PGCE in primary education, I am also a Graphic Designer (BSc Hons). I firmly believe that what you are getting for your money is an absolute bargain and all I ask in return is for you to review the resource.
Please contact me if you have any suggestions.
Perfect for any time of the year - not just pancake Tuesday!
A detailed lesson which demonstrates the importance of instructions and how to write a set of instructions. When you download this resource you will receive:
A PowerPoint Presentation
4 Differentiated Recipe templates (lined and unlined)
Instructions Checklist
Pancake recipe sheet
Word banks (Time connectives & imperative verbs)
The interactive PowerPoint is split into sections;
Examples of when we use instructions in everyday life.
Why are instructions important?
Tips on writing instructions.
Things to remember when writing instructions.
Different sections of a recipe. This slide reviews a blank recipe template.
Review of a pancake recipe. This slide reviews a pancake recipe.
This resource was designed by a graphic designer (BSc Hons) with a PGCE in education. I strive to make my resources an extremely high quality and welcome any feedback.
I am a fully qualified graphic designer and I created this Elvis Presley themed Success Ladder when I was studying my PGCE. I am also a massive Elvis fan.
The concept is simple. After printing and laminating the posters (A3 or A4 - the quality of the image will support both) you must print out a name tag for each child in the class. Stick posters on the wall (in the correct order - see below) and subsequently stick all the children’s names to the middle poster (Ready, Set, Go!)
Each poster has a name and throughout the day you as a teacher can reward good behaviour by asking a child to move their name up, or punish bad behaviour by asking them to move their name down. The daily/weekly goal is to make it to ‘Graceland’ and to stay as far away from ‘Heartbreak Hotel’ as possible.
The list of names and order of sticking each poster to the wall are as follows (from bottom to top - with one suggestion of applying rewards to each poster);
Heartbreak Hotel - this is the bottom of the ladder, to make it here a child has misbehaved 3 times and could subsequently loose 15 minutes of golden time.
Trouble - this is the second from the bottom, to make it here a child has misbehaved twice and could subsequently loose 10 minutes of golden time.
Don’t Be Cruel - this is the third from the bottom, to make it here a child has misbehaved once and could subsequently loose 5 minutes of golden time.
Ready, Set, Go! - this is the middle poster, this is the starting point for all children, from here you can move up towards Graceland for good behaviour or down towards Heartbreak Hotel for bad behaviour.
Blue Suede Shoes - this is the third from the top, to make it here a child has showed good behaviour or great work and could be awarded 5 extra minutes golden time.
Promised Land - this is the second from the top, to make it here a child has shown good behaviour more than once and could subsequently gain 10 minutes of golden time.
Graceland - this is the top of the ladder, to make it here a child has displayed excellent behaviour and could subsequently gain 15 minutes of golden time.
The free Elvis poster shows Elvis with his guitar along with the quote “When things go wrong, don’t go with them”.
Two sets of high quality images detailing the times tables (0x to 12x) for you to print whatever size you require.
The first set have the answers - these are best suited to printed on A3 paper and laminated to be stuck on the wall.
The second set have blank squares instead of the answers - these are best suited to be printed on smaller sized paper for times tables revision. They can also be laminated and children can then use dry wipe markers to revise their times tables.
When creating these images I had place value on my mind. I wanted to show my children that in maths one digit or mathematical symbol goes into a single square.
These images were created by a fully qualified Graphic Designer (BSc Hons) with a PGCE in Education.
All feedback welcome.
The best way to describe this pack is to list the files you’ll receive. All resources designed by a graphic designer (BScHons) with a PGCE in education.
[1] Marcus Rashford PowerPoint Presentation. A visually stunning PowerPoint presentation which details the life of Marcus Rashford so far. The categories include; Early Life, Man United, England, Charity, Letter to Government & MBE.
[2] Marcus Rashford Letter PowerPoint. A PowerPoint containing Marcus Rashfords letter to all MPs dated 15th June 2020. This is a 4 slide slideshow with each slide containing half a page of Marcus’ letter. This will allow you to analyse it with your class.
[3] Marcus Rashford Letter PDF. A high quality copy of Marcus’ letter to all MPs dated 15th June 2020. A PDF copy for you to print and share with your class. This can be emailed for home learning.
[4. 5. 6.] Differentiated letter templates. Three differentiated letter to downing street templates. You could task your class with writing a letter to the government asking them for help fixing an issue.
[7. 8. 9.] Differentiated Marcus Rashford Missing word worksheets. Three differentiated worksheets with 8 sentences and a wordbank containing 8 - 16 missing words for them to fill in the gaps. These can always be used for children to copy into books.
[10. 11.] Fact files which encourage children to research Marcus Rashford safely on the internet. Second factfile has an extra lined page for higher abilty children to gather and jot down any extra information they find.
[12] Marcus Rashford Colouring In pages. 5 outlines of Marcus Rashford in action on the football pitch for your class to choose their favourite as a lesson ender or as a fabulous pop art activity - encourage your children to be creative with colours, I’d love to see them!
All feedback and positive reviews appreciated they’re my bread and butter! I’m quite active on this site so if you have any suggestions or tweaks you’d like me to help out with, let me know!
Grab a bargain on 3 popular downloads! Perfect for setting up or freshening up your classroom!
All work designed by a Graphic Designer (BSc Hons) with a PGCE in Education.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G_ZHOePgTRQ
This is a really fun problem solving lesson. You’ll need a bag of match sticks so that each child can participate.
We’ve all been challenged by someone who laid some matchsticks down and told us we could only move a certain amount to achieve a goal. Well, this PowerPoint contains 16 of these puzzles and their solutions!
Each slide shows a number of matchsticks laid out in some form of shape. You the teacher will tell each child to copy that shape. After this the slide will display the objective of the puzzle. After your class has had a go you can then click to reveal the answer.
A fantastic lesson on problem solving. Perfect for the run up to Christmas, easter or Halloween holidays!
This download is a free sample of my main Stations of the Cross download which can be found here;
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/stations-of-the-cross-presentation-worksheets-colour-in-and-beautiful-posters-re-12480931
When you choose to download this download you’ll receive 2 pictures which are aimed at giving you a ‘try before you buy’ experience.