This is a complete lesson teaching children how to identify, read and write the ‘ee’ digraph of phase 3 phonics. This lesson introduces the ‘ee’ digraph and the sound that it makes. It is designed to be the SIXTH lesson in a series of phase 3 lessons that build on prior learning from phase 2.
In phase 3 of phonics, children learn that multiple letters (digraphs and trigraphs) can make one sound. They also meet some of the less common letters and the sounds they make. They continue to practise segmenting and blending CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words, CCVC and CVCC words as well as some longer, phonetically-decodable words.
These lessons follow on from the phase 2 phonics lessons where the most commonly used letters and sounds are learned and children practise segmenting and blending mostly CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words.
These lessons are designed to teach children how to read and write by practising the skills of identifying, segmenting and blending. Each lesson includes all the information, games, videos and activities needed teach each phase 3 sound.
PLEASE CHECK THE NOTES SECTION ON EACH SLIDE FOR EXTRA TIPS AND IDEAS FOR TEACHING PHONICS PHASE 3.
It is recommended that you teach these lessons in the following order as the lessons build on prior learning:
ai
air
ar
ch
ear
ee
er
igh
j
ng
oa
oi
oo (long)
oo (short)
or
ow
qu
sh
th
ur
ure
v
w
x
y
zz
The presentation includes:
√ Learning objective and success criteria
√ Phase 3 phonics sound mat
√ Review slides for phase 2 phonics
√ Games, videos and activities introducing the sound
√ Segmenting and blending reading activities
√ Segmenting and blending writing activities
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with very few adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
This is a complete lesson teaching children how to identify, read and write the ‘ch’ digraph of phase 3 phonics. This lesson introduces the ‘ch’ digraph and the sound that it makes. It is designed to be the FOURTH lesson in a series of phase 3 lessons that build on prior learning from phase 2.
In phase 3 of phonics, children learn that multiple letters (digraphs and trigraphs) can make one sound. They also meet some of the less common letters and the sounds they make. They continue to practise segmenting and blending CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words, CCVC and CVCC words as well as some longer, phonetically-decodable words.
These lessons follow on from the phase 2 phonics lessons where the most commonly used letters and sounds are learned and children practise segmenting and blending mostly CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words.
These lessons are designed to teach children how to read and write by practising the skills of identifying, segmenting and blending. Each lesson includes all the information, games, videos and activities needed teach each phase 3 sound.
PLEASE CHECK THE NOTES SECTION ON EACH SLIDE FOR EXTRA TIPS AND IDEAS FOR TEACHING PHONICS PHASE 3.
It is recommended that you teach these lessons in the following order as the lessons build on prior learning:
ai
air
ar
ch
ear
ee
er
igh
j
ng
oa
oi
oo (long)
oo (short)
or
ow
qu
sh
th
ur
ure
v
w
x
y
zz
The presentation includes:
√ Learning objective and success criteria
√ Phase 3 phonics sound mat
√ Review slides for phase 2 phonics
√ Games, videos and activities introducing the sound
√ Segmenting and blending reading activities
√ Segmenting and blending writing activities
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with very few adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
This is a complete lesson teaching children how to identify, read and write the ‘ar’ digraph of phase 3 phonics. This lesson introduces the ‘ar’ digraph and the sound that it makes. It is designed to be the THIRD lesson in a series of phase 3 lessons that build on prior learning from phase 2.
In phase 3 of phonics, children learn that multiple letters (digraphs and trigraphs) can make one sound. They also meet some of the less common letters and the sounds they make. They continue to practise segmenting and blending CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words, CCVC and CVCC words as well as some longer, phonetically-decodable words.
These lessons follow on from the phase 2 phonics lessons where the most commonly used letters and sounds are learned and children practise segmenting and blending mostly CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words.
These lessons are designed to teach children how to read and write by practising the skills of identifying, segmenting and blending. Each lesson includes all the information, games, videos and activities needed teach each phase 3 sound.
PLEASE CHECK THE NOTES SECTION ON EACH SLIDE FOR EXTRA TIPS AND IDEAS FOR TEACHING PHONICS PHASE 3.
It is recommended that you teach these lessons in the following order as the lessons build on prior learning:
ai
air
ar
ch
ear
ee
er
igh
j
ng
oa
oi
oo (long)
oo (short)
or
ow
qu
sh
th
ur
ure
v
w
x
y
zz
The presentation includes:
√ Learning objective and success criteria
√ Phase 3 phonics sound mat
√ Review slides for previously learned sounds
√ Games, videos and activities introducing the sound
√ Segmenting and blending reading activities
√ Segmenting and blending writing activities
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with very few adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
A full lesson teaching the names of different feelings and emotions, including: happy, nervous, angry, scared, excited, interested, worried, confused & proud.
The presentation includes:
√ Learning objective
√ Three success criteria
√ Starter activity - AFL
√ Teaching input slides learning to name and identify different feelings: happy, nervous, angry, scared, excited, interested, worried, confused, proud, miserable
√ Speaking and listening activity
√ Consolidation activities:
- Reading activity & discussion points
- Writing activity - apply the learning
√ Plenary activity
This lesson is designed specifically for Cambridge Stage 6, unit 1 teaching content but can be suitable for any English lesson about feelings and emotions.
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
A full lesson teaching how to use ‘yet’ to talk and ask about time in the past.
The presentation includes:
√ Learning objective
√ Three success criteria
√ Quizlet game starter activity learning new unit vocabulary
√ Present perfect tense review activity plus answer slide
√ Input slides teaching how to use ‘yet’ in statements plus example sentences, reasoning questions and explanations
√ 1 multiple-choice review questions
√ 1 reasoning consolidation activity plus answer slide
√ Sentence builder consolidation activity for ‘yet’ as a statement plus answer slides
√ Input slide teaching how to use ‘yet’ in questions plus example sentences
√ Sentence builder consolidation activity for asking questions including ‘yet’
√ Plenary - fill in the blank - AOL for yet, & AFL for ‘ever’
This lesson is designed specifically for Cambridge Stage 6, unit 1 teaching content but can be suitable for any English lesson about using ‘yet’ to refer to time in the past.
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
This resource includes everything you need to teach children grades 3 to 6 how to write a letter. It includes teaching input/ information slides for the structural and language features of letters, examples of formal and informal letters, a modelled/ shared writing task, independent writing tasks and differentiated feature checklists.
The resource is a PowerPoint presentation lesson complete with:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity
√ Review of relevant prior learning
√ Teaching input/ information slides
√ Example of a formal and an informal letter
√ Speaking, listening, reading and writing tasks
√ Feature checklist for letters
√ All answer slides
√ Plenary
Learning Objective:
LO: To identify the features of and write my own formal letter.
Success Criteria:
I can identify the purposes of a variety of different letters.
I can read and understand a letter of complaint.
I can describe the structure of a letter.
I can identify the language features of a letter.
I can write my own letter.
Lesson details:
Starter activity - comparing and contrasting task
Example of formal and informal letters
Speaking and listening task - mind-map of features
Teaching input - Structural features of letters:
Sender address
Date
Recipient address
Salutation
Paragraphs
Valediction
Name and/ or signature
Teaching input - language features of a letter:
- Time order adverbials
- Present tense, imperative verbs
- Second person pronouns
- Formal, impersonal language
- Adverbs
Modelled/ shared write task - letter writing
Independent and differentiated consolidation writing task (formal letter writing regarding an environmental issue (3 levels)
Differentiated feature checklists (3 levels)
Plenary - Peer review task
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
This resource includes everything you need to teach children grades 3 to 6 how to write non-chronological reports. It includes examples, lists of features to include, details for a modelled/ shared writing task and an independent, consolidation writing task.
The resource is a PowerPoint presentation lesson complete with:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity - grammar task
√ Review of relevant prior learning
√ Teaching input/ information slides
√ Examples from non-chronological report texts
√ Speaking, listening, reading and writing tasks
√ Feature checklist for non-chronological reports
√ All answer slides
√ Plenary
Learning Objective:
LO: To plan and write a non-chronological report
Success Criteria:
I can structure my non-chronological report correctly and with appropriate headings and subheadings.
I can fill my report with relevant and accurate facts.
I can use the correct tense and write in third person.
I can include an introduction and key information box.
I can use generalisers, technical vocabulary, formal language and factual adjectives.
Lesson details:
Differentiated starter activity (3 levels) - Verbs and tenses task (review of relevant prior learning, grammar task)
Teaching input - covering the following:
What does non-chronological mean?
What’s the difference between fiction and non-fiction?
What structural features will we find in a non-chronological report?
What tense is a non-chronological report usually written in?
What is the purpose of a non-chronological report?
What language features of a non-chronological report can you list?
Example of a non-chronological report introduction
Teaching input - structure of an introduction
Teaching input - language features of a non-chronological report, explanations, examples and consolidation tasks for these features (present tense, third person, generalisers, technical vocabulary, factual adjectives, formal language)
Modelled/ shared write task- Introduction for a report
Independent consolidation task
Example of a non-chronological report paragraph
Feature checklist
Plenary - Assessment of learning task
This lesson can be a stand-alone lesson showing the features of a non-chronological report but it can also be part of a bundle of three lessons teaching children how to write non-chronological reports. This is lesson one of three.
Lesson 1 - Identify the features of non-chronological reports and examine example texts
Lesson 2 - Conduct own research into a topic and present findings (https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-13117269)
Lesson 3 - Write own non-chronological report
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
Before children try to write a non-chronological report, they need to know what one looks like, they need to know how it should be set out and they need to know what features to include.
This resource includes everything you need to teach children grades 3 to 6 about non-chronological reports and their features. It includes two example non-chronological report texts for you to examine in class.
The resource is a PowerPoint presentation lesson complete with:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity
√ Review of relevant prior learning
√ Teaching input/ information slides
√ Examples of good non-chronological reports
√ Speaking, listening, reading and writing tasks
√ Explanations and examples of how to use each structural and language feature in your own non-chronological reports
√ Consolidation tasks for each feature
√ Whole class and independent activities
√ Feature checklist
√ Plenary
Learning Objective:
LO: To identify the structural and language features of a non-chronological report
Success Criteria:
I can distinguish between fiction and non-fiction.
I can explain the meaning of ‘non-chronological’.
I can describe how a non-chronological report is structured.
I can identify language features of a non-chronological report.
Lesson details:
Starter activity - Sorting texts task
Review of revelant prior learning - fiction & non-fiction
Teaching input - meaning of non-chronological
Example of a non-chronological report (6 text slides)
Teaching input - structure of a non-chronological report, explanations, examples and consolidation tasks for these features (headings, sub-headings, an introduction, paragraphs, facts, photos, diagrams, key information boxes)
Teaching input - language features of a non-chronological report, explanations, examples and consolidation tasks for these features (present tense, third person, generalisers, technical vocabulary, factual adjectives, formal language)
Independent consolidation task
Example of a non-chronological report (5 text slides)
Feature checklist
Plenary - Assessment of learning task
This lesson can be a stand-alone lesson showing the features of a non-chronological report but it can also be part of a bundle of three lessons teaching children how to write non-chronological reports. This is lesson one of three.
Lesson 1 - Identify the features of non-chronological reports and examine example texts
Lesson 2 - Conduct own research into a topic and present findings (https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-13117269)
Lesson 3 - Write own non-chronological report
(https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-13118600)
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
This lesson can be used as part of a unit on non-chronological reports OR it can be used as a stand-alone lesson teaching children how to conduct research and present their findings to the class.
This resource includes everything you need to teach children grades 3 to 6 how to conduct research into a topic, make detailed and informative notes and then present their findings to the class in a clear and concise manner.
The resource is a PowerPoint presentation lesson complete with:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity
√ Review of relevant prior learning (fact and opinion)
√ Teaching input/ information slides
√ Two research tasks (one historical and one present day)
√ Speaking, listening, reading and writing tasks
√ Differentiated research support slides
√ Tips for taking notes, presenting findings, speaking and listening well
√ Presentation plan examples
√ Answer slides
√ Plenary activity
Learning Objective:
LO: To conduct research and create a presentation on a particular topic
Success Criteria:
I can use multiple sources to find out information about a given topic.
I can make useful notes as part of my research.
I can use present my findings to others in a clear and concise way.
I can make listen carefully and make notes on a presentation.
Lesson details:
Starter activity - Fact or opinion?
Game to engage learners in research task - twenty questions
Teaching input - how to conduct research
Historical research task (dinosaurs topic)
Speaking and listening task - class mind-map + suggestions
Differentiated research support (questions to answer etc.)
Preset day research task (disasters topic)
Speaking and listening task - class mind-map + suggestions
Differentiated research support (questions to answer etc.)
Example presentation plans for both topics
Hints and tips for speaking/ presenting and listening/ note-taking
Plenary - Assessment of learning task
This lesson can be a stand-alone lesson teaching children how to conduct research into a topic and then present their findings. It can ALSO be part of a bundle of three lessons teaching children how to write non-chronological reports. This is lesson two of three.
Lesson 1 - Identify the features of non-chronological reports and examine example texts (https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/non-fiction-lesson-features-of-a-non-chronological-report-teaching-powerpoint-with-activities-13116858)
Lesson 2 - Conduct own research into a topic and present findings
Lesson 3 - Write own non-chronological report
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
This resource includes everything you need to teach children grades 3 to 6 how to plan and write fantastic narrative stories filled with powerful descriptions and suspense!
The resource is a PowerPoint presentation lesson complete with:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter and plenary activities
√ Review of relevant prior learning
√ Teaching input/ information slides
√ Example texts for each part of a story (character description, setting description, suspense-filled climax, resolution, ending)
√ Differentiated feature checklists for each part of a story (3 levels)
√ Whole class/ shared writing activities
√ Independent consolidation tasks (3
√ Speaking, listening, reading & writing tasks
√ Differentiated grammar task - writing in the past tense (3 levels)
√ Writing inspiration
Learning Objective:
LO: To identify the features of and write my own fiction story
Success Criteria:
I can explain the structure of a typical story.
I can write in past tense.
I can use powerful, descriptive language (adjectives, adverbs, fronted adverbials etc.)
I can describe events in chronological order.
I can use figurative language.
Lesson details:
Starter activity - adjectives bingo game
Review of revelant prior learning - True or false statements about stories
-Teaching input/ information slides - story hills, typical structure of a narrative story + differentiated consolidation activity
Differentiated grammar task - writing in the past tense
Story openings - setting descriptions (what they are, example of a good setting description, features of setting descriptions, identification of features consolidation task, shared write activity, independent writing activity)
Story openings - character descriptions (what they are, example of a good character description, features of character descriptions, identification of features consolidation task, shared write activity, independent writing activity)
Story build ups & Climaxes - using suspense to describe the problem (what suspense is, example of a good suspense-filled climax of a story, structural and language techniques for building suspense, identification of features consolidation task, shared write activity, independent writing activity)
Story resolution - (what happens here, example of a good resolution, shared write activity, independent writing activity)
Story ending - (what happens here, example of a good ending, shared write activity, independent writing activity)
Independent extended writing task (assessment of learning)
Differentiated feature checklists for stories (3 levels)
Plenary - synonyms of ‘went’ game
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
Do your children still struggle to know where to place full stops? Do they understand the differences between the various components of sentences: subjects, verbs, objects, prepositional phrases, adverbs and adverbial phrases, co-ordinating conjunctions, subordinating conjunctions? Can they distinguish between complex, compound and simple sentences? Or between different types of nouns (pronouns, proper nouns, common nouns) and different types of verbs (modal verbs, being verbs, infinitives, continuous verbs etc.)?
All this is covered in this ultimate sentence construction grammar lesson. Help your children begin to really understand what makes a sentence and not just a phrase. Help them understand where to place full-stops and how to use these different sentence components to make their writing more descriptive and interesting.
This resource is a PowerPoint presentation which contains all the information slides and consolidation activities you need to teach children how to contruct powerful, descriptive and grammatically correct sentences!
The presentation includes:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity - AFL (Where should the full stops go?)
√ Information and explanation slides
√ Shared/ whole class consolidation activities for each learning point
√ Independent, differentiated activities (3 difficulty levels)
√ Activities reviewing relevant prior learning
√ Answer slides
√ Plenary activity
What does this lesson cover exactly?
A starter activity allowing teachers to assess children’s current understanding of where to place full stops.
The subject of a sentence is the one that does the verb. The subject usually (but not always) comes in front of the verb and almost all sentences have a subject (except for commands where the subject may be implied as ‘you’). The subject will be some form of noun (pronoun, proper noun, common noun etc.)
Differentiated consolidation activity - identify the subject in these sentences
All clauses must have a verb (otherwise they are just a ‘phrase’). Verbs may be action/ doing words or ‘being’ verbs (is, are, am, was, were, will be etc.) Verbs tell us the tense of a clause. If a sentence has just one clause, it is a simple sentence but clauses can be joined together to make compound and complex sentences using conjunctions.
There are two main types of conjunction: subordinating conjunctions which join a subordinating clause to a main clause to add extra information about the main clause and coordinating conjunctions which join two main clauses together. There are only seven coordinating conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, ye
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoint for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
This lesson is also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. It could combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
Do you teach Cambridge Stage 5? If so, this resource is perfect for reviewing all the key concepts in unit 1 - Talking About People. This is a PowerPoint lesson presentation complete with all the activities required to teach or review the following points from Cambridge ESL Stage 5, Unit 1 (Talking About People).
The lesson covers the following:
Feeling and personality characteristics
Present simple tense and the subject- verb agreement rule
Adjective - preposition pairs
Have, has, is and are grammar rules
Do, does, doesn’t and don’t grammar rules
Interview writing task
Rhyming words
Structural features of poems
The lesson contains all answer slides as well as learning objective and success criteria.
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoints for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
These lessons are also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. They combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
Homophones Group A, Part 1: plane, meet, mail, heal, grown, fair, accept, affect, ball and berry
Homophones Group A, Part 2: plain, meat, male, heel, groan, fare, except, effect, bawl and bury
It is advisable to teach homophones separate from each other to avoid confusion (e.g. teach ‘main’ on a different day to ‘mane’). This bundle contains two full lesson teaching the spellings of the homophones in group A; each lesson focuses on one half of all the pairs of homophones in group A.
Lesson 1 covers: plane, meet, mail, heal, grown, fair, accept, affect, ball and berry.
Lesson 2 covers: plain, meat, male, heel, groan, fare, except, effect, bawl and bury
The lessons include an explanation of what ‘homophones’ are, explain the meanings of all the words and include a multitude of activities for learning both the spelling and meaning of these words (anagrams, word searches, crosswords, fill in the blanks, spelling pyramids, acrostic poems and many more). They also include spelling strategies mats for extra ideas and methods for learning spellings.
A homophone is a word with the same pronunciation as another word but which has a different meaning and usually, a different spelling. It is advisable to teach homophones independently from each other so as to avoid confusion between the word spellings and meanings.
The spelling lessons include the following:
√ Spelling assessment
√ Learning objectives
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activities
√ Review of prior learning
√ Teaching inputs and information slides
√ Multiple consolidation activities for learning the word spellings
√ Multiple consolidation activities for learning the word meanings
√ All answer slides
√ Spelling strategies mats
√ Extension task - writing application activities
√ Plenary activities
This includes everything you need to teach children the spelling of these homophones in a fun, engaging and impactful way.
Homophones Group B, Part 1: break, great, hear, knot, main, meddle, mist, rain, scene, peace
Homophones Group B, Part 2: brake, grate, here, not, mane, medal, missed, reign, seen, piece
It is advisable to teach homophones separate from each other to avoid confusion (e.g. teach ‘main’ on a different day to ‘mane’). This bundle contains two full lesson teaching the spellings of the homophones in group B; each lesson focuses on one half of all the pairs of homophones in group B.
Lesson 1 covers: break, great, hear, knot, main, meddle, mist, rain, scene, peace
Lesson 2 covers: brake, grate, here, not, mane, medal, missed, reign, seen, piece
The lessons include an explanation of what ‘homophones’ are, explain the meanings of all the words and include a multitude of activities for learning both the spelling and meaning of these words (anagrams, word searches, crosswords, fill in the blanks, spelling pyramids, acrostic poems and many more). They also include spelling strategies mats for extra ideas and methods for learning spellings.
A homophone is a word with the same pronunciation as another word but which has a different meaning and usually, a different spelling. It is advisable to teach homophones independently from each other so as to avoid confusion between the word spellings and meanings.
The spelling lessons include the following:
√ Spelling assessment
√ Learning objectives
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activities
√ Review of prior learning
√ Teaching inputs and information slides
√ Multiple consolidation activities for learning the word spellings
√ Multiple consolidation activities for learning the word meanings
√ All answer slides
√ Spelling strategies mats
√ Extension task - writing application activities
√ Plenary activities
This includes everything you need to teach children the spelling of these homophones in a fun, engaging and impactful way.
Never plan another phonics lesson! Here are all the resources you need to teach children to recognise these common digraphs, created by an EYFS specialist and UK trained teacher.
Whether you’re an experienced teacher whose realised that your free time is too valuable to spend hours planning everything from scratch, or your a parent with no idea on how to even start teaching your child to read and write, our phase 2 phonics lessons have everything you need. These lessons can be incorporated into the order you teach the phase 2 individual letters and sounds or can be taught at the end. These are the first digraphs children usually learn, due to their high frequency in English. You can then follow these with the phase 3 phonics lessons which teach children about many more digraphs and trigraphs.
Phase 2 of Phonics is when the letters and sounds they represent are introduced, and children learn how to form the letters. It is also where the skills of blending and segmenting are taught. We blend sounds in order to read words and we segment words into their sounds in order to write them down. All of this is covered in these resources and you will find you have everything you need to execute effective, engaging and inspiring lessons.
For those of you who have never taught phonics before, many slides contains directions, hints and tips in the notes section. These explain what each slide is for and often include additional ideas for their execution.
As a teacher, tutor, early-years specialist and head of English at an international school, I have personally used these lessons teach classes of children how to read and write, tweaking and perfecting them annually. They contain:
Reviews of prior learning
Learning objectives and success criteria
Phase 2 phonics sound mats
Video and game links
Activities introducing the letters and the sounds they make
Letter identification activities and texts (poems)
Activities for identifying the initial, middle and final sound in CVC (consonant- vowel- consonant) words
Letter formation activities and video links
Activities for blending sounds to read CVC words
Activities for segmenting words into their sounds to write CVC words down
These resources teach children the sounds and letters based on the order of their frequency of use in English:
Lesson 1 - S
Lesson 2 - A
Lesson 3 - T
Lesson 4 - P
Lesson 5 - I
Lesson 6 - N
Lesson 7 - M
Lesson 8 - D
Lesson 9 - G
Lesson 10 - O
Lesson 11 - C
Lesson 12 - K
Lesson 13 - CK
Lesson 14 - E
Lesson 15 - U
Lesson 16 - R
Lesson 17 - H
Lesson 18 - B
Lesson 19 - F
Lesson 20 - FF
Lesson 21 - L
Lesson 22 - LL
Lesson 23 - SS
Segmenting and blending activities begin from lesson 3 onwards. Lessons should be taught in the above order as they follow on from each other, building on prior learning and they also include a recap of previous learning at the start of each lesson.
These lessons will get children reading and writing words. You can then follow these lessons with the Phase 3 lessons (also available in bundles) which will get children reading and writing sentences.
Please check the notes sections on each slide for extra details, directions, hints, tips and ideas.
Environmentally friendly!
No printing is required for any activity in any lesson. Children can work on white-boards or in notebooks. The lessons can also be easily used to teach children online, especially with interactive apps such as Pear Deck, Seesaw, Nearpod etc.
All the resources you could ever need to teach the full set of the phonics phase 3 consonants; this bundle includes all the videos, games, activities and resources needed to teach children how to read and write the phase 3 phonics consonant sounds. It consists of six one-hour long lessons and each PowerPoint includes:
√ Learning objective and success criteria
√ Phonics phase 3 sound mat
√ Review of previously learned sounds
√ Videos introducing the sound
√ Games practising identifying, segmenting and blending each sound
√ Reading activities
√ Writing activities
In phase 3 of phonics, children meet some of the less common letters and the sounds they make.
These lessons follow on from the phase 2 phonics lessons and phase 3 digraph and trigraph lessons.
PLEASE CHECK THE NOTES SECTION ON EACH SLIDE FOR EXTRA TIPS AND IDEAS FOR TEACHING PHONICS PHASE 3.
You can download the ‘ai’ digraph for free from the Firefly Learner TES shop’s featured resources. We also have a bundle for all the phase 3 digraphs and tragraphs. This bundle includes the following sounds from phonics phase 3:
j
v
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Three PowerPoint Presentations complete with tasks and activities to teach children how to write fantastic non-chronological reports.
Lesson 1 - Examine example non-chronological reports, look at their features and learn how to use these in our own writing.
Lesson 2 - Guides students in researching a non-fiction topic (dinosaurs or natural disasters) in preparation for a class presentation.
Lesson 3 - Teach children how to write non-chronological reports using the information that they found in lesson 2. Includes shared/ modelled writing tasks, example texts, feature checklists etc.
Each lesson is complete with:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity
√ Review of relevant prior learning
√ Teaching input/ information slides
√ Speaking, listening, reading and writing consolidation tasks
√ Whole class, paired, group and independent activities
√ Plenary
Do you teach Cambridge Stage 6? If so, this resource will save you bags of time as it includes all the lessons and activities you need to teach the concepts of unit 1 (My World) in an impactful and engaging way.
Lesson 1 - To describe feelings and emotions
Lesson 2 - To use the present perfect tense
Lesson 3 - How to use ‘yet’
Lesson 4 - How to use ‘ever’ and ‘never’
Lesson 5 - To locate countries on a map, using the correct vocabulary
Each lesson is complete with a PowerPoint presentation containing:
√ Learning objective
√ Success criteria
√ Starter activity
√ Review of prior learning
√ Grammar activities
√ Speaking games and discussion tasks
√ Information slides/ teaching input
√ Reading tasks
√ Writing tasks
√ Mini plenaries and recaps
√ Extension and application tasks
√ Independent, paired and group activities
√ Vocab focus
√ Plenary task
√ All answer slides
PLEASE NOTE - Please look at the ‘notes’ section of the PowerPoints for additional information about each slide. These include teaching tips, ideas and further explanations.
These lessons are also suitable for being delivered remotely through online learning with some slight adaptations. They combine very well with platforms such as Pear Deck and Nearpod.
All the resources you could ever need to teach the full set of the phonics phase 3 digraphs and trigraphs; this bundle includes all the videos, games, activities and resources needed to teach children how to read and write the phase 3 phonics digraphs and trigraphs. It consists of twenty one-hour long lessons and each PowerPoint includes:
√ Learning objective and success criteria
√ Phonics phase 3 sound mat
√ Review of previously learned sounds
√ Videos introducing the sound
√ Games practising identifying, segmenting and blending each sound
√ Reading activities
√ Writing activities
In phase 3 of phonics, children learn that multiple letters (digraphs and trigraphs) can make one sound.
These lessons follow on from the phase 2 phonics lessons where the most commonly used letters and sounds are learned and children practise segmenting and blending mostly CVC (consonant - vowel - consonant) words.
PLEASE CHECK THE NOTES SECTION ON EACH SLIDE FOR EXTRA TIPS AND IDEAS FOR TEACHING PHONICS PHASE 3.
You can download the ‘ai’ digraph for free from the Firefly Learner TES shop’s featured resources. This bundle includes the following sounds from phonics phase 3:
air
ar
ch
ear
ee
er
igh
ng
oa
oi
oo (long)
oo (short)
or
ow
qu
sh
th
ur
ure
zz
Never plan another phonics lesson! Here are all the resources you need to teach children how to read and write, created by an EYFS specialist and UK trained qualified teacher.
Whether you’re an experienced teacher whose realised that your free time is too valuable to spend hours planning everything from scratch, or you’re a parent with no idea on how to even start teaching your child how to read and write, this bundle contains everything you need.
Phase 2 of Phonics is when the letters and sounds they represent are introduced, and children learn how to form the letters. It is also where the skills of blending and segmenting are taught. We blend sounds in order to read words and we segment words into their sounds in order to write them down. All of this is covered in these resources and you will find you have everything you need to execute effective, engaging and inspiring lessons.
For those of you who have never taught phonics before, many slides contains directions, hints and tips in the notes section. These explain what each slide is for and often include additional ideas for their execution.
As a teacher, tutor, early-years specialist and head of English at an international school, I have personally used these lessons teach classes of children how to read and write, tweaking and perfecting them annually. They contain:
Reviews of prior learning
Learning objectives and success criteria
Phase 2 phonics sound mats
Video and game links
Activities introducing the letters and the sounds they make
Letter identification activities and texts (poems)
Activities for identifying the initial, middle and final sound in CVC (consonant- vowel- consonant) words
Letter formation activities and video links
Activities for blending sounds to read CVC words
Activities for segmenting words into their sounds to write CVC words down
These resources teach children the sounds and letters based on the order of their frequency of use in English:
Lesson 1 - S
Lesson 2 - A
Lesson 3 - T
Lesson 4 - P
Lesson 5 - I
Lesson 6 - N
Lesson 7 - M
Lesson 8 - D
Lesson 9 - G
Lesson 10 - O
Lesson 11 - C
Lesson 12 - K
Lesson 13 - E
Lesson 14 - U
Lesson 15 - R
Lesson 16 - H
Lesson 17 - B
Lesson 18 - F
Lesson 19 - L
Segmenting and blending activities begin from lesson 3 onwards. Lessons should be taught in the above order as they follow on from each other, building on prior learning and they also include a recap of previous learning at the start of each lesson.
These lessons will get children reading and writing words. You can then follow these lessons with the Phase 3 lessons (also available in bundles) which will get children reading and writing sentences.
Please check the notes sections on each slide for extra details, directions, hints, tips and ideas.
Environmentally friendly!
No printing is required for any activity in any lesson. Children can work on white-boards or in notebooks. The lessons can also be easily used to teach children online, especially with interactive apps such as Pear Deck, Seesaw, Nearpod etc.