Mainly KS2 resources for English, Maths, Science and some topic also. Most of my resources include a lesson plan, presentation, activities and differentiated tasks. Please leave a review on any of my resources in which you purchase so I can use your feedback positively.
I have taught the majority of these lessons and they have worked well. All lessons coincide with the National Curriculum 2014 and have been approved by my subject leaders. Hope they are useful :)
Mainly KS2 resources for English, Maths, Science and some topic also. Most of my resources include a lesson plan, presentation, activities and differentiated tasks. Please leave a review on any of my resources in which you purchase so I can use your feedback positively.
I have taught the majority of these lessons and they have worked well. All lessons coincide with the National Curriculum 2014 and have been approved by my subject leaders. Hope they are useful :)
This is a rewards and sanction chart in which I made with my class. It is coloured green, orange and red to indicate a child's behaviour.
Each child will design their own peg at the beginning of the school year and attach it to the green section, which reads, 'I have earned all of my Golden Time'. If a child misbehaves, or doesn't follow the rules, they will then go and move their own peg to the orange section, which is labelled 'warning.
If a child further disobeys the rules, they then must move their peg to the red section accordingly (i.e. 5 minutes lost, then 10 etc).
The picture attached is the chart in my classroom at the moment (to show as an example), however I have upgraded and improved it to attach on TES.
Please leave a comment and check out the rest of my resources:
This resource was put together as a test for my year 4 class at the end of the year to check their knowledge of SPAG. I have attached the SPAG curriculum to ensure that I have included lots of different areas of this subject.
Children are tested on:
* their knowledge of punctuation (commas, question marks, speech marks and apostrophes plural and possessive).
* their knowledge of SPAG terminology (main/subordinate clause, frontal adverbial, determiner, adverb, suffix, preposition, contractions).
This test gave me a great insight into the progress they’ve made, but also which areas that they are still not so sure on.
Please leave a review and check out some of my other resources: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/Morrisr9
Four simple worksheets with extensions based on:
Apostrophes
Speech Marks
Inverted Commas
Pronouns
Children are reminded what the term means and then given progressive tasks to increase their understanding.
This resource is PERFECT if you want to teach your class how to write a report by using the correct features.
This product bundles together both of my products on reports but you can purchase them both at a discounted price HERE.
Please check out these resources for a more in-depth description.Comprehension
[Writing our own report]https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/non-chronological-report-writing-our-own-11985678)
Understanding the features
6 challenge cards for children to solve upon finishing a comprehension task early or if looking to encourage them to think deeper.
We have been trying to use the A.P.E (answer, prove, explain) technique for inference questions, which encourages children to PROVE their answers by looking at clues in the text/pictures.
These challenge cards remind children to prove their answers.
Teach your students Times Tables with these Times Tables Games! Did you know that research says students learn more through interactive, fun learning? Use these games during starters for Maths lessons, flexible grouping, games, interventions, early finisher tasks or any other time during your day.
Let’s connect:
Instagram: rebecca.the.irish.teacher
Email: rebeccatheirishteacher@gmail.com
A 5 day lesson plan based on instructions. Three of the days are based on children evaluating and creating instructions through video clips and practical activities (making paper airplanes and origami fortune tellers). Two of the days are focused on comprehension and handwriting.
The children will be taught how to write successful instructions by understanding that they need to use clear, simple English for their reader to understand clearly what they are directing them to do.
This is a busy opening lesson on Earth, Moon and Sun topic. It requires the sorting of the scientific vocabulary as well as an interesting insight into the topic. This resource includes a presentation, plan and differentiated activity.
A 3 day series of lessons on suspense and mystery. These lessons allow children to write in a suspense style by using ellipses, short sentences and making the reader think that there is something hidden. These lessons involve video clips and setting a spooky scene my turning off the lights during the reading of these paragraphs.
Included:
A powerpoint
Detailed, differentiated lesson plan
Spooky pictures to spark writing
Sample of mysterious writing for WAGOLL (What A Good One Looks Like)
Picture of the finished product from two Year 4 girls.
These playscripts allow children to create their own play while learning the features of the play-script also. I have attached fairy tales that are turned into playscripts. The features that they will learn how to use are:
*Cast list
* Scene Headings
* Character name and :
* Stage Directions
The first lesson allows children to create their own list of the features of a playscript by finding them themselves. This exploratory, paired learning works best when it comes to the end product at the end of the week.
Children are encouraged to choose a fairytale that they already know to alter slightly, to make the actual story part easier. There is a SPAG lesson included also on adverbs. This will help children to use them for the stage directions also.
An introduction into the Vikings. It’s very exciting lesson as it involves role-play and physical moving around the classroom to “spy” on the Vikings. My class got a lot out of it.
***LESSON PLAN, NOTEBOOK FILE AND A WEALTH OF IMAGES***
This package includes a lesson plan for 4 activites based on the book 'Dinosaurs and all that Rubbish'. Our theme for the day was purple, so we engaged in 4 different activities trying to incorporate both dinosaurs and the colour purple.
Very practical, hands on art in which the kids loved. It made a fantastic display also.
Children will make:
Dinosaur Silhouettes
Dino Fossil
Purple Plate-a-sauruses
Recycled Rockets
This was a fantastic week of English lessons, including lots of speaking and listening activities, resulting in effective writing. This genre was studied through the story ‘Journey to Jo’Burg’. To which we read the first two chapters online (pdf linked in planning) and ended up writing the third chapter as our ‘big write’ including an issue and dilemma.
Lesson 1: Children explore the terms issue and dilemma by engaging in a conscience alley, forcing the child acting as the main character to make a decision based on a dilemma. (thoroughly enjoyable).
Lesson 2: Children read through the chapter 1 and 2 (linked in planning) and underline dialogue, action and different words for the word ‘said’. This allows children to see the exact style used by the author in order for them to recreate their very own chapter 3 in the style of the story. Planning is also done in this lesson.
Lesson 3: The success criteria is shared with the children and they are then allowed the remainder of the lesson to finish off their chapter 3.
The end product was fantastic! The children came up with their own title for their chapter and really took on the style of the author, alternating between dialogue and action. It was fantastic!
INCLUDED:
*4 day detailed lesson plan
*Colourful Notebook File
*Success Criteria
*Identifying features Prompt
*Moral Dilemmas for discussion
*Positive and Negative grid
Shared/Guided Reading lesson based on the story ‘Journey to Jo’Burg’.
This was used to inspire these kids and completely engage them with the story. My idea is for the starter, display three questions (see planning) and get them to write their answers in groups on post-it notes. Then stick them up on the IWB on a picture of South Africa (also in resources). This will engage them straight away with the text and what’ll happen.
Then you’ll move on to explaining that the idea is to focus on what a dilemma is and what it is in this chapter. (The chapter is linked on the planning and you can download it as a pdf). The children should have a hard copy in front of them and together you will make a success criteria of what a good, interesting reader sounds like. Get them to critique you reading in a boring way.
Children to sort pre-made laminated statements into positives and negatives about going to Jo’Berg. In groups children will then engage in a conscience alley (role-play) to thrash out both sides of a dilemma.
You can do it as a whole class or small groups either. Children really get into the story this way and feel they’re helping Naledi choose her dilemma.
Great, engaging lesson. Really enjoyed it!
After hours of reading and PD on Pie Corbett’s Talk4Writing, I decided to plan my English lessons around his style of teaching. The idea behind it is fun filled, active and different so my children and I absolutely love it!
Included:
4 day, detailed lesson plan (differentiation included).
Power Point of the features of a report.
‘Who killed King Tut’ text resource (colour coded).
‘Boxing it up’ plan
Report starters- which allow the children to get into the mind of writing report style sentences.
Text mapping opportunities- which allow children to act out and DRAW the entire report so they can recite it, thus learning the sentence structure orally.
I have put a lot of detail into the lesson plan, so it can be easily followed to apply this style of teaching to your English lessons.
The idea behind it is:
Week 1= Imitation Phase.
In this week, children need to learn off a text to fully immerse themselves in the style of writing, structure, language etc. This is done through actions and also text mapping (drawing pictures).
Only when children fully understand a text type, should they begin to write. The writing of a report will be done at the end of week 2. (This resource is only week 1).
By the end of the week, your children should fully understand the features of a report, and should be able to recite the whole thing using their text map.
It’s lots of fun and a fantastic scaffolding for children to understand before they write.
Give it a try!
A mathematical activity to engage children with the upcoming world cup in Russia. Lesson Plan included.
I have included a map of Russia with the football stadiums.
Children must measure the distance between a letter and a stadium. Then because 1cm=35 minutes, they must then calculate how long it would take to get to said stadium.
For example:
How long will it take A to get to Kazan stadium?
Using your ruler, measure the distance from A to Krazan stadium.
If it’s 7.6 cm- round to the nearest whole number which is 8cm.
1cm = 35 minutes so 35 x 8 = 280 minutes =4 hours 40 minutes
Children must then fill in a table with their findings.
Making Connections is a very valuable skill to teach in Guided Reading. Children learn to connect what they read to themselves, another text and the wider world, helping them to understand the text on a deeper level.
Most of us tell the children that a good reader “makes connections”, but for the most part, only a handful of the children actually know what this means.
This resource will explicitly teach your children how to make connections with what their reading to themselves, another text and the wider world. This resource can be used with ANY text. It teaches the SKILL of making connections and that can be applied to fiction, non-fiction and poetry.
What’s included
A detailed daily PowerPoint to structure the lessons and encourage children to engage in child talk/cooperative learning.
Making Connections support cards- to provide children with the sentence stems in order to be successful when structuring a connection.
Summarising Tweet template- to ensure children have understood the text read on a basic level before engaging in making connections. Children are challenged to include the main events, main characters etc in 280 characters.
Making Connection activity Sheets.
I hope this resource is useful for you. Please leave some feedback and let me know how these lessons went. I’d love to hear from you.
A complete booklet to hand out to staff outlining events for Book Week. There are ideas, timetables for the week, overviews, checklists for teachers etc. This booklet can be edited to suit your school, but also can be used directly as is to make your Book Week run successfully. This has just been used by my school and was incredibly successful. See photos on my Instagram for more details (Rebecca.the.irish.teacher).
Philosophy 4 Children is being taught across the UK to teach children fundamental skills such as:
critical thinking.
reasoning skills.
empathy.
team work.
In this pack, I have included:
Philosophy Display Cards
Philosophy lesson plan: recycling
Philosophy lesson plan: friendships
Philosophy Powerpoint: recycling
Philosophy Powerpoint: friendships
A document on how to teach philosophy.
I have been teaching Philosophy lessons for a whole term now and the difference it has made in children’s problem solving skills in friendship issues, aswell as mathematical problems is amazing!
We spend an hour a week on P4C and it’s the children’s favourite lesson. Some of them have come out with some cracking conclusions too:
“Crying is an expression of your truest emotions. The body takes over from the mind”. I mean WOW!
BACK TO SCHOOL!!! (Already?)
One of my main goals on day one is to build relationships with the children and leave them go home on the first day feeling happy and safe in their new classroom environment.
The idea behind this resource is that each child write a nice comment on their peers’ jigsaw pieces, so that by the end of the lesson, each child has a nice comment from everyone in the class.
I then plan to cut the jigsaw pieces out and display them in the classroom for the year, for children to refer to anytime they wish.
It also gives you an opportunity to set expectations for a more “busy” lesson, i.e. silent when walking around the room/no running/no pushing etc.
Included is:
The activity sheet
A short powerpoint explaining how to engage in this activity!
Please leave a review and let me know how you got on