2 lessons with plans and resources
Taken from our Year 5 and 6 Geography Flipbook
Lesson 1: Making Waste Work
Learning objectives Children should learn: • to investigate a local environmental issue • about issues associated with landfill sites
Learning outcomes Children will be able to: • understand how change affects the local area • communicate opinions on landfill sites
Activity: You are going to make a written proposal to ask the headteacher to give you permission to start a recycling scheme.
Lesson 2: Recycling
Learning objectives Children should learn: • about the types of rubbish we throw away • about the need for recycling in order to reduce rubbish
Learning outcomes Children will be able to: • understand the difference between re-use and recycling • discuss what needs to be considered when setting up a recycling scheme
Activity:Imagine that you are an education officer for Friends of the Earth. You are against the proposal for a new landfill site in the local area. • Design a T-shirt for children to wear in the campaign against a new landfill site.
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This lesson explores more deeply one of the five pillars discussed in the last lesson: prayer or salah. Islamic prayer takes place five times a day, each time taking about ten minutes. These compulsory prayers help Muslims keep God at the front of their thoughts and keep them from doing bad deeds. Other prayers
also take place at any time and these are called du’a and are often more personal prayers.
The thinking skills strategy of fact or opinion will be used in this lesson. This strategy is used when
material is controversial, such as the idea of a religious belief. It encourages people to think about what is a
fact, a belief or an opinion.
Learning objective
Learning about:
• To understand the importance of regular prayer
in a Muslim’s life; and to understand the beliefs
that teach the importance of regular prayer.
Learning from:
• To understand that what is truth to one religion,
may be considered to be an opinion to another
group of people.
Success criteria
Learning about:
• Pupils will be able to explain the importance of
prayer in the life of a Muslim and discuss how
prayer improves the life of a Muslim.
Learning from:
• Pupils will have considered facts and opinions
about prayers and be able to express their
own views about how different people might
categorise beliefs.
1 lesson plan with resource sheets
Learning objectives
Children learn:
• the names of the continents;
• the names of the oceans;
• the difficulties of representing the globe on a
map.
Success criteria
Children should be able to:
• name and locate the seven continents and five
oceans
Skills and processes
Locational knowledge:
• Name and locate the seven continents and five
oceans.
Human and physical geography:
• Recognise the Equator and North and South Poles.
Geographical skills and fieldwork:
• Use a globe to identify continents and oceans.
Taken from LCP’s KS1 Geography Resource File
1 lesson plan with resources
Called: Going somewhere new
– How will we get there?
Learning Objective
Children should learn:
• about the types of transport used to get to
places;
• to use atlases, internet maps and globes.
Success criteria
Children can:
• use atlases, internet maps and globes to plan
routes
Taken from LCP’s KS1 Geography Resource File
Lesson: My school address
Learning objectives
Children should learn:
• that everyone has a personal address;
• the significance of addresses, including the
school address.
Success criteria
Children can:
understand the importance of knowing addresses
particularly of their school
Taken from LCP’s KS1 Geography File
Lesson: Celebrating the local area- Designing a trail
Learning objectives
Children should learn:
• how to design a trail that celebrates their local
area;
• to work in pairs to review and redraft their
work.
Success criteria
Children can:
• work with a partner to devise a successful trail
which can be readily followed with clear starting
and finishing points, with a set of precise
direction to help find one’s way.
Taken from LCP’s KS1 Geography Resource File
Two units from Make Phonics Fun
Each topic within Make Phonics Fun is supported by a range of lively and appealing pupil text.
The two units are based around the theme of starting school and the weather.
Includes fiction/ non-fiction text, vocabularly words and activities based on the texts.
Across the different genres, children are introduced through the fiction, non-fiction and poetry texts to a list of key words, enabling them to develop their decoding and blending skills. Real and pseudo words have been chosen to cover the grapheme-phoneme correspondences.
Each topic is also supported by photocopiable, labelled picture scenes, providing visual cues for some of the key real and pseudo words to be tested. Care has been taken to ensure that the pictures representing the key pseudo words are of objects and items that are clearly meant to be imaginary.
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Get the all 71 sheets via our TES shop
15 worksheets:
Alphabet – to put words into alphabetical order.
Dictionary – to understand that a dictionary gives the meaning of words. Word Families – to recognise members of a word family.
Thesaurus – to use a thesaurus to find words with similar meanings.
Thesaurus – to use a thesaurus to find words with similar meanings.
Thesaurus – to use a thesaurus to find words with similar meanings.
Adjectives – to identify adjectives.
Adjectives – to experiment with adjectives.
Adjectives Challenge – to experiment with adjectives.
Determiners – to know when to use a and an.
Prefixes – to understand what a prefix is and to recognise some common prefixes.
Prefix Challenge – to understand what a prefix is and to recognise some common prefixes.
Prefixes – to recognise some common prefixes.
Prefix Challenge – to identify and use other prefixes.
Suffixes – to identify and use the suffixes: ful and less.
Suffix – ful Word Search.
Taken from: Grammar and Creativity for Year 3
Good writing may start with an exciting idea, but it needs structure to make sense to a reader. Grammar provides a framework on which to display the imagination.
Writing brings together individual expression and an understanding of the rules that allow our language (any language) to make sense. This book has been written with the view that grammar and creativity go hand in hand to produce good writing. Developing children’s understanding of the basics of English will encourage their literary adventures. The range of activities here has been designed to excite interest as well as guide children and teachers through the rules.
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All five questions link to:
• Add 3 or 4 small numbers,finding pairs totalling 10 or 9 or 11.
• Add three two-digit multiples of 10,such as 40 + 70 + 50.
Includes pages 4 pages with strategies to help problem solve
Problem 1: Sports Shopping
Problem 2: Magic Cross
Problem 3: Page Numbers
Problem 4: Guess the Number
Problem 5: Fencing
Taken from Problem Solving Year 3&4
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The purpose of this topic is for children to learn vocabulary to describe the colour of items.
Learning outcomes
Children learn:
to say the correct word for the colour in response
to the question ¿De qué color es?, e.g. Es azul.
to use short phrases to express personal
responses and preferences: me gusta el rojo, no
me gusta el amarillo.
to use correct intonation to indicate they are
asking a question
to show they understand nouns used with
colours
to show they understand simple commands, e.g.
¡Buscad!
to listen carefully in order to discriminate sounds
and identify meaning
to show they understand familiar statements
to begin to show understanding of syntactic
structure in languages, e.g. position of adjectives
in Spanish in relation to English adjective
position, e.g. un bolígrafo azul – a blue pen
Resources:
Includes Lesson plan and Activity Sheets
The purpose of this topic is for children to identify members of their family, to respond to questions
and to write short phrases correctly with support.
Learning objective
Children learn:
to introduce members of the family
Learning outcomes
Children learn:
to identify correctly names for members of the
family
to understand and say whether or not they have
brothers or sisters
to respond with Se llama… when asked
someone’s name
to understand that el is masculine and la is
feminine
to role-play members of own, imaginary or
famous family
to copy familiar short phrases correctly
to name and describe people
to use visual clues to produce short phrases
using mainly memorised language
Includes:
Lesson Plans, Vocabulary and Lesson Activities
The purpose of this topic is to ensure that the children can say what nationality they are, ask the
question of others and say what language they (and others) speak.
Learning objective
Children learn:
to describe their nationality and the languages
they speak
Learning outcomes
Children learn:
to describe their nationality and ask others the
same question, for example Soy inglés/inglesa
to say what languages they speak, for example
Hablo inglés y español
Includes:
Lesson Plan and Activity Sheets
The purpose of this topic is for children to say what the weather is like, using a few simple phrases.
Learning objective
Children learn:
to describe the weather, using a few simple
phrases
Learning outcomes
Children learn:
to respond to the question ¿Qué tiempo hace?
using short phrases, e.g. hace buen/mal tiempo;
hace calor/frío
to name and describe the weather in various
places, e.g. en Alicante hace calor
to write the phrases so they can describe the
weather correctly
Includes Lesson Plan and Activity Sheets
The purpose of this lesson is: to discover why the landscape was crucial in the life of the ancient Egyptians
Children should learn:
• to make deductions about life in the past from
pictures of the landscape;
• how much of the life of Egypt depended on the
Nile.
Class objective:
• to discover the importance of the River Nile in
ancient Egypt.
Children should be able to:
• extract information about the landscape from
pictures;
• provide answers that show the relationship
between the geography of Egypt and the way of
life in the past
Includes Lesson Plan and Activity sheets where required
The purpose of this lesson is: to learn about the story of Theseus.
Children should learn:
• about one Greek myth in detail;
• to answer questions showing understanding of
myths and legends.
Class objective:
• to learn about the myth of Theseus and the
Minotaur.
Children should be able to:
• understand the nature of a myth;
• recount the story of Theseus and the Minotaur.
Includes: Lesson Plans and Activities and the story
Alternatively, get all 71 sheets from our TES shop
15 sheets with Answers
Nouns – to understand the difference between common and proper nouns. Nouns – to identify collective nouns.
Noun Challenge – to identify abstract nouns.
Noun – to work with singular and plural nouns.
Nouns – to investigate how nouns are part of word families.
Noun Phrases – to expand nouns into noun phrases.
Pronouns – to use personal pronouns correctly as subject and object.
Verbs – to recognise the infinitive of a verb.
Verbs Challenge – to ensure that the subject of a sentence and the verb agree.
Verbs – to use auxiliary verbs correctly.
Verbs Challenge – to explore the subtle changes in meaning when using modal verbs.
Verbs Challenge – to change verbs from one tense to another.
Adjectives – to revise adjectives.
Adjectives Challenge – to explore synonyms and antonyms of adjectives. Adverbs – to revise adverbs of manner.
Taken from: Grammar and Creativity for Year 6
Good writing may start with an exciting idea, but it needs structure to make sense to a reader. Grammar provides a framework on which to display the imagination.
Writing brings together individual expression and an understanding of the rules that allow our language (any language) to make sense. This book has been written with the view that grammar and creativity go hand in hand to produce good writing. Developing children’s understanding of the basics of English will encourage their literary adventures. The range of activities here has been designed to excite interest as well as guide children and teachers through the rules.
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Links to the objective: Read and write numerals from 0 to at least 20.
Solve mathematical problems or puzzles,recognise simple patterns and relationships,generalise and predict.Suggest extensions by asking ‘What if…?’
Explain methods and reasoning orally and,where appropriate, in writing.
5 Sheets with Answers and example strategies to solve the problem.
The overall aim is to help pupils to apply in a variety of situations the mathematics they have already learnt.The programme seeks to achieve this by teaching the strategies that will enable pupils to approach a variety of problems in a more logical and systematic way. The more specific aims of the programme are to promote the following:
• willingness to attempt problems and to persevere;
• confidence in one’s ability to solve problems;
• awareness of problem-solving strategies;
• awareness of the value of approaching problems in a systematic manner;
• ability to select appropriate solution strategies;
• ability to apply solution strategies accurately;
• ability to monitor and evaluate one’s thinking whilst solving problems.
The problems included:
1: Trucks and Trailers
2. Truck Driver
3. Clown Masks
4. Party Masks
5. Target Game
Taken from Problem Solving Years KS1
Taken from our Geography Flipbook Activities Keystage 2 Years5&6
This unit contains
Water Flipbook page 1:
WaterAid at work
Flipbook page 2:Improving water supplies
The resource includes one page of teacher’s notes for every page in the flipbook,and each one includes learning objectives and outcomes,key questions and activity ideas.There are many suggestions on how to use the relevant flipbook page and associated activity sheet.
Learning Objective: Children should learn: • to understand that people in less economically developed countries may not have access to safe, clean water supplies
Learning outcomes: Children will be able to:
• appreciate some of the problems associated with water supply
• understand that important decisions about water use have to be made
2 full lessons includes lesson plans resources and flipbook.
Fun-engaging lesson that can easily be done at home.
1st lesson: Learning objectives
Children should learn: • that plants provide food for humans
Learning outcomes
Children will be able to: • state that humans eat some plants
2nd Lesson Learning objectives
Children should learn: • that there are different plants in the environment • to make observations of one or two plants and of where they grow and to communicate these
Learning outcomes
Children will be able to: • name some common plants • describe where some common plants grow
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Children with a reasonable grasp of Letters and Sounds Phase 5 should be able to access the story in guided reading. It includes a number of words with the following graphemes: ● ‘ee’, ‘ea’, ‘e-e’: sleep, see, three; skebe; beach, eat, real, feast, heat, sea, creature. ● ‘ai’, ‘ay’, ‘a-e’: again; away; late, cave, chase, late, made, babe. There are also a number of words using ‘ou’, ‘ow’ (down) and ‘igh’, ‘i-e’.
Taken from Make Phonics Fun: Summer. For each topic covered there are two pages of practical teacher’s notes offering activity ideas to help you make the best use of the resources and texts provided. Activities are clearly signposted to indicate whether they are most suitable for shared, guided or independent reading sessions and, where relevant, opportunities for writing and for developing speaking and listening skills are also highlighted.
The book makes frequent references to the phases of Letters and Sounds.
Each topic within Make Phonics Fun is supported by a range of lively and appealing pupil texts – including original stories, fascinating non-fiction and quality poetry.
There are two photocopiable activity sheets for each topic, providing a range of fun things to do – from reading games which involve listening for specific phonemes, to sequencing activities and track games providing sounding out and blending practice
At the heart of each topic within this book is a carefully selected list of 40 real and pseudo words (20 words for Section 1 and 20 words for Section 2), building a word bank, from topic to topic and term to term, that
will cover the broad range of grapheme-phoneme correspondences that the children should be familiar with by the time they approach the end of Year 1
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