Born Free works to stop individual wildlife suffering & protect threatened species in the wild.
We create resource packs, aimed at KS2 to KS4, that include full lesson plans, PowerPoint presentations and activities, and detailed links to the National Curriculum.
Our cross-curricular resources aim to develop a range of skills, including; decision making, debating, speech writing, performing, presenting, persuasive writing, questioning, reporting and data analysis.
Born Free works to stop individual wildlife suffering & protect threatened species in the wild.
We create resource packs, aimed at KS2 to KS4, that include full lesson plans, PowerPoint presentations and activities, and detailed links to the National Curriculum.
Our cross-curricular resources aim to develop a range of skills, including; decision making, debating, speech writing, performing, presenting, persuasive writing, questioning, reporting and data analysis.
Help your students to understand the issues surrounding our relationship with nature and the possible impact this has on pandemics such as covid-19.
This resource can either be used as an essay question or the basis for a persuasive letter.
Born Free’s Executive President and Co-Founder, Will Travers OBE, recently highlighted that: “Covid-19 has cleared the sky of planes, the railways of trains, the roads of cars. It has shown that, if we must, we can change the way we live. Now is the time to invest in nature and in the planet – not for sentimental reasons but because it is in our self-interest to do so.”
KS2 Lesson on animal adaptations, focusing on wild animals kept as pets.
Learning Objectives:
To explain the different adaptations animals use to survive in the wild.
To be able to identify how these adaptations provide an advantage in an animal’s natural habitat.
Explain why some animals are not suitable as pets.
Wild animals are perfectly adapted to life in their natural habitat. However, thousands of people across the UK now own an exotic or dangerous wild animal as a pet, including tigers, lions and primates. Through this standalone lesson learn about different wild animal adaptations and allow pupils to discuss whether they think wild animals should be kept as pets.
If you like our resources, please leave a review!
You can book free workshops from a member of the Born Free Education Team. Contact us at education@bornfree.org.uk
This comprehensive pack is great for teachers looking for activities to engage their school’s Environmental Club, or for those who simply want to get their class to learn more about wildlife. Based on the theme of threats to wildlife, this pack includes a range of ideas and activities that can be run across a school term.
Pupils can pick which activities that are particularly important to them and their school, and of course are achievable. The activities are designed to be run on a weekly basis, but can be run across a longer time-frame depending on the interest of the club members and the amount of time they would like to dedicate to them.
Starting an Environmental Club at your school is a great way to promote wild animal conservation and welfare while helping your pupils engage in practical learning. If you need any support please contact education@bornfree.org.uk
Did you enjoy these activities? Search for Born Free’s Environmental Club Packs 1, 3 and 4!
The ocean is a part of the earth’s support system and is vital for our survival. It is also the home to hundreds of thousands of fascinating plants and animals, with many more yet to be discovered.
Featuring fun facts and activities, this pack, can be used alongside Jay Vincent’s book The Shark Who Barked. The activities included aim to increase understating and instil a love of the ocean, or they can simply be used to bring the book to life.
Included within this resource pack:
Full lesson plans
Accompanying presentation and activities
A range of suggested follow-up activities
Please leave a review. Your feedback helps us to continue to deliver high quality content, free of charge.
Any questions? Contact us education@bornfree.org.uk
A selection of curriculum-linked worksheets and activities, perfect for KS1 children learning from home. These can be used as an additional classroom resource for teachers. Our Education Programme aims to instil a love of wildlife in young people, so each of our resources has been linked to an animal or habitat that Born Free is working to protect.
New resources will be added regularly, so keep an eye out for more!
• KS1 English - How A Zoo Animal Feels
• KS1 Maths - Symmetry
• KS1 Maths - 2D Shapes
Enjoy, have fun, and let us know how you are getting on by reaching out to education@bornfree.org.uk with your questions, photos and news.
A selection of curriculum-linked worksheets and activities, perfect for KS1 children learning from home. These can be used as an additional classroom resource for teachers. Our Education Programme aims to instil a love of wildlife in young people, so each of our resources has been linked to an animal or habitat that Born Free is working to protect.
New resources will be added regularly, so keep an eye out for more!
• KS1 English - How a zoo animal feels
Enjoy, have fun, and let us know how you are getting on by reaching out to education@bornfree.org.uk with your questions, photos and news.
This comprehensive pack is great for teachers looking for activities to engage their school’s Environmental Club, or for those who simply want to get their class to learn more about wildlife. This pack includes a range of ideas and activities that can be run across a school term.
Pupils can pick which activities that are particularly important to them and their school, and of course are achievable. The club can be teacher or pupil led, with the option of delegating club roles and responsibilities across members. The activities are designed to be run on a weekly basis, but can be run across a longer time-frame depending on the interest of the club members and the amount of time they would like to dedicate to them.
Starting an Environmental Club at your school is a great way to promote wild animal conservation and welfare as well as environmental stewardship, while helping your pupils engage in practical learning. If you need any support please contact education@bornfree.org.uk
We are currently in the midst of both a biodiversity crisis and a climate crisis, with the 2022 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report stating we must act ‘now or never’. But, can one crisis be solved without the other, or are both interlinked?
Your students will decide.
Born Free’s Great Debate provides teachers with the tools to engage their students in meaningful debates about key wildlife or environmental topics. Through this topic, students will have the opportunity to delve deeper into the issue of climate change, and decide whether we need to harness the power of nature in order to reduce, or even adapt, to its impact.
Students will not only gain knowledge about the this topic, but also skills that will help them to research, frame and deliver an argument. Armed with these skills, young people are more equipped to take action to reduce their impact on the environment, and to encourage others to follow.
Lesson one – Causes & Impacts
Recap the causes and impacts of climate change, and examine the significance of 1.5°C.
Lesson two – Climate Change & Wildlife
Discover how wildlife helps us to mitigate against the impacts of climate change.
Lesson three/ Homework – Research
Research and frame opposing sides of the debate.
Lesson four – The Great Debate
Participate, listen and learn through a formal debate.
Lesson five – Action Planning
Identify calls to action and create a campaign to bring about local change.
Does your class love wildlife?
Wildlife ABC introduces pupils to some incredible wild animals, some of which they may not have heard of before! Learn amazing facts about each animal whilst practising phonics.
We have included digraphs and trigraphs up to Phase 5, so that pupils can decode each animal name. This presentation can be shared on the board as a fun activity with your class, or printed out as an intervention resource.
What do you think of this resource? Pleas leave a review!
You can get in touch with the Born Free Education Team: education@bornfree.org.uk
This comprehensive pack is great for teachers looking for activities to engage their school’s Environmental Club, or for those who simply want to get their class to consider the environment in their daily lives. Based on the theme of taking responsibilty, this pack includes a range of ideas and activities that can be run across a whole school term.
Pupils can pick which activities that are particularly important to them and their school, and of course are achievable. The activities are designed to be run on a weekly basis, but can be run across a longer time-frame depending on the interest of the club members and the amount of time they would like to dedicate to them.
Starting an Environmental Club at your school is a great way to promote wild animal conservation and welfare while helping your pupils engage in practical learning. If you need any support please contact education@bornfree.org.uk
Did you enjoy these activities? Search for Born Free’s Environmental Club Packs 1, 2 and 4!
Included within this resource are two case studies designed to accompany and enhance learning from the National and GCSE Science Curriculums. The case studies take a closer look at:
The transmission of Bovine TB between cows and Eurasian badgers.
The transmission of Rabies and Canine Distemper Virus between Ethiopian Wolves and domestic dogs.
A selection of curriculum-linked worksheets and activities, perfect for KS2 children learning from home. These can be used as an additional classroom resource for teachers. Our Education Programme aims to instil a love of wildlife in young people, so each of our resources has been linked to an animal or habitat that Born Free is working to protect.
New resources will be added regularly, so keep an eye out for more!
• KS2 English - How a captive animal feels
Enjoy, have fun, and let us know how you are getting on by reaching out to education@bornfree.org.uk with your questions, photos and news.
Une courte unité de travail destinée aux élèves du primaire, ou aux élèves plus âgés apprenant le français langue étrangère, sur des animaux sauvages se produisant dans des cirques. Chaque leçon doit durer une heure, bien qu’il existe de nombreuses possibilités de raccourcir ou d’allonger les activités. Ce sujet a de nombreux liens transversaux, avec des liens étroits avec les programmes britanniques de science, de géographie, de SMSC et de citoyenneté.
Leçon 1. Adaptations animales
Décrire comment différents organismes sont adaptés à leur environnement
Expliquer pourquoi les organismes réussissent le mieux dans leur propre environnement naturel
Leçon 2. Une journée dans la vie d’un tigre
Pour comparer la vie d’un tigre dans la nature avec celle d’un cirque
Rédiger une entrée de journal intitulée «Une journée dans la vie d’un tigre».
Leçon 3. Faut-il interdire tous les animaux sauvages des cirques?
Comprendre les arguments pour et contre l’interdiction des animaux sauvages dans les cirques
Se forger une opinion
Ecrire une lettre convaincante.
Le contexte:
Dans le monde entier, des milliers d’animaux sauvages sont utilisés dans les cirques et forcés d’effectuer des tours humiliants et contre nature pour divertir le public. Le bien-être des animaux domestiques et sauvages est souvent gravement compromis dans un environnement de cirque.
Born Free travaille à travers le Royaume-Uni et l’Europe pour mettre fin à l’utilisation d’animaux sauvages dans les cirques et soutient les partenaires de la campagne internationale dans leurs efforts. Dans la mesure du possible, Born Free sauve les animaux des conditions épouvantables des cirques. Au fil des ans, nous avons sauvé et accueilli plusieurs grands félins de cirques en France, en Bulgarie, en Italie et en Allemagne. Nous leur fournissons des soins à vie de haut niveau dans des sanctuaires. Cependant, ce sont les plus chanceux.
Si vous trouvez ces ressources utiles, veuillez laisser un commentaire. Si vous avez d’autres questions ou souhaitez en savoir plus sur notre programme d’éducation au Royaume-Uni, contactez-nous à education@bornfree.org.uk.
Merci beaucoup pour vérifier nos matériaux!
A selection of curriculum-linked worksheets and activities, perfect for KS2 children learning from home, or to be used as an additional classroom resource for teachers. Our Education Programme aims to instil a love of wildlife in young people, so each of our resources has been linked to an animal or habitat that Born Free is working to protect.
• KS2 Geography - Lines of latitude and the ocean
New resources will be added regularly, so keep an eye out for more!
Enjoy, have fun, and let us know how you are getting on by reaching out to education@bornfree.org.uk with your questions, photos and news.
Born Free’s comprehensive Environmental Club packs are great for teachers running clubs, or simply looking for activities to engage their class with nature.
This top-up pack can be used in conjunction with Packs 1, 2 and 3, or can be used independently. It includes activities based on the topics Nature, Threats To Wildlife and Taking Responsibility.
Pupils can pick which activities that are particularly important to them and their school, and of course are achievable. The activities are designed to be run on a weekly basis, but can be run across a longer time-frame depending on the interest of the club members and the amount of time they would like to dedicate to them.
Starting an Environmental Club at your school is a great way to promote wild animal conservation and welfare while helping your pupils engage in practical learning. If you need any support please contact education@bornfree.org.uk
Did you enjoy these activities? Search for Born Free’s Environmental Club Packs 1, 2 and 3!
To celebrate Born Free’s Year Of The Lion we have created this lesson pack to increase pupils’ knowledge of one of the world’s most iconic big cats, the lion.
Pupils will learn about the stories of individual lions, both in the wild, and rescued from captive conditions by Born Free.
This resource pack has been designed to accompany a visit to our Born Free Forever exhibition, which toured the UK throughout 2022 before its final destination at Chewton Glen Hotel & Spa in Hampshire. However, if you are unable to visit the exhibition, this pack can still be used for in-class learning.
Included within this resource pack:
A full in-class lesson plan
Accompanying presentation and worksheets
A range of suggested follow-up activities
For those learning in-class, we have included additional images resources so pupils can participate in all the activities.
Please leave a review. Your feedback helps us to continue to deliver high quality content, free of charge.
Any questions? Contact us education@bornfree.org.uk
A selection of curriculum-linked worksheets and activities, perfect for KS2 children learning from home, or to be used as an additional classroom resource for teachers. Our Education Programme aims to instil a love of wildlife in young people, so each of our resources has been linked to an animal or habitat that Born Free is working to protect.
• KS1 Geography - Naming The World’s Ocean
New resources will be added regularly, so keep an eye out for more!
Enjoy, have fun, and let us know how you are getting on by reaching out to education@bornfree.org.uk with your questions, photos and news.
We are currently in the midst of both a biodiversity crisis and a climate crisis, with the 2022 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report stating we must act ‘now or never’. But, can one crisis be solved without the other, or are both interlinked?
Your students will decide.
Born Free’s Great Debate provides teachers with the tools to engage their students in meaningful debates about key wildlife or environmental topics. Through this topic, students will have the opportunity to delve deeper into the issue of climate change, and decide whether we need to harness the power of nature in order to reduce, or even adapt, to its impact.
Students will not only gain knowledge about the this topic, but also skills that will help them to research, frame and deliver an argument. Armed with these skills, young people are more equipped to take action to reduce their impact on the environment, and to encourage others to follow.
Lesson one – Causes & Impacts
Recap the causes and impacts of climate change, and examine the significance of 1.5°C.
Lesson two – Climate Change & Wildlife
Discover how wildlife helps us to mitigate against the impacts of climate change.
Lesson three/ Homework – Research
Research and frame opposing sides of the debate.
Lesson four – The Great Debate
Participate, listen and learn through a formal debate.
Lesson five – Action Planning
Identify calls to action and create a campaign to bring about local change.
Help your students to learn about physical landscapes of lion habitats, the threats they face with a specific focus on the impact of climate change on the surrounding wildlife and communities and what we can do to protect them. These resources, linking film content, PowerPoints and student activities, are suitable for KS3 and tailored to meet Geography learning objectives.
Learning objectives
To extend locational knowledge and deepen spatial awareness of African countries, including knowledge of key physical characteristics.
Understand how human and physical processes interact to influence and change landscapes, environments and the climate; and how human activity relies on effective functioning of natural systems.
To explain how food chains and food webs work in the African savannah, including how animals have unique adaptations and characteristics developed to survive this environment and keep a balanced ecosystem.
To understand how human actions are destroying and altering ecosystems.
Help your students to learn about the different ethical perspectives that drive conservation. These resources will discuss the vital ecological role lions play in their savannah habitats, the threats they face and what we can do to protect them, whilst facilitating discussion on real world ethical dilemmas in conservation.
Learning objectives
To develop knowledge and appreciation of the differing ethical perspectives in conservation and global issues, and use these to form personal perspectives.
To develop a critical knowledge, understanding and awareness of issues relating to conservation, human rights, animal rights, culture and diversity, and social justice.
To develop knowledge and appreciation of, and respect for, their environment to empower students to take an active role in its stewardship.