This is an introduction to Information Technology Skills for teenagers and adults with additional educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets, files for students and an examination.
The resource is intended to introduce students to IT Skills, including:
Data entry
Word processing
File management
Internet and email
IT theory
Topics include:
IT concepts and terminology
Impact of IT
Managing files, folders and directories
Entering data, wpm
Editing and formatting text
Navigating the Internet
Managing a personal email account
**These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes: **
Explain a range of information technology concepts and terminology
Describe the impact of information technology
Manage files, folders or directories
Use a data entry application to enter data using text, alpha, numeric and special characters to a minimum speed of 15 words per minute.
Access a word processing package to open a file, enter and edit text
Format text using a range of format tools
Enhance text using a range of enhancement tools
Edit a block of text using a range o f editing tools
Navigate specific internet sites through a browser
Use a range of functions in a webmail application
Manage a personal email account
Produce an accurate hard copy of a 50—70 word document by proof reading, and using spell check, save and print features
Produce a hard copy of specific information located on the Internet.
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets can be printed, and teachers can use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard. This resource is not fillable online, and it is recommended that worksheets are printed. Alternatively, students can split their screens to read the instructions and carry out the activities.
What additional materials are needed?
None, all of the components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets, files for students and an examination.
Student Worksheets: 96 Pages
This is an introduction to Health-Related Fitness for teenagers and adults with additional educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets, teaching slides and templates.
The resource is intended to introduce students to Health and Fitness, including:
The human body
Lifestyle practices
Components of fitness
Safety, amenities and equipment
Topics include:
Systems in the human body
Healthy eating, including a meal plan
Benefits of health and fitness
Stress management
Sleep
Drugs awareness
Practical participation
**These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes: **
Identify the basic structure and functions of the human body
Explain the importance of a warm up and cool down
Identify personal lifestyle habits and their effect on longevity and quality of life
Identify quality of life improvements based on an individual’s personal lifestyle habits
Outline the main short term and long term physiological changes the body undergoes due to participation in different types of exercise
List sports and recreation amenities available to the public in the local area
Select, under supervision, appropriate physical activities to achieve a basic level of skill or fitness
Participate in a range of physical activities under supervision to acquire at minimum a basic level of skill or fitness
Use safe and appropriate practice in participation in each phase of an exercise session
Identify the most important health related components of fitness in a range of sports and physical activities
Apply principles of good practice to a personal health related fitness programme.
Can this resource be used online?
Yes, it is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets, teaching slides and templates.
Student Worksheets: 215 Pages
Teaching Slides: 104
Level 2 Preparing for Work
This is an introduction to Preparing for Work for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to preparing for work, including:
Finding out about work
Preparing for work-related activities
Taking part in a work-related activity
Topics include:
Choosing a career
Looking for a job
Writing a CV, including talents, values, skills, etc.
Preparing for an interview
Punctuality and attendance record
Communication
Presentation
Teamwork
Work values
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Identify different jobs that people do in their school
List three local employment opportunities
Describe one way in which people get a job or course of their choice
List possible jobs that students are interested in and find information on the requirements for the job
Visit a local employer and review the visit
Learn how to use work tools or equipment safely
Participate in a work-related activity
Review the activity to evaluate its success
Students assess effectiveness of own role in activity
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets can be printed, and teachers can use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard. This resource is not currently fillable, but can be made so with specialised software.
What additional materials are needed?
None, all of the components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 162 Pages
Teaching Slides: 75 Pages
Level 3 Nutrition and Healthy Options
This is an introduction to Nutrition and Healthy Options for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to nutrition and healthy options, including:
Nutrition and Nutrients
Diet
Food safety
Cooking vegetables
Topics include:
Healthy eating
The digestive process
Eating disorders
Food allergy and intolerance
Poor nutrition
Food safety Ireland
Correct food storage methods
Health benefits of vegetables
Preparing vegetable accompaniments and meals
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Explain the basic principles of food safety and associated legislation
Explain the role of nutrients in the body and the concept of a balanced diet
Describe the human digestive process
List common dietary disorders
Discuss contemporary nutritional issues related to food production
Identify ingredients relevant to special dietary needs
Describe the impact of purchasing, storage, preparation and cooking on nutritional value
Demonstrate the versatility of vegetables, as an accompaniment or as a well-balanced stand-alone meal
Prepare a limited range of varied and palatable meals for vegetarians
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource and the printable and fillable versions are included. If using the fillable version, students can type in their answers and save it on their device.
What additional materials are needed?
None, all of the components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 141 Pages
Teaching Slides: 59 Pages
Level 3 Application of Number
This is an introduction to Application of Number for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to application of number, including:
Number
Measurement and Capacity
Problem Solving
Topics include:
Number systems
Rounding off
Addition, subtraction, multiplication and division
Fractions, decimals and percentages
Calculator skills
Properties of shapes
Area and volume
Measurement skills
Scale
Everyday problem solving
Finding solutions
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Explain the concepts of natural numbers (N) integers (Z) and real numbers
Demonstrate equivalence between common simple fractions, decimals and percentages
Use a calculator to perform functions eg. +, -, x, %, memory keys and clear key
Give approximations by using different strategies.
Demonstrate accuracy of calculations by applying the principle mathematical functions
Describe shape and space constructs using language appropriate to shape.
Draw everyday objects to scale using a range of mathematical instruments
Calculate the area of a square, rectangle, triangle and circle by applying the correct formula
Calculate the volume of a cylinder by applying the correct formula
Understand simple scaled drawings.
Demonstrate metric measurement skills
Calculate solutions to real life quantitative problems
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets can be printed, and teachers can use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard. This resource is not fillable online, and it is recommended that worksheets are printed as mathematical symbols and formats may be difficult for students to type in. If a fillable format is required, there is specialised software available online.
What additional materials are needed?
None, all of the components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets, teacher slides, teacher notes and answers.
Student Worksheets: 159 Pages
Teaching Slides: 99 Pages
Level 4 Work Experience
This is an introduction to Work Experience for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets, slides and student journal.
The resource is intended to introduce students to work experience, including:
General work-related information
Evidence of planning and preparation
Work placement
Topics include:
Factors affecting work opportunities
Rights and responsibilities - employers and employees
Personal audit / profile
Job-seeking kit
Guidelines for work experience journal
Diary/record of activities
Future education, training and employment
Reflection on work placement
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
List factors which influence work opportunities
Describe the impact of paid and unpaid workforce participation
Identify the basic rights and responsibilities of employees and employers
Identify personal strengths, interpersonal and work-related skills, drawing on other life experiences
Summarise potential employment and learning opportunities that match personal strengths and, interests and skills
Compile relevant material for work experience, to include a CV, letter of application, skills checklist, statement of learning goals and associated action points
Participate effectively in work experience to include punctuality, working under direction, personal presentation, adherence to health, safety and other relevant regulations
Reflect on the period of work experience and the progress made on the learning goals and action points that were set
Demonstrate effective communications skills in the workplace
Explore options for future education, training and employment in light of work experience
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
Student Worksheets, teaching slides and student journal
Student Worksheets: 73 Pages
Slides: 61
Level 3 Office Procedures
This is an introduction to Office Procedures for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets, teaching slides and student notes.
The resource is intended to introduce students to office procedures, including:
About the office environment
Working in an office environment
Topics include:
Organisational structures
Formal and informal structures
Which department
Office supplies
Office equipment
Confidentiality
Communication
Answering the phone
Preparing documents
Health and safety in an office environment
Working as part of a team
Delivering quality work
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Outline the formal structures or departments commonly found in a large organisation
Describe equipment and software packages
Outline the primary means of receiving, sourcing, recording and managing and circulating business related information and documentation
Describe contracts of employment
Demonstrate an understanding of the importance of confidentiality in an office
Prepare a variety of physical documents
Carry out a broad range of general reception duties
Maintain a petty cash float
Communicate efficiently, noting messages concisely and conveying accurately to relevant staff
Demonstrate the application of communications team working and quality awareness in an office environment
Apply appropriate health, safety and personal hygiene procedures when working in an office environment
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
Student worksheets, teaching slides and student notes
Student worksheets: 83 Pages
Slides: 52
This is an introduction to Life Science: Habitats for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to plant and animal habitats, including:
Types of plants and animals
Types of habitats
Vertebrates and invertebrates
Living or not living
Flowering and non flowering plants
Topics include various types of habitats:
In the mountains
In the rainforest
In and near the river
In the desert
In an urban environment
In the polar regions
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Sort familiar living things into groups of plant and animal kingdoms.
Sort familiar living things into vertebrates/invertebrates.
Identify a flowering and non-flowering plant.
List plant and animal life forms in a local habitat.
Name some characteristics that enable living things to thrive in a local habitat.
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 78 Pages
Teaching Slides: 55 Slides
This is an introduction to Using Technology for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to using technology, including:
Technology in everyday life
Using technology
Topics include:
Technology at home
Technology for entertainment
Technology in learning
Technology in work
Using technology at home
Using technology for learning
Using technology to do banking
Benefits and risks of technology
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Identify areas of everyday life where she/he interacts with technology e.g. for learning, working personal and home management and for fun
Consider some benefits and risks of using technology
Use technology requiring not more than 3 functions for personal, home and educational/workplace use e.g. assistive technologies, electronic information retrieval/communications devices, mobile phone, photocopier, computer, cameras, personal technologies
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
Student worksheets and teaching slides
Student Worksheets: 105 Pages
Slides: 109
This is an introduction to Writing for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and extra writing tasks.
The resource is intended to introduce students to writing, including:
Writing practice
Writing sight words
Writing notes & messages
Writing and drafting meaningful sentences
Using the rules of writing, e.g. capital letters, punctuation
Using different forms of writing
Topics include:
Writing CVC words
Writing personal information
Writing sentences
Everyday writing tasks, e.g. lists, invitation, email, diary, planner, review, captions, recipe, poem, directions, text message, instructions, labels, signs, tweet, poems, etc.
Proofreading
**These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes: **
Write notes and messages needed for simple tasks.
Write, including drafting, at least five sentences so that they convey meaning or information.
Use the rules of writing appropriately.
Use a range of different forms of writing to suit purpose and audience.
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets can be printed, and teachers can use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard. This resource is not currently fillable, but can be made so with specialised software.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and extra writing tasks.
Student Worksheets: 138 Pages
Teaching Slides: 56 Pages
This is an introduction to Spatial Awareness for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to the concept of spatial awareness, including:
Spatial awareness vocabulary
Movement of objects and body
Mapwork skills
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Use appropriate vocabulary to describe direction, e.g. clockwise, anti-clockwise, horizontal, vertical
Use a simple map to find a given location
Draw a simple map to give directions
Calculate the distance between two places on a map
Use the body or body parts to move in a given direction
Move a range of objects in given directions
Topics include:
Shapes
Size
Features of spatial awareness
Relations
Perspective
Visual perception
Movement in everyday life
Personal space
Moving in a crowd
Body language
Map vocabulary
Direction
Compass points
Map scales, keys and symbols
Reading and drawing maps
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 161 Pages
Teaching Slides: 71
Optical Illusion Slides: 21
This is an introduction to Shape and Space for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to shape and space, including:
2D and 3D shapes
Area, perimeter and volume
Topics include:
Describing 2D and 3D shapes
Shapes in everyday life
Drawing shapes
What shapes have in common
Sorting shapes
Perspective
Size
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Name common shapes and forms in everyday life e.g., circles, rectangles cubes, cylinders and spheres.
Describe the properties of common 2D shapes and 3D forms e.g., number of faces, edges, area, volume.
Recognise the relationship between area and volume.
Sort 2D and 3D shapes and forms in relation to size.
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 69 Pages
Teaching Slides: 76 Slides
This is an introduction to Setting Learning Goals for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to goal setting, including:
Personal profile
Learning plan
Learning log and review
Topics include:
Get thinking about goals
Learning styles
Distractions
Study habits
Preparing and setting goals
Motivation
Work-life balance
Supports
Evaluating goals
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Identify elements of a personal profile e.g. some personal skills, attitudes, strengths and weaknesses.
Discuss different ways of learning.
Consider personal learning successes.
Identify elements of the preferred personal learning style.
Consider a learning plan e.g. setting a target, looking at resources and necessary steps, time frame.
Implementing the plan.
Express opinions on how performance could be improved.
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 71 Pages
Teaching Slides: 70 Slides
This is an introduction to Breakfast Cookery for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets, teaching slides and many extras.
The resource is intended to introduce students to breakfast cookery, including:
Food legislation and kitchen safety
Making hot and cold breakfasts
Food preparation
Menu planning
Topics include :
Food safety, e.g. food storage, temperature, hygiene, dietary requirements, etc.
Kitchen terminology
Basic cooking processes, including following recipes, measuring, choosing ingredients, baking, frying, grilling, poaching, garnishing, presenting, etc.
Organisation of a professional kitchen
Basic techniques of tasting
Basic understanding of food costs and quality
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Explain the basic principles of food safety and associated legislation
Explain the organisation of a professional kitchen
Use kitchen terminology, weights and measures appropriately
Explain how different degrees of cooking affect foods
Demonstrate basic techniques of tasting, recognition of food freshness and garnishing finished dishes
Demonstrate basic cookery processes including grilling, poaching, shallow frying, boiling and simmering
Demonstrate basic techniques for preparation of hot and cold cereals and breads
Assist in preparing and presenting a full Irish cooked and a continental breakfast, plated and buffet style
Comply with current food safety and hygiene legislation and regulation
Demonstrate basic understanding of the food cost and quality control cycle
Can this resource be used online?
Yes, it is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets, teaching slides, templates and checklists.
Student Worksheets: 143 Pages
Teaching Slides: 131 Slides
This is an introduction to **Living in a Community **for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to preparing for living in a community, including:
Developing good relationships
Resolving conflict
Using local facilities
Seeking help and advice
Making consumer choices
Topics include:
Benefits if a relationship
Friendships
Community relationships
Speaking to different audiences
Peer pressure
Bullying
Conflict resolution
Helplines
Support agencies
Needs and wants
Consumer rights and responsibilities
Making complaints
**These worksheets are designed to include the following learning outcomes: **
Explore different kinds of relationships eg. parent/child, student/teacher, student/student, friends
Identify situations where people speak differently depending on audience eg. peers, teachers, parents, other adults
Describe ways of making and keeping friends
Identify healthy and unhealthy relationships
Participate co-operatively in a group situation
Recognise peer pressure and coping strategies
Resolve conflict
Spend leisure time in the community
Take part in a school-based community project
Seek help and advice, e.g. helplines, agencies, people in the community
11.Study consumer labels and vocabulary
Make good consumer choices
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 209 Pages
Teaching Slides: 71 Pages
This is an introduction to Problem Solving for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to concepts of problem solving, including:
Sorting information, e.g. colours, shapes, direction, design, type, size and shadows
Patterns and sequence
Shapes
Numbers, e.g. recognition of numbers 1 to 10, writing numbers and counting
Basic addition and subtraction to 10
Making choices, e.g. choosing appropriate clothes, recognising signs, healthy eating and going out
Using problem-solving concepts, e.g. grouping, matching, size, round and square, more and less than, odd one out, differences, ordering tasks, left and right, top and bottom, position words, cost, etc.
Following instructions
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
(1) Organise information in an everyday problem.
(2) Identify choices and results in a problem.
(3) Solve a problem with support.
Topics include:
Colours
Shapes
Numbers
Food and drink
Home
Animals
Work
Going out
In class
Can this resource be used online?
Yes, it is a digital resource. However, it is not currently fillable online. This resource is designed to be used in person. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets are best printed, although teachers can use also them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 204 Pages
Teaching Slides: 122
This is an introduction to Writing for teenagers and adults with special educational needs.
The resource is intended to introduce students to the concepts of writing, including:
Pre-writing practice
Letters of the alphabet
Letter sounds
Numbers
Writing familiar words, e.g. name, place names, telephone numbers, personal information, dates, CVC words and sight words
Everyday writing activities, e.g. notes, lists, sentences , likes and dislikes, greeting card, timetable, email, abbreviations, text message, signs, forms, reviews, etc.
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
(1) Write some familiar words for different purposes, e.g. own name and address
(2) Transcribe simple information in specific order, e.g. phone number, days of the week
(3) Write for different personal and socially relevant audiences, e.g. personal shopping list/reminder, sending a card/postcard, sending a text message
(4) Use some rules of writing appropriately, e.g. use of capital letters to start a sentence, write a sentence correctly
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is designed to be used in person. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets are best printed, although teachers can use also them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
Student Worksheets: 311 Pages
Extra Writing Tasks
This is an introduction to Personal Safety for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets and teaching slides.
The resource is intended to introduce students to personal safety, including:
Safety at home
Safety in the community
Safety at work
Topics include:
Fire safety
First aid
Being safe on your own
Going out on your own
PPE
Signs at work
Risk assessment
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Recognise symbols relating to safety in a given location
Name situations at home / in the community / in the workplace that put personal safety at risk
Demonstrate safe practice for frequently encountered risk situations in the daily environment
Identify people with responsibility for safety in everyday situations
Can this resource be used online?
Yes, it is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 118 Pages
Teaching Slides: 83 Slides
This is an introduction to Quantity and Number for teenagers and adults with special educational needs.
The resource is intended to introduce students to the concepts of numbers, including:
Numbers 1 to 10
Number value
Maths words
** These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:**
(QN1) Name one- and two-digit whole numbers from 0-10
(QN2) Recognise the relationship between numerical value and groups of objects, up to and including 10
(QN3) Record one- and two-digit numbers
(QN4) Recognise the language of mathematics in everyday situations using elementary language, e.g. greater than, less than, bigger than, farther than
(QN5) Apply number bonding between 0 and 10
Topics include:
Reading and writing numbers
Equals
More or less
Number bonds to 10
Addition and subtraction
Size
Measurement words
Position words
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is designed to be used in person. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. These worksheets are best printed, although teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
Student Worksheets: 120 Pages
Teaching Slides: 109
This is an introduction to Food Choice and Health for teenagers and adults with special educational needs. It is a full course and includes student worksheets
The resource is intended to introduce students to food choice and health, including:
Food groups and balanced meals
Benefits of a healthy diet
Preparation of healthy meals
Topics include:
The food groups
Elements of a healthy diet
Healthy eating habits
Energy and mood
Preventing and fighting diseases
Benefits of some foods
General health benefits
Kitchen health and safety
These worksheets are designed to cover the following learning outcomes:
Sort familiar foods according to food groups eg. fruit, vegetables, meat, fish, diary.
Describe typical food and drinks associated with a well balanced diet
List common consequences of of a good diet eg. healthy heart, strong bones, clear skin, dental health
Participate in the preparation of healthy meals
Identify common safe practises associated with food preparation and storage
Demonstrate appropriate food hygiene and safety practices
Can this resource be used online?
This resource is a digital resource. If you have purchased this resource and would like to use it for online teaching, you have permission to do so. A fillable and printable version is included. Students can type in their answers online, or worksheets can be printed. Teachers can also use them for whole-class teaching using a projector or interactive whiteboard.
What is included?
All components are available in the zipped folder, i.e. student worksheets and teaching slides.
Student Worksheets: 113 Pages
Teaching Slides: 55 Slides