Former Head of PE in secondary school in the North of England with 10+ years teaching experience.
My resources tend to be classroom based lessons for the GCSE PE course and form time resources when the register is done and everyone is staring at me expecting interesting and informative action!
Former Head of PE in secondary school in the North of England with 10+ years teaching experience.
My resources tend to be classroom based lessons for the GCSE PE course and form time resources when the register is done and everyone is staring at me expecting interesting and informative action!
When your school chooses to celebrate books and their impact on the world, it can mean that you’re left with a class that needs an activity. This is that activity.
There are 8 rounds, comprising a total of 65 questions. Students can work individually or in groups. Answers are revealed straight after the question has been answered or at the end of the round so that students get immediate satisfaction.
Round 1: Famous First Lines. What books are these the first lines to?
Round 2: Celebrity Authors. Match the author to their book.
Round 3: Missing Words. What are the words that missing from these titles?
Round 4: Book Trivia. Multiple choice questions about books in general and their authors.
Round 5: First Appearances. Match the character to the book that they first appeared in.
Round 6: Banned Books. True or False round based on books that have been banned around the globe.
Round 7: Famous book covers. Name the book from the cover.
Round 7: Connections. What connects the book titles on display?
To make this as accessible as possible, the majority of books are famous childrens’ books with some classics thrown in for more advanced readers.
Also included are 4 word searches on Harry Potter, Chronicles of Narnia, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and classic novels. There are 2 copies of each to allow for differentiation with one having the clues printed on and the other without.
Any feedback, good or bad, is gratefully received.
This is a series of four worksheets that guide a student through the creation of a character, description, planning and eventually crafting a fairy tale.
I would suggest that this is ideal for KS2-KS3 and for low ability students in KS4.
Each sheet has tasks to complete with opportunities provided for peer review and teachers feedback.
As stated, this can be used immediately as it is self-explanatory, engaging and fun. Students are encouraged to draw a scene from a fairy tale on the first sheet, so drawing equipment should be available. Other than this, all that is required is a pen and a modicum of creativity.
I've attached two versions that are identical with the exception that one is saved on publisher and the other is a pdf.
You can use this resource over a series of lessons and as part of a whole unit on fairy tales. It has been suggested that a unit could start with some drama, re-enacting fairy tales, creating new ones and use this as the foundation for the work contained herein.
Any feedback, good or bad is gratefully received.
Powerpoint based quiz with the following 5 rounds:
Round 1: Classics. Match the authors to the famous horror books they wrote. (5 questions)
Round 2: Ghosts. Multiple choice questions with contextual facts attached. (5 questions)
Round 3: Fill in the blanks. The witches spell from Macbeth has five words missing. What are they?
Round 4: History. 5 multiple choice questions on the origins and traditions of Hallowe'en.
Round 5: Fear. 10 True or False questions based on unusual fears.
Answers are revealed either at the end of the round or before the next question so that students don't get bored waiting for the answers. This means that, if you're keeping score, this should be done as the quiz is ongoing. I would utilise whiteboards for the kids to write down their answers and display them either individually or as a group.
Powerpoint with groups of ten true or false questions in seven rounds:
Football teams. Are the names provided the real names of world football teams?
Butterflies. Are these the names of real British butterflies?
Countries. Are the names provided the real names of countries?
Yellow. Are the words provided real synonyms for the colour yellow?
999. Are the statements provided real requests for the emergency services?
Taylor Swift. Facts about Taylor which may or may not be true.
Video Games. Are the titles provided the real titles of past video games?
A bit random I know, but I didn't do this to fulfill some Ofsted criteria, I did it because I thought it may interest and enthuse students.
Any and all feedback is greatly appreciated, positive or developmental.
Thanks
This is the classic "Lost at Sea," exercise where students are presented with 15 items that they should rank in order of importance on their life raft having been "Lost at Sea."
It comes with a power point presentation that details the task, gives tips on completion and shows the correct answers.
Also it has a written sheet with the directions on for the students on, an answer sheet for them to complete and an answer sheet for the teacher with rationale for each ranking.
It is entirely up to you how you run the exercise but, for me, the most important part is how the students come to a decision and end up agreeing as opposed to getting the correct answers.
I have done this and the post-mortem discussion is always the most valuable and where one sees the best responses from students.
Each sheet has part of a comic story printed on it and prompts to complete encouraging them to to think of one characters point of view or to provide ideas as to how the story got to that point. Because they are all so different you can pick one for specific children depending on their interests or the areas that you wish them to develop.
They are ideal to use as either a starter or as an extension task both of which could be developed into the creation of a creative story.
Any and all feedback is gratefully received whether positive or developmental.
Download as word doc. or PDF at your convenience.
Any q's, please ask.
Each sheet has part of a comic story printed on it and prompts to complete encouraging them to to think of one characters point of view or to provide ideas as to how the story got to that point. Because they are all so different you can pick one for specific children depending on their interests or the areas that you wish them to develop.
They are ideal to use as either a starter or as an extension task both of which could be developed into the creation of a creative story.
Any and all feedback is gratefully received whether positive or developmental.
Any q's, please ask.
Lesson 1: TV and radio, comparing audio commentary of football match with TV. Worksheet attached to assist low attainers to make notes.
Creative writing task to finish on future of media in sport.
Lesson 2: Tweeting a sports star.
In-depth look at differences between tabloids and broadsheets.
Media's role looks at either David Moyes' Man U. career or Ched Evans rape case.
Lesson ends with diff'd tasks:
Design a tabloid back page.
Review the 1996 Governing Broadcasting Bill.
Plan a blog/internet campaign.
Worksheet attached to assist low attainers to make notes.
406 combined downloads 4-5 star ratings.
This is a topic that I would advise be completed over a two lesson period rather than rushed and squeezed into one.
In my experience, most of my GCSE classes believe that sport ISN'T sexist because they see top sportswomen representing their country and people like Karren Brady and Delia Smith being influential figures at football clubs.
This lesson seeks to redress those beliefs and enable students to apply a more balanced and thorough view.
The lesson begins with a Do Now task where the answer is that all the activities are competed by only one gender.
The main part of the lesson are a number of tasks to be completed. These can be done on an individual level or in groups. The activities are as follows:
Select and retrieve. Students read one of the two articles and select passages of interest and relevance.
Spot the difference. Students look at the differences between the genders in two different sports.
Mystery Guest. Students name the sportspeople and attempt to explain whether they found it more difficult to name one gender over the other.
Gender Equality. To add some balance there are examples of women being treated "equally" in sport, but is it fair?
What’s your opinion? Some statements about sports issues that may or not be deemed sexist. Students should formulate an opinion based upon them and be able to explain their thought processes.
Why the difference? A number of sports are listed with examples of the differences between them when it comes to gender participation with some questions to answer.
Once students have collated some information from their sheets they get into groups with students who have had different sheets and share their info. It's important that they make notes so that they have a broad view of sport as opposed to just their info. sheet.
Using these notes, students should then pick out their best points and complete the "writing to argue," worksheet. This should be the tool that enables students to write an essay using their knowledge to support their opinion. This can be done as a homework task if required.
Any feedback, positive or developmental, is greatly appreciated.