I am an ex-primary head teacher and English, Maths and History specialist. I've mostly worked in KS2, often in Year 6. Although for the last two years, I've been working in Year 1, which has been delightful!
All the resources have been used successfully with children in a range of schools all over the country.
I am constantly reviewing and updating my resources. Please follow me to ensure that you have the most up to date versions of the resources you buy.
I am an ex-primary head teacher and English, Maths and History specialist. I've mostly worked in KS2, often in Year 6. Although for the last two years, I've been working in Year 1, which has been delightful!
All the resources have been used successfully with children in a range of schools all over the country.
I am constantly reviewing and updating my resources. Please follow me to ensure that you have the most up to date versions of the resources you buy.
Three interactive quizzes designed as assessment or revision of grammar knowledge. They cover:
- recognising and giving examples of common grammatical terms.
- knowledge and use of punctuation.
- knowledge and use of verbs including progressive and perfect tenses, passive and active voice and subjunctive.
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To understand the purpose of an opening chapter
To understand how an author develops relationships between characters.
To understand how characters can be introduced using the viewpoint of the main character.
To understand how secondary characters help develop a primary character
To show how an author uses an address to the reader to provide additional information.
To use inference and deduction to understand how the people of America feel when they see the giant peach.
To form and share opinions about a completed novel.
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To understand how an author sells his story to his reader.
To understand how an author introduces his main characters.
To understand how an author creates a story within a story.
To understand how different characters behave when faced with their own dilemmas.
To understand how a master story teller weaves different elements of a story together.
To understand how an ending of a story links back to its beginning.
A revision or assessment tool for the use of all the verb tenses covered in Year 6 Grammar test.
Verbs include: simple past, simple present, present perfect, past perfect, past progressive (or past continuous), present progressive (or present continuous, passive voice, active voice and subjunctive.
Can also be used with Assertive Mentoring's Grammar Hammer 4.
A revision or assessment tool for the use of punctuation that will be encountered in Year 6 Grammar test.
Punctuation included: inverted commas, apostrophes, semi-colons, colon, dash, ellipse, use of commas in subordinate clauses.
Can also be used with Assertive Mentoring's Grammar Hammer 4.
Includes:
Display vocabulary for all aspects of Assertive Mentoring's Grammar Hammer 4
A weekly teaching resource for Grammar Hammer tests
3 interactive whole class quizzes ideal for pre-programme assessment and termly revision.
Designed to run with Promethean ActivInspire and Promethean Interactive Whiteboards
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To use recall, inference and deduction to find out about two characters.
To be able to empathise with characters from the past
To use inference and deduction to understand a character’s actions
To understand how authors use chance encounters to shape their stories.
To understand how an author can choose archaic words and expressions when writing a story set in the past.
To understand how historical research is used to write a historical novel.
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To understand how an author introduces characters.
To understand how an author develops the central character.
To understand how secondary characters are introduced.
To use deduction and inference to understand a character’s feelings and opinions
To understand how different stories about the same character help develop that character.
To make predictions about a character based on what’s been read.
Lower Ability - Cool
Middle Ability - Wreck of Zanzibar, the Last Wolf
Higher Ability - Kensuke's Kingdom, Private Peaceful.
Ideal for use with Key Stage 2 or Key Stage 3
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To be able to recognise and discuss an author’s style and content.
To recall facts to answer questions about a text.
To skim and scan to find facts about a character
To create a biographical time-line.
To emphasise with the main character as he escapes the Germans.
To understand how a single event changes the narrative of a story.
To reflect upon a completed story.
A differentiated set of guided reading for a half term
Private Peaceful - HA
Carrie's War / Stig of the Dump - MA
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe / Street Child - LA
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To reflect on the opening of a story.
To understand how an author develops the central idea of his book.
To understand how an author contrasts feelings between two main characters.
To understand how an author builds suspense
To reflect on a completed text.
Drawing on the new History Curriculum and focussing on Aims: Strands 4 and 5 this resource includes:
A collection of eleven quotes from contemporary sources,
An explanation of five activities that can be carried out using these resources
Planning Templates to support arguments and a chart to help summarise arguments about Workhouses
Learning Objectives
• To understand historical concepts such as continuity and change, cause and consequence, similarity, difference and significance,
• To make connections, draw contrasts, analyse trends, frame historically-valid questions and create their own structured accounts, including written narratives and analyses
• To understand the methods of historical enquiry, including how evidence is used rigorously to make historical claims, and discern how and why contrasting arguments and interpretations of the past have been constructed.
Learning Outcomes:
Pupils will be able to:
• recognise and discern between arguments made for and against the role of Workhouses.
• draw on primary resources to produce a reasoned debate on the pros and cons of Workhouse.
• produce their own persuasive argument in favour (or against) the abolition of Workhouses.
• produce a balanced argument on the advantages and disadvantages of Workhouses.
• Produce their own written narrative of life in a Workhouse
A great introductory activity or mini topic on the way that Victorian society changed during Victorian times.
This mini topic uses the Market Place PowerPoint to present to your whole class a series round robin / market place / carousel activities. Each of six groups will have skim and scan, research and present information on one of the six following areas of interest:
The Abolition of Slavery
Child Labour
The changing role of education in the lives of children
The industrial revolution and its impact on Victorian life.
The changing role of Women
Workhouses and the Poor Law
They will then gather information from the other five groups before answering a quiz based on this information.
In addition to meeting the learning objectives, children will also develop turn taking, team work, collaborative research and effective presentation strategies.
Learning Objectives:
To organise and select relevant historical information from a range of sources.
To devise and answer questions about the changes to society during the Victorian period.
Learning Outcomes:
To have researched and recalled this historical time period.
To have explained to others and understood for themselves the impact of change on life in Britain.
A collection of resources to prove a background to life in Roman Britain including two investigative activities and a collection of comprehensions which could be used for homework.
A collection of resources to get you started teaching about Roman Britain, including three sets of Guided Reading activities based around the hugely popular Horrible History series and the children's classic, the Eagle of the Ninth
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LOs
To make predictions based on what can be learned from a book before reading it.
To reflect on how a historical novel begins.
To reflect upon a key turning point the novel.
To understand how an author drops hints about the importance of certain characters.
To understand how one event changes that whole focus of a narrative.
To understand how an author uses book conventions to bring tension to a narrative.
To reflect on a completed novel.
A series of questions, answers and reading journal activity based around all areas of reading. Great alternative to SATs tests or written comprehensions.
LO: To be able to empathise with a character in a difficult situation.
A sample resource for all teachers using the Assertive Mentoring Grammar Hammer system
An Interactive Whiteboard file for use with Smart's notebook.
Simply carry out the first Grammar Hammer test mark it and put this up on Whiteboard.
Children can then carry out corrections for any part of the test they got wrong.
There are challenge activities for children getting everything correct.
NB it is recommended that no child corrects more than 5 questions.