With half a million members across both the primary and secondary sectors, Teachit is a thriving community of teachers and home tutors sharing resources and inspiration. What makes us different? All our resources are written and shared by teachers and checked by our teacher-editors so you know they can be trusted to work.
From free PDFs to PowerPoints, worksheets, quizzes, games and CPD webinars and articles from experts, Teachit has something for you at www.teachit.co.uk
With half a million members across both the primary and secondary sectors, Teachit is a thriving community of teachers and home tutors sharing resources and inspiration. What makes us different? All our resources are written and shared by teachers and checked by our teacher-editors so you know they can be trusted to work.
From free PDFs to PowerPoints, worksheets, quizzes, games and CPD webinars and articles from experts, Teachit has something for you at www.teachit.co.uk
Designed to support students preparing for the AQA GCSE, our revision workbook Conflict and Tension 1918-1939 revision workbook features revision tasks to cover the complete course.
The workbook includes content summaries, recap tasks and exam-practice questions in a variety of styles, ensuring students can revise independently and build confidence for their exam.
What’s included?
content summaries in a variety of formats
recap activities
keyword and timeline tasks
exam-style questions.
What’s inside?
Introduction to this workbook (pages 4-5)
Topic 1: Peacemaking (pages 6-17)
The aims of the ‘Big Three’
Clashes between the ‘Big Three’
The Treaty of Versailles: Did the peacemakers achieve their aims?
Who was satisfied with the Treaty of Versailles?
Was the Treaty of Versailles fair?
How did Germany react to the Treaty of Versailles?
What happened at the rest of the peace conferences?
Topic 2: The League of Nations and international peace (pages 18-30)
The aims of the League
What did America’s absence mean for the League?
How did the structure of the League undermine it?
Was the League doomed to fail?
What was the role of the League’s agencies?
How successful was the League in the early 1920s?
What was the effect of the Great Depression on world peace?
What was the impact of the Manchurian Crisis on the League?
What did the Abyssinian Crisis show about the League?
How did the Disarmament Conference of 1932−34 go so wrong?
Topic 3: The origins and outbreak of the Second World War (pages 31-41)
What were Hitler’s aims as Chancellor of Germany?
Hitler’s foreign policy
Why did Britain and France follow a policy of Appeasement?
How was Appeasement a cause of WWII?
Who was to blame for the Second World War?
Exam practice (pages 42-48)
Question type 1 – Source A is critical/supportive of X. How do you know?
Question type 2 – How useful are these sources for a historian studying X?
Question type 3 – Write an account of…
Question type 4 – X was the main reason for Y. How far do you agree with this statement?
Appendix: Further notes and ideas on sources in this pack
Designed to support your teaching of the GCSE applications paper, Geographical applications and skills is a comprehensive teaching pack to be used throughout your GCSE programme of study.
The pack includes teaching notes, PowerPoint presentations, activities and student workbooks to develop your students’ knowledge, understanding and application of geographical skills.
Geographical applications and skills covers all the skills and fieldwork required for GCSE.
What’s included?
teacher notes and PowerPoints to walk you through all the different skills and fieldwork techniques required
activity sheets and workbooks for students to practise key skills
divided into different geographical skills and fieldwork themes, so finding what you need is easy.
What’s inside?
Teacher notes
Geographical applications and skills personal learning checklist
Graph types
Data map types
Geographical skills match-up activity
Teacher answers for student workbook
Teacher answers for PowerPoints
Student work
Mean, median, mode and interquartile range
Calculating area
Atlas skills – describing patterns
OS map symbols
Four- and six-figure grid references
Compass directions
Scale and measuring distance
Latitude and longitude
Synoptic charts
Cross sections
Ground, satellite and aerial photographs
Drawing sketches from photographs
Labelling and annotating photographs
Using maps and photographs together
Labelling and annotating diagrams
Data key terms – sampling and data types
Bar charts and histograms
Divided/compound bar charts
Line graphs
Calculating percentages and creating a pie chart
Pie charts
Scatter graphs
Dispersion graphs
Pictograms
Proportional circles
Triangular graphs
Star and radial diagrams
Kite diagrams
Desire lines
Flow lines
Choropleth maps
Population pyramids
Interpreting graphs
Fieldwork enquiry questions
Fieldwork data collection
Sampling
Methodology
Evaluating methods
Dictionary/glossary
Writing for different genres – SEND is a downloadable set of lesson plans that can be used to support students with special educational needs and disabilities at key stage 3. It has been adapted specifically for SEND students and reluctant writers, and is designed to work in targeted intervention sessions.
It features seven comic strips as prompts to engage neurodiverse students, such as those with dyspraxia, dyslexia or ADD/ADHD. The images, alongside simplified definitions of key terms, vocabulary exercises, word banks and writing prompts will also help to support EAL learners (students who speak English as an additional language) and INA students (International New Arrivals).
Seven genres of writing
It includes lesson plans, teaching notes, exemplars, scaffolded writing templates and worksheets to help students to learn about the language, structure and form of seven different writing styles. By understanding the writing process, they will learn how to produce a range of text types, some of which might be new genres for students.
The writing activities are based on themes to appeal to young adults, such as music, football, aliens and pets, and cover a range of different genres:
a fictional diary
a formal letter
a playscript
a fictional recount
a list
a poem
a comic strip.
Each lesson includes suggestions for starters, as well as a range of differentiated activities to develop students’ vocabulary and writing skills. Students will feel more confident developing their own writing style and writing in specific genres. They will also understand the differences between writing fiction and non-fiction texts.
Key features:
It is accompanied by a PowerPoint for use in class, which contains useful checklists of the language features and structure of each writing genre.
Includes a lesson plan and teaching notes for each of the seven different writing genres.
Includes seven original comic strips as writing prompts.
Includes a PowerPoint with 22 slides of checklists and activities, summarising the language features and structures of each text type.
Includes a range of carefully scaffolded activities to take students step-by-step through the process of writing for each particular genre, including vocab exercises and word banks, sentence starters and frames, and planning and writing templates.
What’s included?
There are 57 pages of classroom activities:
‘A Week’s Excuses’ – writing a diary
‘Something Odd Out There’ – writing a formal letter
‘Alien Arrival’ – writing a playscript
‘Jennifer Jones’ – writing a recount
‘Sad I Ams’ – writing a bulleted list
‘StereoHead’– writing poetry
‘The Dark Avenger’ – writing a comic strip
Develop your KS3 and KS4 students’ formal writing skills with our ‘toolkit’ of creative classroom activities, genuine student exemplar essays and exclusive teaching resources.
This pack features activities to help students write well-planned, well-structured and sophisticated essays in readiness for GCSE English Literature and for the longer essay-style questions in GCSE English Language.
Essential for teaching all aspects of essay writing for your class novel, play text or reading unit.
What’s included?
sections include: getting students started, planning and structuring essays, introductions and conclusions, using quotations, inference and deduction, formal essay vocabulary and drafting and redrafting
real student essays from year 9 students in a range of comprehensive schools.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 3-5)
Getting students started (pages 6-15)
Planning and structuring essays (pages 16-25)
Introductions and conclusions (pages 26-34)
Using quotations (pages 35-48)
Inference and deduction (pages 49-60)
Formal essay vocabulary (pages 61-67)
Drafting and redrafting (pages 68-75)
This GCSE teaching pack consists of 10 PowerPoint files with accompanying photocopiable resources and is designed to improve students’ skills at translating from German to English.
Based on careful analysis of examiner reports and on teacher feedback, the pack focuses on 10 key skills, each linked to a different topic.
The pack includes tasks for Foundation and Higher tiers and exam-style assessments. Weave the activities into your teaching throughout the GCSE course or use as a revision tool in the run-up to the exam.
Mastering GCSE translation – German to English will prepare students for the last question in the German reading exam with AQA, Edexcel or Eduqas.
What’s included?
10 differentiated PowerPoint lessons on GCSE translation skills (into English)
Engaging learning activities across 10 topics
Exam-style assessments for Foundation and Higher, with answers.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 4)
Teaching Notes (pages 5-6)
Lesson 1: Precision (Topic: family and friends) (pages 7-11)
Learning activity: quiz, quiz, trade
Precision assessment and answers
Lesson 2: Time frames (Topic: technology) (pages 12-15)
Learning activity: collaborative translation
Time frames assessment and answers
Lesson 3: Negatives (Topic: free time) (pages 16-20)
Learning activity: verbal dominoes
Negatives assessment and answers
Lesson 4: Articles and adverbs (Topic: customs and festivals) (pages 21-27)
Learning activity: one pen, one dice
Articles and adverbs assessment and answers
Lesson 5: Pronouns and possessive adjectives (Topic: house and town) (pages 28-32)
Learning activity: four in a row game
Pronouns and possessive adjectives assessment and answers
Lesson 6: False friends (Topic: social issues) (pages 33-36)
Learning activity: card sort
False friends assessment and answers
Lesson 7: Connectives (Topic: global issues) (pages 37-41)
Learning activity: running translation
Connectives assessment and answers
Lesson 8: Unknown words (Topic: holidays) (pages 42-46)
Learning activity: card game
Unknown words assessment and answers
Lesson 9: Checking the basics (Topic: school) (pages 47-53)
Learning activity: find it and fix it
Checking the basics assessment and answers
Lesson 10: Common sense (Topic: work and future plans) (pages 54-58)
Learning activity: back to back
Common sense assessments and answers
Case study knowledge is designed to support your teaching of the case studies and named examples required for the physical and human geography papers at GCSE.
Comprising knowledge organisers, summary revision activities and exam-style questions with mark schemes and indicative responses, the pack covers all core and optional case studies required for GCSE.
Although designed for the AQA specification, Case study knowledge is also relevant for all major exam boards.
What’s included?
Knowledge organisers for all core and optional case studies and named examples on the AQA specification
Summary activities to help with revision
Exam-style questions with mark schemes and indicative responses.
What’s inside?
Human geography case studies and examples
A case study of a major city in an LIC or NEE - Mumbai, India
An example of how urban planning is improving the life for the urban poor - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
A case study of a major city in the UK Newcastle upon - Tyne, UK
An example of an urban regeneration project, reasons it was needed and its features - Salford Quays, Manchester, UK
An example of how tourism in an LIC/NEE helps reduce the development gap - Jamaica
A case study of one LIC/NEE experiencing rapid economic development - Nigeria
An example of how modern industrial development can be more environmentally sustainable - Park Royal, west London
An example of a large scale agricultural development, its advantages and disadvantages - The Indus Basin, Asia
An example of a local scheme in a LIC or NEE to increase supplies of food - Cape Town, South Africa
An example of a large scale water transfer scheme, its advantages and disadvantages - South-North water transfer project, China
An example of a local scheme in an LIC or NEE to increase sustainable supplies of water - Bhatha Dhua, Pakistan
Physical geography case studies and examples
The effects and responses to tectonic hazards in countries of contrasting levels of wealth - Nepal and Chile earthquakes
A named example of a tropical storm, its effects and responses to it - Typhoon Haiyan, Philippines
An example of an extreme weather event in the UK, its causes, impacts and management - The Beast from the East, UK
An example of a small scale UK ecosystem - Avington Park lake, Winchester, UK
A case study of a tropical rainforest, causes and impacts of deforestation - Amazon, Brazil
A case study of a hot desert, its development opportunities and challenges - Sahara Desert, Africa
A case study of a cold environment, its development opportunities and challenges - Svalbard
An example of a section of coastline in the UK, its major landforms of erosion and deposition - Borth to Aberwstwyth, West Wales
An example of a coastal management scheme in the UK - Mappleton, England
An example of a river valley in the UK, its landforms of erosion and deposition - Afon Rheidol, West Wales
An example of a flood management scheme in the UK - Banbury, UK
Designed to support students preparing for the AQA GCSE, our revision workbook Germany 1890-1945: Democracy and dictatorship features revision tasks to cover the complete course.
The workbook includes content summaries, recap tasks and exam-practice questions in a variety of styles, ensuring students can revise independently and build confidence for their exam.
What’s included?
content summaries in a variety of formats
recap activities
keyword and timeline tasks
exam-style questions.
What’s inside?
Introduction to this workbook (pages 4-5)
Topic 1: Germany and the growth of democracy (pages 6-27)
Overview of Germany 1890−1918
Who held power in the Second Reich?
The growth of economic and social tensions 1900−1914
The Naval Laws
What impact did World War One have upon Germany?
How did the Treaty of Versailles impact upon Germany?
What economic problems did the Weimar government face?
How far did Germany recover under Stresemann?
Topic 2: Germany and the Depression (pages 28-35)
The growth of the Nazi Party 1928−32
How far did the Great Depression lead to an increase in support for the Nazis in the period 1928−32?
Why did Hitler become chancellor?
How did Hitler become Führer?
Topic 3: The experience of Germans under the Nazis (pages 36-57)
Economic changes in Nazi Germany
Women in Nazi Germany
How did the Nazis change the position of young people?
The police state
How did Hitler control the Church?
Persecution of minorities
Propaganda, censorship and culture
Opposition to the Nazis
Exam skills (pages 58=69)
Our Festivals and celebrations maths challenges year 6 teaching pack is designed to help children recap, practise and consolidate problem solving skills in preparation for KS2 SATs.
The pack is divided into nine lessons. Each lesson targets a specific strand of the Y6 maths Programme of Study and relates to a particular festival or celebration to give maths a real-life context.
Lessons feature a starter activity, a whole class teaching activity with PowerPoint slides, a worksheet for independent work and a plenary.
Questions are KS2 maths SATs-style. Answers are included.
Lessons included in the pack:
Lesson 1: Halloween – add, subtract, multiply, divide
Lesson 2: Bonfire Night – fractions
Lesson 3: Diwali – shape
Lesson 4: Hanukkah – statistics
Lesson 5: Christmas – position and direction
Lesson 6: Chinese New Year – percentages
Lesson 7: Easter – ratio
Lesson 8: Earth Day – area, perimeter and volume
Lesson 9: Eid al-Fitr – algebra
You may also like our Festivals and celebrations comprehension practice teaching pack.
A sample word problem:
Auntie Zainab sells silver bracelets as Eid gifts in her shop. She uses a formula to work out how much each customer pays according to the number of links of silver in the bracelet (which she calls s). She charges 50p for each silver link and then £1.50 for the presentation box. What is the formula she uses to work out the cost for a customer?
Our Festivals and celebrations comprehension practice year 6 teaching pack is designed to help children recap, practise and consolidate comprehension and writing skills in preparation for KS2 SATs.
The pack is divided into nine lessons aligned with the Y5/6 English Programme of Study. Each lesson is based on a text extract or poem relating to a particular festival or celebration.
Lessons feature a starter activity, a whole class teaching activity with PowerPoint slides, paired/group or independent tasks, assessment opportunities and a plenary, with accompanying resources.
Comprehension questions are KS2 SATs-style. Answers are included.
Festivals and texts included in the pack:
Lesson 1: Halloween – Macbeth by William Shakespeare
Lesson 2: Bonfire Night – ‘The Fifth of November’ (English Folk verse)
Lesson 3: Diwali – Prince of Fire by Jatinder Verma
Lesson 4: Hanukkah – ‘Season of Skinny Candles’ by Marge Piercy
Lesson 5: Christmas – ‘A Visit from St Nicholas’ by Clement C. Moore
Lesson 6: Chinese New Year – The Firework-Maker’s Daughter by Phillip Pullman
Lesson 7: Easter – Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl
Lesson 8: Earth Day – My Family and Other Animals by Gerald Durrell
Lesson 9: Eid al-fitr –’Yusuf and the Great Big Brownie Mistake’ by Aisha Saeed
You may also like our Festivals and celebrations maths challenges teaching pack.
An extract from the resource:
Read the extract from The Firework-Maker’s Daughter by Philip Pullman on PPT slides 32-34). Then provide each child with a copy of the extract (Chinese New Year resource 1) and ask them to reread it, underlining all the different ingredients for fireworks. Take feedback and compile a list on the board.
Ask: What makes these ingredients sound exciting? Draw out that the author has paired ordinary words such as powder and grains with attention-grabbing words such as thunder, fly-away and scorpion.
In groups, ask children to plan their firework recipe poem using the scaffold in Chinese New Year resource 2: Firework recipe. First, they must create a list of exciting ingredients, then some powerful imperative verbs. Then children use these as an idea bank to write a recipe poem for an explosive new firework! What will be the name of their firework?
Aimed at developing students’ critical reading skills, Reading non-fiction texts is an anthology of ten literary non-fiction texts from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries combined with supporting lesson plans and resources.
There are two overview lesson plans for each text, with starter activities, main lesson activities and plenaries which teachers can easily pick up and run with.
What’s included?
10 non-fiction text excerpts with a thematically linked ‘partner’ text
20 lesson plans and ideas along with 41 tailor-made resources to developed students’ understanding of assessment objectives
Exam-style questions for AQA, OCR, Edexcel and WJEC Eduqas for every text.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 3)
Text 1: Jane Austen’s letter to her sister, Cassandra Austen (pages 4-18)
Resource - Jane Austen: true or false quiz
Resource - uncovering context: What was life like in 1805?
Resource - picture clues
Resource - reading non-fiction text analysis grid
Text 2: The Guardian article: ‘Why teaching table manners can do more harm than good’ (pages 19-27)
Resource - summarise and attack
Resource - exploring food, exploring language
Text 3: Excerpt taken from The Elephant Man and Other Reminiscences by Sir Frederick Treves (pages 28-43)
Resource - pre-reading activity
Resource - unpicking imagery
Resource - whizzy wiki: Factsheet on The Elephant Man and Frederick Treves
Resource - attitudes towards the Elephant Man
Text 4: Excerpt taken from My Left Foot by Christy Brown (pages 44-52)
Resource - exploring and comparing attitudes
Text 5: Charlotte Brontë’s letter to her father (page 53-64)
Resource - word sort activity
Resource - whizzy wiki: Factsheet on The Great Exhibition
Resource - Great Exhibition quiz
Resource - letter writing lingo
Resource - what was the Great Exhibition like?
Text 6: Excerpt from A History of Modern Britain by Andrew Marr (pages 65-77)
Resource - comprehending the text
Resource - caption competition
Resource - what was the Millennium Dome like?
Resource - chain of comparison
Text 7: Excerpt from Henry Morley, Household Words, ‘Our Phantom Ship: China’ (pages 78-90)
Resource - the typhoon unravelled
Resource - views about visiting China
Resource - comparing attitudes about China
Resource - attitude adjectives
Text 8: Excerpt from Behind the Wall by Colin Thubron (pages 91-100)
Resource - comprehending the text
Resource - Chinese cultural revolution
Text 9: Excerpt from Charles Darwin The Voyage of the Beagle (pages 101-114)
Resource - quick recall quiz
Resource - attitudes towards the native tribes
Resource - formal and informal vocabulary grid
Resource - close-up on writing technique
Text 10: Excerpt from Follow the Rabbit-Proof Fence (pages 115-123)
Resource - pre-reading activity
Resource - the language of pain and suffering
Our GCSE revision guide for students studying Romeo and Juliet covers all the key acts, characters and themes with active revision strategies and practice exam questions and answers for all exam boards.
Perfect for independent study and remote learning, it includes a helpful overview of the play, an act by act summary of events and guidance on key quotations.
Revising Romeo and Juliet also helps to build students’ confidence and develop their understanding through self-checks, quizzes and a detailed exploration of character, setting, Shakespeare’s language and the play’s tragic structure.
What’s included?
Covers key characters and themes (love, fate, family, death, conflict, roles of women) plus a summary of the play.
Includes practice exam questions for all exam boards and suggested answers.
Features active revision strategies to build students’ knowledge.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 3-4)
Plot summary (pages 5-7)
Overview: whole play revision activities (pages 8-17)
Terminology – language and structure
WYOO (What’s your opinion on …?)
Love revision activities (pages 18-28)
Revision activity 1: Types of love
Revision activity 2: A love timeline
Revision activity 3: Stickman summary
Revision activity 4: Structure (and language) analysis
Love practice exam questions
Fate revision activities (pages 29-39)
Revision activity 1: True or false
Revision activity 2: Close analysis
Revision activity 3: The Prince’s perspective
Revision activity 4: The wheel of fortune
Fate practice exam questions
Family revision activities (pages 40-50)
Revision activity 1: Rules were meant for breaking?
Revision activity 2: Surrogate parents
Revision activity 3: All the married ladies (all the married ladies …)
Revision activity 4: Exploding quotations
Family practice exam questions
Conflict revision activities (pages 51-62)
Revision activity 1: Types of conflict
Revision activity 2: Ordering the fight scene
Revision activity 3: Context and conflict
Revision activity 4: Analysing Juliet’s inner conflict
Conflict practice exam questions
Death revision activities (pages 63-75)
Revision activity 1: The ‘extra’ deaths
Revision activity 2: Understanding the key elements of tragedy
Revision activity 3: Romeo’s imagery
Revision activity 4: The families unite
Death practice exam questions
Roles of women revision activities (pages 76-90)
Revision activity 1: Juliet’s change
Revision activity 2: What did Shakespeare think?
Revision activity 3: Strong or weak?
Revision activity 4: Close analysis
Roles of women practice exam questions
Our GCSE revision guide for students studying Macbeth covers all the key acts, characters and themes with active revision strategies and practice exam questions and answers for all exam boards.
Perfect for independent study and remote learning, it includes a helpful overview of the play, an act by act summary of events and guidance on key quotations.
Revising Macbeth also helps to build students’ confidence and develop their understanding through self-checks, quizzes and a detailed exploration of character, setting, Shakespeare’s language and the play’s tragic structure.
What’s included?
Covers key themes (ambition, the supernatural, guilt, gender and relationships, appearance and reality) plus a summary of the play.
Includes practice exam questions for all exam boards and suggested answers.
Features active revision strategies to build students’ knowledge.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 3-4)
Synopsis of the play (pages 5-8)
Overview revision activities (pages 9-20)
Theme: ambition (pages 21-31)
Revision activity - Arguments for and against killing Duncan
Revision activity - Tale of two kings
Revision activity - Why does Macbeth kill Duncan?
Revision activity - Exploding quotation
Theme: the supernatural (pages 32-42)
Revision activity - Animal imagery
Revision activity - Banquo’s version of the meeting with the witches
Revision activity - The witches
Revision activity - Writing an incantation
Theme: guilt (pages 43-53)
Revision activity - Exploding quotation
Revision activity - Innocence
Revision activity - The murder: before, during and after
Revision activity - Blood and symbolism
Theme: gender and relationships (pages 54-65)
Revision activity - Family circle
Revision activity - How to be a man/woman
Revision activity - Tale of two marriages: the Macbeths and the Macduffs
Revision activity - Exploding quotation
Theme: appearance and reality (pages 66-75)
Revision activity - How to be a perfect hostess
Revision activity - The power of asides and soliloquies
Revision activity - That’s ironic
Revision activity - That’s sensational
Diversify your KS3 English curriculum with 12 lessons on 6 brilliant short stories, from wonderful writers including Alex Wheatle, Langston Hughes, Dorothy Koomson, Bali Rai, Jeffrey Boakye and Kit de Waal.
Our KS3 short stories teaching pack celebrates the work of Black and Asian writers and the short story as a unique form of literature.
Introduce your students to a range of exciting literary voices they may not have encountered before with an engaging and inclusive scheme of learning, plus lesson plans and classroom resources.
Engaging and accessible for year 7, 8 and 9 readers, these powerful short stories have been specifically chosen to encourage more reading for pleasure and to be more representative and inclusive.
About the selected stories and authors
All the selected stories are written by Black British and British Asian authors, with the exception of the celebrated Black American short story writer, Langston Hughes, whose unforgettable 20th-century story, ‘Thank you, Ma’am’, also features in this anthology.
The other five stories are contemporary, 21st-century stories and include new writers such as Jeffrey Boakye.
The settings range from New York in the 1950s to a science-fiction future world. Some of the stories have more familiar family or teenage contexts, but all share a focus on relationships and explore themes of race, identity and belonging, love and loss, and redemption.
The collection is divided into three groups for thematic teaching, allowing teachers to dip into the teaching pack to complement an existing scheme of learning, or to teach the stories as a complete short story anthology.
What’s included in the teaching pack?
Written by two experienced English teachers, the teaching pack includes a detailed scheme of learning with lesson plans, teaching notes, differentiation suggestions and homework activities, as well as printable classroom resources.
The 109-page photocopiable teaching pack is student-facing for use in the classroom, and is accompanied by 12 PPT lessons for classroom delivery, and 6 complete short stories for reading in class.
Each lesson includes:
Do now activity
Starter activity
3-4 main lesson activities
Plenary
Extension or homework tasks
Many of the activities are carefully scaffolded, with differentiated, ladder up support and sentence starters for writing tasks, as well as a range of stretch and challenge suggestions for early finishers and higher-attaining students.
The pack includes a lovely range of fun and creative tasks, as well as a focus on developing learners’ reading comprehension and analytical writing skills. It also includes drama activities and engaging speaking and listening tasks to encourage lots of animated, on-topic classroom talk.
There’s also a list of diverse reading recommendations so teacher can encourage more reading for pleasure, and a word bank to help with disciplinary literacy and vocabulary development.
Dyslexia toolkit aims to help subject teachers, form tutors and teaching assistants to support dyslexic students in the mainstream classroom at key stage 3 and key stage 4. Whatever your role in supporting students with dyslexia, this toolkit will give you understanding, tangible ideas and practical strategies to enable young people to realise their full potential.
What’s included?
This 56-page toolkit includes:
information about neurodiversity, the strengths of neurodivergent people and some of the challenges they face
information about dyslexia and how to identify it in the classroom
a CPD PowerPoint for staff training, parents’ evenings and senior leadership meetings
advice on avoiding sensory overload
games to develop learners’ short-term and working memory
templates for sentence starters, task maps and writing planners to reduce the load on learners’ working memory
guidance on chunking tasks into manageable steps to help students to process information
dyslexia strategies for reading
writing strategies for students with dyslexia
information about the link between a weak working memory and spelling difficulties, plus dyslexia spelling strategies
strategies for supporting students with dyslexia in the maths classroom
top tips on harnessing dyslexic strengths such as empathy and problem solving
How does it support dyslexic students?
Dyslexia toolkit offers dyslexia-friendly strategies that can be used with the whole class so that neurodivergent learners are not put on the spot. There are also approaches that can be carried out in small groups, and suggestions for how dyslexic students can support their classmates, fostering a supportive learning environment and helping young people to feel empowered. Information and activities are provided to raise awareness of what it feels like to have dyslexia, and ways are suggested of playing to dyslexic learners’ strengths.
The toolkit includes tick lists for learners to articulate their own areas of challenge and learning preferences, and it provides printable resources to help students to plan written tasks. There is also a step-by-step guide for students to reading for comprehension and an overview of pros and cons of assistive technology such as electronic readers.
About the writer
Dyslexia toolkit was written by Dr Helen Ross, a leading voice on dyslexia within UK education. She is an experienced public speaker, international consultant and researcher, and contributor to a wide range of publications; Helen is also dyslexic.
She supports families, teachers and organisations to better understand the implications of dyslexia, neurodiversity and special educational needs and disabilities (SEND).
In this toolkit, Helen draws on her experiences as a classroom teacher, SENDCo and dyslexia expert to help you to understand what dyslexia is, which aspects of learning can be affected by dyslexia and what you can do to support dyslexic learners.
Our EAL toolkit is designed for teachers and teaching assistants who don’t have a background in teaching English as an additional language to support EAL students in mainstream classrooms at key stage 3 and key stage 4.
What’s included?
The 74-page toolkit includes:
general classroom strategies to support EAL learners
an outline of the challenges faced by international new arrivals
fun and engaging EAL teaching ideas
EAL activities for new arrivals who are total beginners
printable EAL support resources and EAL displays for classrooms
a CPD PowerPoint for staff training and meetings
a glossary of English language teaching terminology
a list of EAL websites for teachers with links to EAL assessment materials.
This EAL toolkit will be invaluable for subject teachers, form tutors, heads of year and SENCos who wish to develop their understanding of the learning approaches you can use to support EAL pupils.
How does it support EAL learners?
The toolkit recommends general classroom strategies to support EAL learners, such as setting up a buddy system with a student who speaks the same home language. It also includes fun and engaging EAL teaching ideas, such as games, songs and role-plays, helping EAL students to feel less anxious about taking part in whole-class activities. It suggests EAL activities for new arrivals who are total beginners, such as labelling images and diagrams, and for those who have a more advanced level, such as adding complexity to sentences.
It includes printable EAL classroom resources, such as an alphabet letters mat, phonics mats, word mats, flashcards, sentence builders and writing frames that can also be used as templates for you to make your own, along with printable EAL support resources that could also be used as EAL displays for classrooms, such as an irregular verbs list, a tenses table, a list of easily confused words or homophones, a list of prefixes and suffixes and a list of common verbs used in academic writing.
It demonstrates how to adapt worksheets for EAL learners in order to support them with both language development and subject knowledge. It offers advice on how to pre-teach vocabulary before a reading or listening activity and how to help students who are learning English as an additional language identify key words and learn new vocabulary from a reading or listening text.
About the writer
Our EAL toolkit was written by Anna Czebiolko, currently a secondary head of EAL. Since starting to work with EAL learners in 2009, she has worked with children in every year group from nursery to sixth form. She also has experience of coordinating EAL provision in a large secondary academy.
What’s included?
KS3/4 Mastering spelling punctuation and grammar is a comprehensive SPaG pack containing resources, worksheets and activities designed to help students master the essentials of SPaG and get them GCSE-ready.
Mastering spelling, punctuation and grammar contains:
curriculum mapping and guidance for teachers along with further reading and/or useful links and references
over 150 pages of worksheets, resources and activities
spelling strategies, punctuation rules and grammar games to make the learning stick
graphic organisers and A4 posters – perfect for consolidation and/or student revision
formative assessments (including self and peer assessments)
summative assessments (and suggested answers) to help teachers/students identify future learning targets.
As your ‘go-to’ SPaG pack, this will support you and your students from the start of KS3 up to GCSE.
Mastering spelling, punctuation and grammar covers the following:
Spelling
spelling strategies and games
the golden rules of spelling
a spelling toolkit of approaches
visualising spellings and connecting meaning
approaches to recalling spellings
spelling lists – KS3 and KS4
Punctuation
punctuation recall (including A4 punctuation mark posters)
an exploration of what punctuation is (and its future)
full stops
commas
colons and semicolons
punctuating clauses
Grammar
using and controlling simple, compound and complex sentences
statements, questions and imperatives
the active and passive voice
pronouns
words that multi-task: verbs, nouns and adjectives
prepositions and conjunctions
adjectives and adverbs
nouns and determiners
This practical and accessible toolkit is designed to help teachers and teaching assistants to support key stage 3 and key stage 4 students with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in the mainstream classroom. ADHD toolkit presents an overview of what ADHD is, how it is diagnosed and how it can be treated. It provides a variety of strategies and printable resources to help learners with ADHD thrive in your classroom.
What’s included?
This 43-page toolkit includes:
an overview of the three types of ADHD: combined, hyperactive-impulsive and predominantly inattentive
a checklist of ADHD symptoms
a summary of the ADHD treatment available, including types of medication and therapeutic support
an explanation of how ADHD affects the brain, including impacts on executive functioning
an overview of how ADHD affects girls and women
comorbid conditions that can occur with ADHD, such as autism and Tourette syndrome
classroom strategies for managing ADHD
tips and templates for rewarding students’ success
a CPD PowerPoint for staff training, parents’ evenings and senior leadership meetings.
How does it support students with ADHD?
ADHD toolkit helps teachers to recognise behaviours that may be indicative of the three main symptoms of ADHD: inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity. It offers advice on seating arrangements, turn-taking skills and conflict resolution, with reminders to praise students and showcase their strengths. It also provides classroom strategies to support executive functioning weakness, and teaching strategies for supporting students with memory skills, organisation skills and writing tasks.
For students, the toolkit offers self-regulation techniques, tips on how to avoid getting distracted, and planning tools such as timetables and activity planners.
The toolkit also suggests sensory supports such as fidget toys that can be beneficial for learners with ADHD and highlights the importance of regular healthy snacks, and of staying hydrated to combat the side effects of ADHD medication.
About the writer
ADHD toolkit was written by Elizabeth Swan. Lizzy draws upon lived experience and upon professional expertise from over 20 years as a qualified teacher, SENDCo and headteacher in secondary schools and special schools. She exploits her postgraduate study of psychology to present the ‘best bets’ from research-informed approaches to supporting children and young people with ADHD.
This Gothic scheme of learning will introduce KS3 students to the key elements of the Gothic genre, while building their reading, writing and comprehension skills.
You’ll find extracts from some of the most celebrated Gothic novels to share with students in this engaging teaching pack, as well as Gothic poems and ghostly short stories from the 18th and 19th century to the present day, including The Castle of Otranto, Northanger Abbey, Jane Eyre, Frankenstein, Dracula, The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, The Hound of the Baskervilles, ‘The Red Room’ and ‘The Raven’ by Edgar Allan Poe. There is also an extract from the exciting new YA series, City of Ghosts, to celebrate contemporary gothic fiction and encourage more reading for pleasure.
The key stage 3 lesson activities are designed to provide an overview of Gothic genre conventions, tropes, settings and character archetypes, and anticipate the key themes in Gothic literature to prepare students for GCSE English Literature prose texts.
To develop students’ exam skills for GCSE English Language, the teaching pack also includes a range of comprehension tasks to build students’ unseen fiction and unseen poetry skills and their confidence with new texts and new vocabulary. There are also exciting stimulus ideas for creative writing tasks for students to develop their fiction writing skills and comparative tasks looking at two texts.
The 94-page pack is student-facing and aimed at year 7-9 students, and includes a range of engaging teaching resources, worksheets and PPTs. There are differentiated activities, with stretch and challenge extension suggestions as well as more supportive ‘ladder up’ tasks, such as sentence starters and scaffolded resources.
What’s included?
There are 14 lessons and lesson plans for English teachers which include:
Do now activities
Starter activities
Main activities with embedded formative assessment tasks, learning checks and reading comprehension questions
Plenaries
Homework tasks.
Each lesson is accompanied by a PowerPoint presentation, and the teaching pack also includes the lesson tasks and classroom worksheets along with answers for self or peer marking in class. Several lessons include a focus on writing analytically, using the PETER paragraphing framework.
The teaching pack culminates in a GCSE-style summative assessment task, which will help you to assess students’ progress in reading and writing. There is also a detailed and comprehensive 15-page scheme of learning to integrate into your KS3 curriculum plans.
Aimed at addressing gaps in prior learning – particularly after the COVID-19 school closures – Basic maths skills – support to improve students’ numeracy is perfect for both the transition to year 7 and for intervention sessions throughout KS3 and KS4.
The pack is divided into five units: number, algebra, ratio and proportion, geometry and measures and statistics. Each unit features ready-to-photocopy worksheets, teaching notes and answers. A tracking tick list is also included.
Improve students’ numeracy skills and ensure they have all the knowledge they need to access the full secondary curriculum.
What’s included?
39 worksheets to fill gaps in prior learning and form a solid base for progress
Answers included
Perfect for intervention at KS3-KS4 or to support Y7 transition
What’s inside?
Student’s section
N1 number: number and place value (pages 5-9)
Read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10 000 000
Use negative numbers in context
Solve number problems
N2 number: calculation (pages 10-21)
Long multiplication
Long division
Short division
Mental calculations
Common factors, multiples and prime numbers
BODMAS
Addition and subtraction multi-step problems
Four rules problems
Use estimation to check answers
N3 number: fractions, decimals and percentages (pages 22-30)
Simplifying fractions
Add and subtract fractions
Multiply proper fractions
Divide fractions by whole numbers
Multiply numbers up to 2 decimal places
Written division methods up to 2 decimal places
Fraction, decimal and percentage equivalence
RP ratio and proportion (pages 31-36)
Relative sizes
Percentage calculations
Scale factors
Unequal sharing
A algebra (pages 37-43)
Use simple formulae
Linear sequences
Express missing number problems algebraically
Working with two variables
GM1 geometry and measures: measurement (pages 44-53)
Units of measure
Convert between miles and kilometres
Area and perimeter of squares and rectangles
Area and volume formulae
Area of triangles and parallelograms
GM2 geometry and measures: properties of shape (pages 54-61)
2D shapes
3D shapes
Parts of the circle
Angles
GM3 geometry and measures: position and direction (pages 62-63)
Translation and reflection in four quadrants
S statistics (pages 64-68)
Pie charts and line graphs
The mean
Teacher’s section and answers
Teaching notes and curriculum mapping (page 69)
Tracking sheet (pages 71-73)
Homework answers (pages 72-91)
Ensure your students are well prepared for AQA’s GCSE English Language Paper 2: Writers’ viewpoints and perspectives.
Based on the themes of the sea, travel, money and the environment, AQA GCSE English Language Paper 2 exam skills pack will give your students all the exam practice they need.
What’s inside
Targeted activities help students understand how to improve their responses to the questions
eight non-fiction and literary non-fiction text extracts
reading and writing sections for each theme
exam tips on assessment objectives for each question
exam-style questions and suggested answers.
It includes analysis of assessment objectives to help students understand exactly what they need to do to gain marks, and targeted activities to improve their responses to each exam question.
What’s included
Teacher introduction (pages 4-5)
Reading: Student introduction (pages 6-34)
Source 1A: ‘How to stay safe at the beach’ by Karl West (2017) with activities
Source 1B: ‘The Pleasures of Life’ by John Lubbock (1890) with activities
Practice exam questions
Writing: Student introduction (pages 35-49)
Activities
Practice exam question
Reading: Student introduction (pages 50-72)
Source 2A: ‘The Guardian view on over-tourism: an unhealthy appetite for travel’ (2018) with activities
Source 2B: Francis Kilvert’s diary from the 1870s with activities
Practice exam questions
Writing: Student introduction (pages 74-88)
Activities
Practice exam question
Reading: Student introduction (pages 89-110)
Source 3A: A Girl Called Jack by Jack Monroe (2014) with activities
Source 3B: Letter from George Dunlop (1813) with activities
Practice exam questions
Writing: Student introduction (pages 111-123)
Activities
Practice exam question
Reading: Student introduction (pages 124-143)
Source 4A: ‘Squids and octopuses thrive as “weeds of the sea” warm to hotter oceans’ by Alan Yuhas (2016) with activities
Source 4B: The Voyage of the Beagle by Charles Darwin (1839) with activities
Practice exam questions
Writing: Student introduction (pages 144-157)
Activities
Practice exam question