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English language arts
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Year 5 Planning English Maths Geometry Haiku
Planning from an academy. Spread over the three terms.
Lots of planning. Worksheets. Powerpoints.
Mainly English and Maths.
Zip has the lot. ive included plenty in the general download to give you an idea of content.
sample :
Explore children’s understanding of the term angle and record on working wall. Where have they seen angles? What do angles look like? What are they measured in? Following knowledge harvest, explain that this term will focus on measuring, drawing, classifying angles. Ensure children can identify the key features of a protractor. Use enlarged version and annotate key features on WW.
Ensure that the children can explain angle types and their properties. This will be useful when checking measurements.
Explore strategies for measuring angles using enlarged models and enlarged protractor.
Have the children measure angles to the nearest 10, 5 and degree. Identify difficulties when alignment is inaccurate. Model the use of known angle types to check accuracy of measurement.
Discuss with pupils what they now know about the structure and style of a haiku poem.
Model for pupils a haiku poem based upon the topic of water (links to Rivers topic, Finding Nemo setting and this week’s setting work)
Then re write after making changes.
Pupils to share their completed work
Steps to Success
Mild- to record ideas for a Haiku poem about water
Spicy- present poem in the form of a Haiku
Hot- to read over my own work and propose changes to grammar and vocabulary, spelling and punctuation ( CAGS 3 / 4)
Extra Hot- selecting appropriate grammar and vocabulary and understand how such choices can change and enhance meaning. ( CAG 5/6)
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Michael Morpurgo The Butterfly Lion Planning Questions Information
Some nice planning.
Plenty of questions on this great book.
sample
Look carefully at the book cover, what do you think this book is going to be about? What kind of story do you expect it to be (i.e. crime, fantasy, sci-fi)? Why do you think this?
Look back over the chapter you are reading. Can you select five powerful words that you could use in your own writing? Write them down.
At the beginning of ‘Chilblains and Semolina Pudding’, the narrator talks of the Butterfly Lion. Draw a picture of what you imagine him to look like.
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Year 4 Literacy Newspapers reports Six weeks short term plans
6 weeks short term plans.
sample
What newspapers and magazines can the pupils name?
What are the articles usually about?
Discuss the purpose of a newspaper.
WALT – know the features of a newspaper text.
WILF – good expression
Read through the opening paragraph of a newspaper article. Children to discuss the features and the structure of the opening paragraph.
Newspaper articles have all of the important information in the opening paragraph. The opening paragraph is not overly descriptive. This information includes who, what, when, where, why and how. (It is written this way because most people do not read an entire newspaper article all the way through. So newspaper writers put the most important information at the beginning).
Children wrote learn the opening paragraph of a newspaper article. Firstly as a class, followed by group work.
Recap the features of an opening paragraph of an article. SW – target group to discuss the features of the article.
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Year 6 Literacy The Savage David Almond Planning Powerpoint and Worksheets
sample planning
Introduce the section of work. Explain that we are going to use a very interesting focus text to complete some narrative writing, art work and drama.
Have a photocopy of the front cover and blurb for ‘The Savage’ by David Almond. TTYP and discuss “What are your initial responses?” (Ask children who may have read the book, not to give it away).
Come back together and discuss children’s ideas from the blurb and front cover. What sort of story is it going to be? What genre? What age group/gender do you think it may be aimed at?
Does anyone know anything about David Almond? His style of writing? His previous work?
Share that he was born into a large family in Newcastle; his books are very popular and critically acclaimed (what does this mean?). His books are very philosophical (meaning) and often appeal to both adults and children. Share with children that ‘The Savage’ deals with issues of loss, sadness, bullying and love.
Read the first two chapters of the focus text.
Come back together and discuss.
What does the use of two different fonts tell us?
Discuss how this is a story within another story. Why is Blue writing about ‘The Savage’? What is it helping him to do? Might there be something of Blue in ‘The Savage’? Might he be expressing his anger at what has happened to his family?
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Spring Term 13 Weeks Literacy Year 6 plan 40 page pdf Big Write
13 weeks of Literacy plans for Year 6. Spring Term.
Includes
Biographical writing
To develop a narrative solution
Persuasive writing
There’s a nice Big Write.
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Planning Year 5 Literacy Imaginary Worlds
Three notebooks.
Two weeks of plans.
Some worksheets.
Nouns ending in a consonant and y (e.g. party, army) change y to i and add es.
Nouns ending with a vowel and y (e.g. day, boy) just add s.
Whole Class Shared Reading - Mister Monday
Read Chapters 1 - 3
S & L opportunity
Pupils will discuss what a fantasy setting is. Most will have seen or read Harry Potter for example. The theme for lots of them is that the central character enters another world but lives in a world we can all relate to.
Pupils to give their opinion. What do they think is going to happen? How do they feel about the characters
Irregular plurals:
goose, man, mouse, woman, tooth, child, person, foot
test understanding of different endings during morning work Read chapter 4
WALT: know how an author creates mood and atmosphere. Pupils will focus on a passage of text that creates mood and atmosphere. What does the author do to build tension? How does he make us empathize with the character and be interested enough to want him to be safe. CT to work with MA to encourage deep thinking about language and sentence structure
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15 Powerpoints Year 5 Morning Work. Great Starters English Maths
15 Powerpoints that you can have on the board as your class enters.
Nice easy start to the day.
Easily adaptable. Nice bits of Math and English.
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Reception Short Term Lesson Plans 480 page pdf Year's Planning
480 page pdf.
Lots of little ideas for lessons.
Saves a load of planning.
sample :
Listen to stories with increasing attention and recall. [L&A]
Join in with repeated refrains and anticipate key events and phrases in rhymes and stories. [L&A]
Listen to stories, accurately anticipating key events and respond to what they hear with relevant comments, questions or actions. [L&A]
Read and understand simple sentences. [R] Remind chn about traditional tales: these were not written in books, they were TOLD. People remembered them and parents told them to their chn. Show/tell chn the story of The Gingerbread Man (see resources). Encourage chn to join in with repeating line, ‘Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me, I’m the Gingerbread Man.’ At the end of the story, write these sentences on f/c and then read them through together, matching words pointed to and said.
Join in with repeated refrains and anticipate key events and phrases in rhymes and stories. [L&A]
Listen to stories, accurately anticipating key events and respond to what they hear with relevant comments, questions or actions. [L&A]
Use language to imagine and recreate roles and experiences in play situations. [S]
Express themselves effectively, showing awareness of listeners’ needs. [S] Have pictures of the characters in The Gingerbread Man (see resources). Choose diff chn to be the diff characters in the story as you act it out from start to finish. Note 3 stages of the story:
Start: Mum makes gingerbread man & he runs away
Middle: Mum/dad/cow/horse chase gingerbread man to river
End: Fox carries gingerbread man over river and tricks him! Remind chn of the repeating phrase ‘Run, run, as fast as you can! You can’t catch me, I’m the Gingerbread Man.’ Use this phrase as you act out the story.
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Christmas Planning Year 5 Three weeks worth English Maths
Three weeks of planning. Plus you can use other planning included for free from different years.
Example
To analyse and create a character and setting description for 23 Degrees 5 Minutes North.
I can express verbally what a character may be feeling, thinking or doing I can explain why I think a character may feel, think or do something I can describe a setting using figurative language
Starter 5 mins
Pen portrait of key characters in 23 Degrees 5 Minutes North: Children mind map/annotate information about the key characters that they know so far around an image of The Adventurer and Professor Erit. They add information about the internal feelings, thoughts and emotions within and the external information such as physical description, or known facts
Activity 1 5-10 mins
Use key questions and discussion in groups to think about answers to questions such as: When is this story set? Who am I? Where am I? Why am I here? Will I be able to find Professor Erit? How will I find him?
Emphasise the importance of chn giving evidence to support their opinion when they give a response to these questions.
Activity 10 mins
Return to image of the Adventurer and Professor Erit. Using a different coloured pencil, chn should add information about these characters
Main 20 mins
Give chn an image of the setting and ask them to mind-map descriptive words, phrases or sentences they could use to describe the narrative setting.
Model using the different kinds of sentence-types to record a setting description, using the vocabulary recorder in the mind-map. Chn use sentences to build suspense if they can.
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Harry Potter Puzzles Crosswords Word Searches J K Rowling
Puzzles for Harry Potter.
Great for Friday afternoons when the kids go mad.
Sample clues.
ACROSS
A person who is born to magic parents but has
no magic ability.
Hooded dark arts creatures who at one time
followed Voltemort.
The wizarding world’s main newspaper.
The day a person dies and becomes a ghost.
A very powerful dark wizard who killed James
and Lily Potter.
Fifth year exam for students of the Hogworts
Academy.
An expensive broom that Sirius buys for
Harry.
The train that takes Hogworts students to and
from the school.
Nearly Exhausting Wizarding Test.
Buttery drink which can be bought by
students in Hogsmeade.
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Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare Planning Powerpoint Year 5
Planning to teach Shakespeare’s play.
Great powerpoints.
Sample planning :
Begin by introducing the new topic and the learning outcome. We will be studying ‘older’ literature. Explain that older literature is defined as anything written before 1914 but we are going to look at much older than this!
Show a picture of William Shakespeare: children to TTYP –
Who is this man?
What is he famous for?
Can you name any of his works?
Come back together and elicit that William Shakespeare was an author – not of stories but of plays and sonnets (poems). Talk about some of his more famous work and explain that he wrote 38 plays and over 160 sonnets.
Shakespeare was born in 1564 and died in 1616. He produced most of his work between 1589 and 1613 – why do you think he wrote mostly plays rather than stories? Elicit that he was an actor so he loved the stage and he intended his works to be acted out rather than just read and also because of the times. TV and film were not entertainment options and the majority of people couldn’t read so going to the theatre or watching an outside performance was very popular.
List the main characters on the board, to include:
The Capulets
Juliet
Lady Capulet (Juliet’s mother)
Lord Capulet (Juliet’s father and head of the family)
Tybalt (Juliet’s cousin and enemy of Romeo)
Nurse (Juliet’s nanny)
Paris (wants to marry Juliet)
The Montagues
Romeo
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Back to School Year 3 Maths English Plans 19 English weeks 18 English weeks
Looking for some inspiration going back to school.
19 English weeks 18 English weeks
Plus some humanities planning on China etc
Sample
Children have white boards. I will describe a person and you must draw them From the twits Roald dahl(Mr Twits). Children share ideas from the first opening paragraph. What made this so visual. LANGUAGE
Look at a series of images. Witch, doctor, pirate.
Look at the features, are there similarities.
Elaborated pictures of people. Famous and non famous.
Discussion and focal point.
Play head band with the children. They have to describe the person they are holding and the partner has to guess who it is.
Expanding on words to describe
Steps to Success
Mild: To review characters
Spicy: To recognise features of a character
Hot: To describe your character
Extra Hot: How could you describe yourself? Tell me.
What sort of questions did you ask eachother?
Why? Who spoke about the hair colour. How could we describe this person to someone.
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Back to School Year 5 Literacy Greek Myths Worksheets Planning Powerpoints
Great worksheets from the last school I taught in.
Write your own Greek Myth over the term.
Perhaps a half term to keep it compact and snappy.
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Fables Myths Legends planning Powerpoints Year 6 Literacy Welsh legends
Three weeks of plans.
You get powerpoints.
Looks at myths particularly Robin Hood and Welsh legends
You get plenty of resources.
Sample:
Ask the children to TTYP and name some famous legends.
Come back together and discuss (King Arthur, Robin Hood etc).
Ask children what they think are the features of a legend?
Establish that myths and legends are very similar but that Although legends often include mythical beings and supernatural events, their narrative spine is more closely connected to the real world of human history. The events in legends tend to seem more likely and less fictionalised than those in myths.
Legends are usually based on real characters and events, even though these have been richly embellished and exaggerated over time. This gives the narrative an exciting quality because all the events seem to be within the realm of possibility even when the plot has become so widely adapted or updated that it is completely fictional.
The plot of a legend usually focuses on an individual character, a cultural hero or a person respected and remembered (Jason, King Arthur, Robin Hood, William Tell, Roland) but there are also legends about places (Atlantis, Shangri-La), objects (the Holy Grail, the Philosopher’s Stone) and legendary animals (the Yeti, Loch Ness monster, Sasquatch, Chupacabra).
Make a checklist for the working wall ‘Features of legends’ to include:
Plot focuses on hero, struggle between hero and villain, journeys, rich vocabulary, imagery, metaphor, a more human story.
Read ‘Robin Hood: Outlaw with a sense of humour’ from Hamilton Trust resources page 9.
Make a list of attributes a hero, villain and side-kick should have in a legend
HA: describe all 3 types of character, include more detail, use complex sentences (with, who, when – model for children)
MA: write about all 3 characters – IR to support
LA: make a character description of Robin Hood – mind map vocabulary first then write 5 good sentences about him.
JS support
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Back to School The Piano by Aidan Gibbons Year 6 Literacy Planning
Great planning and powerpoints on this fascinating topic.
sample :
Speaking
• Tell a story using notes designed to cue techniques such as repetition, recap and humour
Drama
• Reflect on how working in role helps to explore complex issues
Understanding and interpreting texts
• Infer writers’ perspectives from what is written and from what is implied
• Compare different types of narrative and information texts and identify how they are structured
Creating and shaping texts
• Reflect independently and critically on their own writing and edit and improve it
• Experiment with different narrative forms and styles to write their own stories
Sentence structure and punctuation
• Adapt sentence construction to different text-types, purposes and readers
• Punctuate sentences accurately, including using speech marks and apostrophes
Understand, analyse and compare several ‘visual texts’.
Comment on the technical parts of a visual text.
Write a review using correct format and language.
Whole Class Shared Learning
Guided and Independent Activities:
Start to understand what is meant by a ‘visual text’. What do we know so far about narrative writing? Create a list of facts to add to working wall including: fictional, dialogue, opening etc.
Explain to the children briefly, that they are going to watch a short, animated film, entitled ‘The Piano.’ Explain also that there is no dialogue or narration; it will be up to the children to decide what the film is about, to answer simple questions, raise some of their own and provide their own explanations for what they see.
Tell the children that they’re going to watch the film, quietly and without comment at first. Then, watch ‘The Piano’ by Aidan Gibbons.
Model completing thinking feeling and speech shapes linked to the narrative.
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Year 5 Poetry Planning Poetic Style – Valerie Bloom/Pie Corbett
Nice planning :
sample :
Read 3/4 Pie Corbett poems (see list below this plan or plan resources) – NOT Wings. Discuss the poems read eg which one did you like best and why? Is anything similar about the poems? Focus their attention onto things that are typical of Pie Corbett. Use 3 headings: Subject matter/Style of poem/Language. Discuss each of these (subject matter is what the poem is about eg nature, travelling, observations etc). Style is free verse or strict rhythm/regular or irregular rhyming patterns, use of speech or dialogue etc. Language refers to the vocabulary – the use of adjectives and descriptions, metaphors or similes eg ”I heard the paving slabs groan as they muscled for space.” (See plan resources.) Start looking at poems of Pie Corbett under these 3 headings. Give chn time to talk in pairs/small groups about each heading and take feedback. Ask chn to come up and scribe some ideas under each heading. Explain that we will now be exploring some of these headings in more detail. Easy
Give chn a selection of Pie Corbett poems. Model reading a couple to the chn. Discuss what was similar or different in terms of the subject matter. Chn to then read some more poems in pairs and start to sort them into groups that are similar and why. Stick the similar poems onto A3 paper and make rough jottings about why they are similar. TD Medium/Hard
Work in pairs or 3s. Take turns to pick a Pie Corbett poem and read it out loud to rest of group. Repeat this until lots of poems have been read. Provide highlighting pens & poetry checklist (plan resources) to guide their discussion. Ask chn to go back over each poem carefully & highlight any language that makes the poem interesting eg adjectives & descriptions. Give chn the metaphor & simile example sheet (plan resources) to refer to and see if they can highlight any of these in another colour. Make sure chn annotate their highlighting with their own comments. Is there anything linking these Pie Corbett poems together? Does he repeat any language techniques? Finally they look at the style of the poems. Is there a regular rhythm in the poems? Do they use speech?
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Back to School Literacy Year 6 Stories by significant authors J K Rowling
Lots of great planning for an exciting unit.
Nice powerpoints.
Sample :
Share the learning outcome for the unit with the children; share the concept of the working wall. What is narrative? Fact or fiction? Ascertain that this unit is about fiction/narrative/stories. We have three weeks to achieve our learning outcome.
Ask children what they know about JK Rowling. Who is she? What is her job? (use correct terminology- she is an ‘author) Where is she from? (Born in Gloucestershire) Can children name any of her books? (Harry Potter series plus several supplements)
Etc.
Activity One
Come back together, show children a picture of JK Rowling – does this help?
Children to move to next group’s poster and add any more info that they can now think of. Is there anything they agree/disagree with?
Lead into a class discussion on this famous children’s author:
Has anybody read any of her books?
What are her stories about? What genre do you think her stories are written in? (Clarify what we mean by ‘genre’ if needed). What is the purpose of narrative writing? (Display ‘to entertain and enthrall’ on the working wall).
Read first tale from ‘Tales of the Beadle Bard’ – The Wizard and the Hopping Pot. Discuss what is distinctive about this story (what does it remind you of?)
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Independent Reading Tasks learning Aids Lots of Ideas
Gathered together some great ideas for guided reading and Independent reading.
Flexible for all years.
Get them doing tasks whilst you help different groups.
example :
During guided reading your teacher and teaching assistant(s) will be listening to different groups read, and work with children to improve reading and comprehension skills. There will often be one or 2 groups that will work independently. This sheet has lots of activities for you to complete if you are working on your own for the lesson. You can do the activities in any order, but you will need to tick them off and fill in the dates when you worked on the activities so your teacher can check them. You will need to keep your sheets in your folder – make sure you number your work with the activity number too! For most of the activities you will need either your current reading book, one you have read recently, or one you know quite well.
Write a letter as a character in your book to either another character in your book, a new invented character or a real-life character.
Write a letter from yourself to a character in your book.
Write a letter to the author of your book – you could say what you like or dislike about the book, or give ideas for what else you would like included in the book.
Have a go at drawing a map of one of the places in the story. See how much you can include and how much detail you can add.
Pretend you are a travel agent and want people to visit the place in the story. Write a paragraph on what you would tell others.
Re-tell an event from the story from another characters point of view. For example, if Jenny is visiting a haunted castle with her wimpy brother Joe, can you change it from Jenny’s point of view to Joe’s?
Re-tell an event from the story as if you are a newspaper reporter and you are writing a newspaper article.
Imagine you could interview a character in your story – what would you ask them? What would their replies be? Write your interview with your character. Set it out so you use 2 different colours for your questions and your character’s answers.
Write the diary entry (or several) for a character in your story after something interesting has happened. Have a go at writing a second diary entry for a different character.
Have a go at continuing the story after the end of the book. What might happen next?
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Flashback Story Planning Year 6 Late Again For School Powerpoints Worksheets
Great planning.
sample :
Key Questions Teaching
Show the children the PowerPoint ® about different sentence types.
Ask the children to give some examples of sentence types that we use in own writing.
Remind the children of the BOYS and 2A sentences. Write suggestions down. Ask could we extend these sentences, giving more detail?
Model how we might come up with a simple sentence – ‘I walked into school’ – and add another simple sentence to give more detail.
Tell pupils this week we will be focusing on flashback stories. Ask children what does it mean to flashback?
Ask pupils if they can recall the main stages of a narrative. Put up mixed words on board.
Can pupils recall the order?
Opening
Build up
Dilemma
Events
Resolution
End
Tell pupils effective flashback stories often open in the middle of action. This week we will focus on how to write an effective flash back opening.
First we are going to explore a possible story plot. Today’s lesson we are going to look at a picture still and pupils are going to work in pairs to work out what is happening / happened.
What does it mean to flashback? How should a narrative be structured? Why is this a good structure?
Tell pupils there are two ways to start an effective flashback story opening. We can use a 3-ed sentence or an If… If… If… sentence.
This week we are going to explore 3-ed sentences.
The technique we are going to use is called the Cliff hanger 3-ed sentence.
First part of our lesson we are going to look at just the 3- ed sentence. Explain to the pupils, -ed sentences describe a characters emotion/feelings.
The sentence starts with 3 adjectives which end in –ed.
Eg. Frightened, confused, amused.
Show another still picture from ‘Holes’. (see slide 2 of PPT). Ask children to write as many adjectives ending in ‘ed’ as they can think of to describe the scene.
Together, use these adjective and come up with a 3-ed sentences to describe this scene.
E.g. Disgusted, puzzled, repulsed, he held the shoes away from his nose.
Children now to generate their own using the words.
Now show slide 3. Children to generate 3-ed sentences.
Which words best describe the image? Why?
Which sentence is the most effective? Why? Would changing the order of the adjectives make it sound better/worse? Why?
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11 Plus Letter Patterns Volume One Logic Puzzles
100 sheets with answers.
The sort of thing that’s good for eleven plus prep.
Good for logical thinking.11+ Grammar School
Letter Pattern Questions
What do you call a rooster with a bad sunburn? A fried chicken.
Find the next two letters in the pattern for each set
of letters.
Use the alphabet grid if stuck.
KGOKS_ _ OW (- 4 + 8)
QOMKI_ _ GE (- 2)
KGPLU_ _ QZ (- 4 + 9)
FHJLN_ _ PR (+ 2)
HJLNP_ _ RT (+ 2)
GFHGI_ _ HJ (- 1 + 2)
VSPMJ_ _ GD (- 3)
SXQVO_ _ TM (+ 5 - 7)
ZXVTR_ _ PN (- 2)
FILOR_ _ UX (+ 3