I am an experienced Primary school teacher with over twenty years experience in EYFS, KS1 and KS2. I have made and used all of the interactive topic based lesson plans, power-points and resources in this shop with my classes. I hope you enjoy using them with your classes too.
I am an experienced Primary school teacher with over twenty years experience in EYFS, KS1 and KS2. I have made and used all of the interactive topic based lesson plans, power-points and resources in this shop with my classes. I hope you enjoy using them with your classes too.
Each lesson is broken into short focused activities. There are opportunities for pupils to recall prior learning, participate in a short quiz, take notes from a YouTube clip, scrutinise and compare population graphs and weather charts (included on slides), research native animals and use maps and atlases to locate Egypt’s key cities and geographical features. Each set of slides contain images to help pupils ‘get a feel’ for the geography of Egypt as well as simple cultural information such as greetings in Egyptian Arabic at the beginning and end of lessons.
Great to link with cross curricular topic such as Ancient Egyptians, Deserts, Myths and Legends, Early civilizations etc.
Lesson 1
Learning Objectives
I must find Egypt in my atlas.
I should recognise some of the features of Egypt.
I could describe where Egypt is in the world using geographical words.
Lesson 2
Learning objectives
I must be able to spot the main features of Egypt.
I should find and label the features on my map.
I could write a description about two features.
Lesson 3
Learning Objectives
I must describe a desert climate.
I should explain the temperature in different locations.
I could interpret the climate data and temperature chart for each month.
Lesson 4
Learning objectives:
I must explain the definition of the term ‘population’.
I should interpret the population table and identify the challenges for living in Egypt.
I could compare population graphs for Egyptian cities and explain population issues.
Lesson 5
Learning Objectives
I must explain the definition of the term ‘population’, ‘desert climate’ and ‘weather’.
I must order the ten most populated cities in Egypt.
I should explain how the location of Egyptian cities affects population size.
I could explain how the weather and climate support the lifes of the Egyptian people.
Lesson 6
Learning Objectives
I must identify some features of natural beauty in Egypt.
I should identify and research some of the areas of natural beauty which come from Egypt.
OR
I should identify and research some of the animal, fish and birds which come from Egypt.
Greek Myth story plan on a page
KS1 & 2 Greek Myth story planning template. A fun resource for pupils to use to plan their own mythological writing. Includes story prompts and spaces for pupils to develop writing in note or bullet point format when planning their own character description, setting and story structure.
Great to use following a ‘Myths’ writing lesson or drama. Can also be used with topics: Myths and Legends, Ancient Greece, Greece, Heroes and Heroines/Superheroes.
Flashback story template
KS1 & 2 Flashback story planning template. A resource for pupils to use to plan their own story with a flashback writing. Includes a bullet point reminder of the rules for writing flashback stories and spaces for pupils to develop character description, setting and plan the structure of their story.
Great to use following drama. Can also be used with topics : Adventure, Explorers, personal experiences.
Adventure story template
KS1 & 2 Adventure story planning template. A resource for pupils to use to plan their own adventure writing. Includes a bullet point reminder of the rules for writing adventure stories and spaces for pupils to develop character description, setting and plan the structure of their story.
Great to use following an adventure writing lesson or drama. Can also be used with topics : Adventure, Explorers, Travel, Halloween.
EYFS/KS1 summer picnic activity sheet.
Learning objective : I can choose and name at least 8 things to put in a picnic basket.
A simple observation and identification activity for pupils before undertaking an out of school visit (to the beach, woods, park). Pupils draw what they will need for a picnic.
There is a simple picture/word key at the bottom of the worksheet to help pupils identify 8 common items found in a picnic basket.
Can be used as a follow up activity for topic work on ‘Teddy Bear’s Picnic’, seaside, summer, ‘We’re going on a picnic!’ by Pat Hutchins etc.
KS1 and Reception Pack of 30 PE warm up games/activities to develop:
Key skills: Familiarisation with space.
Awareness of obstacles and other children.
Respond to ‘stop’, ‘turn’, ‘change direction’ and simple signals.
Travel in different ways. Taking turns. Positional vocabulary.
Each game/activity can be used as a lesson starter to warm up the pupils and help them to practise the key skills. A list of resources is listed by each activity where needed.
Games included help pupils develop team work, understanding of rules and tactics or simple strategies. I have used these games and activities and have adapted the names of the games to match some of the topics I was teaching at a particular time.
Remembrance Day KS1 and KS2 Assembly.
A simply written whole school assembly to cover the main aspects of Remembrance Day which can be used in the days preceding or on 11th November. A 2 minute silence can be easily slotted into the assembly where you chose and can be followed with the post horn sounding (link included).
Power-point of 15 slides which include:
Suggested music (links to post horn and orchestra) and hymns.
Date of Remembrance Day (11th of 11th at 11 o’ clock).
King George V proclamation for 2 minutes silence.
Brief information about World War I, the Cenotaph and the Grave of the Unknown Warrior.
Poem ‘Flanders Fields’.
The symbol of the poppy.
A short prayer.
Peru today: Series of 6 KS2 power-point Geography lessons.
Each lesson is broken into short focused activities with supporting worksheets and maps. There are opportunities for pupils to recall prior learning, participate in a short quiz, take notes from a YouTube clip, scrutinise and compare population graphs and weather charts (included on slides), research native animals and use maps and atlases to locate Peru’s key cities and geographical features. Each set of slides contain images to help pupils ‘get a feel’ for the geography of Peru as well as simple cultural information such as greetings in Peruvian (Spanish) at the beginning and end of lessons.
Great to link with cross curricular topics such as ‘Incas’, ‘Rainforests’, ‘Weather’, ‘Early civilizations’ etc.
Lesson 1
Learning Objectives
I must find Peru in my atlas.
I should recognise some of the features of Peru.
I could describe where Peru is in the world using geographical words.
Lesson 2
Learning objectives
I must be able to spot the main features of Peru.
I should find and label the features on my map.
I could write a description about two features.
Lesson 3
Learning Objectives
I must describe a tropical climate.
I should explain the temperature in different locations.
I could interpret the climate data and temperature chart for each month.
Lesson 4
Learning objectives:
I must explain the definition of the term ‘population’.
I should interpret the population table and identify the challenges for living in Peru.
I could compare population graphs for Peru cities and explain population issues.
Lesson 5
Learning Objectives
I must explain the definition of the term ‘population’, ‘tropical climate’ and ‘weather’.
I must order the ten most populated cities in Peru.
I should explain how the location of Peruvian cities affects population size.
I could explain how the weather and climate support the life of the Peruvian people.
Lesson 6
Learning Objectives
I must identify some features of natural beauty in Peru.
I should identify and research some of the areas of natural beauty which come from Peru.
OR
I should identify and research some of the animal, fish and birds which come from Peru.
Brazil today: Series of 4 KS2 power-point Geography lessons.
Each lesson is broken into short focused activities. There are opportunities for pupils to recall prior learning, participate in a short quiz, take notes from a YouTube clip, scrutinise and compare population graphs and weather charts (included on slides), research native animals and use maps and atlases to locate Brazil’s key cities and geographical features. Each set of slides contain images to help pupils ‘get a feel’ for the geography of Brazil as well as simple cultural information such as greetings in Brazilian (Portuguese) at the beginning and end of lessons.
Great to link with cross curricular topics such as ‘South America’, ‘Rainforests’, ‘Weather’, ‘The Amazon’.
Lesson 1
Learning Objectives
I must find Brazil in my atlas.
I should recognise some of the features of Brazil.
I could describe where Brazil is in the world using geographical words.
Lesson 2
Learning objectives
I must be able to spot the main features of Brazil.
I should find and label the features on my map.
I could write a description about two features.
Lesson 3
Learning Objectives
To identify the different climate zones in Brazil.
To describe and explain the climate found in each zone. Geographical vocabulary (northern hemisphere, southern hemisphere, equator, Tropic Cancer/Capricorn).
To explain the temperature in different locations.
To interpret a climate data and temperature chart.
Lesson 4
Learning objectives:
I must explain the definition of the term ‘population’.
I should interpret the population table and suggest reasons for how the physical features affect where people live in Brazil.
I could compare population information and explain how the population has changed in Brazil over 50 years.
Roald Dahl Famous person fact sheet.
Includes key events and important stages in his life broken into short easy to read sections with pictures and photos.
I have used this with pupils in Years 1-6 to help them retrieve information / develop their knowledge to write about a famous person in a range of genres (newspaper report, biography, letter or diary writing, fiction, non-fiction etc). I have also used it with a guided reading group and a set of questions linked to the topic followed up with a written comprehension exercise.
Useful for topics: Roald Dahl, Roald Dahl Day (13th September), Fiction books, Famous people, Biographies, Topics based around a Roald Dahl book eg ‘The Witches’, ‘The BFG’.
This Autumn bundle has 10 worksheets for KS1 pupils:
Autumn acrostic poem templates. Autumn Acrostic poetry templates. Four blank templates with the headings Autumn, Scarecrow, Leaf and Farmer. Each poem has a corresponding word mat of Autumn words help pupils start a new line of their poem. The shorter poem templates can be used with younger or SEN pupils.
Autumn months sentence work and an Autumn label to decorate.
Fruit and vegetables. Matching to labels and saying where the vegetable grows (ground, tree, bush, hedge, field).
Autumn survey for an autumn walk
Autumn clothes ordering the clothes in the correct boxes (Autumn or Summer).
The journey of bread. Picture sequencing.
Grain foods. Listing food made from wheat, oats and corn (labelled image to help).
Breadmaking ordering the statements.
Hibernating animals. Dictionary definition work and cut and stick animals into categories.
Activity mat. Fun mat with jumbled autumn words, a maze, symmetrical drawing, wordsearch.
Useful to build into a lesson or for early finishers.
EY/KS1 Signs of Autumn Powerpoint Four lessons.
Learning Objectives:
Lesson 1
To know the names of the Autumn months.
To recognise the signs of Autumn around me.
Lesson 2
To describe weather changes in the Autumn season.
To explain how the autumn weather affects some animals.
To know what the word ‘hibernate’ means.
To list animals that hibernate.
Lesson 3
To name the grains which grow at Autumn time.
To name some foods which are made with grains.
To sequence the stages of making bread.
Lesson 4
To be able to name different autumn fruit and vegetables and say where they grow.
The slides include photographs of animals which hibernate (dormouse, bat, frog, grass snake etc) and do not hibernate but sleep at Autumn/Winter (squirrels, badgers, rabbits/hares). At specific points there are short paired talk activities and simple class activities with worksheets (and answers) for each lesson.
There are BBC links – making bread and a survey worksheet for an Autumn walk.
Cross curricular KOW /Science work on topics of ‘Seasons’, ‘Autumn’, ‘Animals’, ‘Nature’.
Harvest Assembly and supporting powerpoint.
This assembly is complete but can be mixed or edited according to time limitations or pupil numbers/abilities. There are sufficient parts for 2 classes of KS2 pupils or pupils reading and taking acting/ speaking roles.
The Assembly begins with a short introduction and information about harvest traditions and moves onto crops and grains harvested with a harvest Alphabet. The powerpoint has images which support the pupil text if you wish to use it. There are suggestions for well known songs and hymns at key points in the assembly. There is a prayer of thanks in the form of a poem which leads onto thanks to the parents/carers for their harvest donations.
A short play depicts the theme of sharing with those who need it and moves onto supporting our planet and the climate issues it faces. (a summary of props is included on the playscript).
The assembly ends with a ‘Happy Harvest’ where pupils can show their paintings or pictures as they read out short captions.
My class made bread and we inserted pictures of the baking process (including the sticky hands and floury faces!) into the powerpoint. Also, the small recorder group played a short song and we took their photos and inserted them into the powerpoint.
The children’s scripts were numbered so they sat in order of speaking (and moved if they had more than one part) and their script cards (their words) were mounted on Autumn pictures or collages made by the children and held up for the audience to see after speaking.
I hope you enjoy this assembly and have fun with your children.
Pirate knowledge board game. For 2 players. KS1.
Learning Objective
To practise and remember important words (vocabulary) about Pirates.
To work with my partner to remember facts and information about pirate life.
To test my own knowledge.
Learning objective and rules included.
Pupils need a dice or a spinner and a counter each. This is a traditional style board game where the children work their way around a trail from start to finish answering the pirate general knowledge questions as they go. Correct answer wins 1 square forward, incorrect answer wins 1 square backwards.
The first person to reach the finish square is the Pirate Champion!
I laminated this game for durability and its increased size when I wanted to include up to 4 pupils in the game with an adult to support younger pupils.
Useful as an assessment activity or a fun way of developing knowledge in a Pirates topic.
Visual timetable cards. Set of 36 of the most commonly used classroom tasks and subjects with simple text and images. Includes individual cards for the 7 days of the week and cards for ‘afternoon’ and ‘morning’.
The words on the cards are: Lunch, swimming, wash hands, milk time, circle time, talk and share time, surprise time, Assembly, reading practise, writing practise, handwriting, dance, library, PE and games, outdoor learning, music, playtime, drama, Maths/numeracy, computing, RE, citizenship, learning a language, healthy living, growing things, school visit, topic work, phonics and spelling, baking, design technology, toilet, science, history, art, geography.
Useful to help children of most ages and abilities use a timeline to predict and prepare for the order of the daily activities.
Set of 60 (covering one term) ‘Five a Day’ maths challenges. Aimed at Y1 and some YR these challenges can be used as a simple daily warm up, a quick test, early finishers task or a small group task.
The challenges cover a range of simple number and shape space and measures and become more challenging as the children move through the 60 days. The exercises are presented in a similar way to help children to get used to what is asked of them in recorded format. The exercises include:
Counting in ones, twos and later in 5s and 10s.
More/less than.
Number lines and picture/number sequences.
Simple addition and subtraction to 10 then 20+.
Making sets and pairs.
Ordinal numbers. Positional vocabulary: before, after.
Heavier/lighter
Longer/shorter/taller
Length in cm
O clock and half past.
2D shapes: circle, square, rectangle.
Half and whole.
Simple tally graphs.
Creativity Bubbles.
Set of 3, one for each Key Stage, modified with statements which enable pupils to recognise when they are being creative in lessons. The statements are categorised under three headings: imagination, originality and evaluation.
Can be used by the teacher to measure pupil progress, peer to peer observation and self-assessment in creative learning.
I have used these in all Key Stages, initially asking children as a class which tasks could be identified as creative eg ‘I think of unusual ways of doing things’ in a PE lesson – pupils were able to give examples of travelling sequences using mats and small apparatus saying specifically how their moves were different or unusual to that of their peers.
Can be useful to use to prompt self and peer assessment in subjects which are not perceived as ‘creative’ by pupils eg Maths, Science, Geography.
KS1 Christmas SATs Maths Practise Booklet
I made this booklet based upon similar Year2 SATs questions but with a Christmas theme. It is targeted at Years 1 & 2 for practise in the areas below. There are 33 questions altogether in the booklet. Each topic has a learning objective for pupils to match against their targets. The questions are set out in a simple format with spaces for pupils to write answers and show workings and calculations. Christmas pictures are included alongside the questions which are practical and fun.
Answer sheet provided at the end of the booklet.
Page 1 Questions 1-3 Learning objective: I can count accurately and use numbers to 100.
Page 2
Questions 4-6 Learning objective: I can name one more or one less from a given number.
Page 3 Questions 7-9 Learning objective: I can order numbers.
Page 4 Questions 10-11 Learning objective: I can add and subtract.
Page 5 Questions 12-13 Learning objective: I can add and subtract.
Page 6 Questions 14-16 Learning objective: I can solve one and two step problems.
Page 7 Questions 17-19 Learning objective: I can add and subtract
Pages 8-10 Questions 19-25 Learning objective: I can use measures.
Page 11 Questions 26-27 Learning objective: I can recognise fractions in shapes.
Pages 12-14 Questions 27-33 Learning objective: I can multiply and divide to solve problems.
I made this fun booklet for my KS2 pupils to practise maths in a ‘real life’ situation based on planning a Christmas party for 200 KS1 pupils. After completing this task, the children actually did plan a party for KS1! They were amazed at the actual cost of the items and gained a real insight into planning for an event.
There are 7 tasks in total with a task summary table for pupils to record their summaries at the end of each task. The pupils have a budget of £400 and must make decisions based upon their budget and costs of items such as food and entertainment.
Task 1 Party timetable – working out a timetable around set times.
Task 2 Total cost of food for 200 children. Percentage and fraction of children’s votes for a particular buffet type. Cost per head and total costs.
Task 3 Total number of tracks for the whole party. Numbers of tracks for the dancing sessions using multiplication and addition skills.
Task 4 The cost and name of the cheapest show. Calculating the actual costs of two shows plus extras and deciding on the cheapest option.
Task 5 Total drinks cost for 200 children. Options for drinks and total costs.
Task 6 The cheapest option for party hats
Task 7 Total cost of all prizes.
KS1 & 2 Myth story planning template. A resource for pupils to use to plan their own mythological writing. Includes a bullet point reminder of the rules for writing myths and spaces for pupils to develop writing in note or bullet point format when planning their own character description, setting and story structure.
Great to use following a ‘Myths’ writing lesson or drama. Can also be used with topics: Myths and Legends, Ancient Greece, Greece, Heroes and Heroines/Superheroes.