I am a teacher specialising in Geography and Religious Studies with over 4 years experience to date. I pride myself on designing lessons that engages students in their learning, with an enquiry-based focus being at the forefront.
Any lesson that you download is fully resourced and differentiated ready to use in a flash. I hope they make a real contributing to your own classroom like they have done to mine.
I am a teacher specialising in Geography and Religious Studies with over 4 years experience to date. I pride myself on designing lessons that engages students in their learning, with an enquiry-based focus being at the forefront.
Any lesson that you download is fully resourced and differentiated ready to use in a flash. I hope they make a real contributing to your own classroom like they have done to mine.
This contains a fully resourced lesson on Plato's analogy of the cave. It contains a set of activities to meet the following objectives:
To describe the story of Plato’s cave.
To explain how the story questions our idea of reality.
To understand the symbolism of Plato’s ideas in The Matrix.
Has worked very well with my classes. It is ideally aimed at KS4, but can easily be adapted for KS3.
This contains a fully resourced lesson, differentiated lesson on whether religion is important in the 21st Century. It is done by considering the fictional scenario that it has been proven that God does not exist, and therefore neither does religion. They complete a group discussion and brainstorming exercise, compile notes and produce a newspaper report on their findings.
Learning Objectives:
To describe the positive and negative effects of religion.
To explain the possible effects of a world without religion.
To evaluate whether the world would be a better place without religion.
This contains a fully resourced lesson on how the climate of the UK varies. The main component of the lesson involves choropleth mapping to show how temperature and rainfall varies between winter and summer. Extension tasks are included throughout.
Learning Objectives:
To describe what the climate of the UK is like.
To explain the reasons for these differences.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on Christian baptism. The main part of the lesson involves students using a resource sheet to describe what happens during a baptism, a ranking task where students consider the importance of reasons why baptism is important for Christians, and a scenario-based discussion task where they finally consider difficulties the ceremony may create for young people.
Learning Objectives:
To describe what happens during a typical baptism.
To explain why baptism is important for Christians.
To assess the difficulties this ceremony can bring for young people.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson towards Aristotle's theory of the Four Causes. The main part of the lesson involves exploring the difference between Plato's and Aristotle's philosophy through picture analysis and a worksheet, followed by note-taking on Aristotle's Four Causes, which is then applied to a variety of objects which can be found within the world of empirical observation (with extension task).
Learning Objectives:
To outline the difference between Aristotle’s and Plato’s approach to Philosophy.
To explain Aristotle’s theory of the 4 causes.
To apply his theory to the world of empirical observation.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on what makes us truly human. The main part of the lesson involves students working in pairs to describe characteristics that make us human (table outline provided), using a clip to add further ideas, then finally completing a piece of writing on what they believe is the most important thing that makes us human.
Learning Objectives:
To describe the different characteristics that makes us human.
To explain your viewpoint on what makes us human.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on Christian attitudes to euthanasia. The main part of the lesson involves a card sort where students organise the key arguments into those that support either the Anglican or Catholic viewpoint, a Biblical quote analysis task, and a 12-mark evaluation practice exam question.
Learning Objectives:
To explain different Christian attitudes towards euthanasia.
To examine how Biblical evidence can support these viewpoints.
To evaluate whether euthanasia is acceptable or not.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the work of Christian charities. The main part of the lesson consists of an information gathering and consolidation carousel group task (based on four charities, including Barnando's and the Salvation Army) and evaluating which cause they believe is worthy of support, linking their answer to Christian views towards charity and wealth. Learning Objectives for the lesson are as follows:
To describe the aims of different Christian charities.
To explain why their work is important.
To evaluate which cause you believe is particularly worthy.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the different sources that comprise the total world’s energy mix. The main part of the lesson involves students producing a mind map of different energy sources which is developed in stages (initially in pairs writing down sources they are aware of, then using a video clip to add further sources and relevant facts with teacher input, then labelling into renewable and non-renewable sources), followed by a worksheet task classifying statements into advantages/disadvantages of renewable and non-renewable energy sources, finished with students using a table of data to answer questions about the world’s current energy mix.
Learning Objectives:
To describe the different sources of energy.
To explain the advantages and disadvantages of these sources.
To investigate how energy sources are used around the world.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the causes of rain in the UK. In the main part of the lesson students use a video and information presented on the Powerpoint to explain how each type of rainfall forms - there are three different sheets of varying difficulty to complete depending on how confident each student feels.
Learning Objectives:
To identify the three types of rainfall and its causes.
To explain how it rains in detail.
To analyse where the types of rainfall would be found in UK regions.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated scheme of work on ‘Weather and Climate’. All lessons contain a set of clear activities to meet a set of differentiated learning objectives. They should be taught in the following order:
What is the difference between weather and climate?
What factors influence climate?
What is the climate of the UK like?
How do we use climate graphs?
How does the water cycle work?
What are the causes of rain in the UK?
What are the different types of cloud?
How does air pressure affect weather?
How do we measure the weather?
How do different factors affect microclimate?
How do we measure school microclimates?
School microclimate survey
School microclimate report
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on how headlands and bays form. The main part of the lesson involves a critical thinking exercise where students have to theorise how headlands and bays form from the diagram provided, then following a class discussion/teacher explanation they produce to a labelled diagram to explain how they form, which is followed by a group activity where students have to use a set of clues to assess in detail the influence of geology which leads to their formation.
Learning Objectives:
To explain how headlands and bays form.
To assess the importance of geology in its formation.
This fully resourced lesson explores the three types of rainfall in the UK. It contains a key term starter, video note-taking task and then a worksheet where they draw diagrams and explain the three main types of rainfall. The worksheet is differentiated to three different levels according to how confident students feel. I printed off a set for each table in different colours, from which they selected which one they felt the most confident with. Feedback always appreciated.
This contains a fully resourced set of activities that focus on the impact of bullying. This was used during form time, but could easily be adapted into say a Citizenship lesson as well. Learning Objectives:
To understand what bullying is and its different forms.
To explain the emotional impacts that bullying can have.
To analyse the ways in which bullying can be tackled.
This is a fully resourced, introductory lesson on how people go about making moral decisions. The main part of the lesson mostly focuses on a case study to consider the effects of our moral actions, namely that the minerals from our mobile phones can be sourced (on occasion) to war zones. It contains a written task, peer discussion task and evaluation task.
To describe what moral decisions are.
To explain the effects of our moral decisions.
To evaluate the morality of our moral decisions.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the Christian Creation Story from Genesis. The main part of the lesson involves drawing a storyboard to show the key parts of the story, a pair discussion task on how Fundamentalist and Liberal Christians might view the story (leading to a card sorting task of the reasons behind the views), and finally a written reflection evaluating how they believe the story is best understood.
Learning Objectives:
To describe the Christian Creation Story.
To explain how this story is viewed by different Christians.
To evaluate how you personally believe it is best understood.
This resource consists of a series of fact sheets detailing the causes and effects of modern conflicts, including the Syria and Libya Civil war alongside the conflict in Ukraine.
This is an active starter for pupils when introducing the topic of sustainability.
INSTRUCTIONS:
Walk around the room finding students who match up to one of these sustainability statements, and then get their signature in the square
The first one to get BINGO (horizontal, vertical, diagonal) wins!
FEEDBACK:
What have you learnt about yourself or other people from this experience?
What do all these statements have in common?
Why are these things important?
Suggest what you think the word ‘sustainability’ means
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the viewpoints different groups of people can have towards the use of coastal defences.
The main part of the lesson involves a discussion activity where students have to consider the potential views of a range of key stakeholders, a popcorn reading activity and follow-up written exercise where students use a textbook page to concisely explain the viewpoints of a range of key stakeholders (based upon a case study, Scarborough), finished by drafting a letter addressed to a newspaper outlining their views about the proposed coastal defence scheme.
Please note that the exact textbook page is not incorporated with this lesson, but it is believed to be a recent iteration of the Geog. 2 textbook.
Learning Objectives:
To identify different points of view towards sea defences.
To explain the reasons for these viewpoints.
To express a justified opinion towards the scheme.