<p>This lesson will build on the persuasive devices that students have previously been introduced to. The various activities lead up to the main arch of the lesson - planning and writing their own speech.</p>
<p>Full <em>I am Malala</em> scheme of work with all resources (slides, activities) included. The resource is very activity heavy, meaning that you have the option to select which resource you believe your students would benefit from best.</p>
<p>This scheme has been adapted heavily from another author on here.</p>
<p>Activities include:</p>
<ul>
<li>Factsheets</li>
<li>Comparison questions</li>
<li>A speaking and listening presentation</li>
<li>Film reviews</li>
<li>Speech analysis</li>
<li>Newspaper article</li>
<li>Poetry comparison</li>
</ul>
<p><strong>All</strong> resources are included as Word documents with the exception of one or two Adobe files, meaning that you can adapt/scaffold.</p>
<p>We taught this to our Y7 class as their first novel in Secondary school: they absolutely loved it. I would use this scheme for 12 weeks, 2 lessons per week.</p>
<p>You would need to add</p>
<ul>
<li>copies of the text <em>although there is an online version for free via Goo</em>le*</li>
<li>Copy of DVD</li>
</ul>
<p>Please leave me a review! This is the first scheme that I have written in its entirety.</p>
<p>Based on the television show, this Christmas Jeopardy pack has six categories (including challenge) that will excite even the most surly of students.</p>
<p>The categories are as follows: English, Food and Drink, Sport, General Knowledge, Films and Challenge. There are five questions in each, with a bonus point in each round.</p>
<p>For those unsure of how Jeopardy works, the students are able to select a numbered question from the question board. The number corelates with how many points the question is worth; if the student gets the answer correct, they win that amount of points. If they get it incorrect, it goes to the next individual, and so on, until it is answered correctly. The challenge questions are similar, however there is the element of direct competition; the student must select another individual to go against, with the points up for grabs going to the winner. <strong>N.B. One of the options is sorting two mixed packets of Mentos into the correct colours, as quickly as they can. These will need to be bought prior/changed to a tik tok challenge etc</strong></p>
<p>The powerpoint is completely animated, allowing you to click between the question board and the questions. All you need to do is organise teams and a scoreboard.</p>
<p>Enjoy, and don’t forget to rate!</p>