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Unique resources created by an experienced Secondary English and History teacher. These are academically rigorous resources that target children between 13 and 18 years of age.

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Unique resources created by an experienced Secondary English and History teacher. These are academically rigorous resources that target children between 13 and 18 years of age.
War Poetry - What is war and an intro to analysing war poems
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War Poetry - What is war and an intro to analysing war poems

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1) A fun an engaging PPT designed to build up students' reading comprehension abilities. It includes a definition of war, a series of questions for classroom discussion (drawing on prior knowledge), a small clip from Forrest Gump for students to watch and discuss (questions included), info about who writes war poetry and the various reasons they have for doing so, an answer to the question 'why read poetry?' Following this the PPT encourages students to engage with three poetic texts and learn to read for meaning and to appreciate the emotions created by the author and how they achieve this. Each poem comes with questions to check for student comprehension and to begin scaffoldin their ability to analyse. 2) A handout with the words to each poem: Grandpa what did you do in the war?, Gaps in the ranks & And the band played Waltzing Matilda 3) A Poetry retrieval chart (homework) for students to complete to revise after the lesson -- I would send these out via email to be completed electronically.
Religion: Introduction to Inquiry Based Learning Social Justice Unit
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Religion: Introduction to Inquiry Based Learning Social Justice Unit

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Three resources used in a 9 Theology unit on social justice and the work of laypeople. 1) a PowerPoint introducing students to Inquiry Based Learning. It includes the two big questions of the unit (aka fertile questions). Students to complete a KWL chart before learning to develop sub questions to answer the two big questions. It then talks students through a process that they can use to begin finding answers to these questions. It includes an explanation of BOOLEAN search practices which can be used when researching online to produce more relevant results. 2) A list of prayers required to be taught throughout the year (grade 9) 3) A table which explains the various steps of TELSTAR (the structure used for this Inquiry unit)
Australian Frontier Wars - 11 Modern History - Summarising Written Sources (skills lesson)
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Australian Frontier Wars - 11 Modern History - Summarising Written Sources (skills lesson)

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Resources designed for the new senior Modern History syllabus (implemented in QLD in 2019). The syllabus objectives would also be useful more broadly for English students in other states and countries with an interest in colonialism and Australia’s Frontier Wars (1788-1930s). A PowerPoint for a skills focused Modern History lesson focusing on Summarising. It begins with a settling activity (writing definitions of key historical concepts into glossary - empathy, cause & effect, historiography). This is followed by an explanation of paraphrasing, summarising and quoting. I have provided an example of each using the transcript of President Rooseelt’s declaration of war post Pearl Harbor. I have explained some things that you see in sources that students may not be familiar with [sic] and ellipses (…). Subsequently I provided sources about the Frontier War for students to summarise to practice the skill. Finally, I address referencing and how to in text reference within an exam. I show them an example exam response to help them see in text referencing in action. A homework sheet with three sources from the Frontier Wars for students to summarise (one of them is a visual source). I pride myself on the quality of the materials I produce, I don’t charge high prices because I don’t agree with paying £10 for a wordsearch. If you need to check before you buy, have a look at some of the free resources in my shop for a sample of the quality and depth.
Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Unit Introduction
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Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Unit Introduction

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. The end of term assessment for this unit was a 90 minute short response examination. A PowerPoint to introduce the students to the unit. It includes a quiz about their experiences in the workforce & a categorising activity where they look at elements that make a good job and list them in order of preference. Students are introduced to key terms - full time, part time, casual and temporary employee. They view a short YouTube clip about workplace myths to generate interest in the topic. Then they are introduced to The Fair Work Act which is one of the key pieces of legislation they need to refer to throughout the unit. There is a cloze passage for them to complete and some discussion points. A handout which explains the 10 National Employment Standards which all Australian workers are guaranteed. For homework students were to fill in the far right column ‘How does this help create a healthy workplace?’ I pride myself on the quality of the materials I produce, I don’t charge high prices because I don’t agree with paying £10 for a wordsearch. If you need to check before you buy, have a look at some of the free resources in my shop for a sample of the quality and depth.
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships -Inquiry Booklet and Conflict Scenarios
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Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships -Inquiry Booklet and Conflict Scenarios

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. An inquiry booklet which students complete in the early phase of the unit. They then use what they find to write their report. This booklet includes: a pre quiz (to see what students already know), key terms to be defined, a place to reflect on and record what they know about their own personality (including where they feel they fit in the Big 5 personality types). It also includes questions to investigate (they must keep a record of their sources and evaluate them), a space to record their analysis of the two people from their chosen conflict scenario, a table for comparing their personality traits (using Big 5), a graphic organiser for collecting information about a range of conflict resolution strategies and a SWOT analysis to be completed at the end of the assessment. A handout with 3 conflict scenarios which students can choose from to respond to in their report. Two are from films (10 Things I Hate About You & Remember the Titans), the last is from the media (Taylor Swift vs Katy Perry). The handout provides a summary of the conflict scenario, information about Person A & B and quotes from the specific conflict scene. A template for students to write their report into.
Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Unions
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Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Unions

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. 1. A PowerPoint explaining what unions are and why they exist. It includes a clip from Behind The News (2016) giving a historical overview of the origin of unions. It includes an explanation of collective bargaining within Australia. I then provide a specific example of a union - the Queensland Teachers’ Union. It includes a video about what the QTU achieved in its first 120 years. Information from their website about the benefits of belonging to a teacher’s union. The 11 steps in the enterprise bargaining process and how belonging to a union is protected under the Fair Work Act (2009). This is followed by two case studies for students to read and respond to. A handout which goes along with this lesson
End of year Quiz for high school students - various subjects
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End of year Quiz for high school students - various subjects

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A fun trivia PPT designed for an end of the year activity but which would also be useful if you broke it up and used particular rounds as warm ups or brain breaks throughout a year. There are 20 questions per round (12 rounds in total) - each slide features 10 questions which auto appear upon clicking. Each round has a different focus or theme. There are a couple of picture rounds (famous people, famous landmarks, celebrity singers etc.) Additional round categories include: popular culture, true or false, food and drink, science and the human body, English, Geography, History, General Knowledge, Maths and lastly Animals and Birds. After each round is a slide providing the answers for that round. Questions could also be used in a jeopardy style game.
Social and Community Studies - Arts & Community - Language features used in Street Art
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Social and Community Studies - Arts & Community - Language features used in Street Art

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. The lesson begins with a consideration of the role art plays in society. There is a Bansky quote which encourages discussion about whether these murals would be quite as powerful if they were in a gallery or done by legal means. There is information about how art conveys messages and a series of slides which name and explain language techniques used by artists with relevant pictures of street art supplied. The techniques are: allusion, rhetorical questions, repetition, pun, metaphor, sarcasm, verbal irony, a call to action and parody. This is followed by a series of pictures where the students need to identify which language feature it utilises. If time remains, this is followed by a Click View viewing activity about street artists in Melbourne.
11 Engineering Skills (Metalwork) -  Unit Plan and Introduction to assessment PowerPoint
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11 Engineering Skills (Metalwork) - Unit Plan and Introduction to assessment PowerPoint

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Part of a set of resources created for a year 11 Engineering Skills class in Australia (new syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. A unit plan which includes a description of the subject, a unit description, a list of key resources, a breakdown of assessment (theory and prac), syllabus objectives, a list of learning intentions and success criteria, a place to record the differentiation you are providing for particular learners in your class, ways to monitor learning, some questions for reflecting and a teaching and learning guide for the key knowledge / skills to be taught in the unit. 2)** An Introductory PowerPoint for the assessment portion of the unit**. It revisits classroom expectations (in particular those around working in a computer room). It provides tips for the photographic journal portion of the assessment task. It explains to the students how they will be graded for their theory and prac (photographic journal + technical drawing + JSA + construction procedure + toolbox construction).
Worksheet - An Introduction to studying poetry
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Worksheet - An Introduction to studying poetry

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Do you fear teaching students about poetry because of how you learned about poets in school? Are you new to teaching poetry and want some ideas of where to start? If so this could be the resource for you. This lesson is the first of many created to teach learners to appreciate poems, analyse poems and write poems of their own. Each of these worksheets has been made after consulting numerous texts about best practice pedagogy and each includes links to other resources you may find helpful (see reference list). This worksheet can be used as a one on one tutoring resource. Alternatively, you can take activities from here to use in a PowerPoint lesson, as fast finishers or homework activities. It includes a definition of poetry, some of the reasons people write poems and the effects poetry can have on the reader. It goes back to the basics of grammar looking at how poets use adjectives, nouns, verbs and prepositions to convey meaning. Example poems are provided for students to identify these devices in. Other poems are provided along with comprehension questions to help students see the importance of reading to glean meaning. There is also a section on tone which provides students with a list of words to describe the tones of various texts and activities to check for student understanding. Finally, it includes a vocabulary building and spelling activity for fast finishers.
World War Two – the atomic bombing of Hiroshima
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World War Two – the atomic bombing of Hiroshima

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A PowerPoint which I think History teachers will find helpful. If you use it, and like it, please give me a positive star rating / review. Constructive criticism is also appreciated. It was designed for teaching grade 10 history in Australia. PowerPoint: The Atomic Bomb Key learnings  The significance of the use of atomic bombs during World War II  The contestability surrounding the use of atomic bombs during World War II  What are causes and effects of the use of atomic bombs during World War II? Information contained on slides • The beginning of the nuclear age • The first atomic bomb • Different perspectives on using the bombs (prior to their use) o Why did America decide to use the atomic bomb on Japan? o US President Harry Truman’s perspective • Little Boy and Fat Man – dates and locations of use • Images of Hiroshima including artworks • A description of the Hiroshima blast o Images and descriptions of damage to buildings o Information about the final initial death toll o Black rain o Immediate effects of the radiation o Image of a human shadow etched in stone o Fire • Human effects of using the atomic bombs (health consequences) o Hair loss, radiation, scarring, cataracts, birth defects, leukaemia and cancers • Discrimination against survivors of the bomb (known as Hibakusha) • The wider causes and effects of the use of the atomic bombs during World War Two • The Hiroshima peace memorial • The story of Sadako and the thousand paper cranes • Images of Hiroshima today • Arguments for dropping the atomic bomb • Arguments against dropping the atomic bomb
Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Workplace legislation
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Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Workplace legislation

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. A PowerPoint for the orientating phase of a unit on Australian workplace rights. It begins with revision questions about the Fair Work Act, types of employees, superannuation etc. This is followed by a YouTube clip explaining the difference between the duties of the Fair Work Commission and those performed by the Fair Work Ombudsman. I usually take dot point notes for students to copy after viewing but I have also provided a follow up slide with text. Afterwards, there is a link to an ABC news story about a time when the FWO intervened to protect workers rights. A new term - jurisdiction - is introduced along with an explanation of key State and federal laws which protect workers. Then the lesson zooms in to focus on specific sections from the Fair Work Act (as students need to be able to explain the purpose of particular sections for their exam). A handout goes along with this which has places for students to sum up the sections after the class discusses them. It includes information about ‘adverse action’ (including examples), a case study about a nurses strike, information about ‘discrimination’ along with examples and non examples. The lesson ends with an interesting clip from the SBS Insight program (2016) about the exploitation of foreign workers. I usually only show the first two case studies and discuss these with the class. A handout to be used during the lesson and kept for revision purposes. It includes extracts from Legal Studies for QLD volume 2.
Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Workplace Health and Safety
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Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Workplace Health and Safety

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. A PowerPoint focusing on safety in the workplace. It begins with notes on Workplace Conditions for students to copy (settling activity). Followed by a clip of a topical workplace safety incident - Dreamworld’s Thunder River Rapids Ride Accident. Information about how young workers are more likely to be injured at work than any other age group. Information about the 2011 Workplace Health and Safety Act. Employer WHS responsibilities (from the Legal Studies textbook). An explanation of the term ‘duty of care’ and how employers can make everyone in their workplace safe. Employee responsibilities are also outlined. A compare and contrast of the responsibilities of employees and employers (answers provided on following slides). Define injury and 10 workplace hazards. A viewing activity about an electrician who died in Queensland. Students to fill in a retrieval chart as they view. The consequences of workplace injuries are discussed and students are to write a practice short response to a question. Transcript of the Dale Kennedy story. WHS Handou which goes along with the PowerPoint. A homework sheet with a series of short response questions similar to those students will encounter in their exam
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Unit Plan
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Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Unit Plan

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A Unit plan designed for a 10 week term. It includes syllabus objectives, a description of the unit, a marking breakdown which explains what the teacher would expect to see for each assessment criteria, assessment task details and a list of recommended resources. It also includes explanations of some recommended pedagogical strategies (for group work etc.) A Scope and Sequence suggesting topics to be covered throughout the term is provided. Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons.
Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Revision Sheet and Practice Exam
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Social and Community Studies - Workplace Rights - Revision Sheet and Practice Exam

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. A revision sheet designed to prepare students for a 90 minute short response examination. It covers topics including The Fair Work Act (2009), Workplace Rights, Employee & Employer Rights and Responsibilities, The 10 National Employment Standards, Bullying & Harassment, Unfair Dismissal and Unions & Industrial action. A practice exam designed to give students the opportunity to practice meeting the key criteria Social and Communities study criteria explained in a series of accessible ‘I can’ statements.
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Introverts and Extroverts
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Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Introverts and Extroverts

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. PowerPoint designed to wrap up the previous unit and introduce the next unit. It includes an explanation of reflecting on learning in preparation for students to complete a reflection sheet. Introduction of key terms - personality, extraverts, introverts and ambiverts. Students watch a clip explaining the differences between extroverts and introverts. I displayed images of famous extraverts and introverts that students may be familiar with. A clip about Keanu Reeves (a well known introvert) and another example Dr Seuss (Theodor Geisel). A paragraph writing activity for students to consolidate their learning. A quiz for students to determine whether they are predominantly an extrovert or introvert. A TED talk about the pro’s of being an introvert. Unit reflection handout. Lesson plan
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Factors which influence our identity
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Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Factors which influence our identity

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. A lesson designed to teach students how to define identity and list some factors which influence our identity, explain the difference between sex and gender, liist some of the stereotypes which exist about men and women and explain how gender can influence your personal identity. It includes a sorting activity where students view 13 things that influence someone’s identity and rank them in order of importance to them. This is good for promoting discussion. Introduction to key terms - sex and gender. A few clips to view which contain stereotypes - students to list them in a table and then discuss after each clip. There is also a clip on gender in advertising from ABC’s the checkout which students watch and then write a paragraph to summarise what they learned.
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Conflict scenarios for assessment
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Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Conflict scenarios for assessment

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. A lesson plan A PPT - The lesson begins with two warm up questions (getting students to consider how the school helps students to resolve conflict). This is followed by a revision activity (the definitions of 5 conflict resolution strategies are provided - students must name them). An explanation of what conflict is and some other terms e.g. ‘pinch point,’ frustration, defensiveness and baggage. This is followed by a list of common elements to conflicts (reasons why people fight). This is followed by tips of how to respond to problems (to avoid exacerbating the problem). This is followed by an activity where students view a clip from Everybody Loves Raymond (this clip will be used for the teacher assessment exemplar for the rest of the term). Students fill in a graphic organiser based on what they observed. Some tips for resolving conflict e.g. Active Listening are provided. Afterwards, there is an overview of the 3 conflict choices for students to pick from to respond to in their assessment.
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Writing a compare and contrast paragraph
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Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Writing a compare and contrast paragraph

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. A handout version of the teacher exemplar (for Everybody Loves Raymond conflict scenario) and recommended sentence starters. PPT - The lesson begins with an explanation of the importance of linking your ideas with in your paragraph and a list of conjunctions (joining words). This is followed by a recap of what the cognitive verb ‘compare’ means and some ‘clever connectives’ from Logon Literacy which can be used in compare paragraphs. An overview of possible sentence starters for this paragraph is followed by a teacher example - which is colour coded on the slide. Students then write their paragraph and then follow the prompts to double check their paragraph. This is followed by new learning - a conflict resolution strategy (apologising). This term is explained and information is provided about when it is a good idea to use this strategy. This is followed by some discussion questions e.g. ‘what makes a good apology?’ Afterwards there are two clips to be viewed from Everybody Loves Raymond and students watch to see how the characters apologise and whether they appear to be sincere or not.
Social and Community Studies - Science and Technology (eSafety) unit - Identifying perspectives
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Social and Community Studies - Science and Technology (eSafety) unit - Identifying perspectives

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Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in 70 minute lessons. This lesson is designed to help students prepare to write about specific case studies of people who have had their identity stolen. It revises key terms (viewpoint and perspective) and how this differs from bias. It also includes opportunities to practice identifying viewpoints in websites / news stories about identity theft / financial fraud. What you get: A PowerPoint which I use to facilitate the lesson (I have a lot of visual learners). It goes through the structure for body 2 where students will have to utilise the skills they learn today. We revisit the cognitive verb ‘explain’ and the graphic organiser that we intend to use to retrieve information from the sources we find. Then there is a ‘we do’ activity where the class reads an article entitled ‘From catfish to romance fraud, how to avoid getting caught in any online scam’ together and fills in the graphic organiser. Then there is a ‘you do’ where students view a clip from 60 minutes and fill in the same graphic organiser. Afterwards, there are some post viewing discussion questions. Students are then introduced to the cognitive verbs 'compare’ and ‘contrast.’ For the remainder of the lesson, students use the internet to find example case studies. NB: This resource also includes a handout which includes two articles that contain viewpoints about Identity Theft as well as some sentence starters which students can use when comparing and contrasting viewpoints (a skill they are required to demonstrate in their upcoming essay).