About the author:
I am currently a teacher of English in a wonderful West Midlands secondary school, having prior experience as a Literacy Lead, Specialist Leader of Education, SLT Lead, AQA examiner and Head of English. I am in my fourteenth year of teaching and as such am keen to share resources I have used successfully, both in my own lessons and across my school / MAT.
About the author:
I am currently a teacher of English in a wonderful West Midlands secondary school, having prior experience as a Literacy Lead, Specialist Leader of Education, SLT Lead, AQA examiner and Head of English. I am in my fourteenth year of teaching and as such am keen to share resources I have used successfully, both in my own lessons and across my school / MAT.
This resource includes a 48 slide powerpoint containing 35 fun, literacy-based word game activities, originally designed for years 7 and 8 form time as a competition, but suitable any easily adapted for any secondary year group or as in-lesson tasks.
These activities have been based on research into literacy across the curriculum, utilising ideas such as disciplinary literacy to help develop the vocabulary of all pupils involved. There is roughly one challenge per academic week for the entire year (35 tasks).
The tasks are divided into different types as follows:
synonym finder - a word is given and pupils must submit as many synonyms as possible
word ladders - pupils must change one letter at a time to reach the top of the ladder from the bottom
caption this - pupils are given an image that they must provide a headline or caption for
define it - pupils must define the subject-specific language and identify the subject area
missing words - pupils must choose appropriate adjectives or adverbs for the sentence gaps
root words - pupils are given a Latin or Greek root word and must submit as many words to include the root as possible
seasonal challenges - pupils must identify as many nouns as possible on a seasonal topic
Please see the tasks file preview for an example of the sort of thing you receive.
Answers are included where appropriate, and all further instructions required to set up the competition element (if desired) are contained within the powerpoint. It can be linked to a Google Form for easy tracking and to encourage competitiveness if using whole school.