I am a secondary school GCSE & A-level Science teacher, specialising in Biology and Physics.
My resources are designed to be interesting, engaging and motivating.
All content which are lessons, include: a framework to deliver content; questioning opportunities; assessment; a range of activities to suit students of all abilities; differentiation in most points of the lesson; challenging questions (for all levels) with model answers; and of course starters and plenaries.
I am a secondary school GCSE & A-level Science teacher, specialising in Biology and Physics.
My resources are designed to be interesting, engaging and motivating.
All content which are lessons, include: a framework to deliver content; questioning opportunities; assessment; a range of activities to suit students of all abilities; differentiation in most points of the lesson; challenging questions (for all levels) with model answers; and of course starters and plenaries.
Students struggle to write good flash card questions. I regularly find I need to teach students how to do this.
I use this resource to help students make flashcards and use it to model how to write good questions on flash cards for effective revision.
The resource is differentiated into three varying levels of difficulty (easy, moderate and hard) and also shows question types. It is designed to have on one slide for a PPT presentation or printed out in A5 for support card format.
It can even be used to help trainee teachers when they are developing worksheets and lessons.
This is designed for students completing GCSE and specifically aim at students who need extra support. So from the low ability groups to mid ability groups. Grades 1 - 6. These work well along side my less structured 6 mark templates for the higher ability groups which focus on what they know and how they are going to use that information.
This resource is a designed to be quick to set up (with exam pro or existing 6 mark questions - paste them into the template), aid the student on how to structure there answer, write in feedback, from which they can then write an excellent response to the question. They also work along side a metacognitive approach.
Students do not answer the questions yet!
Students will need there ppt printed out but both slides on one sheet. This makes it easier to trim down and glue in books as a piece of formative assessment and also as a task on one side. My students love these. Instructions are on the ppt.
1.When showing this on the board, go through the tasks that need to be completed once they have read the question.
2. Students will need to then go through the tasks on their sheet and tick when completed. This will mimic how students should break down a long style (6 mark) answer.
3. Discuss what the students have come up with – if possible write down there ideas on the board on the ppt.
3. Then show ideas once they have completed the table on their sheet.
Attached are some quick to place in lessons, fun literacy style challenges intended for start or plenary use.
The ppt contains a template for: word wheel, word wheel to encourage students to use words in sentences, find the keywords in two different formats and finally a taboo template.
This is a plenary randomiser that is based on a wheel. You can spin it when you want, stop it when you want, re-spin it if necessary. The wheel has eight different plenary types. My students love it. Ability of the wheel activities ranges from low to high abilit
There is a second version which will allow you peer assess students ideas.
This is an effective way show students how to approach and write 6 mark questions. These work very well along side my more structured 6 mark template approach - which is not sold as part of this set. Students love these.
This resource is a designed to be quick to set up (with exam pro or existing 6 mark questions), aid the student on how to structure there answer, write in feedback, from which they can then write an excellent response to the question. You will need to add in the 6 mark question of choice (paste it in).
It consists of three slides. the first one is the student copy.
step 1) Students do not write in the answer but write in the ideas and connectives that will them answer.
Step 2) from exampro, the ideas or statements from the 6 mark answer will be in the ideas box. Students write in feedback and corrections in green.
Step 3) students then write the answer. Give a time limit.
Step 4) mark and give back feedback.
I found this to be really powerful, particularly in step 2 with the metacognitive phase.
I have thrown in an example to show you how to do it.