5 crosswords testing conjugation of avoir and être in the present tense. Pronouns form part of the answers.
There are several ways this resource could be used:
set one in class and a different one for homework
for revision
for tests to ensure there is no collaboration
as a check prior to teaching perfect tense
Answer sheets are included.
This is a follow-on test from this free resource on [French pronunciation.]https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/french-pronunciation-numbers-1-20-avoir-and-tre-12439204)
It consists of a sound file and a worksheet testing students’ ability to discern numbers when they appear before vowels or consonants.
An answer sheet is provided.
The resource consists of six sets of worksheets to support the teaching of subtraction using written methods. They are ideal for independent work in class, and there are enough for homework and revision purposes. The different levels of difficulty allow for a high level of differentiation by ability.
The folders are organised as follows:
2 digit subtraction with no regrouping/borrowing (x5)
3 digit subtraction with no regrouping/borrowing (x5)
4 digit subtraction with no regrouping/borrowing (x5)
2 digit subtraction with regrouping/borrowing (x5)
3 digit subtraction with regrouping/borrowing (x5)
4 digit subtraction with regrouping/borrowing (x5)
There are 20 questions on each sheet. Answer sheets are included.
This is a 12 slide presentation which would be useful to anyone who is unsure about what the subjunctive is and how to recognise it. The slides show examples of how the present and past subjunctive appear in 9 set expressions in English. Students are challenged to write sentences using five of the expressions. There is a linked worksheet available separately.
This is the second of 5 sets of cursive handwriting worksheets Letters are grouped by type or frequency, and each worksheet builds upon previous ones. The style is fully joined and looped.
Top joins are introduced from the beginning, and reminders occur throughout the sets.
This is the first of 5 sets of cursive handwriting worksheets Letters are grouped by type or frequency, and each worksheet builds upon previous ones. The style is fully joined and looped.
Top joins are introduced from the beginning, and reminders occur throughout the sets.
This is the fourth of 5 sets of cursive handwriting worksheets Letters are grouped by type or frequency, and each worksheet builds upon previous ones. The style is fully joined and looped.
Top joins are introduced from the beginning, and reminders occur throughout the sets.
This is the third of 5 sets of cursive handwriting worksheets Letters are grouped by type or frequency, and each worksheet builds upon previous ones. The style is fully joined and looped.
Top joins are introduced from the beginning, and reminders occur throughout the sets.
For Y2 and upwards. Great for remedial work!
This is the fifth of 5 sets of cursive handwriting worksheets Letters are grouped by type or frequency, and each worksheet builds upon previous ones. The style is fully joined and looped.
Top joins are introduced from the beginning, and reminders occur throughout the sets.
This worksheet provides an explanation and examples of the use of ‘who, whom, whose’. The exercise which follows challenges pupils to combine simple sentences to make complex sentences linked by a relative pronoun. Answers are supplied, including notes about why some sentences are punctuated differently from others. The objectives are taken from the Y5/6 programme of study, but the worksheet would also be a useful and challenging resource for older students.
The PowerPoint presentation which is linked to this resource can be found [here]https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/complex-sentences-with-relative-clauses-11400996
This is a set of seven high interest activities on adjectives. Ideal for parents who are home schooling their children, or for teachers needing resources for distance learning.
This activity consists of a teacher card with 50 spellings and their meanings plus 30 different pupil cards (10 sheets of 3). The teacher has the choice of reading out the words or - for more able groups - the meanings. Great as a starter or plenary activity.
A short text to be used at the beginning of the week as a whole class presentation and basis of SPaG discussion. Related worksheet activities accompany the PowerPoint presentation (punctuation, spelling crossword, writing task, differentiated dictation).
These differentiated sets of worksheets are written to meet the objectives for Year 6 Number. Each of the five topics (addition, subtraction, long multiplication, short division, long division) is split into three levels, indicated on the worksheets by 1, 2 or 3 stars. There are 3 versions of each worksheet. There are 45 worksheets in all, plus answer sheets.
The material could be used in several ways:
* work through all the levels with the whole class
* use the levels to target varying abilities within the class
* use extra versions of tasks to set as follow-up homework
* where pupils are inclined to copy, use different versions of worksheets to ensure independent working
* extra versions of tasks can be set as assessment at the end of a unit
Learning objectives are given at the beginning of each sheet.
A simple ‘thumbs up’ style of self-assessment is printed at the bottom of each task.
This is a customisable resource for English designed to get the creative juices flowing.
A list of random words (choice of 2 - 5) is generated and pupils are challenged to come up with ways of including all of them in a piece of collaborative writing. As the class comes up with ideas, the teacher records them by typing on the onscreen board. The work can be saved at the end of the session.
If pupils are not used to this kind of exercise, I suggest beginning with the 2 word sentence option. Challenge them to make sentences that make links between the words. You can move on to the other options in the menu as they become more confident…
Although designed for use in English classes, this resource can easily be adapted for other subjects and for whole school sessions like assemblies. It is great for CPD too (safeguarding training, for instance).
The PowerPoint file is stored in a folder with a text file named ‘words’. By replacing the words on this list by your own, the words generated on the screen can be related to any topic you like. Make sure that you keep the text file and the PowerPoint file together, however, or the nothing work.
I have included a separate folder with three extra word lists (summer, adjectives, and synonyms for ‘said’). If you decide to use them, you need to rename them as ‘words’ and swap them with the original file in the main folder.
You need to enable macros on your computer to use the resource, otherwise nothing will happen!
A nine slide PowerPoint presentation along with A PDF version for display.
A worksheet explaining the topic more fully and providing practice exercises can be found [here][https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/complex-sentences-with-relative-clauses-2-who-whom-whose-11644479)