Over 2000 primary school resources including assemblies, games, activities, presentations and more! All resources have been tried and tested and most cost less than a cup of coffee. Thank you for visiting.
Over 2000 primary school resources including assemblies, games, activities, presentations and more! All resources have been tried and tested and most cost less than a cup of coffee. Thank you for visiting.
22 slides.
Examples of subjects, verbs, active and passive sentences.
The final 2 slides contain pairs of active and passive sentences. The children have to choose one pair of sentences, copy them down and explain why one is active and the other is passive.
Fully editable.
6 end-of-year activities!
A memories booklet and worksheet.
An end-of-year party (set of resources).
An end of year activity booklet (9 pages).
End of year class profile sheet.
End of year class notes.
Non Fiction Bundle - 6 resources:
Book Reports (Fiction & Non Fiction).
Features of a Non Fiction Text (Activity and Poster).
Non-Fiction PowerPoint.
Rats and Hamsters Non-Fiction Activities.
‘Our School’ Non-Fiction Homework Task and School Prospectus.
This homework activity is designed to help any school design and construct a special non-fiction book for their school. Every child is given a section to complete.
The children are also expected to design an appropriate front cover for the book.
My students loved this activity and the book was used as the school’s prospectus! Prospective parents and students love it too (as do school inspectors).
Differentiation can be determined by outcome and support.
Fully editable!
2 fully-editable non-fiction resources:
A poster highlighting some features of a non fiction text.
Features of a non-fiction text matching activity - match the correct word with its correct definition.
Answers provided
Ideal for 7 - 11 years.
Fully editable.
A very popular game to use! The game is called, ‘WHAT AM I?’
You can link this game with ANY topic, e.g. rainforest animals, toys, family members, rooms in a house etc.
Just describe what it is you want to describe on 1 card and draw and label what it is you are describing on the other. The example shown is a parrot.
You can use the cards in many ways. Here are 2 examples:
Stick the answer card on the back of the description card and make a complete set of topic cards. How to play: Deal the cards. Take it in turns to read the description on the card shown to you. If you guess correctly, keep the card. If you guess incorrectly, you don’t get the card. The winner is the person who wins all the cards.
Arrange the description cards on 1 side of a table and the answer cards on the other side. Match them up.
I’ve attached a complete set of 10 ‘What am I?’ cards to print out and use. If you want a bigger set of cards, just print off a few more.
The card template is fully editable so you can design them on a computer and print them off when you’re finished … this makes them look VERY professional.
Your class will love this. They might even become more popular than TOP TRUMPS.
Ask your children to write a story about being shipwrecked.
This activity could be linked to the story of ‘Kensuke’s Kingdom’, an island topic, feeling isolated and alone OR just taught as a discrete lesson.
Attached is a helpful planning guide and template.
The planning guide contains questions to consider, the layout of the story and some useful vocabulary.
Fully editable and designed to make writing appealing to a younger audience.
2 pages.
Fully editable.
What happens to ‘Grandma’ after she receives George’s Marvellous Medicine?
Your student’s can use this worksheet to retell the events OR create their own marvellous reactions to the medicine!
Fully editable.
A fully editable and effective booklet to follow when teaching WRITING TO EXPLAIN.
Page 1: Easy things for children to explain.
Page 2: More tricky things for children to explain.
Page 3: Writing to explain - writing guide/format to follow.
Page 4: Writing to explain - writing frame (to complete).