Mainly KS2 resources for English, Maths, Science and some topic also. Most of my resources include a lesson plan, presentation, activities and differentiated tasks. Please leave a review on any of my resources in which you purchase so I can use your feedback positively.
I have taught the majority of these lessons and they have worked well. All lessons coincide with the National Curriculum 2014 and have been approved by my subject leaders. Hope they are useful :)
Mainly KS2 resources for English, Maths, Science and some topic also. Most of my resources include a lesson plan, presentation, activities and differentiated tasks. Please leave a review on any of my resources in which you purchase so I can use your feedback positively.
I have taught the majority of these lessons and they have worked well. All lessons coincide with the National Curriculum 2014 and have been approved by my subject leaders. Hope they are useful :)
Time to move away from the guided reading carousel and onto whole class guided reading! This lesson plan is FREE to show you step-by-step how you can carry out a whole class guided reading lesson in your class too.
Outline:
10 mins teacher/student/chorus read
5 mins quick fire questions (to check understanding)
5 mins modeling the task
15 minutes task and feedback
This way your whole class are being guided in their reading daily, as opposed to once a week in a teacher led group.
It’s a free resource, so give it a try, let me know your thoughts, and check back later to see more resources like this!
Good luck!
I’ve added these key terms (in yellow) here for you to create a working wall for your English display. These headings can be kept up all year round, even when you change genre. All you need to do is to change the work around it, accordingly.
See my blogpost on my blog to see how exactly I use this display in my class.
(Note: only the headings in yellow and the clouds are included).
Time to move away from the guided reading carousel and onto whole class guided reading! This lesson plan is FREE to show you step-by-step how you can carry out a whole class guided reading lesson in your class too.
Outline:
10 mins teacher/student/chorus read
5 mins quick fire questions (to check understanding)
5 mins modeling the task
15 minutes task and feedback
This way your whole class are being guided in their reading daily, as opposed to once a week in a teacher led group.
It’s a free resource, so give it a try, let me know your thoughts, and check back later to see more resources like this!
Good luck!
*This is a follow on lesson from Whole Class Guided Reading: Vocabulary (see my store for more details)
Prior to a ‘big write’, I ask the children to stick these into their books as a check list to ensure they include all of the necessary features of our chosen genre. You can add extra things on there too, such as a whole class target or focus you’ve been working on that week (e.g. similes or openers).
I use it as a slight assessment tool for myself to see how my children are progressing in writing. They complete a big write at the end of our genre which is usually every 2-3 weeks. It’s a simple tool to show progression in writing as well as make use of self and peer assessment.
Just edit this document to suit the needs of your class/genre in writing.
I’d love to hear how you got on using them :)
I created these bookmarks to laminate and have in my children’s English books as they struggle to spell these words.
By seeing them spelt correctly so often, they got better at spelling them themselves.
Easy to edit also.
FREEBIE!
This freebie contains a book review for both fiction and non-fiction texts. It’s a sample from my recent resource:
[https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/the-super-book-of-guided-reading-activities-11926213]
Check it out for 25 pages of superhero themed activities.
An editable book cover hunt. Children will follow the clues on the reverse side of each book cover and hunt around the school for some hidden treasure. They must write down the names of the book covers that they come across too and aim to read at least one of them that week. Just something a bit different during Book Week to engage them with different books. For more information of activities that we did during Book Week, check out my Instagram: Rebecca.the.irish.teacher.
Each week, I like to give my children a new comprehension to 1) check their understanding and 2) immerse them to different text types. While studying poetry, I discovered that many children found it difficult to decode the meaning behind poetry.
This resource contains:
*A poem.
*Questions to check understanding.
*An answer sheet.
The poem chosen is one of my favorites as it’s about bullying so it can tie into other lessons/discussions that arise in the classroom. It’s written by an Irish author, so there are 2 or 3 phrases included that children may not understand. This is a fantastic opportunity for them to use their reading skills to read back over the sentence and try to work out what the word means.
A really enjoyable poem and it can also be sent home as a homework activity.
Overall, children will gain an understanding of the meaning behind the poem and they will be encouraged to form opinions on a poem, which is something a little bit different. I hope you enjoy this resource as much as we did!
6 challenge cards for children to solve upon finishing a comprehension task early or if looking to encourage them to think deeper.
We have been trying to use the A.P.E (answer, prove, explain) technique for inference questions, which encourages children to PROVE their answers by looking at clues in the text/pictures.
These challenge cards remind children to prove their answers.
These spellings are based off the statutory spellings of the English National Curriculum 2014. Children in years 3&4 are expected to spell these words by the end of Year 4, and in my classroom, we try to learn and familiarise ourselves with them as much as possible.
With this resource, I print, laminate and cut up these words and have them in a basket or box in the classroom. As a starter to guided reading or any English lesson really, I take out the basket and give each table 5 words to focus on. They discuss the words and the spelling patterns, along with the meaning. This way the words are familiar to them.
To increase children’s use of these words, any time they use one of them in their writing, they are encouraged to underline it to show they can spell it. Thus, the spelling of my year 4s has greatly improved, thank god!
This resource comes with 109 words in both yellow and black and white.
Please leave a review and let me know your thoughts.
Don’t forget to follow me on Instagram for more ideas :)
A complete booklet to hand out to staff outlining events for Book Week. There are ideas, timetables for the week, overviews, checklists for teachers etc. This booklet can be edited to suit your school, but also can be used directly as is to make your Book Week run successfully. This has just been used by my school and was incredibly successful. See photos on my Instagram for more details (Rebecca.the.irish.teacher).
If you are teaching your class about myths or simply just want a comprehension activity that is SLIGHTLY different from the norm, then this resource is for you.
Included:
*Text
*Questions to check understanding (inc ordering events, decoding meaning etc)
*Creation Station- where children create their own labyrinth.
*Adjective Alley- children create amazing adjectives and phrases to describe the minotaur.
*The New Minotaur- children will get their creative juices flowing and create a Minotaur of their own, perhaps even half human, half unicorn.
An enjoyable, creative way to check and extend children’s understanding of what they’ve read.
Also an excellent addition to your myths topic, if you’re teaching it.
Check out:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/myths-understanding-the-features-11943412
A comprehension based on the story of ‘Who killed King Tut’. (a report)
Children are encouraged to use their inference skills and comment on why the author has used a certain structure to help the reader.
Children will use a range of reading skills and strategies when answering this comprehension.
Needing some inspiration for my reading corner, I created this display in order to show case the children’s reading books.
The idea behind it is that the book templates will be printed out for children to fill in whenever they complete a book. They can draw the front cover and fill in the blurb on the back and the teacher can laminate the books and hang them from a string underneath the heading.
It’s a super cute idea to show off all the books that you’re class have read and let’s face it, it looks really colorful in your reading area.
Included:
*The display name: “Books we’ve Read”
*Book templates to print out.
(See cover photo for a clearer idea).
I created this document to hand out to my parents at the beginning of the school year. It’s a short snippet of activities that parents could engage with with their children.
There are 7 pages, including:
*Some sample questions to ask children while reading.
*Rate out of 10. To allow children to form opinions on what they’ve read.
*Re-tell the story. To allow children to order parts of the story.
*Change the ending. This allows children to take their understanding to another level.
*Strategies for parents when reading with their children.
See my preview for a clearer idea of this resource.
This is a follow on lesson that I used to establish understand of possessive apostrophes (could be used as an introduction also). This package contains a powerpoint, a lesson plan and a resource that is differentiated.
The activity is related to Horrid Henry which my children love.
This resource was put together as a test for my year 4 class at the end of the year to check their knowledge of SPAG. I have attached the SPAG curriculum to ensure that I have included lots of different areas of this subject.
Children are tested on:
* their knowledge of punctuation (commas, question marks, speech marks and apostrophes plural and possessive).
* their knowledge of SPAG terminology (main/subordinate clause, frontal adverbial, determiner, adverb, suffix, preposition, contractions).
This test gave me a great insight into the progress they’ve made, but also which areas that they are still not so sure on.
Please leave a review and check out some of my other resources: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/Morrisr9
Chapter 2 of the BFG with comprehension questions. My class love the BFG so I decided to create a comprehension on each chapter.
Looks at deducing, inferring, italics and spotting similes
A simple display I used when studying the book ‘Journey to Jo’Burg’. We used this book to create pieces of writing with issues and dilemmas. (Planning is available in my shop also).
Children loved the colorful characters which confirmed their understanding of what a dilemma was, while learning about the country of South Africa at the same time.
*I know the sign in my cover picture (Jo’Berg) is spelled wrong, however I have fixed it in the resource itself.
A 5 day lesson plan based on instructions. Three of the days are based on children evaluating and creating instructions through video clips and practical activities (making paper airplanes and origami fortune tellers). Two of the days are focused on comprehension and handwriting.
The children will be taught how to write successful instructions by understanding that they need to use clear, simple English for their reader to understand clearly what they are directing them to do.