I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
A poetry aid and vocabulary to help children put their ideas down about Red Nose Day or Comic Relief. I have differentiated by creating 2 Poetry Aid sheets. i
Wangari Muta Maathai was a Kenyan social, environmental and political activist and the first African woman to win the Nobel prize.
In 1977 she founded the Green Belt Movement = an environmental no=governmental organization focused on the planting of trees, environmental conservation and women’s rights.
The statement announcing her as winner of the Nobel Peace Prize by the Norwegian Nobel committee said
Maatha stands at the front of the fight to promote ecologically viable social economic and cultural development in Kenya and Africa. She has taken a holistic approach to sustainable development that embraces democracy, human rights and women’s rights in particular. Shae thinks globally and acts locally.
Sources
Remembering Remarkable Firsts During Black History Month
Wikipedia
The first four sheets are all to do with FIRSTS. First into Space -Yuri Gagarin. First Man on the Moon - Neil Armstrong and First Re-usable Spaceship - Columbia.
The next sheet is a general vocabulary about space travel followed by thoughts
about meeting an alien. There is a crossword/word search/answers and two A5 ‘blank’ sheets for ‘best’ copy.
Mae Jemison was the first African-American woman to travel in space when she served as a mission specialist aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour in 1992.
I have created some work sheets which can be used to help the children understand the importance of Remembrance Day.
I have included a vocabulary, a Poetry Aid a 'blank' for their writing, a word search and a 'How many words can you find in ______-' plus answers.
Illustrations are by David Woodroffe.
I have put together 10 pieces of work associated with trees.
The second sheet about the rain forest I think is excellent clip art.
The poetry aids ‘In the woods’ and ‘Trees’ also have excellent clip art.
The two narrative pieces at the end, ‘Trees’ and ‘Tree Lover’ were both written with an environmental bias. The first dealing with the importance of trees, the second is how trees are inhabited by many wild life animals.
David Woodroffe, an established illustrator, draw all the pictures.
Olaudah Equiano, known for most of his life as Gustavus Vassa, He was probably born in the Eboe region of the kingdom of Benin province, in the area that is now southern Nigeria. ( He twice listed his birthplace in the Americas)
Most of what he wrote in his book The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa (published in 1789)can be verified.
( See Amazon notes)
As a child he was kidnapped with his sister, aged about 11, and sold to local slave traders and shipped across the Atlantic to Barbados and then Virginia.
In Virginia he was sold to a Royal Naval officer, Lieutenant Michael Pascal. Pascal renamed him Gustavus Vassa - the name of a 16th century Swedish king ( he had already been called Michael and Jacob). He travelled the oceans with Pascal for 8 years. In his book he give eye witness accounts of the Seven Years War with France.
Pascal favoured him by sending him to his sister-in-law so that he could attend school and learn to read and write.
Olaudah was converted to Christianity and was baptised at St. Margaret’s Westminster on 9th February, 1759
Pascal then sold him to Captain James Doran of the Charming Sally at gravesend, from where he was transported to the Caribbean. Doran sent him to Montserrat where he was sold to Robert King, a prominent American Quaker merchant from Philadelphia who traded in the Caribbean. He worked as a deckhand, barber and valet for King. He earned enough money over 3 years, by trading on the side, to buy his freedom.
He then spent the next 20 years travelling the world. He made trips to Turkey and the Arctic. He took care not to be captured and sold again as a slave.
In 1786 he came to London, He became involved in the movement to abolish slavery and joined the Sons of Africa - a group of 12 black African men.
(See notes)
In 1789 he published his book. which depicted the horrors of slavery. he spent many months speaking in public about his life. It went through 9 editions in his lifetime and helped gain passage of the British Slave Trade Act of 1807
On 7th April 1792 he married Susannah Cullen, an English woman. They married in Soham, Cambridge and settled there. They had 2 daughters -Anna Maria and Joanna
Susannah died in February 1796
Olaudah Equiano aged 52, died on 31st March 1797 just over a year later. The register reads Gustus Vasa, 52 years, St Mary Le Bone He was buried at Whitefield’s Tabernacle on 6th April. (burial place now lost).
Anna Maria died in 1797 aged just 4
Joanna went on to marry Revd. Henry Bromley
Amazon
Timelines from Black History
BBC History
The British nationality Act of 1948 gave citizens of the UK and Colonies status and the right of settlement in the UK.
This resulted that between 1948=1970 nearly half a million people moved form the Caribbean to Britain which faced sever labour shortages after WW11.
These immigrants were later referred to as the Windrush generation.
because many of them had come to the UK on the ship called HMT Empire Windrush.
The only official records of many ‘windrush’ immigrants when they had originally come to the UK were the landing cards which were collected when they disembarked from ships in UK ports. Over subsequent decades these cards were routinely used by British immigration officials to verify dates of arrival for borderline immigration cases.
Any one from the Commonwealth, who arrived before 1973 was granted an automatic right to remain, unless they left for more than 2 years. For the next 40 years anyone in that category were never given or asked to provide documentary evidence of their right to remain.
In 2009 landing cards were earmarked, by the Labour government , for destruction, as part of a broader clean up of paper records. It was implemented in 2010 by the incoming coalition government.
Whistleblowers and retired immigration officers warned managers there would be a problem- these cards were the only record of their arrival.
Theresa May was Home Secretary when the hostile environment policy was introduced in October 2012. The idea was to reduce UK immigration figures promised in the 2010 Conservative Manifesto. (See hostile environment policy)
In 2018 we had the Windrush scandal. People were wrongly detained, denied legal rights,lost jobs or homes, passports confiscated, denied medical care, threatened with deportation. At least 83 cases cases were wrongly deported -many of those affected had been born British subjects and had arrive in the UK before 1973. These were part of the 'Windrush generation.
Since then a hardship scheme has been set up by the Home Office Those classified as illegal immigrants were to be compensated scheme. Very little of the £200 -£570 million set aside has been paid up -just £46,795 ( See Hardship scheme)
On 19th March 2020 the Windrush Lessons Learned Review concluded that the Home Office showed an inexcusable ’ ignorance and thoughtlessnes’ and what had happened had been ’ foreseeable and avoidable’. (See W L L Review)
November 2020 the Equality and Human Rights Commission said the Home Office had broken the law by failing to obey public-sector equality duties by not considering how the policies affected black members of the Windrush generation.
Dexter Bristol and Paulette Wilson are 2 examples of how the ‘Windrush generation’ were seriously let down.
I have put together 10 New Testament profiles which I hope should prove of use. I have included all/many of the biblical references for all of them.
Mary and Joseph the parents of Jesus, and Zechariah and John the Baptist are related. Zechariah's wife, Elizabeth, is a cousin of Mary and John the Baptist is their son. I have included a statement explaining what happened normally to illegitimate babies in Israel 2000 years ago.
Andrew, Simon Peter and Matthew are three of the disciples of Jesus.
Mary Magdalene, according to the gospels, only had seven demons removed by Jesus. There is actually nothing to say what she did before she became a follower of Jesus.
Lazarus was raised from the dead and Stephen was the first Christian martyr.
Chief Kofoworola Abeni Pratt Hon. FRCN was a Nigerian born nurse and was the first black nurse to work in Britain’s National health Service. She went on to become vice-president of the International Council of Nurses and the first black Chief Nursing Officer of Nigeria, working in the Federal Ministry of Health.
Kofoworola was educated at Lagos CMS Girls’ Grammar school. She wanted to become a nurse but her father discouraged her so she trained as a teacher. For 4 years she taught at CMS girls’ school.
She married Nigerian pharmacist Dr. Olu Prat and they came to the UK in 1946. She studied nursing at the Nightingale School at St. Thomas’ Hospital. She passed her preliminary exams in 1948, her finals in 1949 and qualified as a State registered nurse in 1950. She was the first black nurse to work for the NHS.
After 4 years she returned to Nigeria. She applied for the post of ward sister but at the time only British expatriates allowed to hold role. 1955-7- admin .sister.
1955-63 deputy matron
In 1960 Nigeria became independent. Kofoworola 's star began to shine!
She led in the Nigerianisation of nursing in her country.
She was appointed Matron of the University Hospital in Ibadan 1964/5 - the first Nigerian to do so.
1965-72 chief nursing officer (federal)
1965 she was founder of a nursing school at the University of Ibadan
leader of the Professional Association of Trained Nurses in Nigeria
co-edited the journal Nigerian Nurse.
1971 she became President of National Council of Women’s Societies in Nigeria.
1973-5 commissioner for Health, Lagos State
1973 she was awarded the Florence Nightingale Medal by the International Committee of the Red Cross.
1975 she was awarded the chieftaincy title * Iya Ile Agbo of Isheri * f or services to the nation.
1979 Kofoworola was made an honorary fellow of the Royal College of Nursing.
1981 awarded an honorary degree from the University of Ife.
Twice in her life time we are aware she was discriminated against because of her colour. The first time was when she worked at St, Thomas’. The second , although fully qualified, in Ibadan from becoming a matron earlier in her career.
Kofoworola died on 18th June 1992
Kofoworola has not yet been honoured in Britain in association with Florence Nightingale. She is linked to Nightingale for inspiration, the Nightingale School where she trained , and the Nightingale Fund which gave her a scholarship. Nor must it be forgotten Kofoworola was the first black nurse to work for the NHS.
Sources used
Florence Nightingale Museum London
Mary Seacole Information
The Nightingale Society
wikipedia
Sojourner Truth was born Isabella Bomfree. She was a slave, born in 1797 in Dutch speaking Ulster County, New York.
She was bought and sold 4 times. In her teens (1815) she was united with another slave and they had 5 children.
In 1827, the year before New York’s law freeing slaves was to take effect, she ran away with her infant Sophia. She ran to the nearby abolitionist family, the Van Wageners. For $20 they bought her freedom.
In 1928 she began to work for a local minister. By the early 1830s she was participating in the religious revivals that were sweeping the state and she became a charismatic speaker and itinerant preacher.
In 1943 she declared the Spirit called on her to preach the truth- renaming herself Sojourner Truth.
Abolitionists, William Lloyd Garrison and Frederick Douglass, encouraged her to give speeches about the evils of slavery.
She never learned to read or write. In 1950 she dictated her autobiography The narrative of Sojourner Truth to Oliver Gilbert, who also helped publish the book. The book brought her national recognition and she survived on the sales of the book.
She met women’s rights activists,including Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, plus temperance advocates, and quickly championed both causes.
In 1851 she delivered her famous Ain’t I a Woman speech at the women’s conference on Akron, Ohio. She challenged the prevailing notions of racial and gender inferiority and inequality by reminding her listeners of her combined strength - she was nearly 6 feet tall and had female status. ( See Speech)
She eventually split from Douglass because he believed enslaved men should should come before women’s suffrage. She believed they should occur simultaneously.
In the 1950s she moved to Battle Creek where 3 of her daughters lived. She continued to speak nationally and to help slaves escape to freedom.
During the Civil War she encouraged young men to join the Union cause and organized supplies for black troops.
After the war, in 1864, she was invited to the White House by President Abraham Lincoln and became involved with the Freedmen’s Bureau - helping freed slaves find work and build new lives.
In the mid 1860s a street conductor violently tried to block her from riding. In court she won her case.
In the late 1860’s she collected 1000s of signatures on a petition to provide former slave with land - Congress never took action.
In her final years she became nearly blind and deaf. She spent her final years in Michigan and died in 1883.
Sources
National Women’s History Museum
Ain’t I a Woman transcript
Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) was an abolitionist, civil rights activist, feminist and advocate of Social justice. He travelled to Britain in 1845 for 19 months, lecturing against slavery in the USA.
Frederick was born on a plantation in Talbot County. He was born a slave. His birth name was Frederick Bailey. he did not know who was his father or the exact date of his birth. He later picked 14th February as his birthday and estimated he was born in 1818.
Aged 7 he was sent to live at the Wye House plantation. His mother died when he was 10. Eventually he went to Baltimore to serve the Auld family.
Sophia Auld started to teach him how to read. It was against the law and her husband her from teaching him. Frederick was an intelligent young man and taught himself how to read and write by observing others and watching white children.
He read in newspapers about slavery, He taught others to read which got him into trouble and he was moved to another farm where he was beaten by the slave owner to break his spirit.
In 1838 he escaped. He disguised himself as a sailor and carried papers to show he was a free black seaman. On 3rd September he boarded a train for the north. 24 hours later he arrived in New York a ‘free’ man. He married Anna Murray and took the surname of Douglas.
They settled in New Bedford, Massachusetts. There he met abolitionists - people who wanted to abolish slavery. He became an excellent speaker on the subject and became famous but feared of being captured and returned to slavery.
In 1845 he travelled to Ireland and Britain lecturing against slavery in the USA. He became embroiled in controversies due to his electrifying capacity as an oratory and performer. He returned to the USA a free man, British abolitionists purchased his legal freedom.
He also spoke about Women’s Rights. He attended the first ever women’s rights convention at Seneca falls, New York in 1948.
During the Civil War 1961-6 he fought for the rights of black soldiers. When the Soth announced they would execute or enslave any captured black soldier he insisted that President Lincoln should respond- he responded by threatening to execute like for like. Frederick also sought equal pay and treatment for black soldiers.
He wrote an autobiography Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, It became a best seller, He later wrote 2 more books about his life.
Frederick died on 20th February 1895, aged 77 (?) from either a heart attack or stroke. His legacy lives on in his writings and monuments named after him.
NOTE
This is just a simple summary. There are 38 pages on Frederick Douglas on Wikipedia giving far more detail.
Sources used
Wikipedia
Biography for Kids
Rosa Parks is best known for refusing to move to the back of the bus.
She was an American civil rights activist. She came from Montgomery where her young pastor was Martin Luther King.
She lived to be 92. She was laid in state in the rotunda of the U.S. capital. She was the first woman and only the second Black person to receive the distinction,
Source used
Encyclopedia Britannica
Caroline Chisholm is a woman spent a great deal of her time trying to help others get on in life -especially other women. With her husband Archibald she spent time in both India and Australia. In India where she opened a school. In Australia she wanted to help emigrants settle successfully there- she set up the Female Immigration Home and also helped set up a safe route for the gold pioneers to follow.
She also helped migrants wanting to go to Australia from the UK.
It has been suggested that Charles Dickens, in his book Hard Times, wrote his character Mrs. Jellyby as a criticism of female activists like Caroline Chisholm.
Millions of birds migrate from the north to the south in early autumn to avoid the cold weather.
I found a map which illustrates what happens.
I have included 3 differentiated sheets…
Also included some pictures from ‘The Bird Atlas’ written by Barbara Taylor and beautifully illustrated by Richard Orr.
I have put together a number of Phrase/Vocabulary and Poetry Aid sheets about travelling by sea. I have included hydro foils,hovercrafts, yachts and even submarines. There are clip art sheets for most of the headings. Sea Rescue has also been included. The simple crossword/word search sheets have the SAME answers.
Added general Rescue Vocabulary sheet
Looking for information about Desmond Tutu I found a list of Champions of Human Rights - 9 champions with a picture of each and some basic information about them which I thought could be useful for Key Stage 2/3 work.
These sheets were created under Youth for Human Rights. There are Free resource kits available in many languages.
Mahatma Gandhi
Cesar Chavez
Eleanor Roosevelt
Nelson Mandela
Dr. Martin Luther King (See separate entry)
Desmond Tutu
Oscar Arias Sanchez
Muhammad Yunus
Jose Ramos-Horta
I have added Father Trevor Huddlestone (See separate entry)
Plus information about anti-apartheid in South Africa
I came across these sheets looking at Alternative fuel.
They listed 9 alternative fuels for cars-
Air
Biofuels
Electricity
Heat
Hydrogen
Kinetic
LPG liquified petroleum gas
Nitrogen
Steam
Another sheet listed 5 innovative alternatives to fossil fuel-
Elephant Grass
Hydrogen fuel cells
Solar paint
Wave energy
Whisky - (waste from the distilleries)
I have put together some differentiated work about British Birds.
The first 4 sheets are about the early stages of a bird’s life. The 5th sheet is a phrase and vocabulary sheet. There are then 2 illustration sheets followed by a Bird Cycle sheet.
Nest Boxes comes from my Debate file - which might prove .
I have differentiated my Poetry Aids and put together some simple’ couplets. There are 3 sheets for their final poetry efforts to be neatly written up on.
Finally i have included 3 differentiated word searches with answers.
Hopefully there is some material you will find useful.
All the drawings used were created by David Woodroffe an established illustrator.
Source
Nature and Seasons by Tony Batchelor
Some basic information about Asians
List of Asian people
List of faiths, with numbers of followers, in Asian culture
Percentage of Christians and showing dominant faith, in Asian countries
List of Festivals and Celebrations
Brief information on Cuisine