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Mega Humanities Bundle Geography RE History Healthy Eating Worth 18 Selling £3
Bargain bundle.
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Normal cost 18.
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Mega Bundle Year 1 and Year 2 Planning English Literacy Maths
Tons of great planning at bargain price.
Covers all terms for both year 1 and year 2
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Year 6 Mega Bundle Loads of Teaching Resources Maths English
Loads of resources.
Tons of planning.
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Plenty of Maths and english. Take the stress out of planning your lessons.
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Back to School Year 3 Resources Math Literacy Great Bundle Puzzles Sudoku
Great mega bundle for year 3. Wide range of materials.
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20 resources in total. Bargain.
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Literacy Great Bundle Masses of Planning Ideal for Supply Teaching
A massive bundle.
Tons of resources over a wide range of years.
Brilliant for supply teachers.
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Year 4 Super Bundle Masses of Planning Worksheets Literacy maths Arts
Super bundle for year 4.
Loads of resources. See my shop for details.
Start your school year with loads of planning that you can adapt for personal use. Take the strain out of Sunday planning.
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Literacy Bundle Masses of Planning and Worksheets Primary Level
Massive bundle.
20 groups pf resources.
A wide range of levels so something for everyone.
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Year 5 Super Bundle 20 Items Loads of Planning Maths English Humanities Worksheets
A super bundle.
Tons of planning.
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Literacy Ideas Talk For Writing Wolves Emily Gavett
Nice powerpoint and notebook files and great grammar word document that you can use for display.
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Dramatic Conventions three weeks Year 5 Literacy Planning TV Script
Three weeks planning.
Dramatic conventions.
Pupils write a news report and tv script.
sample:
Chn to complete new KWL and explain that we are starting a new unit called dramatic conventions.
What do you think this means? (Dramatic conventions may be categorized into groups, such as rehearsal, technical or theatrical. Rehearsal conventions can include hot seating, role on the wall and still images. Technical conventions can include lighting, dialogue, monologue, set, costuming and entrances/exits. Theatrical conventions may include split focus, flashback/flashforward, narration, soliloquy and spoken thought)
Explain that we will be focusing on the technical conventions side especially the dialogue/script
As a class watch part of this news round clip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xb387rEINs
How do they know what to say? How do they know what to do? How would this be scripted? What do you think it would be like?
Discuss how this would have to be scripted just like in the news etc without being a play – explain that this can sometimes look similar to a play script but not always as they will see tomorrow.
What do you think you would need to include in script writing?
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Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare Rewrite Year 6 English Literacy Planning
Couple of weeks planning.
sample;
Genre: Narrative Unit 4 ‘Older Literature’
Focus Texts: ‘Romeo and Juliet’ by William Shakespeare. (Adapted for children by Andrew Matthews and Tony Ross – Orchard classics).
Begin by introducing the new topic and the learning outcome. We will be studying ‘older’ literature. Explain that older literature is defined as anything written before 1914 but we are going to look at much older than this!
Show a picture of William Shakespeare: children to TTYP –
Who is this man?
What is he famous for?
Can you name any of his works?
Come back together and elicit that William Shakespeare was an author – not of stories but of plays and sonnets (poems). Talk about some of his more famous work and explain that he wrote 38 plays and over 160 sonnets.
Shakespeare was born in 1564 and died in 1616. He produced most of his work between 1589 and 1613 – why do you think he wrote mostly plays rather than stories? Elicit that he was an actor so he loved the stage and he intended his works to be acted out rather than just read and also because of the times. TV and film were not entertainment options and the majority of people couldn’t read so going to the theatre or watching an outside performance was very popular.
Explain that Shakespeare’s plays can be broadly split into tragedies and comedies. TTYP – what does this mean?
Show a list including some of Shakespeare’s most famous comedies and tragedies.
Talk about our recent history topic – who would have been on the throne when Shakespeare was writing (Elizabeth I until 1603 and then James I start of the Stuart dynasty). Talk briefly about the context to Shakespeare’s plays – Elizabeth I ruled over a very successful empire, England was starting to explore and find new shores and arts & culture were becoming more important and sought after. Link to previous unit.
Children to take a whole page in their literacy books to design an advert/poster to be put up around a Tudor town. It should advertise an exciting new play by William Shakespeare (give children a few to choose from).
Talk about the different language used for a comedy or a tragedy.
CN with target group.
CS with JD group. Start to read the children’s adapted version of ‘Romeo and Juliet’.
Success Criteria:
I recognise William Shakespeare and I know what he did for a living.
I can start to understand what England was like when Shakespeare was writing.
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Matilda Roald Dahl Literacy Lesson Year 6 plus types of noun powerpoint
nice easy lesson.
sample:
TTYP – why do authors use descriptive vocabulary? Take feedback and jot down ideas for the working wall – elicit the idea that, as a writer, it is our job to create an image in the reader’s mind.
Show the part of ‘Matilda’ where the main character approaches Crunchem Hall for the first time. 22 min 30 to 24 min 30.
Take part in ‘Book Talk’ on this visual text:
How did we feel about Matilda when we watched her walk into the school under the arch?
How did we feel about the school buildings and environment?
What impressions have we made about Miss Trunchbull?
How were we made to feel like that?
How did the director manipulate our emotions?
Show the ‘Likes, dislikes, patterns and puzzles’ board and explain the task .
Task 1 11am-11.10am
Engaging with the visual text.
A – Australia group (Level 3a/4c): Children to fill in an individual ‘like/dislikes’ board. Children to focus particularly on the ‘patterns and puzzles’ sections. Working independently. Extension task – children to annotate a still from the film with adjectives to describe the setting.
BA – Brazil group (Level 3b/c): Miss Greenwood to support and extend. Children to fill in an individual ‘like/dislikes’ board.
SEN/BA – Mexico group (Level 2): Working with Miss Noble on a guided like/dislikes board. Extending children to talking about the atmosphere.
Main Teaching 2 10 minutes (11.10am – 11.20am)
Share some ideas from the task and explain that now we are fully immersed in the text, we are going to start to transfer the clip into a written text.
TTYP – what does ‘atmosphere’ mean? Talk and agree that it means: a feeling or mood created by a particular place. I am going to attempt to describe the setting AND the atmosphere to the reader. I am going to write in third person and past tense.
Elicit the use of the senses for a setting description.
Model write with reference to s/c and sentence trick cards.
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Year 3 Literacy Planning The Hodgeheg by Dick King Smith
Planning for this interesting book.
sample
Show chn the front cover of The Hodgeheg and say that we will be working on this book. Read blurb on back then ask chn what type of story they think this is? Establish that it is a Quest or Adventure story with a problem, journey and resolution. Ask chn what else the blurb tells us and note their ideas for Working Display notes. (E.g. the main character is Max who is a hedgehog, he has a family and he wants to cross the road…). Explain that today we are going to be Sentence Detectives as we read the story. We are looking for sentences which have adverbs in them. Revise the fact that an adverb modifies a verb, telling us how something was done: She went happily to see her granny. Develop this to talk about fronted adverbials, phrases at the start of a sentence which act like an adverb, telling us how, where or when something is done or happened, e.g. In total silence, the girls tiptoed along the corridor. Comprehension 1/ Grammar 1 Display extract from Hodgeheg (see resources). Read it out loud together. Briefly revise the rules for writing dialogue: (1) Speech marks around direct speech; (2) new speaker = new line;
(3) Punctuation (question marks, exclamation marks, commas, full stops) that goes within the speech marks.
Point out that if the dialogue finishes but it’s not the end of a sentence, then a comma goes at the end of the dialogue within the speech marks. See resources for marked up example. Then make-up physical signs for each type of punctuation, e.g. speech marks = hands held up, 2 fingers on each hand bent; comma = one finger drawing it in the air; full stop = pointing gesture, etc. Draw a map of the passage together, (look at the example map resource to guide you). Ask chn for suggestions for each element. Spoken language 1
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Year 5 Literacy Persuasion Lesson Persuasive Writing
Great little lesson or short set of lessons for persuasive writing. Couple of nice powerpoints.
Endangered Pandas
Pandas are rare today and are protected by law in China. In 1963, the first panda was exhibited in a zoo outside of China. Today, there are more than a dozen pandas in most zoos. Pandas can be seen in zoos in Washington D.C, Mexico City, London, Tokyo, Madrid, Paris, and Berlin. All pandas in zoos are given double names; this is a Chinese custom, which indicates affection. Scientists study the zoo pandas in hope to learn how to save wild pandas from extinction. There are only about 700 to 1000 pandas alive in the world today.
Imagine you are one of the scientists that are researching pandas and a philanthropist has come to you and offered you a substantial research grant if you can persuade him that your research deserves. He asks you, “What makes a Panda so special that it should be saved?”…. your response is crucial!!!
In both short and extended texts, I can use appropriate punctuation, vary my sentence structures and divide my work into paragraphs in a way that makes sense to my reader.
Tools
LIT 2-22a
Throughout the writing process, I can check that my writing makes sense and meets its purpose.
Tools
LIT 2-23a
I am learning to use language and style in a way which engages and / or influences my reader.
Creating Texts
ENG 2-27a
Learning Intention ~ I can use personal research to create a persuasive piece of writing.
Success Criteria – have you… (Tick as you have achieved) ???
I have used emotive and descriptive language to engage the reader’s emotion
I have punctuated accurately
I have used paragraphs effectively to organise my ideas
I have proof read and self-corrected using a variety of resources
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Back to school year 5 Literacy Design a Chocolate bar Month's worth planning
A great month of planning.
lots of powerpoints.
Pupils have to use persuasive language to make a chocolate bar.
sample
Adverts will be up on the board. Introduce topic by asking what it is… (5mins)Asked to identify the aim of the advert (using mini whiteboards). Teacher leads discussion through the answers e.g. “what made you think it was that purpose?” (10mins)
Then asked to go to tables and work in mixed ability groups to identify the aims of adverts on their tables – recording this info(15mins). Extension work – to write the features as to how they knew it was that purpose.
class discussion as to the aims of the adverts – questioning how they know that(5mins)etc
Discussion to lead onto ‘who is the intended audience’, again using mini whiteboards at first(5mins), then back to groups to identify the audience of the adverts they had seen before – recording this information(10mins).
Discuss the audience – recap with new adverts asking pupils to identify both purpose and audience as plenary. (10mins)
Starter – to recap on purpose and audience of adverts quickly on the board, using adverts seen yesterday then new advertisements that weren’t seen yesterday (5mins).
Put cadburys cream egg advert on board and ask the children to point out some of its features. Ask questions like ‘what makes this advert stand out’ talk about the colour, the slogan, the brand, the image. Put up some other advertisements and ask them to point out the slogan, talk about how slogans rhyme, have a play on words, are short, use alliteration etc (10mins).
Go back to their tables where there will be some recognisable products (coca-cola, mars bar, bouncy ball, yazoo milkshake), where children have to come up with a slogan for each. Extension work – come up with more than one slogan and they have to pick their favourite. (15mins)
Children then share their slogans with the rest of the class. Table points for the best.
Point out that slogans are in big bold fonts and match the phrase e.g. the Cadbury one is ‘gooey’,
Children draw out their favourite slogan on A4 paper – to colour in too (20mins).
Children asked to explain why they used certain colours or style of writing for their slogans for that product. (5mins).
Homework – find 5 slogans from ads.
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Back to School Year 6 Summer Term Maths Literacy
Nice compilation to get you through the tricky Summer term.
Compilation from several schools I taught at. Plenty of material.
sample:
TTYP what is an autobiography?
Come back together and discuss.
Repeat for biography.
Which would be written in first person and which would be written in third?
Who is the audience and what is the purpose of both text types?
Activity One
Show ‘fact’ and ‘opinion’ on the board. What do these mean? Talk about how autobiographies can contain both because the subject is writing their own life story.
Activity One
Give groups a copy of the John Lennon biography section and the section of ‘Boy’ by Roald Dahl (both from essential non-fiction anthology).
Each group to divide a large piece of paper in half and create a features list for both text types. Read the 2008 Long writing task and discuss how we would tackle this.
Your task is to write a biography of Pip’s life,
Including information about his inventions.
Success Criteria:
I have revised the features of biography and autobiography.
I have started to think about how I might tackle tomorrow’s writing task.
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Year 4 English Maths planning kr Short and Medium
Collected together my year 4 lesson planning from outstanding academy.
Mainly English and Maths.
sample:
Tuesday 31.01.12
LO: To understand how the use of expressive and descriptive language can create effects or generate emotional responses.
Read a descriptive/emotive poem ( Poems Not To Missed)
JBA & JP to model how to express how the poem made us feel and what impact the vocabulary choices had on us and why?
Read two poems that are expressive and descriptive.
Ask chn What was your immediate reaction? Which vocabulary choices were effective and had impact? Why? What emotions do you get from the poems? What images did you get from the poems?
Wednesday 01.02.12LO: To plan an ICT-based poetry presentation that involves each member of the group
Recap leaning - What are they learning? What have they learnt about poetry texts? Why is learning about poetry important? How could you use what you have learnt about performing poetry?
Inform chn that they are going to plan a poetry presentation. Discuss What is a poetry presentation? What is the purpose of a poetry presentation? How are poetry presentation put together?
Explain that they are going to promote a poem using key language/emotions from the poem.
In talk partners discuss what makes ‘good’ poetry? JP/JBA to scribe chn ideas on ‘working wall’
Using visual Literacy watch clips from poetry readings that the chn have watched previously. Ask:
What makes the poem a ‘good’ poem and why? Can you identify key language/emotions/rhythm in the poem that would entice others to read the poem and why? How would you go about putting the key language/emotions together to create a poetry presentation? JP/JBA to scribe chn ideas on ‘working wall’
JBA & JP model how we plan to put together a poetry presentation for a poem we have read. Explain that a presentation is to demonstrate the understanding of a poems’ key message.
Show what we are thinking when planning a poetry presentation. Which parts of the poems’ language was effective? What was the most emotional verses and why? Which verse has rhythm? How could we present this poem through drama? Thought shower ideas on working wall.
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Year 5 English Maths Planning kr
Gathered up my pland for year 5 from a great academy school.
Mainly English and maths.
sample:
To use multiplication methods to multiply TU × U or HTU × U.
On the board have a question: 76 x 4=?
On their whiteboard ask the children to solve this. If they don’t know this then they don’t need to worry as I will be teaching them. Highers do 675 x 3=?
On the progress board tally how many can do this.
Teach them how to use the multiplication method. They follow in their yellow books.
To use written methods to divide whole numbers.
Ask the children who can divide 87 by 3? Highers do 87 by 4?
Fill in the progress chart.
Show them the chunking method. Hayley takes SEN out to show them how to use the number line to divide.
Children follow in their yellow rough books. If the children understand it they carry on independently. Those that don’t sit there and follow until they understand.
Targets.
Ask the children who thinks they can achieve their targets now at the beginning of the lesson? Ask those who can’t remember them to look now in the front of their book.
To know the key features of arguing a point of view.
Link the reading with the work the group has been doing for the last two weeks.
Introduction _ Explain that this week the group will be looking at another context for persuasive writing – presenting an argument in a letter.
_ Discuss what the children have found out about persuasive texts.
_ Read children their target for the week: ‘I am learning to organise my writing to present information clearly.’ Today they are going to see how one writer has done this.
_ Explain that when reading ‘What a rip off’ you want the group to think about two things: (1) how the argument is structured, and (2) the language features.
Read What a Rip Off.
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Year 1 Maths English Planning
Planning for English and Maths. 56 files.
sample:
Text:
This is the bear and the scary night
Genres covered in this unit:
Narrative SPAG focus:
Monday: spelling patterns
Tuesday: use and to join clauses
Wednesday: high frequency words
Thursday: high frequency words
Friday: time connectives
Key teaching input/texts/questions/
clips etc Steps to Success
Read the story This is the Bear and the scary night
Discuss character, setting, key events etc…
Discuss what happened in the beginning, middle and end of the story. Explain to the children that this week they are going to write their own story similar to the bear and the scary night.
Ask children to describe their character to their partner (can be their favourite toy or the teddy they bought into school on Friday).
Ask children to share their ideas about their story.
What is the setting?
What are the characters doing?
What is the problem?
How are the characters feeling?
How does your story end?
Mild: describe your main character
Spicy: share your ideas with your partner
Hot: listen attentively to your partner
Extra Hot: Act out key events from your story
LA Activities MA Activities HA Activities
Read to Write
Mrs Preston Phonics
Mrs Simpson Talk for writing and act out their story
Photos for books
Resources: The bear and the scary night book, cards with questions
Give 3 minutes for children to recap their story.
Who is their main character?
What happens at the beginning, middle and end of the story?
Model how to put key ideas onto their plan.
Steps to Success
Mild: recap your story with your partner
Spicy: Identify the beginning, middle and end of your story
Hot: Write key ideas onto your story plan for the beginning, middle and end.
Extra Hot: Check your partner’s plan is sequenced correctly