We supply engaging and practical educational resources across a variety of settings. On our experienced team we have Primary teachers, Secondary teachers, TEFL teachers, Senior Management and Specialist Leaders of Education. Together, we aim to spread our knowledge and enthusiasm to other professionals and pupils around the world.
We supply engaging and practical educational resources across a variety of settings. On our experienced team we have Primary teachers, Secondary teachers, TEFL teachers, Senior Management and Specialist Leaders of Education. Together, we aim to spread our knowledge and enthusiasm to other professionals and pupils around the world.
This bundle includes all 4 Units of work for the popular All About Me topic. They include differentiated reading, writing and speaking + listening lessons. The four units each comprise of a series of lessons and together they can be used for a whole term’s work.
The units in this bundle are:
All About Me
The People In My Life
Settings In My Life
My Spare Time
This unit contains a series of lessons for an ‘All About Me’ topic. It includes reading, writing and speaking and listening. The writing lessons are differentiated with higher level planning sheets and writing support sheets. The lessons in the unit include:
Read about other people and complete a profile about them.
Have a group discussion with other pupils telling them about the person you have read about and taking notes on the people they tell you about.
Complete a profile about yourself.
Write all about yourself.
Have a group discussion telling other pupils all about you and taking notes on what they tell you about themselves.
Complete an
‘All About Me’ poster.
This is a revision test that fits with an Entry Level English exam body. It ca be used for revision or as part of a lesson linked to a play or novel. It was designed to be taught while teaching Romeo and Juliet at the point when Romeo is lovesick over Rosaline. However, it could be used for various novels, plays or poems that deal with the same theme, or as a stand alone revision exercise.
This is The Ultimate Writing Championship! Pupils complete a series of writing challenges that focus on specific skills. Each challenge has a warrior who represents that challenge. To complete the challenge, the pupil has to achieve the challenge target and defeat the warrior. At the end of each unit, they must face the Stage Champion in a battle for the Stage Title. Pupils can also compete for the tag team title, working with friends or with staff support. In these title matches, pupils are assessed on all the skills included in the stage.
The Ultimate Writing Championship raising pupils’ engagement when writing. The challenges can be used as part of a literacy hour or as extension work. The writing topics are for you or the pupil to choose. They can therefore be linked to any lesson, therefore promoting literacy across the curriculum. Each challenge has an easy to mark system and each unit has a challenger record for staff and pupils to record their victories.
This resource contains all the challenges for the Stage 4: Women’s Division. There are 14 skill challenges and 2 title challenges.
Challenges include:
Metaphors
Similes
Spelling Challenge
Grammar Challenge
Connectives/Conjunctions
Varied Sentence Openings
Wow Words
Writing In Paragraphs
Punctuating Speech
Alliteration
Commas In A List
Making Your Writing Interesting
This presentation can be used as an assembly or as a class activity. It can be used to introduce the teaching of any of his novels. It is about his works and his life. Both of these elements are presented in the form of a quiz which can be used as a speaking and listening activity or with the pupils writing the answers. It contains a nice mixture of facts, fun and nonsense.
This resource is to be taught with Chapter 3 of Michael Morpurgo’s novel ‘Private Peaceful’. It deals primarily with two topics. These are the character of Grandma Wolf and that of the kids in the story poaching. This resource actually contains enough activities to last for a series of lessons. The teacher can choose which activities they wish their pupils to do in class and can use other activities as homework if they wish. The activities included are used with the following lesson(s) plan:
Lesson(s) Plan:
• Listen to/read the 3rd Chapter of the novel.
• Complete the comprehension challenge about Grandma Wolf.
• Take part in a group discussion about whether the kids should poach or not.
• Record the opinions of you and your group on this topic.
• Take part in a class debate on this topic.
• Work on a writing plan for a discursive essay.
• Write a discursive essay about whether the kids should poach or not.
There is also a sheet which gives pupil some useful language that they can use in discursive writing.
This is The Ultimate Writing Championship! Pupils complete a series of writing challenges that focus on specific skills. Each challenge has a warrior who represents that challenge. To complete the challenge, the pupil has to achieve the challenge target and defeat the warrior. At the end of each unit, they must face the Stage Champion in a battle for the Stage Title. Pupils can also compete for the tag team title, working with friends or with staff support. In these title matches, pupils are assessed on all the skills included in the stage.
The Ultimate Writing Championship raising pupils’ engagement when writing. The challenges can be used as part of a literacy hour or as extension work. The writing topics are for you or the pupil to choose. They can therefore be linked to any lesson, therefore promoting literacy across the curriculum. Each challenge has an easy to mark system and each unit has a challenger record for staff and pupils to record their victories.
This resource contains all the challenges for the Stage 2: Men’s Division. There are 9 skill challenges and 2 title challenges.
Challenges include:
Using adjectives
Using adverbs
Spelling
Using connectives/conjunctions
Using varied sentence openings
Using correct grammar
Making sense
This is The Ultimate Writing Championship! Pupils complete a series of writing challenges that focus on specific skills. Each challenge has a warrior who represents that challenge. To complete the challenge, the pupil has to achieve the challenge target and defeat the warrior. At the end of each unit, they must face the Stage Champion in a battle for the Stage Title. Pupils can also compete for the tag team title, working with friends or with staff support. In these title matches, pupils are assessed on all the skills included in the stage.
The Ultimate Writing Championship raising pupils’ engagement when writing. The challenges can be used as part of a literacy hour or as extension work. The writing topics are for you or the pupil to choose. They can therefore be linked to any lesson, therefore promoting literacy across the curriculum. Each challenge has an easy to mark system and each unit has a challenger record for staff and pupils to record their victories.
This resource contains all the challenges for the Stage 4: Men’s Division. There are 14 skill challenges and 2 title challenges.
Challenges include:
Commas in a list
Grammar Challenge
Spelling Challenge
Metaphors
Similes
Punctuating Speech
Varied Sentence Openings
Connectives/Conjunctions
Writing In Paragraphs
Interesting Writing
Alliteration
Wow Words
This is The Ultimate Writing Championship! Pupils complete a series of writing challenges that focus on specific skills. Each challenge has a warrior who represents that challenge. To complete the challenge, the pupil has to achieve the challenge target and defeat the warrior. At the end of each unit, they must face the Stage Champion in a battle for the Stage Title. Pupils can also compete for the tag team title, working with friends or with staff support. In these title matches, pupils are assessed on all the skills included in the stage.
The Ultimate Writing Championship raising pupils’ engagement when writing. The challenges can be used as part of a literacy hour or as extension work. The writing topics are for you or the pupil to choose. They can therefore be linked to any lesson, therefore promoting literacy across the curriculum. Each challenge has an easy to mark system and each unit has a challenger record for staff and pupils to record their victories.
This resource contains all the challenges for the Stage 1: Men’s Division. There are 9 skill challenges and 2 title challenges.
Challenges include:
Writing on the line
Finger spacing
Letter formation
Basic spelling (High Frequency Words and simple phonetic words)
Full stops
Capital letters
Making sense
This lesson is the first in a series of lessons for the Roald Dahl novel ‘Fantastic Mr Fox’. It has a variety of tasks, leading towards the pupils writing about the farmers. There are visual writing help sheets for pupils who require more support and a challenging extension activity that is aimed at building the pupils vocabulary.
This resource is best taught after the pupils have read or listened to the first four chapters of Michael Morpurgo’s ‘Private Peaceful’. It contains comprehension exercises regarding the character development of some main characters in the first four chapters. It also deals with the theme in Chapter 4 of ‘An Amazing Event’. In Chapter 4 the kids see a yellow aeroplane and meet its pilot. Pupils are asked to list amazing events from their lifetime and ones they have lived witnessed, before they plan then write about witnessing an amazing event. also included, is a presentation that accompanies the lesson. It can be used with the activities in the lesson, as a starter, a plenary or it can lead to further speaking and listening activities.
Here are the main activities in this unit:
• Listen to/read the 4th chapter of the novel.
• Complete the comprehension challenge regarding 4 characters in 4 chapters.
• Make a list of any amazing events that have happened in your lifetime or that you have witnessed.
• Take part in a class/group discussion about these events.
• Work on a writing plan for describing witnessing an amazing event.
• Write a text about witnessing an amazing event.
This writing course is designed to be used with any school subject. It includes a variety of writing frames and planning activities that pupils can easily use to produce different types of writing. There are three separate booklets which represent three different levels. These are Initial Level, Higher Level and Advanced Level and the tasks in each are differentiated accordingly. The names are chosen for motivational reasons so that all pupils feel they are working to a good standard. The types of writing included at each level are:
Informative Writing
Personal Writing
Writing Instructions
Persuasive Writing
Imaginative Writing
Discursive Writing
Most of these types of writing can be used along with topics studied in any subject. Staff may not feel that some types of writing fit their course, for example imaginative writing, so you may choose to only use some units in some subjects.
This is a great resource to promote literacy across the curriculum. With numerous subjects following the same structure for writing and with them all completing this course, your pupils are more likely to improve their writing skills.
This reading text is designed for Entry Level pupils who will be sitting an Entry Level English qualification. It is about Migrant Farmers in America and is best used to introduce the novel, ‘Of Mice and Men’. It is based on the OCR Entry Level English course.
This lesson is to be taught with Chapter 8 ‘Fourteen Minutes Past Two’ of Private Peaceful by Michael Morpurgo. There is a series of worksheets and a powerpoint presentation to be used during the lesson. The presentation is used to help organise the lesson structure and to provide visuals to help check pupils’ understanding of the text and to generate ideas for their oracy and their writing. This resource is normally used for between two and three hours of teaching.
The activities of the lesson are:
• Listen to/read the 8th chapter of the novel.
• Check your comprehension of the story by describing what happened using the images on the lesson powerpoint.
• Group Discussion: What makes a character effective in a story?
• Lesson Activity:
Write A Character Report On Charlie Peaceful
Complete a writing plan for your report on Charlie Peaceful.
Write your report on Charlie Peaceful.
• Extension Work:
• Were Charlie’s Actions Right Or Wrong?
Write down as many reasons as you can for why Charlie’s action were right and wrong.
Plenary: Class Discussion
Class debate on whether Charlie
was right or wrong to act the way he did.
Please look at our other Private Peaceful lessons.
These three resources introduce students to the concept of using adjectives to improve their description when writing. They use strong images to provide the students with ideas and inspiration. The pupils move from adding one adjective to a given sentence, to writing a short text in which they describe a setting using a variety of adjectives.
The first text sees pupils concentrating on using one adjective in a sentence. The second text sees them move to using two adjectives. The third texts deals with the use of multiple adjectives in multiple sentences.
These resources can be used as class activities, extension activities or homework.
These two resources support pupils in improving their consistency in punctuating sentences correctly and helping them to know when to use ‘and’ + when to use ‘but’. In both resources, the pupils move from being given phrases to use to create sentences using either ‘and’ or ‘but’, to writing multiple sentences independently using both ‘and’ + ‘but’ appropriately.
These resources can be used as class activities, extension work or as homework.
In these resources, pupils are given visuals and some words and are asked to use them to create a simple sentence using a conjunction/connective. They are expected to use capital letters and full stops correctly and to choose additional High Frequency words and spell them independently. They are asked to repeat this process with different visuals and words a variety of times.
This is the first step in preparing pupils to write sentences while using conjunctions/connectives. The images help more visual learners and the given words provide ideas for what to write about and structure.
These resources can be used as a class activity, as extension work or as homework.
There are five resources to use when you choose this download.
The conjunctions/connectives included are and, when, but, so, + because.
These resources contain multiple activities that work on helping pupils to use a variety of conjunctions in their writing. They make use of strong visuals to give the pupils ideas and to inspire their imagination. This bundle includes resources for:
Using ‘and’
Using ‘but’
‘And’ v ‘But’
Using ‘so’
Using ‘because’
Using ‘when’
There are multiple downloads included with the resources in this bundle.
These resources can be used as class activities, as extension work or as homework.
This resource consists of a spelling booklet of words in 9 phases of difficulty and a spelling test template. The growing difficulty of the words presented is linked to the pupils’ developing knowledge of phonics. These documents can be used in lessons and as homework. For both resources in this unit, we have included both a PDF and a Word version. The Word version is editable and the PDF version ensures that the format of the documents is fixed.
This bundle contains a series of resources designed to be used when preparing pupils for the OCR Entry Level English qualification. The units can be taught with the classic texts ‘Of Mice and Men’ and ‘Romeo and Juliet’. However, they are also great stand alone activities on a variety of topics and themes. They are an excellent source of revision activities that can be used in the classroom, or given to the pupils as homework.