I am a teacher specialising in Geography and Religious Studies with over 4 years experience to date. I pride myself on designing lessons that engages students in their learning, with an enquiry-based focus being at the forefront.
Any lesson that you download is fully resourced and differentiated ready to use in a flash. I hope they make a real contributing to your own classroom like they have done to mine.
I am a teacher specialising in Geography and Religious Studies with over 4 years experience to date. I pride myself on designing lessons that engages students in their learning, with an enquiry-based focus being at the forefront.
Any lesson that you download is fully resourced and differentiated ready to use in a flash. I hope they make a real contributing to your own classroom like they have done to mine.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on Descartes version of the ontological argument and its overall success. The main part of the lesson involves students using two colours to add addotations to a copy of Descartes ontological argument to show how it works and its strengths/weaknesses, followed by a comprehension exercise where students answer a series of questions on how Kant criticised the argument, which is concluded with students writing a model conclusion to an essay question relating to the success of the ontological argument.
Learning Objectives:
To outline Descartes version of the Ontological argument.
To explain why Kant rejected the Ontological argument.
To evaluate how successful the argument is in proving the existence of God.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on contour lines. The main part of the lesson involves students having to read heights off a custom-made map and then drawing a cross-section of the landform (this exercise is supported with clear instructions and visuals on the Power Point and differentiated grids).
Learning Objectives:
To be able to read height on a map.
To draw a cross section of contour lines.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on how the teleological argument can be challenged, namely on three grounds: moral (John Stuart Mill), logic (David Hume), and scientific (Charles Darwin). The main part of the lesson involves students working in groups to produce a teaching tool based on their allocated challenge (use poster paper, ensure they also make their own copy), from which they then teach the other groups about their challenge. This leads into a written task where students write a model conclusion to an essay question on the challenges facing the teleological argument.
Learning Objectives:
To explain why David Hume, Charles Darwin and John Mill rejected the teleological argument.
To assess the effectiveness of their objections.
To evaluate the overall strength of the teleological argument for the existence of God.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on how the problem of evil can be seen by some to challenge the existence of God. The main part of the lesson involves a brief section of note-taking and class discussion on the basic idea behind the problem of evil, with students suggesting their own solutions to the inconsistent triad (logical problem), followed by a written comprehension exercise on the evidential problem. The lesson concludes with a brainstorming exercise on the strengths and weaknesses of Swinburne’s Free Will Defence and class continuum on its success in resolving the problem of evil.
Learning Objectives:
To explain the logical and evidential problem as a challenge to the existence of God.
To assess one philosophical response to the problem.
To evaluate the success of this response.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the ontological argument. The main part of the lesson involves an active class demonstration of Anselm’s first version of the ontological argument (supported with a card sort task), with students then drawing a perfect island to draw out how Gaunilo criticsed this version, with students finally annotating Anselm’s second version of his ontological argument.
Learning Objectives:
To outline Anselm’s Ontological Argument for the existence of God.
To explain Gaunilo’s criticism to it.
To assess the strength of Anselm’s reply.
(Note: You will require chocolate or other food item for the starter activity)
A fully resourced lesson on meditation in Buddhism. It includes a starter where they list their life worries and how they deal with them, in the main section a task on describing the story behind Siddhartha's enlightenment and a set of meditation exercises. In the plenary they then explain why meditation is important.
A fully resourced lesson on the popualtion density of the UK. The lesson is as follows:
* Starter- They imagine McDonalds want to open a new store, but only in areas with the greatest concentrations of people. What factors might they look for?
*Main- A class demonstration on what we mean when we talk about population density.
*Main- Produce a chloropleth map on the UK's population distribution.
*Main- Answer a set of questions examining why people choose to live in certain locations.
*Plenary- Pass the ball!
This fully resourced lesson explores the three types of rainfall in the UK. It contains a key term starter, video note-taking task and then a worksheet where they draw diagrams and explain the three main types of rainfall. The worksheet is differentiated to three different levels according to how confident students feel. I printed off a set for each table in different colours, from which they selected which one they felt the most confident with. Feedback always appreciated.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the main depositional landforms created by longshore drift. The main part of the lesson includes a discussion and written task on how spits form, followed by students using an information sheet to produce their own diagrams as to how bars and tombolos form.
Learning Objectives:
To understand how the process of longshore drift forms spits.
To explain the formation of bars and tombolos.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the Hindu belief of karma. The main part of the lesson consists of a game to help them understand how actions can lead to good and bad karma, a worksheet to explain how their belief in karma works in detail and a class discussion at the end relating to some of the problems associated with their belief.
Learning Objectives:
To describe how the idea of karma works.
To explain why this belief is so important to Hindus.
To assess some of the problems with this belief.
A fully resourced lesson on how the UK is linked with the rest of the world (interdependance).
*Starter- Students listen to the story of Lizzie, and how morning routine is linked to products worldwide.
*Main- Students produce an ideas map showing how the UK is linked to the rest of the world, categorising those links.
*Main- They then use the task sheet to create an informative poster to explain why countries are reliant on each other for food.
*Plenary- What might happen if we cut off our links to the rest of the world?
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on how the different grounds under which religious experiences can be challenged, including psychological, physiological explanations, interpretation difficulties and the inability for humans to experience a divine reality. The main part of the lesson involves students summarising the challenge they have been allocated on the sheet, then peer teaching to others in their group. This leads onto producing a bullet-pointed essay plan on the topic.
Learning Objectives:
To explain the various challenges to the validity of religious experiences.
To assess the strength of these challenges.
To evaluate whether the notion of religious experiences is valid.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated introductory lesson on religious experiences. The main part of the lesson involves students produce a spider diagram showing William James’s criteria for a religious experience, working in groups to complete a grid task showing its different types (i.e. mystical, corporate, conversion, visions and voices) and then link it back to William James’s classification scheme for analysis (how these examples meet some or all of his criteria), finishing off with a fun and innovative plenary.
Learning Objectives:
To describe the meaning of a religious experience.
To explain the various categories of religious experience.
To analyse whether they meet William James criteria for a religious experience.
This lesson focuses on how belief can affect people's actions, focusing on Desmond Doss, a soldier from WWII who refused to fire a single bullet. They explain how his belief affected his action, consider and analyse different viewpoints and evaluate how strictly one should follow their actions. Was designed for an observation lesson.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on global poverty. In the main part of the lessons students have to consider a range of definitions to decide what they believe is the best one, use a range of pictures to explain the impacts of global poverty, and finally complete a written evaluation as to whether they believe it is possible to end global poverty. Learning Objectives:
To describe the meaning of poverty.
To explain the impacts of global poverty.
To speculate whether it is possible to end global poverty.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson towards Aristotle's theory of the Four Causes. The main part of the lesson involves exploring the difference between Plato's and Aristotle's philosophy through picture analysis and a worksheet, followed by note-taking on Aristotle's Four Causes, which is then applied to a variety of objects which can be found within the world of empirical observation (with extension task).
Learning Objectives:
To outline the difference between Aristotle’s and Plato’s approach to Philosophy.
To explain Aristotle’s theory of the 4 causes.
To apply his theory to the world of empirical observation.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on the key geographical features of the British Isles. The main part of the lesson consists of a mapping task (cities and towns, seas and oceans) which is assessed through an interactive quiz included. It also includes a section on students writing a paragraph to describe the location of an English town using appropriate geographical methodology (this start with a class discussion on how this is best approached to create a list of success criteria on the board), leading to peer assessment as a plenary.
Learning Objectives:
To plot the key Geographical features of the British Isles.
To describe our location using appropriate Geographical terminology.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated lesson on whether Happisburgh should be protected from coastal erosion - forming an end-of-unit assessment for a Coastal Environment Scheme of Work. The main part of the lesson is split into two parts: firstly, a short written exercise describing the location of the settlement and an information hunt to obtain the viewpoints of different stakeholders on whether the settlement should be protected from coastal erosion (with a grid extension task evaluating the strengths/weaknesses of these arguments); secondly, designing a newspaper article which answers the question ‘Should Happisburgh be protected from coastal erosion?’.
Learning Objectives:
To describe the location of Happisburgh.
To explain the arguments for and against protecting Happisburgh.
To evaluate whether you ultimately believe Happisburgh should be protected from erosion.
This is a fully resourced, introductory lesson on how people go about making moral decisions. The main part of the lesson mostly focuses on a case study to consider the effects of our moral actions, namely that the minerals from our mobile phones can be sourced (on occasion) to war zones. It contains a written task, peer discussion task and evaluation task.
To describe what moral decisions are.
To explain the effects of our moral decisions.
To evaluate the morality of our moral decisions.
This contains a fully resourced, differentiated introduction lesson on coasts. In the main part of the lesson students use a stimulus image to generate their own definition of what a coastline is, carry out a image analysis of different coastlines around the room (open-ended but focused questions for students to generate their ideas) and lastly a ranking exercise on different reasons why the coastline is important for people.
Learning Objectives:
To identify what a coastline is.
To describe the key features that make up a coastline.
To explain why coastlines are important.