Therapeutic and inclusive resources, mostly created with SEN children in mind. Literacy and numeracy tasks embedded throughout.
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Therapeutic and inclusive resources, mostly created with SEN children in mind. Literacy and numeracy tasks embedded throughout.
Visit neuralescentcommunity.uk to find out about our cultural and respite support services.
SEN Y6 Science- could be used in Ks3 and Ks1/2 also. I used this during the introductory lesson about the heart and found the combination of firstly labelling togather and then independently filling in the gaps worked really well.
Originally made for Edexcel B GCSE Geog- Batte for the Biosphere topic but can be applied to any syllabus teaching about the causes of deforestation. The students really enjoyed the lesson as it is very balanced between discussion and exam prep- suits a mixed ability group well and there's lots of room for creative higher level thinking.
The lesson gets students to first of all think about the connection between a beef burger and the rainforest and then gets the students to discuss the various causes of deforestation through peer teaching of 3 different articles.
There is a describe/explain answer builder sheet which worked well with low ability students and the articles can be differentiated when they are initially given out.
There is also an exam question and sample answer for the students to then use to create their own. There's discussion of indigenous tribes living sustainably in the TRF through a brillian TED talk and ends with a quick MEAT the facts video which gets students to understand the links between deforestation and our meat appetite in economically developed nations.
This lesson was created for a Year 10 group to recapture their love of the planet to enable them to think about Geography in a less separate way and encouraged them to generate solutions whilst teaching them about sustainability and conservation.
It is a lesson where the students are in control and much of the discussion is for you to facilitate and them to discover amongst themselves.
I found it really energised the group to learning in depth about different ecosystems and encouraged them to think about their own role in society locally and their global impact.
I often use this lesson at the end of term for other year groups to remind them what geographers do in the real world and how they think about the planet.
Please review if you download, thanks :)
Every class should know right from the start what you expect from them (Max 3/4) and you need to know what they expect from you.
I run this activity with every new group, SEN or not and ensure it is displyed immediately at the front of the class to be constantly referred back to .
Enjoy :)
Usually at the end of term once I have marked an extended piece of work/assessment, I use this to help students reflect on their work and work out which area they need to focus on to improve next term.
The students will need lots of assistance and sampling the first time you show them this but once they’ve got it, they enjoy picking out specific targets from the list and then on the first lesson back, I get them to write their target at the stop of the page and keep checking their work against it.
Also easy to peer assess future work as students can focus on their peer’s specific target and give richer feedback.
Please review if you download!
Thanks :)
I used this during an introductory lesson about the heart- I used this after we had discussed and completed the parts and function worksheet and watched a short clip demonstrating how the heart moves.
This took around 10-15mins with my small SEN group and they enjoy the fast pace and choosing which activities to do to speed up their hearts.
Enjoy.
I created these slips to encourage a very tricky mixed ability group to reflect upon their classroom behaviour and work. I printed on coloured card and handed them out at the end of term. I then sent a text out to all parents telling them to ask for the slip and to email me if they didn’t receive one.
The students appreciated the bespoke feedback and were interested to read each other’s and I could use them to refer back to in future lessons to help them reflect upon their learning.
I used this as a two part video lesson that lead to an exam contrasting the impacts. This video really aided engagement with the wider oil and geopolitical issues of the energy module.
The students really enjoyed the documentary as it is very engaging and I regularly targeted questions and checked worked and then allowed them to have the sheet with them during the next lesson’s exam q.
Print the worksheet onto coloured paper.
Thanks.
The students always love this lesson as it involves them taking on Tourists or Resident roles in 5 different countries.
The students get to explore how tourism impacts different people across the world using coloured role cards ( that you must laminate!) and discussing the various types of tourism and positive/negative effects that the industry has.
All the cards have been made specifically for this lesson and are differentiated so that you may choose to give the higher ability students the resident cards and the lower ability the tourist cards as they contain slightly less complicated vocabulary and you can target your questions much more easily.
The lesson contains a variety of assessment techniques and the student assessor roles always work particularly well- if you have a large group then use 4/5 student assessors. The exit cards only take 2/3 mins and I always insist on complete silence so the students can leave what was a high energy lesson very calmly.
Ignore the homework slide at the end! Was made for a low ability group that couldn't cope with any more demanding homework.
Enjoy!
This lesson was a follow on from the Economy of China lesson, and incorporates homework students completed before the lesson on Acid Rain.
It involves dividing the class into two, with one half focused on rural Linfen and the rest on urban Shanghai. Each group of 3/4 will then fill in the worksheet or create their own presentation using the timelines and their own research and previous lesson knowledge. Once completed- the students can then present their information so that each student has knowledge on either place.
Lesson could be adapted really easily if you wanted to use it as a card sort or carousel activity, the lesson if focused on the students attaining the various environmental impacts of industry for those living and working in the factories and those using the materials and living in the cities.
The live wind current link works especially well and I sometimes leave it on the board whilst the students are working as it is very calming.
There is a HA question for those who complete everything, but I usually give this to everyone at the end and those who have completed it are used as examples and then I give them verbal improvements to complete alongside the rest of the class.
Could be used over two lessons if required, enjoy.
I absolutely love teaching the OCP through this drama activity I created last year when I had a small but very unmotivated group who had been subjected to far too much on China and were quite bored.
The lessons involve you first setting the context of the OCP and discussing the use of propaganda and explaining the political context.
Then the students complete the mystery activity which I found on here and the students discussing and making notes on the possible impacts of the OCP.
Then the students are put into groups of 4 MAX and you designate the roles depending on their ability- i.e- director roles usually given to the most creative but possibly quiet students. Actors- outgoing LA students. Narrators- HA- outgoing students. Don't let them decide who is who unless you really trust them!
Each group is given one scene of the play to create using the script help sheets and other videos and previous work. It is very important you explain the play will run in order as it follow the characters lives from childhood and also they musn't confer with their friends in other groups.
It usually takes 2 lessons but can run into three if you think they require it, the success criteria tables should be stuck into their books before they begin working on their scenes so they are focused on how to produce a 'glorious' scene. If possible- let them cue up music/sound effects to be heard during the final play.
This lesson has been observed and graded outstanding a few times due to it's inclusive activities and strong geographical focus. The students may not be up for it at first but if you get the groups/roles right it will be a lesson where you can sit back and listen to the students working really hard.
The post its at the end are important for you to gauge how many of the students really understood the OCP and can be drawn out into a debate style plenary very easily or used to peer assess for SPaG/quality of argument.
If your school has ipads- get students to video and put the play together electronically.
Enjoy!
Template for the Three Gorges Dam, with extension evaluation task at the bottom and scaffolded tasks.
With LA groups, I use a video and pause and demonstrate answers on the board, they usually have a lot of questions about the dam and how they work.
Equally, it could be set as homework or for pairs to complete in a computer room and then put on display.
UPDATED LESSON- READY TO GO for MIXED ABILITY GROUPS with high SEN/G+T
The lesson was taught within a SoW on China for year 9 but could be adapted for all secondary years.
Although this lesson contains lots of information and key vocab, all activities are visually stimulating and engaging. Works very well with groups that loathe writing or when you need to mix up your teaching but you still need your students to learn what many may find a boring topic. This is a discovery based lesson and will require you to demonstrate very clearly how to use the living graph and mind map effectively.
The living graph is an excellent activity as it encourages visual and kinaesthetic students to engage and the mind map allows artistic but perhaps not academic students to design and scribe with their peers.
Homework task at the end works well as I made sure they understood that they would not be able to engage well in the next lesson if not completed. I had them hand it in before the next lesson so I could chase any missing cards and by the day of the lesson, I had them all back.
Hope you enjoy, please REVIEW if you download! :)
A lesson I used as an introductory lesson about migration and the different types of migrant and as a way of highlighting biases present in the media and our individual world view.
Best used with new groups of students of any year 7-11 as most of the tasks are reflective and discussion based and involve random pairings and a main carousel activity. Very engaging and easy to manage lesson.
Could definitely be used in a Tutor time/Citzenship lesson also and possibly for English to alert students to journalistic bias and to help them read texts more critically.
This resource could be used as part of an Environmental Issues SoW. The aims are to reduce the amount of plastic used in your school through the class creating persuasive adverts encouraging their peers to buy reusable bottles. Each lesson uses a variety of learning techniques based on enquiry and all video links are in the notes section of each slide.
I will then display the students work around the school and see if it has any impact!
Water consumption is incredibly important for concentration and should be encouraged within the school environment.
These lessons could also be used to create cross curricular links in DT and Art and potentially provide the design for school merchandise!
Please review if you download!
Enjoy :)
Students consistently enjoy this lesson and enjoy learning about the unique animals and plants of each region.
Depending on the class, this carousel could last 1-2 lessons and involves each student travelling to different habitats and completing a range of diverse and engaging tasks indepedently. You will need to set up the classroom into 4 large tables which can seat 1/4 of the class. I usually blue tack the sheets to the desks and surrounding walls and double print so that everyone can choose which tasks they’d like to complete at each station.
Lots of potential for PA of answers and I usually put this work on display and talk through the IUCN red list/show them videos of the animals in China.
This assessment was created to enable the students to use all of their China lessons/knowledge and combine it into an opinion piece about living in China.
Length spent on it will be determined by your students but I wouldn't allow more than 45minutes as it is not about them writing everything they know about China.
It is out of 21, and I usually get the students to set what the boundaries should be for certain grades which can be an interesting conversation!
If you don't want to do that just set the marks in line with whatever assessment style you school is using, obviously top marks on this will not equate to an A/A* as this was written for year 9.
I always put the writing frame between each pair so that everyone can see it and no one feels targeted. If students want one to write on I print separate A4 size ones on coloured paper.
Is a very easy assessment for them to peer assess/improve in the next lesson.
Hope it works as well for you as it does for me :)
The ppt also contains a link to a China video to end the topic and stop and discuss if required.
Self-explanatory worksheet created for homework for Energy Topic- GCSE. They move through tasks matched to varying abilities and use a computer to research the different views held by stakeholders about mineral extraction in the Arctic.
Could also be used in school as an independent PC lesson and used at KS3.