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Lost in Learning

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Bright, colourful and exciting teaching resources that help to keep your class engaged, stretch and challenge those that are soaring, and close the gap with the children who need an extra helping hand!

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Bright, colourful and exciting teaching resources that help to keep your class engaged, stretch and challenge those that are soaring, and close the gap with the children who need an extra helping hand!
KS1/2: Emotion Graph
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KS1/2: Emotion Graph

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Hi, fellow teachers! Here’s a free resource for you- it contains a PDF and a wordx document version of an emotion graph where children can plot characters’ emotions throughout a story. Enjoy!
KS1/KS2: Word Class Wordsearch
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KS1/KS2: Word Class Wordsearch

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Hi, All! Here’s a little resource for your convenience- a wordsearch where childrne then must categorise the words into the following word classes: pronoun, determiner, adjective, adverb, verb, noun, conjunction. Enjoy!
Primary: What is a fruit? (2-resource pack)
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Primary: What is a fruit? (2-resource pack)

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Hi there, Here is a small pack of resources for a 'What is fruit?' lesson. They're not very detailed, and are mainly meant for an introduction lesson and therefore I'll be sharing them for free :) Please feel free to comment or message me and I'll endeavour to help any way I can, Miss Ritchie
Lion King Assembly/Performance
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Lion King Assembly/Performance

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This is a 4-page script for The Lion King. It’s for a performing arts event for the musical theatre section. I wrote the narration in verse, and included two songs: Be Prepared and I Can’t Wait To Be King.
Knight/Superhero Themed Class Display
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Knight/Superhero Themed Class Display

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Here is a pack of resources for creating a class display for your new classes! included: Sword and shield shiet (chn create a coat of arms for themselves and set 3 sword targets) Outlines for knight/superhero swords for completed targets
Year 3/4: Types of angle
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Year 3/4: Types of angle

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Dear All, Here’s a small resource that involves sorting angles between acute, right and obtuse. I set it as a homework, but it’s editable for use in lessons too.
KS1/2/3: Food Diary
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KS1/2/3: Food Diary

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I was looking online for a booklet-style food diary that looked good, and alas I could not find one! So I spent a couple of minutes putting this together before school this morning. Graphics are by GraphicsPassion, and the font can be downloaded here: https://www.dafont.com/sea-balance.font? I collected the graphics onto the back page so you can play around with them as images if needed. The days can also be reordered to fit your timetable. Hope it’s helpful!
Year 4: Compound Area
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Year 4: Compound Area

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A single worksheet on calculating compound area and a plenary document for children to explain what the dashes on the lengths of sides mean (equal length). Enjoy!
Maths Language- Fraction Problems
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Maths Language- Fraction Problems

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This is a sheet that I used for homework with my high-ability Year 3 cohort. It involves the children using maths language or talk for maths sentence starters to explain their reasoning as to whether questions, such as the following, are true or false. When you simplify 3/9, the new fraction is 1.5/4.5. The numerator is the total number of parts. Children can choose which questions they answer, giving them more ownership and allowing for self-differentiation. LO: To explain answers with mathematical evidence.
Colour Vocabulary Thesaurus
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Colour Vocabulary Thesaurus

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Help your children to improve their descriptions and narratives by using these colour vocabulary sheets in your literacy lessons or on display. They equip pupils with exciting words for ‘red’, ‘blue’, ‘green’ and everything in between! I have been using these colour thesauruses as part of a Writing Toolkit (coming soon!) that I give to my class at the start of the school year. After modelling how to use them in writing, the children then independently use stronger, more effective colour descriptives when describing settings or characters- I even see them cropping up in their speech! BOTH SPELLINGS OF COLOR/COLOUR INCLUDED! Included in this download: A display poster and pocket-sized version of the color vocabulary grid PDF versions of the resources .docx Word versions of the resources for editing purposes 2 fonts to edit your resources with UK/AU/NZ/CA version using ‘colour’ spelling Looking for the full Writing Toolkit? Due to be completed by September 1st 2020 I hope this product saves you time and stress, Happy Teaching! Miss Austin
Matilda: Book Review (Roald Dahl)
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Matilda: Book Review (Roald Dahl)

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Book Review worksheet concentrating on summarising, forming opinions and concluding on Matilda by Roald Dahl. UK and US versions included In this book review, children are asked to summarise the main parts of the story, give their opinion on the story as a whole, state the funniest, scariest and favourite parts, rate the story from 1-5, explain if they would recommend the book, and discuss who their favourite and least favorite characters were. This works great as a post-text exercise, and also works as a movie review if you are following the feature film instead. Reviewing books helps children know that it’s okay to like or dislike a book, and also allows them to work out what their favorite genres are. Included in this download: UK and US versions of PDF and Word documents PDF version of the book review .docx Word document version of the book review for editing purposes ‘Lost in Chalk’ font to help you edit the resource and keep the style Looking for more Matilda resources? X 4-Week Matilda English Unit I hope this resource helps you to save time and save stress! Thank you, and happy teaching! Miss Austin
How To Train Your Dragon: Book Review (Cressida Cowell)
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How To Train Your Dragon: Book Review (Cressida Cowell)

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Book Review worksheet concentrating on summarising, forming opinions and concluding on How To Train Your Dragon (Book 1) by Cressida Cowell. In this book review, children are asked to summarise the main parts of the story, give their opinion on the story as a whole, state the funniest, scariest and favorite parts, rate the story from 1-5, explain if they would recommend the book, and discuss who their favourite and least favourite characters were. This works great as a post-text exercise, and also works as a movie review if you are following the feature film instead. Reviewing books helps children know that it’s okay to like or dislike a book, and also allows them to work out what their favorite genres are. Included in this download: PDF version of the book review .docx Word document version of the book review for editing purposes ‘Lost in Chalk’ font to help you edit the resource and keep the style I hope this resource helps you to save time and save stress! Thank you, and happy teaching! Miss Austin