Resourcefully has an ever growing range of primary teaching resources carefully created by us. Our resources are here to help you build amazing lessons for your pupils without starting from scratch.
Resourcefully has an ever growing range of primary teaching resources carefully created by us. Our resources are here to help you build amazing lessons for your pupils without starting from scratch.
Writing Bites!
Ten writing prompt sheets, perfect for: morning tasks, English lesson starters or even as a stimulus for a piece of writing. Each sheet has a different image and eight prompts for writing including: vocabulary, writing an alliterative sentence, generating questions and more.
PDF document of ten ‘writing bites’ and a PPT with writing bites explained, as well as an example writing bite.
Worksheets (with three levels of differentiation) allowing students to convert past tense verbs to present tense and use them in sentences. Answers included.
Past to present tense verb matching cards.
An engaging fifteen lesson writing unit, leading students towards writing their own newspaper article based on a fictional event: a school has lost its gravity!
This would make a great unit to be taught alongside a Science unit on forces, or as a way to revisit Scientific knowledge.
The first ten lessons explore text type, followed by sentence and word level work. The unit uses differentiated example text types throughout to support students understanding.
Lesson Order
Hook lesson: a school has lost its gravity!
Analysing newspaper articles.
Formal vocabulary used in newspapers.
Relative clauses used in newspapers.
Parenthesis used in newspapers.
Rhetorical questions to start and link paragraphs.
Technical language (explaining gravity).
Appropriate descriptive language used in newspapers.
Writing a conclusion, focussing on how the structure is different to other parts of the report.
Writing the report: writing the introduction.
Writing the report: writing paragraphs 2 and 3.
Writing the report: writing paragraph 4 and conclusion.
Writing the report: editing, with a report for students to practise editing.
Writing the report: publishing.
Ideal for use in Lower Key Stage Two, builds on the work done in Year Two on subordinating conjunctions.
Subordinating conjunction activity sheets with three levels of differentiation including a range of activities to help children recognise and understand the meaning of different subordinating conjunctions. Answers included.
Subordinating conjunction passages, short paragraphs with three levels of differentiation where children need to identify the subordinating conjunctions used. Ideal as a short activity or a grammar session. Answers included.
Coordinating conjunction activity sheets with three levels of differentiation including a range of activities to help children recognise and use different coordinating conjunctions. Answers included.
Coordinating conjunction passages, short paragraphs with three levels of differentiation where children need to identify the coordinating conjunctions used. Ideal as a short activity or a grammar session. Answers included.
Conjunction talk cards. A range of questions including identifying the missing conjunction in a sentence, discussing the effectiveness of a conjunction and explaining how different conjunctions can change the meaning of a sentence. Answers included.
Conjunction display cards.
National Curriculum Links – Years 3 and 4
Pupils should be taught to extend the range of sentences with more than one clause by using a wider range of conjunctions, including when, if, because, although.
Use conjunctions to express time and cause.
Assessing the effectiveness of their own and others’ writing and suggesting improvements.
Differentiation
Subordinating conjunctions: when, because, if, that, however, although.
Coordinating conjunctions: and, but, or.
Subordinating conjunctions: when, because, if, that, however, although, as, until, before, while, even though.
Coordinating conjunctions: and, but, or, so, yet.
Subordinating conjunctions: when, because, if, that, however, although, as, until, before, while, even though, since, provided that, unless.
Coordinating conjunctions: and, but, or, so, yet, for, nor.
Aimed at Year 6, this fantastic bundle features detailed resources for introducing Y6 grammar objectives or revising them, ideal for SATs. Each resource features a range of activities, suitable for short and snappy grammar activities or for the main activity in a lesson. Most of our resources contain three levels of differentiation and answers are always included.
Fourteen weeks of morning task activities, four activities per week.
These morning activities are perfect for the start of the day, after break or lunch. We know how these times of the school day can be tricky and there is a lot going on, each day’s activity focuses on one objective with a challenge for any students who need it. They are designed to review curriculum knowledge that students have already learnt about, so are a perfect way to warm up for the day.
These activities are prepared for the first term of Year 3 but can be used whenever, keep an eye out for morning tasks for the rest of the year. Objectives cover:
Adding 10 and 100
Times tables
Mental addition and subtraction
Spelling, including common exception words
Word classes
Number sequences
Ordering and comparing numbers and more!
PPT and worksheets. Answers/examples provided where appropriate.
Try the first week’s morning activities for free.
Eleven weeks of morning task activities, four activities per week.
These morning activities are perfect for the start of the day, after break or lunch. We know how these times of the school day can be tricky and there’s a lot going on, each day’s activity focuses on one objective with a challenge for any students who need it. They are designed to review curriculum knowledge that students have already learnt about, so are a perfect way to warm up for the day.
These activities are prepared for the second term of Year 4 but can be used whenever, keep an eye out for morning tasks for the rest of the year or buy our Autumn and Spring Bundle here. Objectives and activities include:
Multiplication and division facts
Multiplying and dividing by 10 and 100
Multiplying 2 and 3 digit numbers by 1 digit
Perimeter
Recognising fractions and their equivalents
Writing decimals
Sequences and patterns
Adjectives, nouns, verbs and adverbs
Spelling
Following instructions to create an image
Speech
Writing stories and letters
Reading comprehensions
Try the first week of Autumn morning activities for free here.
Ideal for use in Year 3 when using ‘a’ or ‘an’ is introduced or consolidation in later years.
PPT with the rules for adding ‘a’ and ‘an’ including the common exceptions to the rule and a quickfire **quiz**.
Activity sheets with three levels of differentiation to allow children to identify when ‘a’ or ‘an’ needs to be used across a variety of words.
National Curriculum Links
Use of the forms a or an according to whether the next word begins with a consonant or a vowel
Differentiation
Using ‘a’ and ‘an’ before a range of words, no exceptions to the rule.
Using ‘a’ and ‘an’ before a range of more increasingly difficult words, no exceptions to the rule. Applying their knowledge to sentences.
Using ‘a’ and ‘an’ before a range of words including exceptions to the rule. Applying their knowledge to sentences and paragraphs.
Ideal for use in Year 4 when the possessive apostrophes objective is first introduced or in later years for consolidation.
‘Plural possessive apostrophes’ PPT. A guide to how to use apostrophes for plural nouns with a **quiz** to allow for practise in class.
‘Possessive apostrophes’ activity sheets with three levels of differentiation including a range of activities to allow children to practise using and adding apostrophes.
National Curriculum Links
Year 4 statutory content to be introduced – Apostrophes to mark plural possession
Differentiation
Adding apostrophes to singular nouns to consolidate previous learning.
Adding apostrophes to plural nouns that end in an ‘s’.
Adding apostrophes to plural nouns that end in an ‘s’ and those that don’t e.g. children.
A detailed and engaging fifteen-lesson writing unit, guiding learners towards writing a persuasive letter, convincing their headteacher to change the school week to four days. Throughout the unit, students read and refer to differentiated example texts to support their learning and understanding of what a persuasive letter is. The first ten lessons explore the text type and sentence level work. The final five lessons allow time to write the persuasive letter, one step at a time.
Where appropriate, each lesson is differentiated and carefully planned to suit different students’ needs. Answers (or example answers) are provided, where appropriate.
Lesson order:
• Hook lesson: students will be given the chance to practise persuading each other to do simple tasks to understand what persuasion is. They will then read the example text, ending the lesson by exploring pros and cons for the idea of a four-day school week.
• Identifying the key features of a persuasive letter, sorting and highlighting the features.
• Speaking and listening lesson on exaggerating, students will explore what it means to exaggerate, and the language features used. Then practise exaggerating different reasons for having a four-day school week in pairs or groups.
• Power of three, students learn what the power of three is, how it is used in the example texts and practise using it.
• Talking directly to the reader using first and second person pronouns, students learn what first and second person pronouns are using a snap game. The independent activities include finding pronouns in the example texts, creating a word mat and re-writing sentences using incorrect pronouns.
• Writing opinions as facts. Students learn the effect of writing opinions as facts to be persuasive and have the chance to practise writing some.
• Fact finding lesson to create simple statistics, students create questions and poll class/staff members to create their own simple statistics for their letters.
• Conjunctions to extend ideas, students explore how different conjunctions are used before the main activity, a matching card game where students need to match two parts of a sentence with a conjunction.
• Understanding what rhetorical questions are and how they are used in persuasive letters, students either fill in the blank on an example text with rhetorical questions or create a word mat for rhetorical questions.
• Planning our persuasive letter.
• Writing the introduction and first paragraph, looking at examples and exploring the language used.
• Writing the third paragraph, shared write to support students writing.
• Writing the conclusion.
• Students can practise editing using our ‘persuasive letter to edit’ before editing their own work.
• Publishing texts.