In this lesson, students will learn what the British Industrial Revolution was and how it changed Britain. They will look at 6 key areas which contributed to this, completing research on top of information given.
They will also be taught about Victorian inventions and The Great Exhibition which showcased many inventions. They will be tasked to write a persuasive letter to Queen Victoria from an inventor using what they have learnt.
All resources for this lesson are provided.
This lesson is intended for KS2 but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
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This BUNDLE contains 5 lessons of teaching material which span from 1-3 hours of content per lesson. The lessons follow the sequence:
Lesson 1- Fossils and Mary Anning
Lesson 2- Charles Darwin
Lesson 3- Evolution through natural selection
Lesson 4- Plant and animal adaptations
Lesson 5- Inheritance
Lessons come with an interactive presentation, video links, worksheets and activities. They deliver a comprehensive overview of evolution and inheritance and do so in an engaging way. These lessons have been designed for Year 6 students but can be easily adapted to suit KS2 or KS3 students.
In this BUNDLE, all of the lessons for Year 6 Science topic Living Things and Their Habitats are included. You will receive lessons on the following:
The Linnaean Classification System (Carl Linnaeus)
Classification keys- animal classification
Classifying plants
Microorganisms
Microorganisms- helpful and harmful
All lessons come with engaging power point presentations and a range of activity sheets.
If you would like to see more resources like this, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou
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This bundle (Classic Fiction) includes lessons on the following:
Whole-Class Guided Reading
Describing characters
Describing a setting
Altering speech for characters
Narrative style
Building tension and suspense
All lessons include a presentation, lesson plan and the relevant resources. These lessons have more content than an hour with the reading alongside and so will easily cover a two-week unit.
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This sequence of lessons studying newspaper reports is based around the theme of Space. It looks at a model text about Tim Peake’s journey to space and over two weeks teaches students how to structure a newspaper report part by part.
Each lesson comes with an engaging powerpoint presentation and all relevant material. Included is a unit planning overview so you can see how the lessons progress. At the end of the unit, the children are tasked to write their own newspaper reports using the techniques they have learnt.
The lessons progress as follows:
Lesson 1- Show what you know
Lesson 2- Whole class guided reading on the model text
Lesson 3- Using a range of devices to build cohesion within and across paragraphs
Lesson 4- Features of newspaper reports
Lesson 5- boxing up the model text and planning own reports
Lesson 6- writing the headline, subheadline and introductory paragraph
Lesson 7-writing the main body of the report
Lesson 8- writing a conclusive paragraph
Lesson 9-Show what you know- independently writing own reports
Lesson 10- editing, improving and sharing writing
This lesson is intended for Year 5/6 students but can easily be modified to suit lower KS2 or KS3.
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This three-week unit of work is based on the text Pig Heart Boy by Malorie Blackman and the Talk for Writing model with a baseline assessment- planning- imitation- innovation- independent application- final assessment.
The pupils will learn what the features of newspaper reports are and how to identify bias. They will look in detail at a ‘model text’ and will learn this off-by-heart to help them reproduce similar sentence structures and vocabulary in their own writing.
Through teacher modelling, they will embellish the class version on kidney xenotransplantation before writing their own independently using the techniques they have learnt.
Lesson 1- Have a go writing own newspaper report
Lesson 2- whole class guided reading on the model text (Pig Heart Boy based)
Lesson 3- Looking at how cohesion is created
Lesson 4- Features of newspaper reports
Lesson 5- ‘Boxing-up’- looking at how the model text is structured
Lesson 6- Analysing bias and how it is created in newspaper reports
Lesson 7, 8 & 9- Shared writing with teacher modelling
Lesson 10,11,12,13,14,15- planning, writing, editing and improving own newspaper reports
This unit is planned for Year 5 and 6 children but can easily be modified to suit lower KS3 students.
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In this BUNDLE, you will receive lessons on the following:
Lesson 1- Persuasive advertising
Lesson 2- Creating own persuasive advert
Lesson 3- Persuasive leaflets
Lesson 4- Identifying devices used in persuasive writing
Lesson 5- Writing own persuasive text
(The content of these lessons can easily spread over two weeks if taught as a whole unit).
These lessons provide lots of examples of persuasion in action and students will learn the acronym FREDEPTORS to help them remember persuasive devices. They will critique different forms of persuasive texts and will use the planning frames to produce their own persuasive advert, leaflet and text.
These lessons are ideal for upper KS2 and can easily be modified to suit KS3 also.
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The Hobbit, or There and Back Again is a children’s fantasy novel by English author J. R. R. Tolkien. The Hobbit is set within Tolkien’s fictional universe and follows the quest of home-loving Bilbo Baggins, the titular hobbit.
This lesson looks at describing the character of Bilbo Baggins. It teaches how to describe characters according to their appearance, personality, behaviour and any special traits or interests.
Students look at a number of example extracts and are asked to highlight these examples before planning and writing their own character description using the planning frame provided.
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This supportive resource will help students understand how to accurately write and punctuate speech.
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Air resistance is a force that is caused by air. The force acts in the opposite direction to an object moving through the air. It is a type of friction.
In this lesson, students will learn what air resistance is and how it affects us. They will learn about Galileo Galilei who first investigated air resistance and how without air, objects with the same mass will fall at the same rate. They will learn about streamlining in order to minimise surface area and they will complete a quiz mid-way to check understanding.
They will then carry out two experiments- 1) paper drop test 2) investigating how the size of a canopy affects the rate of a parachute’s decent.
Sheets are provided for the experiments along with an interactive presentation and useful knowledge organiser.
This lesson is 1/6 lessons on Forces. To view the other lessons, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou/Primary science
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Water resistance is a force that tries to slow things down that are moving through water. It is a type of friction and sometimes called drag.
In this lesson, students will learn what water resistance is and how it affects us. They will learn about streamlining and how we make things streamlined in order to reduce water resistance. They will also learn about upthrust and how this enables boats to float. They will complete a quiz mid-way through to check understanding.
They will then carry out an experiment to investigate how the shape of aluminum foil affects how it behaves in water. The experiment worksheet is provided as well as an explanation into the reasons behind this.
This lesson is 1/6 lessons on Forces. To view the other lessons, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou/Primary science
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In this lesson, students will learn how Athens was governed as a direct democracy. They will learn what the key words- oligarchy, monarchy and tyranny is and will understand how the direct democratic model worked in Athens.
They will also learn about the Athenian criminal court system and will then enact two different scenarios using drama to better understand the systems. They will be given two scenarios to write down their arguments either for/against and as a class will role play these.
This lesson is heavily guided with all of the information needed included. A video and a quiz also makes it engaging for all.
This lesson is intended for KS2 but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
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Metaphors are a figure of speech in which a word or phrase is applied to an object or action to which it is not literally applicable.
This lesson focuses on using metaphors in poetry. It comes with an engaging powerpoint presentation and the related lesson plan, activity sheet and example poems.
Children learn what metaphors are and identify them in poems as a class, discussing their effect on the poem and the reader. They then do this in pairs/ small groups reading a number of poems and creating their own metaphors for images given. As a class then complete a modelled write, taking words and phrases from the children to create a stanza/verse of a poem based on the video clip. The children then write an additional stanza to the poem independently making use of metaphors for effect.
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Journalistic writing is the style of writing used to report news stories in newspapers, television broadcasts, on radio and on the Internet.
This bundle includes lessons on:
Forms of news
Features of newspaper articles
Direct and reported speech in newspaper reports
Identifying bias
Writing a newspaper report
All lessons have included presentations, lesson plans and resources!
A great bundle deal!
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In this lesson, students will learn what the stages of a story mountain are from beginning- build up- problem- resolution and ending. They will look at an example story and pick out each part before writing a story mountain plan as a class for the film Frozen. Following this, they will work in groups to write their own story mountain plan for a film they know well before moving on to doing the same for their own imaginative stories.
This lesson is intended for KS2 students but can be easily modified to suit KS3.
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At its height, the Roman Empire ruled over much of Europe, North Africa and the Middle East. In this lesson, students will learn about the Roman Gods and Goddesses and how Christianity later spread across the Roman Empire.
They will investigate religious terminology and complete factfiles on the Roman Gods and Goddesses. THey will then read about the spread of Christianity and answer questions on this. By the end of the lesson, they will have a good understanding of the religious practices of the Romans
This lesson is intended for KS2 but can easily be modified to suit KS3.
“The Highwayman” is a narrative poem written by Alfred Noyes, first published in 1906. It tells the story of an unnamed highwayman who is in love with Bess, a landlord’s daughter.
In this lesson, students will consider more than one point of view. They will first learn what a balanced argument looks like and the features of the text type. They will then put forward points for and against the statement ‘The Highwayman was to blame for Bess’ death’.
They will then look at an example text and consider why it is effective before planning out the structure of their own balanced arguments using the support frame. Finally, they will write their own balanced argument on the statement using the writing frame given.
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Lesson objective: To recognise, describe and build simple 3-D shapes, including making nets.
In this lesson, students will recap on 3d shapes and their properties. They will then look at the nets of different 3d shapes and through the interactive links will practise forming nets of the 3d shapes provided. Finally they will learn how to draw the nets of shapes accurately.
3 levels of differentiated activity sheets are provided as well as answer sheets.
Duration: 1 hour
This is an engaging lesson which comes with an interactive power point presentation and all corresponding activity worksheets. It is designed for Year 6 but could easily be modified to suit lower KS2 and KS3.
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Light is electromagnetic radiation which is visible to the human eye. In this lesson, students will learn about how light travels and experiment with a light source to prove that light travels in straight lines. The presentation- with links to online video clips, lesson plan and investigation sheet are all provided.
This lesson is intended for Year 6 students but can easily be modified for lower KS2 and KS3 students.
This lesson is 1/6 lessons on Light. To view the other lessons, please visit: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/ResourcesForYou/Primary science
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This BUNDLE contains 5 lessons of teaching material which span from 1-3 hours of content per lesson. The lessons follow the sequence:
Lesson 1- What is electricity?
Lesson 2- Circuits
Lesson 3- Investigating variations in electrical components in a circuit
Lesson 4- Electrical safety
Lesson 5- Investigating voltage
All lessons come with an interactive presentation, video links, worksheets and activities. They deliver a comprehensive overview of electricity and do so in an engaging way. These lessons have been designed for Year 6 students but can be easily adapted to suit KS2 or KS3 students.
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