I provide resources I have used myself. They are mainly aimed at UPKS2 as I am based in Year 5, however many can be easily updated to suit the needs of a vast range of children.
I provide resources I have used myself. They are mainly aimed at UPKS2 as I am based in Year 5, however many can be easily updated to suit the needs of a vast range of children.
This resource helps children understand the different symbols and objects of 6 different religions (buddhism, hinduism, islam, christianity, sikhism, judaism). The idea is to sort the objects into the different religions by cutting them out and creating 6 posters - one for each religion.
It is a great activity for children to work together in groups or can be done independently.
Children will have 6 objects from each religion and each object contains a brief, child friendly description to explain what the item is (without giving away which religion it belongs to!)
A perfect activity for all of Key Stage 2 although would also be great for upper KS1 or Lower KS3 depending on the children.
**ANSWERS INCLUDED **
*This would also be perfect for a comprehension activity in shared reading or literacy lessons as the children would have to read each sentence and using inference to decide where it belongs. *
A word bank with pictures and meanings.
Split into two sections, one to describe the fire and one to describe the feelings of people affected.
Some words have brackets to give a simple meaning.
A great little resource to encourage the use of high level vocabulary all through this unit. We used it when writing a newspaper report and a diary entry from the time.
This is a comprehension aimed at Key Stage 2 to address the issue of cleanliness and personal hygiene. The text covers all areas of personal hygiene such as washing daily, washing your hair, brushing your teeth, washing hands etc.
It also includes ten questions for the children to answer along with the correct answers for the teacher.
This resource uses screen shots from The Piano by Aidan Gibbons (Literacy Shed for free).
It is designed to support children in analysing and/or retelling what is happening during each scene in the video.
A fantastic video and produces amazing writing at the end of the unit. The children really develop a sense of empathy as the video is unpicked. This resource can be used in a number of ways to discuss characters feelings at each stage, what happens to the music, what the characters are thinking, why those particular memories stand out etc.
Gives the children five different categories for starting their sentences.
Preposition (P) ‘ing’ words (ing) Adverbial (AD) Passing of time (PT) Conjunctions (C)
Sheet contains example sentences and the word bank to support in their own writing.
A handy resource with a checklist for the features (including examples) and word banks to support with sentence openers, time conjunctions and cause and effect conjunctions.
A very hand little resource.
This resource contains a beautiful copy of Maggie and the Dinosaur (a poem) and three differentiated comprehension question sets along with answers.
The LA questions has a question underneath a specific line of text to make answering simple and show clear differentiation.
Here is a bank of resources with a front cover.
Included are:
Page 1 - Front cover
Page 2 - Colouring page
Page 3 - Christmas crossword.
Page 4 & 5 - Plan your own party (Maths).
Page 6 - Calculate the cost of each present (Maths).
Page 7 - Use the code to find the joke answer (English).
Page 8 - Pricing Christmas presents (Maths).
Page 9 - Colouring page.
Page 10 - Write a character description of an Elf (English).
Page 11 - 12 days of Christmas puzzle (Maths & Comprehension).
Page 12 - Four operations word problems (Maths).
Page 13 - Unscramble words (English).
Page 14 - Word Search (English).
Page 15 - Colour the stained glass window & write a summary of the scene (English).
Page 16 - Word Search (English).
PLEASE NOTE: While I have written and created some of the resources in this document, others have been found on Google and in other TES documents therefore I do not own copyright and copyright belongs to the creators of those individual worksheets. I have gathered these together in a booklet and added my own worksheets for which I do own the copyright. Thank you.
A fantastic resource to go alongside the youtube video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryu1JZiSbHo).
I have included screenshots from the video to retell the story as well as a word bank including characters, quotes from the poem, setting descriptions and descriptive phrases.
A fantastic lesson to introduce and clarify the story of The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes.
A sheet based on the video The Piano by Aidan Gibbons (for free on the Literacy Shed).
This resource enables the children to generate words they can use in their writing based on scenes from the video.
Can be easily differentiated by moving or removing columns.
This is a fantastic lesson to get practical.
The photos should be printed and laminated and then hidden in some manner. Preferably, hidden in sand to become a true archaeological dig, however they could also be hidden around the school or even just distributed throughout the classroom.
Children will find an artifact, draw it, guess what it was used for and then use research or Google reverse image search to find what the item actually was.
Makes a brilliant practical lesson with many possibilities.
Note: All artifact images have been collated from a Google image search in order to make reverse image search accurate. Consequently, the copyright of these images remains with the individual or organisation.
This is a great resource I have used with my Year 5 group, but would work well as SAT’s revision or as individual teaching elements in LKS2 or as a recap of skills in KS3.
The Murder Mystery consists of five challenges based on five different SPAG areas. The children must follow the instructions on each challenge to find a clue. Each clue helps to eliminate people from the suspect list. A notebook file is included with examples of each style of challenge in order to check understanding before the children begin each task.
The task begins with a story about a murder in a sleepy village and asks the children to help solve the case.
Included in this set of resources is:
Instructions for the teacher.
A story introducing the event.
The suspect list.
Five clues** (with all of the answers). **
A self-assessment tool to use at the end of the unit of work.
A bright, colourful Notebook file which guides through each challenge and includes examples.
A lesson plan.
SPAG skills covered by this resource include:
Clue 1: Full stops and Capital Letters.
Clue 2: Nouns, Adjectives and Verbs.
Clue 2: Commas
Clue 4: Subordinating and Co-ordinating conjunctions.
Clue 5: Speech Punctuation.
This works brilliantly in mixed ability groups or by individual groups of pupils. Higher ability pupils relish the challenge of investigating for themselves whereas some lower ability or SEN children will need support. It can be used across one (or a series of) lessons or as a weekly starter/plenary/SPAG task which can extend the ‘whodunit’ tension across an entire half term.
Here is a set of differentiated resources which can be used for all abilities.
There is a HAP, MAP, LAP and SEN resource.
Children need to join the sentence to the matching adverbial phrase.
There is also a word bank sheet for children to use with their own writing.
As a class we watched the Prince of Egypt (available on Netflix) as part of our Egyptian/R.E. lessons.
We then discussed the power of prayer (link to R.E.). The children examined each scene in the storyboard and wrote a short prayer underneath that the character may say at that time.
Alternatively, the pictures could be used to sequence the events in the story.
Image 1: Mother putting Moses in the river to save his life.
Image 2: Moses seeing the treatment of the slaves.
Image 3: Moses begging his brother to let the slaves go.
Image 4: Family preparing a house with lambs blood over the door.
Image 5: Moses just about to part the sea.
Image 6: Moses looking forward to the future at the end of the movie.
Here we have 6 addition word problems. I have split each one so they can be cut and stuck into books easily.
These are 2 digit add 1 digit, however could be quickly adapted to suit any numbers.
There is also a challenge question at the end to extend those children who finished early.
This is an extract from the cat in the hat with 7 comprehension questions including literal retrieval, inference, multiple choice and reasoning.
I am using this for a lower ability intervention group, however it would suit any KS1 group or lower ability KS2 group.
I have included a title and image too.
This is a board game using the first few paragraphs of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. The children roll a dice and move counters around the board. If they get a question correct, they may remain on the square. If their partner disagrees and can prove it they go back to the previous square.
An engaging way to explore guided reading skills.
This is a set of five texts which can be used during shared/guided reading sessions. Each text includes literal retrieval as well as ‘find and copy’ style questions and interpretation questions.
The children should be given between 20 and 30 minutes to complete the questions therefore meaning their is time left to review the answers as a group/class.
Within a whole class, the higher ability children can be given an initial task to complete, such as dictionary work, while the remainder of the class begin their text. After ten minutes the higher ability children then begin their text. This means all children should complete their work at the same time.
All texts are aimed at Upper Key Stage 2, however could be accessible by confident Year 4 children or some Key Stage 3 children.
Please note: I do not own the copyright to any of the texts used within these worksheets. Copyright for the original texts remains with the individual authors.