I am a primary school teacher uploading my resources and lessons that I make! I really appreciate feedback and reviews and I hope you find them useful!
I am a primary school teacher uploading my resources and lessons that I make! I really appreciate feedback and reviews and I hope you find them useful!
What is a Carbon Footprint?
A carbon footprint is the total amount of greenhouse gases (especially carbon dioxide) released into the atmosphere as a result of human activities.
Examples of activities that increase it:
Driving petrol/diesel cars
Flying
Using electricity from fossil fuels
Eating meat
Buying new clothes often
Visuals: Icons or images of cars, planes, factories, meat, and electricity.
REAch 2 Carbon Reduction Efforts
Overview:
REAch 2 is working to reduce its carbon footprint by using energy-efficient systems, promoting recycling, and encouraging sustainable practices in schools.
Student Engagement:
What questions would you ask someone from REAch 2 about their efforts?
Space for students to write interview questions.
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Reduce: Use less turn off lights, avoid waste.
Reuse: Use items again water bottles, bags.
Recycle: Turn waste into new products paper, plastic, cans.
How it helps: Less energy is used, fewer resources are needed, and fewer emissions are produced.
Planting Trees
Video: How Trees Help
Take notes while watching. What do trees do for the planet?
Key idea: Trees absorb CO 2 and release oxygen.
Why Trees Alone Are not Enough
Trees take time to grow.
They can not absorb all the CO 2 we produce.
We must also reduce how much CO 2 we create.
Lifestyle changes are essential (e.g., using less energy, eating less meat).
Reducing Energy Use
List all the electrical items you use at home/school.
Reflection Questions:
Can you turn them off when not in use?
Do you leave lights or devices on?
Could you use less heating or air conditioning?
Key message: Every small action helps reduce fossil fuel use.
School Walkabout Activity
Instructions:
Walk around the school.
Look for ways to reduce energy use and waste.
Examples:
Lights left on?
Computers on standby?
Could we plant trees or recycle more?
What changes could we suggest?
Guided Reading questions for Ice TRap by Meredith Hooper and M.P Robertson
2 weeks of Guided Reading lessons aimed for UKS2.
Covers retrieval, inference, vocabulary, language, explanation and summary.
Y3 - Plants second unit
Children will explore the part that flowers play in the life cycle of flowering plants, including pollination, seed formation and seed dispersal.
Learning Outcomes:
Lesson 1 - To identify parts of a flower
Lesson 2 - To understand how seeds are formed
Lesson 3 - To understand how seeds are dispersed
Lesson 4 - To describe the life cycle of a flowering plant
Assessment
Lesson 1 - Forces
Push and Pull Forces
Activities
Chn to discuss what a force is.
Chn to sort cards into actions/objects that use a push force or pull force or both.
Does the force stop or start motion?
Chn to complete a Venn diagram identifying actions/objects that use push/pull/both.
Lesson 2 - investigation friction
WALT investigate the effects of friction on different surfaces
Activity
Chn to plan and set up investigation to see which surfaces generate the most friction.
Chn to make predictions about which surface will cause the most friction.
Chn to evaluate their findings after conducting investigation.
Lesson 3 = WALT sort magnetic and non-magnetic materials
Chn to understand what a magnet is and what a magnetic field is. Chn to use term attract to describe. Chn to investigate and sort materials/objects according to whether that are magnetic/non-magnetic.
Lesson 4 - WALT explore magnetic poles
Activity
Chn to understand what attract and repel mean and north and south poles.
Chn to investigate using two magnets, exploring the two poles of a magnet and which attract and which repel.
Chn to use a bar magnet to create a compass which children
Lesson 5
WALT explain that magnets attract some materials
Chn to create and play a game using magnetic force (e.g. maze or racing using magnetism)
Chn to explain how their games work with the use of the magnet. Chn to evaluate their game.
Passive Voice Game
Aim of the game: capture as many locations as possible!
To do this you must roll a dice to move a space, you cannot go diagonally!
When you land on a location click on its number. This will take you to a slide with an active voice sentence.
To mark the space off of the map you must turn the active sentence into passive! If you lose you do not get the location and your turn ends.
To recognise the characteristics of the world’s oceans.
Skills Starter: Locating latitude lines
Label continents, oceans, equator, tropics.
Recap of water cycle – what do the rivers flow into? Use world map to look at this.
Mini Quiz – multiple choice
What is the percentage of ocean on Earth? 71%
How deep is the ocean?
Difference between terrestrial and marine.
Ellen McCarthur – Talk about knowledge of currents, tides, weather
Task:
Plan a route around the world’s Oceans by following the currents.
Learning Outcomes:
• To recognise the characteristics of the world’s oceans
• To identify the layers of the ocean
• To recognise the adaptation of marine species to their
environment
• To investigate a marine area and the impact of tourism
• To identify the impacts of overfishing and the dangers of plastic in the ocean on marine life.
Vocabulary:
Algae
Anemone
Bioluminescent
Coral
Environmentalist
Mariana Trench
Midnight zone
Plankton
Sunlight zone1
The Abyss
Trenches
Twilight zone
WALT Interpret current trends in global emissions.
Lesson Vocabulary:
binding
peak
Multilateral
Lesson:
Start by looking at maps/data of the arctic.
Ask the children what emissions are; where do they come from? What impact do they have?
Do a climate quiz to refresh knowledge and identify gaps
What is the Paris agreement?
Explain the following:
The Paris Agreement is a legally binding international treaty on climate change. It was adopted by 196 Parties at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP21) in Paris, France, on 12 December 2015. It entered into force on 4 November 2016.
Its overarching goal is to hold “the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels” and pursue efforts “to limit the temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels.”
Explain that today we will look at how countries are doing regarding reducing their emissions.
Use the booklet with COâ‚‚ emissions - Our World in Data
To explore world data regarding emissions. There are many useful representations of the data; children answer the questions.
Plenary
 Thinking About Why
Why do you think China’s CO₂ emissions have gone up so much?
Why might the UK or Germany be making less COâ‚‚ now than before?
How does using more factories or cars affect COâ‚‚ levels?
Looking Ahead
What do you think might happen if countries keep making more COâ‚‚?
weather.
What could countries do to help reduce COâ‚‚ emissions?
Topic Focus: Flint, Fire and Forage
LO: To understand the three main periods in the Stone Age
Resources included:
Time line link for yr3 history.
Starter activity sheets.
Research sheets with matching worksheet for adaptive teaching.
Guidance on slides.