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English year 5 and 6 The Mysteries of Harris Burdick Planning and Powerpoints Literacy year 5
A great collection for teaching this interesting topic.
You get powerpoints and planning.
Sample :
Punctuate sentences accurately, including using speech marks and apostrophes.
Use commas to mark clauses.
Group and classify words according to their type and meaning.
Read a variety of texts, commenting on the authorās choice of vocabulary.
Construct sentences which are punctuated correctly; including the use of commas, speech marks and apostrophes.
Use a range of connectives to join sentences.
Experiment with complex sentences.
Whole Class Shared Learning
Discuss pronouns (homework)
Define each type of word: Noun, adjective, verb and adverb. Build up a sentence as we go.
Show the children a picture on the whiteboard of a horse galloping and of a lightning bolt. Children to write down 3 (LA) or 5(MA and HA) important nouns from the picture. Share. On the left of the noun, children to write an adjective to modify or describe the noun. Share. After the noun, children to write a verb and then an adverb to qualify the verb.
e.g. The black horse galloped elegantly along the beach.
Praise the children on yesterdayās literacy work ā they showed knowledge of the function of nouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs (HA showed knowledge of the difference between common, proper and pro nouns).
Children to name a range of punctuation ā I record on the board (I do not add to it at this point).
Ask volunteers to illustrate uses of the punctuation named. Look on the punctuation pyramid ā have we named any L5 punctuation? This is what we should be aiming at all the time.
Children to have a variety of sentences to up level punctuation on their whiteboards.
Come back to āThe Mysteries of Harris Burdickā. Read through all of the captions and talk about āreadingā the illustration. Allow children time to talk about the āmysteryā ā what do they think happened to Harris Burdick?
Choose a picture from āThe Mysteriesā¦ā and list all of the questions which it provokes. What do children think of the pictures? Do the captions answer any of the questions?
Talk about the settings in the pictures ā often they are recognisable, familiar settings where things are not as they seem. Explain that we would call this āStories in a familiar settingā.
Model the task.
Use PPT to study speech punctuation.
Use the pictures from āThe Mysteriesā¦ā to write some possible dialogue.
Model possible conversations, including synonyms for said and adverbs plus adverbial clauses. With correct punctuation.
Look at some of the pictures from āThe Mysteries ā¦ā
Think / discuss some of the characters in the pictures. Use adjectives to describe them ā give them names. From the pictures come up with verbs to describe what they are doing then add adverbs and adverbial clauses.

Literacy planning year 6 Tuesday by David Wiesner
couple of lesson plans and some worksheets.
Sample: Share L.O and STS with the children.
Introduce the cover for the new book ā what do you predict will happen in the story? I predict thatā¦ā¦.because
Why do you think the book is called Tuesday? Has the time got anything to do with it? I think that it is called Tuesday becauseā¦.
Give children images taken from the book ā what order should they go in? encourage groups to discuss the order as a group ā explain that there is no right or wrong answer because they are predicting.
Invite children to share the order they chose and justify their choices.
CT model writing the story using the order they have chosen and time connectives. Model THINK, SAY, WRITE, CHECK method for writing. Remind children of noun phrases to add interesting detail. Encourage MA children to use complex sentences.
Resources:
Tuesday images
Sentence starter flash cards (differentiated)
Time flash cards
Images for books
Share LO and STS.
What do we know about the story so far? What are the main events? Children to share their work from previous lesson.
Watch:
How has the order changed from what you predicted? Arrange key images from the story in chronological order on the working wall.
Language starters to retell the story ā āSo far I have discovered thatā¦ā āFirst, then, after thatā¦ā Whilst x was⦠y wasā¦āWhat is inference? Where have you seen it before? Why is it important with this text? Establish that it has no words so we must assume what is happening to tell the story.
Use the PowerPoint to tell the story as a class.
Share L.O. and vocabulary ā where are we on the learning journey.
Ink Waster ā Jotters ā 2 minutes to write down everything you remember about the story.
Key Questions
When did it happen? Where did it happen? Did anyone see anything?
Display an image ā Can you explain what is happening? Partner talk using language ladder openers to support ā children to share with class.
Give groups of children images from the story and time connective sentence starters ā children to sort the pictures into the correct sequence and use time connectives to retell.
Explain written task.
What is a noun phrase? What is an adverbial phrase? How would these be applied to this piece of writing?
CT model writing against STS

Poetry year 4 Two Weeks of Planning Magic Box Kit wright Material
Two weeks Planning. the powerpoint is a sample. Thereās other files in the planning
Great powerpoint on the work of Kit Wright.
The magic box really inspires kids.
Sampl planning Ask children to remind you about what a simile is and discuss why it is effective to use when writing. Explain that today we will be creating some poems of our own by creating some similes. Write āas thin asā on the board and ask everyone to think of very thin things. Push children to think harder past the more obvious objects. Prompt them if necessary āwhat part of an animal is very thin?ā and so on. Write other prompts such as āas tall as, as large as, as hot asā. Draw some circles on the board and write a prompt above them āThe sun is likeā¦ā See how many other things they can think of that are round like the Sun. Turn the circles into objects they suggest. Now encourage children to extend their ideas further.
Explain that today children will be making some simile poems of their own about a monster. List some features of a monster and some adjectives that describe a monster.
HA work alone to create a simile poem about a monster.
MA supported by KB, use a writing skeleton for their poem which has some features already listed.
LA supported by AS, use a writing skeleton for their poem which has the features already listed, make a list of adjectives that might describe a monster.
Read through some of childrenās poems together. Discuss what similes they have used and the effect it has on their writing, why is it more effective?
Can children compare objects?
Can they use adjectives?
Can they extend their own ideas and thinking?
Can they choose effective similes?

Year 4 Literacy Newspapers reports Six weeks short term plans
6 weeks short term plans.
sample
What newspapers and magazines can the pupils name?
What are the articles usually about?
Discuss the purpose of a newspaper.
WALT ā know the features of a newspaper text.
WILF ā good expression
Read through the opening paragraph of a newspaper article. Children to discuss the features and the structure of the opening paragraph.
Newspaper articles have all of the important information in the opening paragraph. The opening paragraph is not overly descriptive. This information includes who, what, when, where, why and how. (It is written this way because most people do not read an entire newspaper article all the way through. So newspaper writers put the most important information at the beginning).
Children wrote learn the opening paragraph of a newspaper article. Firstly as a class, followed by group work.
Recap the features of an opening paragraph of an article. SW ā target group to discuss the features of the article.

1000 Questions on Shopping KS2 Mathematics Money Calculator Use
1000 questions on shopping.
Answers provided.
Pupils have to work out the cost of various food items.
Lots of variations.
Would be good as a homework or calculator use.

Fables Myths Legends planning Powerpoints Year 6 Literacy Welsh legends
Three weeks of plans.
You get powerpoints.
Looks at myths particularly Robin Hood and Welsh legends
You get plenty of resources.
Sample:
Ask the children to TTYP and name some famous legends.
Come back together and discuss (King Arthur, Robin Hood etc).
Ask children what they think are the features of a legend?
Establish that myths and legends are very similar but that Although legends often include mythical beings and supernatural events, their narrative spine is more closely connected to the real world of human history. The events in legends tend to seem more likely and less fictionalised than those in myths.
Legends are usually based on real characters and events, even though these have been richly embellished and exaggerated over time. This gives the narrative an exciting quality because all the events seem to be within the realm of possibility even when the plot has become so widely adapted or updated that it is completely fictional.
The plot of a legend usually focuses on an individual character, a cultural hero or a person respected and remembered (Jason, King Arthur, Robin Hood, William Tell, Roland) but there are also legends about places (Atlantis, Shangri-La), objects (the Holy Grail, the Philosopherās Stone) and legendary animals (the Yeti, Loch Ness monster, Sasquatch, Chupacabra).
Make a checklist for the working wall āFeatures of legendsā to include:
Plot focuses on hero, struggle between hero and villain, journeys, rich vocabulary, imagery, metaphor, a more human story.
Read āRobin Hood: Outlaw with a sense of humourā from Hamilton Trust resources page 9.
Make a list of attributes a hero, villain and side-kick should have in a legend
HA: describe all 3 types of character, include more detail, use complex sentences (with, who, when ā model for children)
MA: write about all 3 characters ā IR to support
LA: make a character description of Robin Hood ā mind map vocabulary first then write 5 good sentences about him.
JS support

Teaching Resources 100 worksheets Coins KS1 Teachers Counting KS1 KS2
I have designed 100 worksheets on coins for primary school children. I have used a variety of coins, a variety of difficulty and a variety of numbers of questions per sheet. Pupils write on the sheets how much it all adds up to. Answer sheets are provided for all worksheets.

The Highwayman Alfred Noyes Teaching Resources Powerpoints Worksheets
Assorted great planning and ideas for the superb poem The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes.
Great powerpoints.
Great ideas and worksheets.
Plenty to get your teeth into and reassemble.
Sample planning :
Introduce children to āThe Highwaymanā. Explain that it is a poem that tells a story involving a highwayman.
They will need to listen carefully as the poem is read, as it uses a lot of āold-fashionedā language. The poem was written by Alfred Noyes and was first published in August 1906.
Read the poem to the class and then children talk with partner about what they have found out about the story.
Come back together and discuss the story told through the poem. How can children tell that this poem was written some time ago?
Make notes on the board about character and story.
Make notes about the Highwaymanās appearance.
Recap on the techniques we use in fiction writing (and make clear again that poetry is a type of narrative) to describe the scene/setting to the reader. What is our main objective? To create an image in the readerās mind. We do this by using the senses ā recap.
Re-read just the first three lines of the poem, ask children to close eyes and visualise the setting as I read it again. Talk about the language and the kind of pictures it created for them.
The wind was a torrent of darkness upon the gusty trees,
The moon was a ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas,
The road was a ribbon of moonlight looping the purple moor,
Can the children see a technique which has been used in each of the three lines? Metaphor. Discuss.
Children to pick out words which evoke the senses:
Darkness, gusty trees, ghostly etc
Recap what we have found out so far about āThe Highwaymanā. What makes it a narrative poem?
Explain childrenās final writing outcome. They are going to use the opening part of āThe Highwaymanā as their inspiration and they are going to write their own poem based on Bess, the Landlordās daughter.
Recap on last lesson ā what is a simile and what is a metaphor?
What are the three nouns which Noyes describes using metaphor? The wind, the moon and the road. Children are also going to use metaphor to describe these, they are then going to use simile to describe Bess waiting for her love.
Explain that todayās planning session is going to focus on the metaphor part of the writing outcome.
Model how to write a metaphor by first mind mapping each item.

Religion Story of the People of God Lots of Planning Catholic Flavour
Lots of great planning.
The unit covers:
Start to understand the structure of the Bible.
Research some different styles of writing found in the Bible.
Discuss some of the important figures in the OT and understand why and how they had a special relationship with God.
Analyse The story of the fall.
Know the story of Cain and Abel.
Relate the story to our relationships with friends and family.
Know the story of Manna from Heaven. (Exodus 16: 1-18)
Understand why God provided for the needs of his people.
Empathise with all involved.
Explain how we can show our love for God through our obedience of the ten commandments.
Sample planning :
Introduce the new unit to the children and explain that, through this five week unit of RE, we will be learning about some of the different styles of literature found in the Bible. We will also be learning about some significant people from the Old Testament and their relationship with God.
Introduce the LO.
Display the word āancestorsā on the board and children to TTYP and discuss the meaning of the word.
Take feedback from class.
Share meaning and address any misconceptions.
Children to think about stories that they know about their family and the ancestors that went before them. Talk about people who research their family tree ā they are researching their ancestors. The people who came before them. Discuss the program āWho do you think you are?ā on BBC 1. Show the opening credits http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vCeWuSgiqHI
Discuss the title of the program. Donāt these celebrities already know who they are? They know their own names, their dates of birth, their parentsā names: what else are they looking for?
Discuss how a knowledge of where we have come from, might help us to understand or plan where we need to go to.
Bring this back to the Bible. The Bible is a library of books which gives us information about our ancestors ā the people of God.
Explain to the children that the Bible contains the story of the Jewish people in the Old Testament and is the foundation of the story of the Christian people in the New Testament.
Revise work from Year 4 about the Bible being a library of books rather than just one book. (Use the ābooks of the Bibleā slide on PPT). Ch to count up how many books in the Bible ā 39 in OT, 27 in NT ā 66 in total

1000 questions Equations Single Variable Mathematics KS2 Algebra
1000 questions with answers on Equations.
Single variables.
Pupils have to work out what y equals.

Autumn Planning Year 5 Literacy ks2 & Aesop Fables Worksheets
Reclaim your Sundays!
Literacy planning for year 5 for the Autumn term.
Plus 108 great close worksheets on Aesopās fables.
Planning covers topics such as Famous Authorsā Plans, Myths, Legends and Fables, Recounts.
You get over 40 mb of material.

Number Sequences Maths 100 Worksheets with Answers
100 worksheets.
100 answer sheets.
At least 10 questions per sheet.
Pupils have to enter the next two numbers in the sequence.
They get harder so that later sheets include decimals and 20 questions per sheet.

Back to School The Piano by Aidan Gibbons Year 6 Literacy Planning
Great planning and powerpoints on this fascinating topic.
sample :
Speaking
⢠Tell a story using notes designed to cue techniques such as repetition, recap and humour
Drama
⢠Reflect on how working in role helps to explore complex issues
Understanding and interpreting texts
⢠Infer writersā perspectives from what is written and from what is implied
⢠Compare different types of narrative and information texts and identify how they are structured
Creating and shaping texts
⢠Reflect independently and critically on their own writing and edit and improve it
⢠Experiment with different narrative forms and styles to write their own stories
Sentence structure and punctuation
⢠Adapt sentence construction to different text-types, purposes and readers
⢠Punctuate sentences accurately, including using speech marks and apostrophes
Understand, analyse and compare several āvisual textsā.
Comment on the technical parts of a visual text.
Write a review using correct format and language.
Whole Class Shared Learning
Guided and Independent Activities:
Start to understand what is meant by a āvisual textā. What do we know so far about narrative writing? Create a list of facts to add to working wall including: fictional, dialogue, opening etc.
Explain to the children briefly, that they are going to watch a short, animated film, entitled āThe Piano.ā Explain also that there is no dialogue or narration; it will be up to the children to decide what the film is about, to answer simple questions, raise some of their own and provide their own explanations for what they see.
Tell the children that theyāre going to watch the film, quietly and without comment at first. Then, watch āThe Pianoā by Aidan Gibbons.
Model completing thinking feeling and speech shapes linked to the narrative.

108 Cloze Exercises Aesop's Fables KS1 KS2 Literacy Greek Roman Myths Aesop
108 cloze exercises on Aesopās Fables.
Great for Literacy lessons. Gives lower ability pupils confidence.
The Cloze worksheet is a standard exercise for improving studentsā understanding of word context.
The student then fills in the words on the worksheet based on an understanding of the sentence and the list of potential words removed from the text.
The cloze procedure is a reading comprehension activity in which words are omitted from a passage and students are required to fill in the blanks. This procedure is incredibly useful in reading instruction because it can be easily done by any teacher and provides valuable reading comprehension information.

Back To School Kensuke's Kingdom Year 4 to 6 Planning and worksheets
Iām now retired from teaching after decades in the classroom.
Iād like to help the younger generation.
One aspect I donāt miss in Sundays. Trying to fill in planning grids that were rarely used or looked at. What a nightmare!
So Iāve put together my teaching plans etc from the various schools I was in.
The zip contains loads. Iāve put a sample in the ordinary download to give you a flavour
Itās mainly to do with Kensukeās Kingdom. But thereās othet stuff too included for free. Thereās stuff on Dolphin Boy, Butterfly boy etc.
Feel free to adapt for your planning grid.
Sample planning :
Recount one event from holiday. Note features and language patterns to list.
Chronological, time connectives, 1st person, past tense, personal views. Write a recount for the Easter holiday. Individual revision task. Focus on organization and links using temporal connective phrases. Personal views.
Introduce ch 1 for Kensukeās Kingdom. Record initial response with prediction. Select examples to show Michaelās feelings. List reasons for and against yourself and family setting off on a round the world sail, Justify relating to evidence selected from the text.
Red: format provided
Gr/Or: list reasons from two places
Bl/Y: form contrasting sentences⦠begin with, āeven thoughā¦ā
Read ch 2. In pairs. How does Mom feel about the trip and Dadās ideas? What is the alternative? 1. Why has Michael decided now to tell his story?
2. Who are the members of Michaelās family?
3. What do the family do together on the weekends? Can you describe how it makes them feel?
4. Why do the family stop sailing?
5. What is the atmosphere like in the house?
6. What happened to Michaelās best friend?
7. What happens to Michaelās father and why?
8. What do you think happens next?
9. Describe the father when they meet up again. What sort of mood is he in?
Read chapter three. List examples of each characterās feelings. How do Mom and Dadās feelings compare.
When Michael and his family first set sail, how many miles a day do they want to do?
How many miles a day do they actually do?
What game do Michaelās parents play?
What do they eat?
What creatures do they see off the coast of Africa?
In November they went to Brazil. Where did they stop?
What did Michael do in Brazil?
What did they do on Christmas Day?
Describe, in your own words, the incident with Stella Artois. Record the incident with Stella as a personal diary entry.
Refer to events in the chapter.
HA: personal style to include worries for the future.
MA: Organise into paragraphs with links
LA: use ed-ing-ly openers.
You get 8.7 mb of stuff so thatās good value imo. In it are lesson plans, powerpoints, questions etc.
Enjoy your Sundays!

Year 5 Poetry Planning Poetic Style ā Valerie Bloom/Pie Corbett
Nice planning :
sample :
Read 3/4 Pie Corbett poems (see list below this plan or plan resources) ā NOT Wings. Discuss the poems read eg which one did you like best and why? Is anything similar about the poems? Focus their attention onto things that are typical of Pie Corbett. Use 3 headings: Subject matter/Style of poem/Language. Discuss each of these (subject matter is what the poem is about eg nature, travelling, observations etc). Style is free verse or strict rhythm/regular or irregular rhyming patterns, use of speech or dialogue etc. Language refers to the vocabulary ā the use of adjectives and descriptions, metaphors or similes eg āI heard the paving slabs groan as they muscled for space.ā (See plan resources.) Start looking at poems of Pie Corbett under these 3 headings. Give chn time to talk in pairs/small groups about each heading and take feedback. Ask chn to come up and scribe some ideas under each heading. Explain that we will now be exploring some of these headings in more detail. Easy
Give chn a selection of Pie Corbett poems. Model reading a couple to the chn. Discuss what was similar or different in terms of the subject matter. Chn to then read some more poems in pairs and start to sort them into groups that are similar and why. Stick the similar poems onto A3 paper and make rough jottings about why they are similar. TD Medium/Hard
Work in pairs or 3s. Take turns to pick a Pie Corbett poem and read it out loud to rest of group. Repeat this until lots of poems have been read. Provide highlighting pens & poetry checklist (plan resources) to guide their discussion. Ask chn to go back over each poem carefully & highlight any language that makes the poem interesting eg adjectives & descriptions. Give chn the metaphor & simile example sheet (plan resources) to refer to and see if they can highlight any of these in another colour. Make sure chn annotate their highlighting with their own comments. Is there anything linking these Pie Corbett poems together? Does he repeat any language techniques? Finally they look at the style of the poems. Is there a regular rhythm in the poems? Do they use speech?

Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare Planning Powerpoint Year 5
Planning to teach Shakespeareās play.
Great powerpoints.
Sample planning :
Begin by introducing the new topic and the learning outcome. We will be studying āolderā literature. Explain that older literature is defined as anything written before 1914 but we are going to look at much older than this!
Show a picture of William Shakespeare: children to TTYP ā
Who is this man?
What is he famous for?
Can you name any of his works?
Come back together and elicit that William Shakespeare was an author ā not of stories but of plays and sonnets (poems). Talk about some of his more famous work and explain that he wrote 38 plays and over 160 sonnets.
Shakespeare was born in 1564 and died in 1616. He produced most of his work between 1589 and 1613 ā why do you think he wrote mostly plays rather than stories? Elicit that he was an actor so he loved the stage and he intended his works to be acted out rather than just read and also because of the times. TV and film were not entertainment options and the majority of people couldnāt read so going to the theatre or watching an outside performance was very popular.
List the main characters on the board, to include:
The Capulets
Juliet
Lady Capulet (Julietās mother)
Lord Capulet (Julietās father and head of the family)
Tybalt (Julietās cousin and enemy of Romeo)
Nurse (Julietās nanny)
Paris (wants to marry Juliet)
The Montagues
Romeo

Year 3 Literacy Planning The Hodgeheg by Dick King Smith
Planning for this interesting book.
sample
Show chn the front cover of The Hodgeheg and say that we will be working on this book. Read blurb on back then ask chn what type of story they think this is? Establish that it is a Quest or Adventure story with a problem, journey and resolution. Ask chn what else the blurb tells us and note their ideas for Working Display notes. (E.g. the main character is Max who is a hedgehog, he has a family and he wants to cross the roadā¦). Explain that today we are going to be Sentence Detectives as we read the story. We are looking for sentences which have adverbs in them. Revise the fact that an adverb modifies a verb, telling us how something was done: She went happily to see her granny. Develop this to talk about fronted adverbials, phrases at the start of a sentence which act like an adverb, telling us how, where or when something is done or happened, e.g. In total silence, the girls tiptoed along the corridor. Comprehension 1/ Grammar 1 Display extract from Hodgeheg (see resources). Read it out loud together. Briefly revise the rules for writing dialogue: (1) Speech marks around direct speech; (2) new speaker = new line;
(3) Punctuation (question marks, exclamation marks, commas, full stops) that goes within the speech marks.
Point out that if the dialogue finishes but itās not the end of a sentence, then a comma goes at the end of the dialogue within the speech marks. See resources for marked up example. Then make-up physical signs for each type of punctuation, e.g. speech marks = hands held up, 2 fingers on each hand bent; comma = one finger drawing it in the air; full stop = pointing gesture, etc. Draw a map of the passage together, (look at the example map resource to guide you). Ask chn for suggestions for each element. Spoken language 1

Free Mega English Christmas Wordsearch Year 1 to Year 6
Tons more great resources at Auntieannieās shop.
I specialise in Primary school stuff mainly.
Please have a look.
Tons of Literacy and Maths lessons and resources.
Religion a speciality too with a smattering of Humanities.
You can get planning for indivisual years and terms too.
Bundles offer incredible value. Lots of self made sheets.
Thanks for looking!

Freebie Free 5 Worksheets Maths Shopping Arithmetic KS1 KS2 Money Counting
A freebie.
If you like these I have 100 for sale in my shop.
I have designed 5 worksheets on Money and Shopping for primary school children. I have used a variety of items, a variety of difficulty and a variety of numbers of questions per sheet. Pupils write on the sheets the total cost. e.g. a milkshake costs £2.90 a hot dog £1.65 How much would 2 milkshakes and 3 hotdogs cost? There is plenty there to reinforce the work done in the classroom. Good for extra homework or additional work for the bright ones. Answer sheets are provided for all worksheets.