Rainy days can be fun when youâre being the rain yourself in a punchy action rhyme, and thinking up sounds and âdoing-wordsâ to say and write - especially when writing them on an umbrella! Children who canât write yet can colour the many-sectioned umbrella and contribute verbally. There are 2 short rhymes - actions provided - and 1 writing sheet with accompanying Guide for use/lesson plan.
This resource supports Literacy, Expressive Arts & Design, Understanding the World (seasons and weather) and Physical Development.
Rhymes are original, designs hand-drawn - home produced. PDFs.
Hereâs my poem âWhat is a Cloudâ (published): https://youtu.be/EOKVIktMh10
Sea-themed haiku poetry - lesson plan, including 3 frames with gaps to fill, 3 starter lines, information about haiku and how they work, warm-up tips, and a whirl of ocean thoughts to spur discussion and writing ideas.
The sea has wonderful potential as a poetic theme, possessing such a wealth of features and variables, including many contradictory ones: it can be both deep and shallow, warm and freezing, colourful or grey as iron, gentle or savage. Itâs fresh, yet ancient, fun, yet formidable. It offers up a kaleidoscope of colours, sounds and moods. A haiku looks so small and simple, yet it can convey any concept you like, with impact.
For more themes, see my Trees, Birds, Butterfly, and Dragon Haiku sheets too.
Bring fun and laughter into your space studies with this two-page, quick-fire roll of crazy, snappy rhymes about aliens, rockets, stars and more! Most are couplets, with a few 4-line verses too, and all are bonkers! Theyâll inspire variations and brand new rhymes from your class, boosting their literacy skills.
The rhymes are my own, and Iâve used some in my space poetry sessions.
TIPS for class rhymes - I recommend starting with âspaceâ, eliciting a list of single words that rhyme with it to write below. Then fill up the line leading up to âspaceâ, e.g. I saw an alien up in space, and finally think up a line to end with your rhyming word, e.g. She was doing up her lace. Have fun!
**SEE ALSO ** - PLANET poetry frame (Yrs 2-4) - /teaching-resource/planet-poetry-frame-ys-2-4-12018025 + Planet picture-poem frame (KS2) - /teaching-resource/planet-picture-poem-frame-ks2-guidance-sheet-11886984
A class rhyme about space will bring your lesson to life.
This list of relevant rhyming words, together with the example rhyming couplets on the next page, will provide all the back-up you need. There are plenty of other rhyming words (and near-rhyming ones) to think up too, and any number of ways to write your verses, but these suggestions will provide a solid starting point to branch out from.
Recommended: read out some of the verses first, to give your class an idea of what rhyming couplets are like and how fun and varied they can be. Then read out and write up a selection of the rhyming words, inviting others too, to spur and guide ideas. Next, read out one of the first lines offered, and either invite word alternatives for variation, or ask for a different second line from the one given here. Try some more together, drawing on these resources as need be, then let your class have a go independently, or in pairs or groups, with help as needed.
This 4-pack bundle will enthuse your juniors and able Yr 2s, as they dream up ideas about space, planets and aliens to express with similes on these attractive sheets. Contents: planet poetry frame (easier and harder versions + teacher guide for harder), alien fun sheet, and rhyme bank with example couplets for class verses on the theme.
An imaginary castle can be any sort you like - fairy-tale pink or iron grey, for instance, so your children can have fun with this sheet, thinking what their castle could be like as well as thinking up effective similes for them. The two blank lines at the end are for totally free expression. Some children might like to add further similes, others might like to add a warning, or a comment about the castleâs inhabitants, or a rounding-off rhyme, or even a metaphor (the castle is a âŠ). The example sheet can be read out to demonstrate the simile concept and trigger ideas. Recommended for lower juniors, and older writers as a starting point for individual poem-crafting.
Book news -
âSQUEAK! SQUAWK! ROAR!, Amazing Animal Poemsâ was published by Otter-Barry Books in January 2025.
âBrilliant resource for schoolsâ- School Reading List.
Which of the eight given sound-words fits which slot? Thatâs the simple challenge here. Eight separate lines of prose are given below them, each with a gap for one, but which? Thereâs a blank line at the end, with an invitation to write a sentence containing onomatopoeia independently.
These 3 punchy rhymes bring the past alive. Their titles are: Who Lived in the Castle?, Bowing and Curtseying, and My Castle is Old. Each contain rhyme and rhythm, while offering scope for alternative words to be slotted in (notes below provide ideas for these). There is also scope for acting-out, adding sound effects and enhancing with percussion. Suggestions for all of these are provided. They serve to prepare children for writing about castles, also enriching their vocabulary, developing their sense of rhyme and rhythm, and providing a window on the past. In addition, they promote physical development: the actions involved are fun and imagination-triggering, encouraging creative expression and physical exertion.
The rhymes and illustrations are my own.
3 sheets in total -PDF.
Autumn leaves picture poem activities. Writing and colouring sheets for all stages from Reception to Ys 2-3. Describing words, similes, movement words and more are invited on these beautiful, inspiring, leafy sheets. Supports seasonal study and literacy together.
Warm up tip: combine with outdoor fun watching leaves blowing off trees and gathering fallen ones. Examine, discuss and launch them together, then fly and spin like leaves yourselves, building language and imagery as you go.
Very popular in my workshops.
This guided **âStormy Seaâ writing sheet is an exciting!
With video How-to.
Children love writing their simile ideas for a stormy sea on these wavy lines, as confirmed time and again in my Stormy Sea poetry sessions.
Suggestions for teacher introduction and prompts are given in the accompanying guide sheet. the repeated phrase - The sea went⊠is followed by a wavy line for action words and description (rolling, roaring, wildly charging like an angry beast on the loose?). The poem ends calmly, inviting a simile for a peaceful sea. Yrs 3-6.
**SEE ALSO - ** TREASURE MAP alliteration game - /teaching-resource/treasure-map-alliteration-game-yr1-6-guide-for-use-11887395 (popular)
PLUS - SEA SIMILES (summer sea) -** /teaching-resource/sea-similes-poem-frame-illustrated-12100413** .
Watch out for the dragon - but what sort? Scary? Crazy? Hot and spiky? Red, green, wild, funny?
Your Reception and KS1 children will be eager to express their ideas, both out loud and in writing. Never mind if their word is hard to spell - they can sound it out and give it a go, building confidence in their writing skills as they go. Not that dragons have to be scary, of course - âWatch out for the kind or friendly dragon!â would be equally valid - as in: donât miss him/her. The gender can also be changed. There are 3 versions here, of graded difficulty, the last inviting describing words for spikes and scales too, and ideas for the dragonâs favourite food.
NB (1) Please note that my hand-drawn illustrations are sketchy. However, in my experience, children donât mind or notice this.
NB (2) Older/abler Yr 2s will welcome further lines, perhaps inviting similes, e.g. Heâs as hot as a⊠or [colour] ⊠as a. These could be squeezed in or written on the back, or the sheet could be manually adapted. More advanced versions coming here in due course.
Exciting, illustrated writing frames supporting Journeys, Explorers, Transport, Space, Ocean and World topics, harder and easier versions. Children write in first person, as the explorer, describing their imaginary expedition: destination, means of transport, clothes, equipment, dangers (3 invited), and how theyâre feeling. An activity to get everyone on board, fired up and thinking, also developing literacy skills.
A lively little story brings meaning to grammar here. When to write âitâsâ and when to leave out the apostrophe and just put âitsâ? Thatâs the burning question in this fun activity. The plentiful illustrations, the large, soft-blue script and the engaging narrative all add to the appeal, and the key words stand out bright and clear in bold red for simplicity. A summary of the grammar rule involved is given at the top of the two-sheet resource, with example phrases for both âitâsâ and âitsâ. A few answers and tips are also given at the end for extra guidance. Children are then invited to compose two sentences of their own (lines provided), to illustrate âitâsâ and âitsâ, to consolidate the concept. Best for Yrs 5 and 6 and able Yr 4s.
Story: Rashidâs robot has gone crazy, but Ella finds a solution - recharging it! Seeing the robot enjoying its âteaâ, they go off to have their own - including ice cream sundae!
This resource comprises 3 sheets: a planet-themed picture-poem simile writing frame for KS2, a simpler version for younger/less confident writers, and a guidance sheet for use, with examples of full poems and suggestions for development.
Children have the fun of writing their poems on a planet - or planet-shaped frame. This fires enthusiasm and ideas for the writing task, which involves description and similes, and whatever individual writers may like to add. Theyâll also need to invent a name for their planet. The possibilities for description are wide open, as the two examples on the guide sheet show, so creativity can take off in this activity. A simpler and harder example is provided on the guide sheet, for Yrs 3/4 and 5/6 respectively.
This home-devised, hand-illustrated sheet has proved popular and rewarding in my poetry workshops.
This 5-sheet resource comprises a castle picture-poem, easier/harder, and a castle-characters picture-poem in 3 graded versions.
These are attractive sheets with lively, hand-drawn illustrations of old, cobwebby, crumbling castles, the graded ones featuring characters such as a ghost, king and queen. Children have the fun of writing directly onto the castles - a particularly vivid experience in the âMy castle isâ activity. Describing words are invited on each sheet.
These writing frames are self-explanatory, having starter phrases followed by thick lines for writing, with increasing opportunities for imaginative, expressive input on the graded character sheets.
For âMy castle isâ, prompt for describing words such as: old, crumbly, tall, spooky, dark, haunted, spidery, cold, windy, grand, royal, huge, hard, rat-infested, ghostly, scary, massive, golden, fine, splendid, stone, rich, ancient, mysterious, creepy, abandoned, damp, shadowy, candle-lit, and ruined. On the Castle Characters graded sheets, encourage a range of personality attributions for the ghost, king and queen, such as kind, mean, cruel, crazy, gentle, friendly, and various colours. The ghost might be see-through, floaty, spooky or dancing.
This is principally a Literacy resource, though it also offers scope for expressive art through colouring, and an intriguing window onto the past.
This is an exciting, fascinating picture-poem frame, in 3 variations of graded difficulty. It will inspire your 5-7 year-olds to get dreaming and writing, drawing on passive vocabulary to express their buzzing imagination. Their castle might be dark, damp and gloomy, or grand, golden and magical, or ancient, crumbling and haunted. Itâs as old as âŠ, and as [__] as __ .
What will you find inside? Treasure? A sword? A secret message? Who lives there? A lonely ghost? A fiery dragon? A bossy king? And what does he/she like to do? Thereâs scope for drama, humour and mystery here. Recommended for Yrs 1-2.
Supports Poetry, Literacy and History.
See my other Castle-themed resources too.
Children will be motivated to sharpen up their own spelling with these fun quizzes. They involve differentiating between words that sound the same but are spelt differently, and words the rhyme - or look as though they rhyme. The 2-page resource includes a checking/sorting challenge and an odd-one-out challenge, with opportunities for children to think up their own spelling quiz questions too.
Ideal for spelling reinforcement, revision and enrichment, and handy for time-fillers and lesson enhancers.
Haiku poems are easy and fun to write when you know how, and your class will love the syllable-counting fun, too. This 2-page, 10-step guide will see you through the process of introducing the format, practising it with the class and helping them produce their own haiku. There are also suggestions for topic, approach and follow-on poetry-writing. I use the process myself in my workshops, and am always amazed by the fascinating and powerful lines produced.
Recommended for Year 5 upwards - ideally Year 6 and above.
This intriguing poetry-writing theme, and the accessible, attractive worksheets, will motivate writers of all ability to think up imaginative description and similes. The Ideas Sheet, titled âCity Lightsâ, is fun to use, with a spider diagram and scattered lines for adjectives and images. The poem frame, titled âNight Lightsâ, has plentiful space for writing, with clear, supporting structure, though able writers may prefer to use it as a launch pad for an individual approach. Both sheets are excitingly illustrated, with details to spark ideas.
The Guide provides prompt suggestions for each and development ideas for the poem. The resource is home-produced and has been successfully used with Yr 3-6 classes.
Black and white, PDF.
Halloween fun! A sheet of magic spell rhyming couplets to complete - all guided towards happy, innocent wishes.
Four couplet frames + two blank lines for an independent one.
Example:
Wind, rain, snow and sun -
Let today be __ and fun!
I have a debut book of poems:
âSQUEAK! SQUAWK! ROAR! Amazing Animal Poemsâ, published by Otter-Barry Books.
âA brilliant resource for schoolsâ - School Reading List.