Skip to content
⭐️ Buy one Get One Half Price on ALL Schemes of Work ⭐️
⭐️ Buy one Get One Half Price on ALL Schemes of Work ⭐️

At the Farm

Original price £10.00 - Original price £10.00
Original price
£10.00
£10.00 - £10.00
Current price £10.00
SKU G12CS40110
Key Stage 1Geography Skills and FieldworkHuman GeographyPhysical GeographyGeographyYear 1Year 2

Take a trip to the countryside with your class and explore a working farm in this fun scheme of work for KS1. Find out about arable, livestock and dairy farms and the difference between them, before taking a closer look at a fictional farm that does a little of everything! Your class will learn about the features of a farm and use a map to navigate around a farm, as well as thinking about the differences between life in the country and life in a busy town.

Unlock huge savings with a PlanBee Subscription

Instant access to our entire library of resources from just £6.49 a month. Find out more

 
#TheCompleteSeries5lessons

With lesson plans, slides, differentiated worksheets, maps, challenges and much more, these Year 1 and 2 'At the Farm' lessons provide all you need to teach a variety of geographic ideas through stimulating and fun-filled activities.

 

#Lesson1WhatandWhy

The first lesson in this series starts by thinking about what a farm actually is and why farms are important. It looks at different types of farms, namely arable, livestock and dairy, and what happens on each one. It also gives your class the chance to think about what different foods we get from the different types of farms from chips to chipolatas!

 

 

What's included:

  • Lesson plan
  • Slides
  • Activity ideas
  • Differentiated worksheets
  • Description cards
#Lesson2FarmFeatures

This lesson explores a fictional farm and looks at its features. Your class will find out about the barns, farmhouse, office, farm shop, pig sty, hen house, crop fields, pastures and more as they take a walk through the farm. By the end of the lesson, your class will be more familiar with how farms work and the vocabulary needed to describe them.

 

 

What's included:

  • Lesson plan
  • Slides
  • Activity ideas
  • Differentiated worksheets
  • Poster template
#Lesson3MapsandKeys

Now that your class know what kind of features they will find on the farm, they will learn how to navigate around the farm using a map. After looking at compass directions and how they can help describe positions on a map, your class will have the chance to use a map of the farm to describe where places are in relation to each other. They will also find out how keys on maps can make them easier to read and how to construct them.

 

 

What's included:

  • Lesson plan
  • Slides
  • Activity ideas
  • Differentiated worksheets
  • Differentiated farm maps
  • Tractor pieces
  • Challenge cards
#Lesson4FarmSeasons

What happens on a farm during the different seasons? By the end of the lesson, your class will be able to answer this question as they find out about the events and changes on a farm in spring, summer, autumn and winter. They will find out how animal care changes through the year and look at what farmers do in each season to ensure that their crops are taken care of.

 

 

What's included:

  • Lesson plan
  • Slides
  • Activity ideas
  • Differentiated season wheels
  • Season wheel cover
#Lesson5TownandCountry

The final lesson in this series asks your class to help someone who has never visited a farm to prepare for a visit. They will think about how life in a busy town and a country farm are different in terms of both the physical and human features found in each, and what this means for the people who live in each.

 

 

What's included:

  • Lesson plan
  • Slides
  • Activity ideas
  • Differentiated worksheets
  • Sentence cards
  • Word cards
  • End of unit quiz

Free Overview (Medium-Term Plan)

Download a free overview to support your teaching of this scheme of work.

Free Assessment Grid

Download a free, editable assessment grid to support your teaching of this scheme of work.

Curriculum Objectives covered
  • KS1 - use basic geographical vocabulary to refer to key physical features, including: beach, cliff, coast, forest, hill, mountain, sea, ocean, river, soil, valley, vegetation, season and weather.
  • KS1 - use basic geographical vocabulary to refer to key human features, including: city, town, village, factory, farm, house, office, port, harbour and shop
  • KS1 - use simple compass directions (North, South, East and West) and locational and directional language [for example, near and far; left and right], to describe the location of features and routes on a map
  • KS1 - use aerial photographs and plan perspectives to recognise landmarks and basic human and physical features; devise a simple map; and use and construct basic symbols in a key

Customer Reviews

Based on 5 reviews