Perfect for the end of the year as a fun and reflective project, or at the start of the year to help you get to know your new class! This pack includes everything you need: detailed lesson plans, printable resources, differentiated activities, and ready-to-use lesson slides.
This scheme of work is also part of our This is Me English Pack.
In this initial lesson on non-chronological reports your class will explore some unknown technical vocabulary that is used in non-fiction writing. They will discuss the different strategies they may use to determine the meaning of a word using the context as well as replacing the word with synonymous vocabulary to see if they fit.
This lesson relies on the children discussing the vocabulary used by the author and thinking carefully about the change in meaning and/or effect when we replace words in a sentence. They will need to justify and reason their choices for synonyms and come up with a best fit scenario when investigating an unknown word.
This lesson comes with everything you need including lesson slides, detailed planning, differentiated activity ideas and printable resources.
What's included:
- Lesson Plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated worksheets
- Differentiated report cards
This lesson focuses on reviewing the features of this genre and identifying them in example texts. The children will identify the features, and evaluate the effectiveness of their use in different examples. They will assess the texts as a whole and suggest different ways they would improve the use of different structural features as well as grammatical features.
The included lesson slides in this lesson pack help you to lead discussions around this genre and how to create an effective non-chronological report. The example texts provided offer examples of both good and bad uses of the features and encourage the children to think critically about the writing.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Worksheet
- Model text
- Example text cards
- Feature checklist
This lesson takes a closer look at the passive voice and how it is used in non-chronological reports. The children are challenged to identify the active and passive voice and change sentences into the alternative.
The activity ideas provided challenge your children to select a sentence and identify if it is the active or passive voice before changing it between the two voices. Alternatively, the children can identify active sentences in a non-chronological report extract and decide if the sentence sounds better in the active or passive voice, giving reasons for their choices.
The variety of differentiated activities provided in this lesson pack will make sure you have an appropriate activity for your class to explore the passive voice. All the resources you need are provided along with answer sheets to save you time!
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Active sentence cards
- Passive sentence cards
- Sentence cards
- Active/passive help sheet
- Extract card
- Worksheet
In this lesson the children have the opportunity to show off what they know about their favourite hobby or topic. The aim is to collect and record all the information they know about their chosen hobby in one place, ready to use in their non-chronological reports. In order to become experts, the children will also have the opportunity to research information to fill any knowledge gaps they may have.
The lesson slides included in this pack provide you with tailored questions to draw out the discussions about the hobbies as well as discussions about effective research. These ideas can then be used by the children when collecting information on the lesson's worksheets.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Model text
- Differentiated worksheets
In this lesson the children will create the plans for the non-chronological reports they will write in the following lesson. They will look closely at the information they collected and decide on the subheadings they will use to organise and guide their reader.
Using the 'Fancy Something Different?' (FSD?) activity, encourage your class to create a double page spread in their books for their report, using scrap paper to map out and organise information into sections.
This complete lesson comes with a detailed lesson plan, differentiated activity ideas, lesson slides and printable accompanying resources.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Information sheet
- Challenge card
- Worksheet
In this final non-chronological report lesson, the children will spend time drafting and presenting their reports on their favourite hobbies. The included lesson slides focus on and discuss the structure of paragraphs, specifically topic sentences. They will use this discussion to influence their own paragraphs.
Alternatively, the children can use presentation software to turn their report into a presentation on their favourite hobby, using the same grammatical and language features discussed in previous lessons.
This complete lesson comes with a detailed lesson plan, differentiated activity ideas, lesson slides and printable accompanying resources.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Paragraph structure card
- Model texts
- Challenge card
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Reading - Comprehension Objectives:
- continuing to read and discuss an increasingly wide range of fiction, poetry, plays, non-fiction and reference books or textbooks
- checking that the book makes sense to them, discussing their understanding and exploring the meaning of words in context
- asking questions to improve their understanding
- Identifying how language, structure and presentation contribute to meaning
- retrieve, record and present information from non-fiction
Writing - Transcription Spelling Objectives:
- use the first three or four letters of a word to check spelling, meaning or both of these in a dictionary
- use a thesaurus
Writing - Composition Objectives:
- identifying the audience for and purpose of the writing, selecting the appropriate form and using other similar writing as models for their own
- noting and developing initial ideas, drawing on reading and research where necessary
- selecting appropriate grammar and vocabulary, understanding how such choices can change and enhance meaning
- using further organisational and presentational devices to structure text and to guide the reader [for example, headings, bullet points, underlining]
- proposing changes to vocabulary, grammar and punctuation to enhance effects and clarify meaning
- ensuring the consistent and correct use of tense throughout a piece of writing
- proof-read for spelling and punctuation errors
Writing - Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar Objectives:
- using passive verbs to affect the presentation of information in a sentence
- How words are related by meaning as synonyms and antonyms [for example, big, large, little].
- Use of the passive to affect the presentation of information in a sentence [for example, I broke the window in the greenhouse versus The window in the greenhouse was broken (by me)].
- Layout devices [for example, headings, sub-headings, columns, bullets, or tables, to structure text]
Spoken Language Objectives:
- ask relevant questions to extend their understanding and knowledge
- use relevant strategies to build their vocabulary
- use spoken language to develop understanding through speculating, hypothesising, imagining and exploring ideas
- participate in discussions, presentations, performances, role play/improvisations and debates