Lesson Three – Animal Lists

This English teaching pack for Key Stage One gets the children to select and compile lists of descriptive vocabulary words that can be used to describe a range of different animals that live wild in the world.
The class can select and record sets of words to describe the colour, shape, size and sounds of different wild animals that could be kept as family pets.
Download this teaching pack including a lesson plan, classroom activities and an interactive presentation to select and compile lists of descriptive vocabulary words that can be used to describe a range of different animals that live wild in the world
Activities in this teaching pack include a set of differentiated worksheets to compile lists of descriptive vocabulary words that can be used to describe a wild animal that could be kept as a family pet to use when constructing matching sentences.
The interactive presentation gets the children to explore how to compile lists of descriptive vocabulary words that can be used to describe a range of different animals.
This lesson is part of an English scheme of work to get the children to explore descriptive language used in stories about family life, practise spelling words with le endings and write sentences using the correct punctuation. There are teaching activities for shared learning, differentiated worksheets to support independent learning and interactive presentations to introduce concepts and key skills.
-
Counting Back
Practise using the number technique of counting back to solve and complete a range of abstract and contextual subtraction calculations
-
Mother Nature
Explore how mother nature can provide nourishment, protection and support to all living things in different habitats and environments
-
Digraphs Word Sums
Investigate the spellings and meanings of different sets of words with a range of initial consonant digraphs
-
Van Gogh
Investigate and replicate the work and painting style of a famous artist from the past by producing a matching landscape of the school building