Refresh your desk and cloakroom labels with personalisable or dry-wipe ones!
Includes:
⭐️ Name on handwriting lines
⭐️ Alphabet and number line
⭐️ Emotions check-in
⭐️ Traffic light support
⭐️ Class / House / School colours available
https://t.co/06XjN6tcBc
#edutwitter
If you teach Y6, you're welcome to use any of my reading lessons for free in the attached Google Drive.
They link to our curriculum but will work as stand alones. Also full planning for Holes/Little Badman/When The Sky Falls. About 50 lessons atm.
https://t.co/MMLoHljGYu
There are numerous ways to support pupils with Autism. Communicating through the use of visuals and a carefully planned environment can help to support pupils.
Have a look at some more strategies below...
Was just updating the reading page on our school website, and updated our collages of class novels for this year as some have changed or been added. Heck of an offer they get at our school in my opinion. In order from 3 to 6.
So, I spoke to people getting food at a food bank and here are some things I learned from those in need:
1. Everyone donates Kraft Mac and Cheese in the box. They can rarely use it because it needs milk and butter which is hard to get from regular food banks.
2. Boxed milk is a treasure, as kids need it for cereal which they also get a lot of.
3. Everyone donates pasta sauce and spaghetti noodles.
4. They cannot eat all the awesome canned veggies and soup unless you put a can opener in too or buy pop tops.
5. Oil is a luxury but needed for Rice a-Roni which they also get a lot of.
6. Spices or salt and pepper would be a real Christmas gift.
7. Tea bags and coffee make them feel like you care.
8. Sugar and flour are treats.
9. They fawn over fresh produce donated by farmers and grocery stores.
10. Seeds are cool in Spring and Summer because growing can be easy for some.
11. They rarely get fresh meat.
12. Tuna and crackers make a good lunch.
13. Hamburger Helper goes nowhere without ground beef.
14. They get lots of peanut butter and jelly but usually not sandwich bread.
15. Butter or margarine is nice too.
16. Eggs are a real commodity.
17. Cake mix and frosting makes it possible to make a child’s birthday cake.
18. Dishwashing detergent is very expensive and is always appreciated.
19. Feminine hygiene products are a luxury and women will cry over that.
20. Everyone loves Stove Top Stuffing.
In all the years I have donated food at the Holidays, I bought what I thought they wanted, but have never asked. I am glad I did. If you are helping a Family this Christmas, maybe this can help you tailor it more. It does for me!
Today I’ve found out about Rewordify and I’m blown away! You can copy text and it will create word banks for you. Great for creating resources for low ability students 🤌🏻
I've said this before, but it still needs saying. The books that we call "children's books" are really books written for an audience that includes children, but excludes no-one. They're books for EVERYONE - not some lesser form of literature, but the most important books of all!
✨Giveaway!✨
We are giving away two copies of Agent 9: Flood-a-geddon by @jamesburksart!
To enter...
✅Follow us
👍Like and retweet
😍Comment a 😼 emoji
Winner announced in 24 HOURS! @piccadillypress#Agent9
In honour of #WorldMentalHealthDay, a small bookish giveaway – win a book of mine of your choice. RT & follow to enter. 5 winners. Ends Thursday 6pm GMT. There is truth in stories, and healing in truth. In my stories, I hope you'll find both.
🌟 Giveaway! 🌟
What Are You Feeling?
We’re celebrating this incredibly important book, aimed at developing emotional literacy in children, with a giveaway of a copy! Full review below ⬇️
RT & Follow
To Enter
UK
Ends 18.10.23
🌟 Full Review 🌟
What Are You Feeling?, is a beautiful book created by @TheSchoolOfLife which tackles a range of big feelings that can be difficult for children to explain. Although aimed at developing emotional literacy for children aged 5-8 years, this book is perfect for sharing with any child who might struggle to find the right words. Not only does this book help children to recognise and understand their emotions, it helps children to find different ways to describe them, gives them examples of what these emotions might look like in every day life and most importantly, it reassures children that all of these important feelings are OK.
A truly beautiful book, with funny and colourful illustrations from @dgraybarnett, written in an accessible way for children to understand. What Are You Feeling? creates a wonderful opportunity for adults to share this book with children in order to create a dialogue about feelings and emotions.
Check out the resources we have designed for The School of Life, to celebrate this incredibly important book! https://t.co/naaBAXgEQR
📚 GIVEAWAY 📚
To celebrate #BookshopDay on Sat 14th Oct, we're giving a bag of goodies each to two lucky winners!
1 to be won on Instagram, the other here - so enter on both platforms!
To enter:
1. Follow us
2. Like & repost this post
1/2
*Daily Tip*
Remember not all pupils will arrive in your room with the same prior knowledge & experiences. Visiting the beach, or knowing the name of a farm animal can be key gaps for some pupils. Take time to plug the gaps & don't assume all chn have had the same opportunities.
Today I turn 27 YEARS OLD. Which means 11 YEARS AGO I was on Educating Yorkshire. I am so fortunate to live life sharing the power of teachers. I am proud to be someone who stammers, something one teacher helped me to accept in the classroom. Thank you to everyone for the continuous support #EducatingYorlshire #PowerOfTeaching #ThankYou
I've been using these as my 'do now' for English for a week now and have these observations:
1. Children are getting much faster at spotting mistakes and at constructing sentences. This task takes circa 7 mins atm.
2. The 7 mins is worth it as sentence construction is improving
Please RT as lots of people asked and I want to make sure it reaches everyone!
Thanks so much for your patience! Here is the link to the resources:
https://t.co/KvNfiZ9n8V
Any issues let me know!