Guest Posted April 30, 2009 Share Posted April 30, 2009 This is my first post so apologies if it is not in the right place! Hi, I am hoping somone could advise me, I qualify as a NQT this year and have made it through to interview stage, but first I have to teach a class I have never met who are working at various levels. I am to teach story sequencing using story language. This is a very creative school so I want the lesson to be hands on but am frightened of being too adventurous!! I would be really grateful for any help!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chocisgood Posted April 30, 2009 Share Posted April 30, 2009 hi Christina and welcome to the forum! You don't say what age range? Have you found communication4all website, thats got some good literacy stuff on it which helps with differentiation. otherwise go for the re-enacting with role play, play dough, etc stuff? all the best Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted April 30, 2009 Share Posted April 30, 2009 Hi thanks for that it is ctually for a year 1 class, but I feel the reason I have got this far is because all my exp is in the foundation stage and the head would like to see elements of the foundation stage spreading through ks1. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted May 1, 2009 Share Posted May 1, 2009 Hi, I guess the obvious answer would be to get the children to brainstorm some words and phrases for sequencing a story - first, next, suddenly, a little while later. You could then split them into groups and give each group a series of pictures, which they could sequence using the words they found. Each group could then prepare a freezeframe of one moment in the story, show this to the class, and get the others to guess. HTH, Sue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Upsy Daisy Posted May 1, 2009 Share Posted May 1, 2009 How about using puppets? They could be useful if one or two of the little darlings need some extra motivation to concentrate. Gives them a more tangible focus for the characters than pure imagination. Photocopies of story book pages for them to cut out particular phrases. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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