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Cartoons, photos, songs - fun, imaginative ways with teaching are here for you and they're all free as birds!

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Cartoons, photos, songs - fun, imaginative ways with teaching are here for you and they're all free as birds!
CREATIVE WRITING ON UNUSUAL FRIENDSHIPS
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

CREATIVE WRITING ON UNUSUAL FRIENDSHIPS

(0)
This single-page sheet helps students to spark an idea for a great story about an unusual friendship. It can be used at any time of the year, not just Halloween. They can discuss in pairs or groups what they think the different creatures in the picture are like and maybe think of names for them. Names make characters seem real in the mind and give them a life of their own. You could have fun with alliteration, e.g. Bob the Bat, and with setting a mood, e.g. Snooty Candle. Old-fashioned or unusal names can sound mysterious, e.g. Winona the Witch, while nicknames can sound funny and approachable, e.g. Mike the Monster. It can also be funny if a name has absolutely nothing to do with the nature of the creature, e.g. Colin the Coffin or Tim the Ghost. ‘The Something of Something’ is another useful pattern, not just for a character’s name, but for a story title, e.g. ‘The Creatures of Castle Spooky’, ‘The Mummy of Mortlake’, ‘Mutterings in the Moat’. Letting your characters talk to each other is fun and unpredictable: you can never be quite sure what they are going to say. Don’t let the difficulty of punctuating direct speech inhibit learners. After all, if they type this, they can always correct things like paragraphing and punctuation marks afterwards. They could illustrate their work or even turn a key scene from it into a storyboard or a strip cartoon for a younger audience than themselves. Have loads of spooky fun! SEE ALSO ‘HOW GOTHIC BEGAN AND WHAT IT UNLEASHED!’
HANDWRITING: A CLASS OF 26 LITTLE PEOPLE
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

HANDWRITING: A CLASS OF 26 LITTLE PEOPLE

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These two illustrated sheets explain a way of looking at handwriting which transforms the task of improving it from a vague worry to a fun task. Instead of saying ‘I have terrible handwriting,’ learners are encouraged to think of their handwriting as a class of little people. Very often, I find that there are just a handful of letters that are unclear. When these are noticed and practised, the handwriting as a whole improves. Learners can find it quite fun as well as helpful to think of their own handwriting as a class of little people over whom they have friendly but firm control. This creates a way of talking about handwriting in a way that is easier to visualise and remember. Your marking can be included in this, too. For example, ‘Can you see which letters are falling asleep here?’ or ‘Your ‘g’ is kicking the letters on the line below again’ are comments that create a vivid yet also helpfully specific image for a learner to act upon. I always find it a pity if someone ‘hates their handwriting’, as an unruly blob that cannot change and over which they have no control. Instead, these two pages describe an approach which combines friendly curiosity in the small details that can make a big difference. Check out my PUNCTUATION PEOPLE too!
PUNCTUATION PEOPLE - Apostrophe2Possess.
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

PUNCTUATION PEOPLE - Apostrophe2Possess.

(1)
This uses cartoon people to explain how the apostrophe is used to show possession. Always ask yourself: what does this apostrophe know? Check out my HANDWRITING PEOPLE too! That resource is called HANDWRITING: A CLASS OF 26 LITTLE PEOPLE.
PUNCTUATION PEOPLE - Apostrophe1Omiss.
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

PUNCTUATION PEOPLE - Apostrophe1Omiss.

(0)
This uses cartoon people to explain how the apostrophe is used to show that a letter has been omitted. The apostrophe is a spy who knows exactly which letter has escaped from a word! Check out my HANDWRITING PEOPLE too! That resource is called HANDWRITING: A CLASS OF 26 LITTLE PEOPLE.
FAIRY TALES - GERMAN + WRITE YOUR OWN!
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

FAIRY TALES - GERMAN + WRITE YOUR OWN!

(3)
The Lesson Plan tells you how to help pupils to create their own fairy tales using a series of simple choices of character, description and plot. The videos are examples of some of tne many cartoon versions of famous fairy tales in German. Finally, a feisty German Rapunzel finishes this set of resources!
WHEN THIS LOUSY WAR IS OVER
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

WHEN THIS LOUSY WAR IS OVER

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The pupils’ activity is simply the lyrics for the song ‘When This Lousy War Is Over’, with guitar chords. The MP3 is a recording of a female voice. Also find the song on YouTube from the film, ‘Oh What A Lovely War’, with male voice choir - the link is included here. The other website has lyrics for the same song and a few others.
VICTORY ODES AT THE GREEK OLYMPICS
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

VICTORY ODES AT THE GREEK OLYMPICS

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A Powerpoint about Pindar’s Victory Odes at the Greek Olympics, prepared by Professor Edith Hall, Kings College London, for a Poet in the City event: Poetry and the Greek Olympics. Teacher can tell the class how the athlete’s training was military, the victory odes were performed for the victors in front of thousands and some of the games were very violent!
GOETHE - ERLKöNIG
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

GOETHE - ERLKöNIG

(3)
Goethe’s terrifying poem based on a Danish folktale about the ‘Erlkonig’, possibly meaning ‘Elven King’, but the name is a mystery. Give 1-2 verses at a time to build suspense. {Anyone who Googles the ending and tells the class gets a detention! ;o) ] Let them illustrate each verse to build up a storyboard. Divide class into groups who each learn a different part to recite in a spooky chorus, with the lights off. First web link is Schubert’;s menacing song version, dramatically performed! Second web link is an eerie cartoon version that makes the different voices clear.