Learning Objective: Find similarities and differences between the life of a child in an African primary school and my life in the United Kingdom

Similar documents
If we want to measure the amount of cereal inside the box, what tool would we use: string, square tiles, or cubes?

UK flood management scheme

Manual for teacher trainers

Curriculum Scavenger Hunt

Mission Statement Workshop 2010

Picture It, Dads! Facilitator Activities For. The Mitten

A Pumpkin Grows. Written by Linda D. Bullock and illustrated by Debby Fisher

Airplane Rescue: Social Studies. LEGO, the LEGO logo, and WEDO are trademarks of the LEGO Group The LEGO Group.

LEGO MINDSTORMS Education EV3 Coding Activities

SESSION 2: HELPING HAND

Report of Shree Sanaitha Primary School Kitchen and Dining Sanaitha-4, Siraha District Nepal.!!! Submitted to Kinderhilfe Nepal-Mitterfels e. V.

Let's Learn English Lesson Plan

Technology in the Classroom

Interactive Whiteboard

SOCIAL STUDIES GRADE 1. Clear Learning Targets Office of Teaching and Learning Curriculum Division FAMILIES NOW AND LONG AGO, NEAR AND FAR

Using a topic-based approach for Cambridge English: Young Learners classroom activities

Stacks Teacher notes. Activity description. Suitability. Time. AMP resources. Equipment. Key mathematical language. Key processes

Build on students informal understanding of sharing and proportionality to develop initial fraction concepts.

Creative Media Department Assessment Policy

Objective: Model division as the unknown factor in multiplication using arrays and tape diagrams. (8 minutes) (3 minutes)

About this unit. Lesson one

Lesson objective: Year: 5/6 Resources: 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d, 1e, 1f, Examples of newspaper orientations.

MERRY CHRISTMAS Level: 5th year of Primary Education Grammar:

Economics Unit: Beatrice s Goat Teacher: David Suits

Section 3.4. Logframe Module. This module will help you understand and use the logical framework in project design and proposal writing.

Why Misquitoes Buzz in People s Ears (Part 1 of 3)

Dangerous. He s got more medical student saves than anybody doing this kind of work, Bradley said. He s tremendous.

Pretest Integers and Expressions

WE ARE STORYT ELLERS!

The following shows how place value and money are related. ones tenths hundredths thousandths

Std: III rd. Subject: Morals cw.

Grade 8: Module 4: Unit 1: Lesson 8 Reading for Gist and Answering Text-Dependent Questions: Local Sustainable Food Chain

SPRING GROVE AREA SCHOOL DISTRICT

preassessment was administered)

We endorse the aims and objectives of the primary curriculum for SPHE: To promote the personal development and well-being of the child

FOR TEACHERS ONLY RATING GUIDE BOOKLET 1 OBJECTIVE AND CONSTRUCTED RESPONSE JUNE 1 2, 2005

International Examinations. IGCSE English as a Second Language Teacher s book. Second edition Peter Lucantoni and Lydia Kellas

ISR PARENT EDUCATION HOW TO FILL OUT A FULL BUDS SHEET

PART C: ENERGIZERS & TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES TO SUPPORT YOUTH-ADULT PARTNERSHIPS

FIGURE 8.2. Job Shadow Workplace Supervisor Feedback Form.

GENERAL COMMENTS Some students performed well on the 2013 Tamil written examination. However, there were some who did not perform well.

Eggs-periments & Eggs-plorations

Classify: by elimination Road signs

Learning Fields Unit and Lesson Plans

CAN PICTORIAL REPRESENTATIONS SUPPORT PROPORTIONAL REASONING? THE CASE OF A MIXING PAINT PROBLEM

Table of Contents. Introduction Choral Reading How to Use This Book...5. Cloze Activities Correlation to TESOL Standards...

g to onsultant t Learners rkshop o W tional C ces.net I Appealin eren Nancy Mikhail esour Educa Diff Curriculum Resources CurriculumR

Multi-genre Writing Assignment

This document has been produced by:

Grade 4: Module 2A: Unit 1: Lesson 3 Inferring: Who was John Allen?

Helping at Home ~ Supporting your child s learning!

Hands-on Books-closed: Creating Interactive Foldables in Islamic Studies. Presented By Tatiana Coloso

Create A City: An Urban Planning Exercise Students learn the process of planning a community, while reinforcing their writing and speaking skills.

Getting Started Guide

Creating and Thinking critically

MATH Study Skills Workshop

Association Between Categorical Variables

The lab is designed to remind you how to work with scientific data (including dealing with uncertainty) and to review experimental design.

Characteristics of Functions

UNIT 1. Unit 1. I m only human

172_Primary 4 Comprehension & Vocabulary-7th Pass 07/11/14. Practice. Practice. Study the flyer carefully and then answer questions 1 8.

Grade 2: Using a Number Line to Order and Compare Numbers Place Value Horizontal Content Strand

Contents. Foreword... 5

Conteúdos de inglês para o primeiro bimestre. Turma 21. Turma 31. Turma 41

Universal Design for Learning Lesson Plan

Sleeping Coconuts Cluster Projects

Operations and Algebraic Thinking Number and Operations in Base Ten

Unit 2. A whole-school approach to numeracy across the curriculum

Quiz for Teachers. by Paul D. Slocumb, Ed.D. Hear Our Cry: Boys in Crisis

Functional Skills Mathematics Level 2 sample assessment

Getting Started with Deliberate Practice

Crestron BB-9L Pre-Construction Wall Mount Back Box Installation Guide

École Jeannine Manuel Bedford Square, Bloomsbury, London WC1B 3DN

Preparing for the oral. GCSEs in Arabic, Greek, Japanese & Russian

St Mary s, Isleworth Newsletter for 26th June 2015

Storytelling Made Simple

English Nexus Offender Learning

Kindergarten SAMPLE MATERIAL INSIDE

Sensory-Friendly. Hallowe en in Greenfield Village. Social Narrative

Moodle 2 Assignments. LATTC Faculty Technology Training Tutorial

ELPAC. Practice Test. Kindergarten. English Language Proficiency Assessments for California

Life and career planning

Similar Triangles. Developed by: M. Fahy, J. O Keeffe, J. Cooper

J j W w. Write. Name. Max Takes the Train. Handwriting Letters Jj, Ww: Words with j, w 321

Number Line Moves Dash -- 1st Grade. Michelle Eckstein

Cognitive Development Facilitator s Guide

Case study Norway case 1

Gwen John and Celia Paul: Press preview

GRADE 2 SUPPLEMENT. Set D4 Measurement: Capacity. Includes. Skills & Concepts. Activity 1: Predict & Fill D4.1

Class Outline for October 21, 2009: Announcements for Elegant Design Out of Junk and Spare Parts Presentation by William Kamkwamba with Bryan Mealer

1. Locate and describe major physical features and analyze how they influenced cultures/civilizations studied.

Fluency YES. an important idea! F.009 Phrases. Objective The student will gain speed and accuracy in reading phrases.

EDEXCEL FUNCTIONAL SKILLS PILOT. Maths Level 2. Chapter 7. Working with probability

Interpreting ACER Test Results

with The Grouchy Ladybug

Speak with Confidence The Art of Developing Presentations & Impromptu Speaking

OFFICE OF COLLEGE AND CAREER READINESS

MODULE FRAMEWORK AND ASSESSMENT SHEET

Function Tables With The Magic Function Machine

Stimulation for Interaction. 1. Is your character old or young? He/She is old/young/in-between OR a child/a teenager/a grown-up/an old person

Transcription:

Learning Objective: Find similarities and differences between the life of a child in an African primary school and my life in the United Kingdom National Curriculum links: Geography (PoS 1c) Maths (Ma2 Number 5a) English (speaking and listening 1b, writing 1a, 1c) PSHE (1b, 4c) Resources: Inside the hut photocards Children photocards Speech bubbles (cut up into piles of 12 cards per set; prepare 1 set between 2) Starter: Look again at the photocard showing a mud and thatched house (used for the activity in the previous lesson). If appropriate refer back to the questions pupils wrote about it and see if any can be answered. Stick the photocard on a large sheet of paper and with the children s help write a caption and descriptive labels to parts of it e.g. to show the thatched grass roof and the mud brick walls. Discuss how the materials compare with what their own houses are made from. Now ask the children to imagine walking into the house, point out the slight step they have to tread over (so that the house doesn t get flooded in the rains). Ask them to pretend they are standing inside and looking around. o o Key Question: What shape is the room you are standing in? Discuss how you can tell from looking at the outside of the building that it is round inside. Key Question: What shape is your house? You could use some 3D shapes and link this concept with a maths lesson. Write the words children suggest on further labels around the picture. Key Question: Is it light or dark? Why is it dark? (no windows) What is the effect of it being so dark? (hard to see anything). Why might there be no windows? (easier to construct; way of keeping out the elements and mosquitoes). Write any descriptive words the children suggest around the picture. Build Africa UK Second Floor, Vale House, Clarence Road Tunbridge Wells, Kent, TN1 1HE Registered Charity No. 298316 T: +44 (0)1892 519 619 E: schools@build-africa.org.uk W: build-africa.org

o o Tell them to imagine stepping into the middle of the room and looking up. Key Question: What do you think you might see? Show the photo of the inside of the roof and discuss the sticks you can see meeting in the centre point and covered in the grass thatch. How is this different to our ceilings / roofs? Add a further label to the picture. Key Question: What else might you see around you in the room? Show the photo of the reed sleeping mats. Key Question: what would it be like to sleep on a mat like this instead of in your bed? Ask the children to think about their own bedroom and all the toys and clothes they have in there. Point out the difference in the quantity of things children in the UK have compared to what children in parts of Kenya and Uganda have. Make any other relevant labels. Main Activity: Use the photocards of children to introduce the children who live in a house like the one they have been describing and read through some of their speech bubbles which explain things about their daily life. Independent Work: LA Work as a group to read through the speech bubbles and sort the facts out into two piles to show things that are similar to their own daily life and things that are different. For each fact they have sorted as being different, ask children to tell the group why it is different. Core MA Read through the speech bubbles with a partner and sort the facts out into two piles to show things that are similar to their own daily life and things that are different. For each fact they have sorted as being different, ask children to tell their partner why it is different. As for Core but the activity could be extended by the children drawing a table and writing the comparisons in note form in the two columns. They can also write in the ways that their life is different for example: Similar Life for child in rural Kenya or Uganda Different My life in the UK Both like playing football Fetch water from river Turn on a tap Alternatively this activity could be extended as a Maths lesson by introducing a Venn diagram using sorting hoops. One hoop labelled Daily life in the UK and the other Daily life in rural Kenya and Uganda. Use the speech bubbles to create your own facts that could go in each part of the diagram. Plenary: As a class discuss what similarities and differences the children found. Key Question: Are you surprised by any of these similarities and differences? Why? Build Africa 2015 2

Mud and thatch huts

Mud and thatch hut

Reed sleeping mats

Looking up inside the hut

Edinance

Irine

Joshua

Clapton

I have three brothers and two sisters I like playing football I feed our goats and chickens Build Africa 2015

My favourite football team is Liverpool I fetch water from the river before school I walk to school. It takes me 30 minutes Build Africa 2015

I help my mum with the cooking My house has just one room My favourite lesson at school is maths Build Africa 2015

I like netball My favourite food is cassava I have two sisters and one brother Build Africa 2015