NGfL Cymru was a website funded by the Welsh Government. The resources on TES are a legacy of this project. The content or format of these resources may be out of date. You can find free, bilingual teaching resources linked to the Curriculum for Wales on hwb.gov.wales.
NGfL Cymru was a website funded by the Welsh Government. The resources on TES are a legacy of this project. The content or format of these resources may be out of date. You can find free, bilingual teaching resources linked to the Curriculum for Wales on hwb.gov.wales.
This interactive resource encourages pupils to consider the basic ingredients of a healthy lifestyle. It contains several activities to promote thinking skills in the classroom, using a 'day in the life' of two children, Sophie and Bryn.
This resource also explores the ESDGC themes of &'Health&'; and 'Choices and Decisions&'
A comprehensive series of multimedia materials to support the teaching of the GCSE Design and Technology Food Technology course. The materials can be downloaded as a complete Moodle course or as individual elements. The bilingual resources include video clips, animations, text and quizzes within Moodle and can be used on an interactive whiteboard for whole class teaching or by students on individual computers. The images included in this work, to the best of our knowledge, are from sources that their use do not breach any copyright rules. Please visit the NGfL site, linked below.
Following this Slide Show the student should know:
That people have both a fear and fascination about crime which is partly shaped by the media.
That the media can sensitise issues and help define crime.
That the media can both amplify deviance and create moral panics.
That crime as a spectacle is increasingly common in Postmodern society.
That the media is selective in who and how it treats victims of crime.
Introduction:
Official Crime Statistics (OCR) revealed how recorded crime appears to be a masculine activity (87% of all recorded crime)
Victorians explained women’s conformity with biological theory, sociologists favour socialisation, social control and postmodern concept of ‘transgression’.
Crime, delinquency and deviance viewed as a (working-class) male thing, that usually ends as they ‘settled down’.
However, the growth of laddette behaviour is challenging the implied links between deviance and masculinity.
This unit comprises of a series of 6 interactive activities for introducing vocabulary for common classroom objects, classroom instructions, numbers 1-10 and simple colours.
The unit also includes teachers’ notes with suggestions on how to use each resource.
Use these resources as part of a series of notes in the form of an e-book, with interactive activities and teachers’ guide to coincide with the WJEC GCSE Leisure and Tourism course. For more materials relating to this resource, please visit the NGfL site, linked below.
An interactive whiteboard resources based on Excel (also useable on a network as individual pupil sheets or as a worksheet creator) to practice the four rules of number. The workbook contains self-marking worksheets, including differentiable worksheets on the four rules that will start with basic number bonds to 10 and will progress through number bonds to addition, subtraction, multiplication (by powers of 10, 100, 1000) and division (by powers of 10, 100, 1000) to long multiplication and division. All worksheets will be useable as computer worksheets.
A range of resource looking at different types of holidays, budget airlines and tourism destinations. These materials are designed to support the DCELLS agenda for the development of thinking skills and AFL for learners following travel and tourism courses including: GCSE Leisure and Tourism, OCR Nationals in Travel and Tourism, BTEC First in Travel and Tourism, AS in Travel and Tourism. For more materials relating to this resource, please visit the NGfL site, linked below.
Discussions points including:
Do the owners of the media have too much power?
Are audiences influenced by what they see and read?
Can politicians abuse the power of the media?
Should we have laws to protect people’s privacy?
Do we need censorship against explicit sex on film and television?
Do we need censorship against explicit violence on film and television?