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Using Stories to Teach ICT Ages 5 to 6
Using Stories to Teach ICT Ages 5 to 6
Using Stories to Teach ICT Ages 5 to 6
Ebook149 pages38 minutes

Using Stories to Teach ICT Ages 5 to 6

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Using stories to teach ICT is a new, excellent series of four books that will make the teaching of ICT a more exciting and creative cross-curricular experience. The aim of the series is for ICT to be presented in a format that shows how information technology is used in our everyday lives and demonstrates ways how ICT skills can be taught and extended while linking to a wide variety of other subject areas of the curriculum. Ages 5-6 contains: 6 fun and original stories, detailed lesson plans, up to 4 worksheets with each lesson, activities to develop a range of ICT skills.
Stories include: Playground Proposal (Modelling), Football Crazy (Word Banks), Song Quest (Presenting Information), The Cycle Of Life (Labelling and Classifying), In The Garden (Pictograms), How Does This Work? (Instructions)
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 16, 2012
ISBN9781909102088
Using Stories to Teach ICT Ages 5 to 6

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    Book preview

    Using Stories to Teach ICT Ages 5 to 6 - Anita Loughrey

    Using stories to teach ICT

    Ages 5–6

    Anita Loughrey

    Published by Hopscotch, a division of MA Education, St Jude’s Church, Dulwich Road, London, SE24 0PB

    www.hopscotchbooks.com

    020 7738 5454

    2012 digital version by Andrews UK Limited

    www.andrewsuk.com

    ©2011 MA Education Ltd.

    Written by Anita Loughrey

    Designed by Claire White, Fonthill Creative, 01722 717029

    Illustrated by Kerry Bailey

    All rights reserved. This resource is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed upon the subsequent purchaser.

    No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, except where photocopying for educational purposes within the school or other educational establishment that has purchased this book is expressly permitted in the text.

    Every effort has been made to trace the owners of copyright of material in this book and the publisher apologises for any inadvertent omissions. Any persons claiming copyright for any material should contact the publisher who will be happy to pay the permission fees agreed between them and who will amend the information in this book on any subsequent reprint.

    Introduction

    ICT and the primary curriculum

    Today children will arrive at school with an extensive knowledge of ICT and its capabilities. They have a knowledge and understanding that can sometimes be beyond some adults. The aim in school today is to harness their experiences and use them to enhance their learning in school.

    ICT today is one of the best and fastest growing tools available for learning. It helps to:

    Make difficult and abstract concepts easier to explore

    Make learners partners in their formal learning

    Motivate learners and keep them engaged in learning

    Open up dialogue with parents and extend learning

    Personalise learning and give learners a voice

    Raise standards

    Reach the hard-to-reach

    Save you time and be more efficient

    In order for children to use and apply their ICT knowledge and understanding confidently and competently in their learning and everyday contexts, exciting and stimulating lessons must be provided.

    ICT is no longer viewed as a separate curriculum subject but, permeates all the other subjects. The children should be provided with stimulating activities that allows them to explore and become familiar with the technology resources available in the school, across a wide range of different subject areas.

    About the series

    The Using stories to teach ICT series of books demonstrates how ICT skills can be taught and extended while linking to a wide variety of other subject areas. There are four books in the series – two at Key Stage 1 and two at Key Stage 2.

    They offer a structured approach with the non-specialist in mind and provide detailed lesson plans to teach specific ICT skills while linking to other areas of the curriculum. Each book contains ideas for communication, modelling, presentation, databases and control.

    The aim is for ICT to be presented in a format that shows how information technology is used in our everyday lives. The imaginary situations portrayed in the stories act as a stimulus for the children’s own investigations and creative work. The ideas in this series can be adapted to teach all areas of the curriculum.

    Format of the books

    Each book contains six stories that require the children to use and extend different ICT skills. Each story is accompanied by teachers’ notes containing four separate lessons that can be used in conjunction with the story. Every lesson plan has a corresponding activity sheet.

    The teachers’ notes are broken down into the learning objective and the curriculum links with some suggestions for the type of hardware and software that will need to be made available. The activities have been sub-divided into:

    Resources – this is a list of what you will need to do the lesson

    Introduction – ideas to introduce the activities, with key questions and discussion points to reinforce the concepts and vocabulary required for the lesson

    Main activity – ideas for grouping and using the activity sheets

    Plenary – an opportunity to review and discuss the learning outcomes so children reflect on what they have learnt

    Extension – further ideas to extend their skills and technological knowledge

    The activity sheets can be found at the end of each chapter.

    About the stories

    The stories are designed to be a springboard to develop ICT within the classroom throughout a wide range of subjects due to the broad selection of cross-curricular links.

    At Key Stage 1 the stories have been designed to be read aloud to the class rather than for the children to read themselves. If possible enlarge copies of the story or project it on to a whiteboard so the children are able to see the illustrations and may even be able to follow along as you read it aloud to the class. As the children get older and their vocabulary improves encourage the children to read the stories aloud to each other.

    There is a lot of scope for initiating discussion about the wide range of technology used in our everyday lives and for extending from the given lesson ideas to develop children’s ICT-based projects.

    Using the lesson plans

    Within the planning we have added reference statements headed WALT, WILF and TIB as these or similar systems are often used to ensure lessons are focused, objective led and in context for the learner. They help summarise purpose of the lesson, what is required of the children in order

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