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      King Tut: non-chronological report

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      Why this why now

      This unit uses and builds on pupils' knowledge of non-chronological report writing from the Year 3 unit, 'The Portia Spider: non-chronological report'. Pupils write using the structure of an introduction, themed sections and conclusion; they also write using a range of formal and viewpoint fronted adverbials and subject-specific vocabulary to ensure their writing flows cohesively. Pupils use subheadings to clearly signal each section. This unit prepares pupils for further non-chronological report writing in the Year 3 unit, 'The Stone Age: non-chronological report'.

      Prior knowledge requirements

      • The purpose of a non-chronological report is to inform its reader about a particular subject.
      • Non-chronological reports are a type of factual, non-fiction writing.
      • Non-chronological reports are organised into paragraphs of related content each with its own subheading.
      • Non-chronological reports can contain visual information, most commonly diagrams or photographs accompanied by a caption.
      • Nouns can be referred to in a range of ways in order to avoid repetition.
      • Text flow can be achieved by writing simple, compound and adverbial complex sentences.
      • Grammatical and linguistic features of non-chronological reports include apostrophes for singular possession, subject-specific vocabulary and causal conjunctions.
      • Formal fronted adverbials are sentence starters followed by a comma.
      • King Tut was an Egyptian pharaoh who ruled Ancient Egypt 3000 years ago.
      • King Tut's tomb was discovered by Howard Carter in 1922.

      Threads

      Why this why now

      This unit uses and builds on pupils' knowledge of non-chronological report writing from the Year 3 unit, 'The Portia Spider: non-chronological report'. Pupils write using the structure of an introduction, themed sections and conclusion; they also write using a range of formal and viewpoint fronted adverbials and subject-specific vocabulary to ensure their writing flows cohesively. Pupils use subheadings to clearly signal each section. This unit prepares pupils for further non-chronological report writing in the Year 3 unit, 'The Stone Age: non-chronological report'.

      Prior knowledge requirements

      • The purpose of a non-chronological report is to inform its reader about a particular subject.
      • Non-chronological reports are a type of factual, non-fiction writing.
      • Non-chronological reports are organised into paragraphs of related content each with its own subheading.
      • Non-chronological reports can contain visual information, most commonly diagrams or photographs accompanied by a caption.
      • Nouns can be referred to in a range of ways in order to avoid repetition.
      • Text flow can be achieved by writing simple, compound and adverbial complex sentences.
      • Grammatical and linguistic features of non-chronological reports include apostrophes for singular possession, subject-specific vocabulary and causal conjunctions.
      • Formal fronted adverbials are sentence starters followed by a comma.
      • King Tut was an Egyptian pharaoh who ruled Ancient Egypt 3000 years ago.
      • King Tut's tomb was discovered by Howard Carter in 1922.
      Reading, writing & oracy

      King Tut: non-chronological report

      In this unit, pupils research the life and death of King Tut to write a non-chronological report. Pupils focus on using a range of fronted adverbials and subject-specific vocabulary to present facts about King Tut in a clearly-structured report. Pupils peer edit and present their reports at the end.