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Exploring Clothes Around

Geography • 45 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Geography
45
26 students
26 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

THEME –Clothes/ Fashion – Geography, Enabling children to find out about a different (one European and one non European place) part of the world and to learn about their clothing/ fashion All lessons must be based on the Irish Primary School Curriculum. Each lesson is 45 minutes long. Please include breakdown of times at each main part of the lesson. Please use the word ‘students’ not pupils or children. What must be included in lesson plan: • Subject title • Strand • Strand Units • Learning outcomes/ content objectives (directly from curriculum) • Learning objectives (minimum of 2, maximum of 3). Each one needs to start with ‘The child should be enabled to:’ Keep them in simple language • Assessment section – to include method of assessment, assessment of, and where assessment will be recorded. • Teaching Questioning (lower and higher order questions) for the lesson and must indicate where they apply in the lesson (introduction, development or conclusion part marked with I, D, or C) • Language development opportunities in the lesson • Literacy development opportunities in the lesson • The body of the lesson needs an Introduction section, a Development Section and a Conclusion section. All points need to be in bullet points. • The introduction section needs to include a Stimulus at the start related to the lesson (like a game or something to get the children engaged), how to elicit prior knowledge, and a WALT (what we are learning to) in simple language for children to read and know what they are doing and a WILF (what I (teacher) am looking for) keep it simple language. • The development section needs to set out each step of the lesson, using the teacher will etc • The conclusion must include cognitive piece, social and transition points. Including a maybe discussion, questions, reflection and recap of WALT & WILF. • UDL section at the end to include reason, method and additional comments grid for o pupil 12 with ASD o Pupil 23 with dyslexia o Pupil 25 & 26 EAL o Pupil 4 – hearing impairment o Pupils 24, 9, 17 high ability maths o Pupil 22 lower ability o Pupil 15 social and emotional support • The learning environment. e.g. classroom • List of resources/ materials needed (including IWB, PowerPoint etc)

Exploring Clothes Around

Subject Title

Geography

Strand

Human Environments

Strand Units

  • People and Other Lands
  • Natural Environments

Learning Outcomes / Content Objectives

From the Primary School Curriculum, Geography Strand:

  • Explore and compare the local environment with a distant place in Europe and a distant place outside Europe.
  • Investigate and describe aspects of the environment, including clothing influenced by climate, culture, and resources.

Learning Objectives

The child should be enabled to:

  • Identify and describe traditional clothing from one European country and one non-European country.
  • Understand reasons why people wear different clothes in different parts of the world, focusing on climate and culture.
  • Compare and contrast clothing styles between the two selected countries and the students’ own locality.

Assessment

Method of Assessment:

  • Observation during class discussions and group work.
  • Completion and presentation of a Venn diagram comparing clothing.
  • Teacher questioning and student reflections during conclusion.

Assessment Of:

  • Students’ ability to identify clothing related to geography and culture.
  • Students’ understanding of how environment influences clothing.
  • Communication skills in describing and comparing clothes.

Where Assessment is Recorded:

  • Teacher’s anecdotal notes during lesson.
  • Completed student worksheets (Venn diagrams).
  • End-of-lesson reflection recorded in class journal.

Teaching Questioning

StageLower Order QuestionsHigher Order Questions
Introduction (I)What clothes do you wear when it is cold?Why do you think people in colder countries wear heavier clothes?
Development (D)Can you name a type of traditional clothing from Spain?How does the climate of India influence their clothing styles?
Conclusion (C)What are the differences between our clothes and the ones we saw?How does culture affect clothing choices besides just climate?

Language Development Opportunities

  • Use and explain new vocabulary: traditional, climate, fabric, culture, comparison.
  • Sentence starters for describing clothes: “In ______, people wear ______ because...”
  • Encourage speaking and listening through paired and group work.

Literacy Development Opportunities

  • Reading of simple fact cards about clothing from both countries.
  • Writing or drawing on Venn diagrams to compare clothes.
  • Use of keywords in class discussion and reflections.

Lesson Structure (45 minutes)

Introduction (10 minutes)

  • Stimulus: Play a quick “Guess the Clothes” game using pictures shown on the Interactive Whiteboard (IWB). Show images of traditional clothes from Spain (European) and India (non-European).
  • Elicit prior knowledge: Ask students what they know about different clothes people wear around the world; list ideas on the board. (I)
  • WALT: "Today we are learning about the clothes people wear in different places in the world."
  • WILF: "We look for how clothes are different or similar and why."

Development (25 minutes)

  • Step 1 (5 mins): Teacher introduces Spain and India briefly, focusing on location using maps on the IWB. Explain one traditional clothing item from each country (e.g., Flamenco dress; Sari). Link to climate and cultural reasons. (D)
  • Step 2 (10 mins): Students work in pairs to read simple fact cards about the clothes, climate, and culture of Spain and India; discuss their features. Teacher circulates to support language and understanding. (D)
  • Step 3 (10 mins): Students complete a Venn diagram worksheet comparing the clothes from Spain, India, and their own clothes here in Ireland. Illustrations allowed for support. Teacher models on IWB first. (D)

Conclusion (10 minutes)

  • Cognitive: Class discussion reflecting on the Venn diagrams and clothing differences. Teacher poses questions from the conclusion questioning section. (C)
  • Social: Students share one new thing they learned with their partner.
  • Transition: Recap WALT and WILF; explain next lesson will explore materials used in clothing around the world.
  • Reflection: Students verbally or by thumbs up/down say how well they understood the lesson.

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Strategies

Pupil(s)ReasonMethodAdditional Comments
Pupil 12 (ASD)Sensory sensitivity and difficulty with social contextProvide advance organiser; use clear, consistent instructions; allow use of noise-cancelling headphonesPair with calm, supportive peer for paired work
Pupil 23 (Dyslexia)Difficulties with reading textProvide fact cards in dyslexia-friendly fonts; use audio recordings of the text; allow drawing in Venn diagramProvide extra time for worksheet completion
Pupils 25 & 26 (EAL)Need language supportPre-teach key vocabulary with visuals; use bilingual resources; pair with proficient English speakerModel sentence starters; visuals reinforce meaning
Pupil 4 (Hearing impairment)Difficulties hearing oral instructionsSit student near the teacher; use written instructions on board or slides; use visual cluesUse captioned videos if any multimedia used
Pupils 24, 9, 17 (High ability maths)Need extension for challengeProvide extension task: calculate temperatures in Spain and India and relate to clothes choicesEncourage them to explain answers to peers
Pupil 22 (Lower ability)May find writing tasks difficultAllow oral responses to questions; provide sentence starters; reduce worksheet complexityFrequent check-ins during paired work
Pupil 15 (Social & Emotional Support)Needs emotional encouragement and engagementUse positive praise; allow movement breaks if needed; assign supportive paired partnerMonitor social interaction; provide clear structure

Learning Environment

  • Classroom arranged in pairs and small groups to encourage collaboration.
  • Interactive Whiteboard (IWB) positioned for whole-class visibility.
  • Quiet area for students needing less sensory stimulus.

Resources/Materials Needed

  • Interactive Whiteboard with PowerPoint slides showing traditional clothing and maps.
  • Printed fact cards about Spain and India’s clothing, climate, and culture.
  • Venn diagram worksheets (printed and blank for drawing).
  • Pictures or flashcards of traditional clothes from Spain and India.
  • Markers, pencils, erasers for student use.
  • Noise-cancelling headphones (for ASD student).

This lesson plan is tailored to meet the Irish Primary School Curriculum requirements and utilises interactive, inclusive teaching methods designed to engage third-class students in meaningful geographical learning related to clothes and culture.

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