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Magical Story Adventure

English • 30 • 23 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
30
23 students
21 October 2025

Teaching Instructions

Introduction (5 minutes):

Stimulus: Show the cover of Winnie the Witch and ask: “What do you think this story is about?” Elicit Prior Knowledge: Discuss what pupils know about witches, magic, and Halloween. Share Learning Intention: “Today we’ll listen to Winnie’s story and imagine our own magical spells.”

Development (20 minutes):

Story Reading with BBU Strategy – Visualising (10 min):

Read Winnie the Witch aloud, showing pictures.

Pause to let pupils visualise: “Close your eyes and imagine the colours of Winnie’s house after her spell.”

Ask: “What do you think her next spell might be?”

Cause and Effect Discussion (5 min):

Ask: “Why couldn’t Winnie see Wilbur?” → “Because he was black!”

“What happened when she changed his colour?”

Complete a simple cause-and-effect chart on the board together.

Creative Writing Task (10 min):

Sentence starter: If I were Winnie the Witch, I would make a spell to…

Model a sample response: …turn my teacher into a frog!

Pupils write 1–2 sentences and draw their spell.

Provide a word bank: magic, spell, wand, broom, Wilbur.

Conclusion (5 minutes):

Cognitive: Pupils share their sentences or drawings.

Social: Encourage applause and peer feedback.

Transition: Display drawings on “Winnie’s Magic Wall.”

Overview

This 30-minute lesson is designed for first-class students (ages 6-7) and follows the IE Curriculum framework for English. It focuses on developing listening, speaking, comprehension, visualisation, and creative writing skills aligned with IE competencies in Language and Literacy. Using the book Winnie the Witch, pupils will engage in an interactive, multimodal storytelling experience that promotes imagination, cause-and-effect understanding, and peer collaboration.


Curriculum Links

IE Curriculum - English Language:

  • Listening and Responding:
    Learners listen with sustained concentration to stories and respond appropriately (Strand 1, Strand Unit 1)

  • Oral Language:
    Learners express ideas clearly in conversation and through talk for a range of purposes (Strand 1, Strand Unit 2)

  • Reading:
    Develop visual literacy and comprehension through stories read aloud and linked visual materials (Strand 2, Strand Unit 1)

  • Writing:
    Use emergent writing to communicate meaning, supported by visual prompts and word banks (Strand 3, Strand Unit 1)

  • Thinking Skills and Personal Capabilities:
    Critical thinking – understanding cause and effect relationships (Strand 6)
    Creativity and Imagination – creating new ideas based on stimuli (Strand 6)
    Working with others – sharing ideas and peer feedback (Strand 6)


Learning Intention

  • To listen attentively to a story and visualise key elements.
  • To understand and describe cause-effect relationships in a narrative.
  • To develop early writing skills by creating and illustrating a simple imaginative sentence.
  • To build social confidence through sharing and peer appreciation.

Success Criteria

  • I can listen carefully and imagine what happens in the story.
  • I can explain why something happened in the story using “because.”
  • I can write 1 or 2 sentences starting with “If I were Winnie…” and draw a related picture.
  • I can share my ideas clearly and listen to my classmates’ ideas respectfully.

Resources

  • Winnie the Witch storybook with pictures visible to all pupils
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Cause and effect chart template (simple 2-column chart: Cause / Effect)
  • Pupil exercise books or paper
  • Word bank cards: magic, spell, wand, broom, Wilbur
  • Pencils, crayons

Lesson Structure

Introduction (5 minutes)

Stimulus:

  • Show the book cover of Winnie the Witch displayed visibly (physical or digital).
  • Ask: “What do you think this story is about?”
  • Record brief pupil responses to activate prior knowledge.

Elicit Prior Knowledge:

  • Briefly discuss: “What do you know about witches, magic, and Halloween?”
  • Encourage a few pupils to share ideas, reinforcing vocabulary related to the theme.

Share Learning Intention:

  • Say: “Today we’ll listen to Winnie’s story and imagine our own magical spells.”
  • Display this intention on the board or visual aid.

Development (20 minutes)

Story Reading with BBU Strategy – Visualising (10 minutes)

  • Read Winnie the Witch aloud, displaying pictures clearly.
  • Pause strategically: “Close your eyes and imagine the colours of Winnie’s house after her spell.”
  • Prompt pupils to share their mental images: “What do you see?”
  • Next pause: “What do you think her next spell might be?” – encourage predictions.

This activity builds comprehension and visual literacy, cutting through cognitive load by focusing on images and imagination.


Cause and Effect Discussion (5 minutes)

  • Ask: “Why couldn’t Winnie see Wilbur?”
  • Elicit: “Because he was black!”
  • Then: “What happened after she changed his colour?”
  • Collaboratively complete a cause-and-effect chart on the board, e.g.,
CauseEffect
Wilbur was blackWinnie couldn’t see him
Winnie changed Wilbur’s colourWilbur was visible to Winnie

Supports reasoning skills and reinforces narrative understanding.


Creative Writing Task (10 minutes)

  • Write the sentence starter on the board:
    “If I were Winnie the Witch, I would make a spell to…”
  • Model a fun example: “…turn my teacher into a frog!”
  • Provide pupils with writing and drawing materials plus a word bank (magic, spell, wand, broom, Wilbur).
  • Pupils write 1–2 sentences and illustrate their magical spell.
  • Circulate to support emergent writers and encourage descriptive language.

Conclusion (5 minutes)

Cognitive:

  • Invite several pupils to share their sentences/drawings aloud.
  • Ask: “Can you tell us about your magical spell?”

Social:

  • Encourage classmates to applaud and give positive feedback, fostering a supportive classroom atmosphere.

Transition:

  • Collect work or display drawings on a designated “Winnie’s Magic Wall” — a vibrant classroom display celebrating student creativity.
  • Explain that this magical display will stay up for the week.

Assessment

  • Formative: Observe pupil participation during story discussion and cause-effect chart construction.
  • Written Task: Evaluate pupil sentences for emerging use of English sentence structure and imaginative content.
  • Oral Sharing: Note clarity and confidence when pupils describe their spell.

Differentiation

  • Support: Provide visual prompts and additional word cards for pupils needing help forming sentences.
  • Extension: Prompt more confident writers to add a second sentence describing how their spell would be used.

Reflection and Ideas to Wow!

  • Use a magic wand pointer during reading to “cast” spells and encourage engagement and imagination.
  • Dim the classroom lights briefly during visualisation pauses to deepen immersive experience.
  • Capture pupil-led videos of sharing sessions with parental permission and create a “Winnie’s Magic Story” digital gallery for a fun multimedia extension.
  • Integrate simple sound effects when reading (e.g., whooshing broomstick), linking auditory stimuli to the story.

This lesson combines imaginative storytelling with literacy and thinking skills in a joyful, culturally relevant way, deeply rooted in the IE Curriculum. It will enchant your learners while advancing core competencies!

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