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Writing a Report

English • 30 • 14 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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English
30
14 students
15 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

i want the lesson to focus on report writing but i need a good stimulus for the lesson. In the lesson the children are going to be filling in their report card based off the visit they had from the guard. The classa re going to write the introduction together and then write their facts on their own. i also need to include diffrentiaition for easily distracted children and EAL children

Writing a Report

Overview

This 30-minute lesson introduces first-class students (aged 6-7) to basic report writing using a real-life stimulus: a recent visit from the school guard. Students will collaboratively write an introduction, then independently record facts in their report cards. The lesson aligns with the IE Curriculum framework for English, focusing on early writing competencies, language structure, and comprehension.


Curriculum Links

Curriculum Strand: Oral Language and Reading
Strand Unit: Writing
Learning Outcomes:

  • W1.4: Use their own words to write short pieces that communicate meaning for different audiences and purposes.
  • W1.6: Write simple texts (sentences and short paragraphs) with appropriate spacing and basic punctuation (capital letters and full stops).
  • SEN - Language and Literacy: Support oral and written language development for learners who are EAL and those with attention difficulties.

Lesson Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will:

  1. Understand the purpose and structure of a simple report.
  2. Collaboratively create an introductory paragraph for a report about the guard’s visit.
  3. Independently write 3–4 factual sentences about the visit.
  4. Use basic punctuation accurately (capital letters, full stops).
  5. Apply simple organisational skills to complete their report card.

Resources

  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Printed “Report Card” templates (with spaces for an introduction and facts)
  • Visual stimulus: photos or a drawing of the guard from the visit
  • Checklist visual prompts for punctuation and spacing
  • Timers for focused work intervals (for differentiation)
  • “Fact word” cards with simple sentence starters (for EAL and easily distracted students)

Lesson Structure

1. Engage & Stimulate (5 minutes)

  • Stimulus: Teacher shows photos/drawing of the guard and briefly recounts the visit.
  • Q&A: Ask students what they remember about the guard’s visit (Who? What? Where?).
  • Purpose: Explain they will write a report to share what they learned about the guard.

IE Curriculum focus: Activates oral language and builds background knowledge, supporting writing (W1.4).


2. Model Introduction Writing (7 minutes)

  • Teacher models writing the introduction on the whiteboard: e.g., "The guard came to our school today. He told us about his job."
  • Use think-aloud strategies while writing to highlight sentence structure, capitals, full stops.
  • Invite students to suggest words or sentences, writing them visibly and correcting gently.

IE Curriculum Focus: Emphasises sentence construction and punctuation (W1.6).


3. Independent Fact Writing (12 minutes)

  • Each student receives a report card template.
  • Students write 3-4 factual sentences about the guard’s visit, e.g., "The guard wears a uniform."
  • Teacher circulates to support writing and encourages use of capital letters and full stops.
  • Use “Fact word” cards as scaffolds for EAL and easily distracted students.
  • Set a visual timer to break the task into two 6-minute writing sessions with a short reminder break.

IE Curriculum Focus: Independent purposeful writing for audience (W1.4, W1.6). Scaffolded writing support for diverse learners.


4. Sharing & Assessment (5 minutes)

  • Invite volunteers to read their facts aloud (to practice oral language and build confidence).
  • Use a simple checklist for self or peer-assessment: Did I use capital letters? Did I stop at full stops?

IE Curriculum Focus: Integrates oral language and written language skills; encourages reflection on writing (W1.4).


Differentiation

Learner NeedApproach
Easily Distracted- Use a timer for focused intervals with a short movement/stretch break.
- Provide “Fact word” cards with visual prompts and sentence starters.
EAL Students- Pair writing with oral rehearsal of sentences before writing.
- Provide bilingual keywords/images related to the guard and his job.
- Use simplified vocabulary and check understanding frequently.
More Confident WritersEncourage adding a closing sentence or drawing a related picture after writing.

Assessment & Feedback

  • Informal formative assessment through teacher observation during independent writing and oral sharing.
  • Check each report card for:
    • Correct use of capital letters and full stops,
    • Inclusion of factual sentences related to the visit,
    • Clear introduction paragraph.
  • Provide positive written or verbal feedback highlighting students’ successful communication.

Extension Ideas

  • Invite students to illustrate their reports at home or during art time to reinforce content.
  • Involve parents by sending a simple report template home for discussion about safety roles in the community.

This highly specific lesson plan not only meets IE Curriculum standards but also creatively uses a real visitor experience for authentic learning. The blend of collective and individual writing, supported differentiation, and clear, tangible goals ensure active engagement for all learners while developing foundational report writing skills.

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