Category Archives: PHSE

Jigsaw – Year 1

Year 1
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
Carrying on from last week children had to stand and arrange themselves in a row from the tallest to the shortest. What does this show us? We all grow at different rates. Explained that in the next lesson we are going to look at some other important differences in the way we grow.
We did circle time and shared more baby pictures and talked about how much we have changed since being a baby to now.

Jigsaw – Year 4

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
Carrying on from last week we read the story ‘moving house’ and discussed the key points, especially the feelings of the people involved.  Talked through the process the family would have gone through before, during and after moving house. Explained the five steps of the circle of change, I.e. thinking about,deciding, preparing, taking action and keeping it going.
As a class asked children to brainstorm changes that have happened to the children already. We talked about a few and went through the change using the circle of change template, each child made their own circle of change usin a split pin and arrow. Asked the children to think about the change they would like to make when they are in year 5 and to think this through using the circle of change.

Jigsaw – Year 3

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
Carrying on from last week in groups of just boys and just boys , asked children to design a duvet cover/pillow case for children of the opposite sex, e.g. girls design a duvet cover for boys and boys design a duvet cover for girls. Children then had to present their designs – the girls presented to the boys and the boys presented to the girls.
I then asked the children to think about why/how they chose to design their pillow/duvet case as they did. Did they think their design is stereotypical or not?
Asked them to complete the sentence; ‘our design is not stereotyping because…’

Jigsaw – Year 6

Transitioning
Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
On laptops Year 6 children had to research about their new schools and find out information that they would want to know about. Children had to write down any questions that they would want to ask when they visit their new school on transition day.

Jigsaw – Year 5

Changing me
Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
Invited the children to design their own card about what they are looking forward to in becoming a teenager. Asked them to think about how their card compares to the original ones. Inside their card, asked the children to think about what advice they would give to the recipient about coping with the changes being a teenager brings. Asked children to write three bullet points of advice and a positive message.

Jigsaw – Year 1 & 2

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
children siting in a circle, Jigsaw jack holds up a picture of me as a baby. Children then had to help Jigsaw jack to work out who this is? Why is it so difficult to tell? I then invited a child to carefully choose a baby photo from the box.  I ask the children to to help Jigsaw Jack to work out who is in the photo, whose baby photo is this? How do we know? Is it difficult to work out?
In pairs, children talk about the ways they can think of that they have changed since they were babies. Shared round the circle the ideas they have come up with.

Jigsaw – Year 4

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
Seasons on change. In groups, children were given four pictures: a tree in four different seasons. Asked the children to put the pictures in the right order and to discuss the questions:
• What started the process of change?
• What happened I each stage of the change?
• What is your favourite/least favourite period of change?
• Did the tree have any control over the changes that were happening to it?

Jigsaw – Year 3

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
Gave each of the children a task card. Asked the children if any of them to complete the card individually by ticking in the relevant box if they think it is a male/female/either role. Then I asked children to compare their answers with a talking partner. Asked the children to compare the similarities/differences they have and to explain why they have come up with their ideas.

Jigsaw – Year 6

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
We had the police come into our PHSE lesson to talk to the children about knife crimes etc. Children watched a video on ‘one knife, one life’ documentary.

Jigsaw – Year 5

Changing me
Shared ‘The jigsaw charter’ with the children to reinforce how we work together.
Calm me
At the beginning of every jigsaw lesson we help our minds calm down so that we are ready to learn.
In small groups, children examine a selection of birthday cards for 13 year olds and discussed what are those cards telling us about how the designer sees the age of 13/13th birthday? What are the perceptions of 13 year olds shown in these cards? I asked the children to sort the cards into those they think reflect reality and those they think are unrealistic.
Each group picked one card they think best reflects what being a teenager means to them.