
PE • Year gcse • 60 • 24 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England
I'm teaching a Year 10 GCSE PE class about lever systems. I have a thorough PowerPoint presentation to work through and this is the detailed structure of my lesson...
• Do Now Activity: There is a picture on the whiteboard of an individual moving a large rock. Bit of guided discovery here to see what students think about how he is able to move this. Get them thinking and ask them to write down their ideas. • Key words – Students copy key words from presentation into exercise book and write down the definitions. • Brief class discussion about the picture on the whiteboard of an individual moving a large rock. Bit of guided discovery here to see what students think about how he is able to move this. • Explanation: Teacher now explains what the four components of a lever are and the shapes that represent them. • Quick Q&A test on mini whiteboards: The question asks which shape represents a fulcrum of a lever? Students quickly show their responses on their whiteboards. They are then asked to complete the missing words of a definition. It’s a one-word answer so can be done on whiteboards again. • Back to teacher explanation of where the effort, load and fulcrum must be positioned. • Another quick question check on mini whiteboards. • Task A: Students need to complete the table on the worksheet to summarise the key components of a lever. Make a separate worksheet with a word bank to support the lower ability students. • Teacher explanation about identifying the three types of lever system – first, second, third. Also how to remember which one goes in the middle – FLE. • Quick true or false question to check understanding on mini whiteboards. • Continue with teacher explanation of the three types of lever system and examples. • Another quick question check with mini whiteboards. • Task B: Instead of completing this part of the worksheet, students work in pairs to complete this task by using mini whiteboards to help them. Take turns to draw different lever systems and identify them. Explain why using key terms. Give students autonomy to create their own questions and ask different ones to their partner. • This naturally flows into the Exit Quiz which will act as the plenary. Students work together to answer these questions and test each other’s understanding. I then go through the answers and assess students confidence using happy, neutral, sad face method on mini whiteboards. • Resources required: PowerPoint presentation, student folders and exercise books, mini whiteboards and pens, regular worksheet, supported worksheet, exit quiz, A4 photocopy of GCSE revision booklet, sweets.
The lesson plan needs to follow this structure under the following headings: Resources, Learning Objectives, How this lesson links to prior and future learning, Introduction, Development, Conclusion, How students will be assessed, How to challenge students, how to support students.
Component 1 - The human body and movement in physical activity and sport
Do Now Task (5 min):
Key Vocabulary Entry (5 min):
Students copy and define:
(Set up expectations for spelling, precise definitions and exemplification)
Use motivating reward system (sweets/stickers) for best peer explainer or best use of key terms.
Exit Quiz (5 min):
Confidence Check (5 min):
Quick class diagnostic using mini whiteboards.
| Method | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Mini whiteboard checks | Formative assessment of factual understanding |
| Tasks A & B | Assess ability to identify and apply key concepts |
| Exit quiz | Retrieval practice and self-assessment |
| Peer discussion + explanation | Encourages deeper metacognition and articulation |
Let’s leverage every part of the lesson – quite literally – to get these students exam-ready and movement-savvy all in one go.
Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with National Curriculum for England in minutes, not hours.
Created with Kuraplan AI
🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools
Join educators across United Kingdom