Free resources
This said, I've still tried to use KOs in my practice, particularly over the last four years. These are a work in progress and link to the curriculum I was teaching at the time I created each of these. They may not fit perfectly for your school and your context; however, it seemed a waste for these resources to sit on my computer after they were no longer being used in my classroom so here they are. You will find links to all the Knowledge Organisers I have made thus far on the resources page of this website. They are all available (many of them including retrieval quizzes too) for FREE via my TES page. If you find them useful, please let me know...and if you don't, well then let me know how you think they could be improved. Please share them with any colleagues as you can - I want these to remain helpful to others. Remember, sharing is caring! Why must we always reinvent the wheel? If you'd like to know more about why Knowledge Organisers can so powerful and how they are best used (if at all), I'd recommend starting with the following blogs from Joe Kirby, Jon Hutchinson, Michael Tidd & Jon Hutchinson (this time for Teach Wire). If you don't have the time to read these blogs now, here are a couple of key takeaways:
Final tangents As I've been writing this blog post, I've found myself going off on a few tangents that really aren't specific to KOs but are definitely worth looking into. I'm not ready to write a post on each of these right now and others have already written eloquently about them elsewhere but I didn't want to completely delete them either so here are the highlights:
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