Blog
Please sign up to our newsletter to find out what is happening at Brilliant Publications. There is a box for your email address at the foot of this page.
Let us know what other kinds of emails you’d like to receive from us. We’ll use this information to make sure we’re only sending you content you’re interested in. Please fill in our subscription form
-
Top 10 playground games for primary schools
Are you looking for some good playground games to get children active outside? These games will get them moving and will help to develop PE skills and teamwork.
March 2, 2021 -
Exciting grammar
Is it really possible to make English grammar exciting, fun, enjoyable, and varied? By and large, English grammar tends to get a bad press.
February 24, 2021 -
Get cooking – safely
How do we keep children safe as they get cooking with sharp cooking implements? We have 8 short videos showing different skills needed to keep safe in the kitchen.
February 7, 2021 -
For the gifted and talented
More able children are as varied in their individual attributes as everyone else in the class, and so a wide range of approaches and activities is needed.
December 7, 2020 -
Two factors to raise reading comprehension skills
It is vital that children are given passages to read that they can both understand and enjoy – that are appropriate, engaging, varied and grab their attention.
March 11, 2020 -
A comprehensive French resource with cross-curricular links
Introduce French to young children through rhymes, songs and activities with a resource which integrates easily into your lesson plans.
March 21, 2019 -
Teaching division to beginners
We often assess our children’s understanding by using worksheets. In this worksheet the children are asked to share objects evenly to practise division.
March 6, 2019 -
From Outstanding, is the only way to go down?
Would your school benefit from Mentoring Mondays to support colleagues to develop their practice or how about a simple way of tracking children’s progress?
February 19, 2018 -
Using the Two-spoon Method in Cooking
Kate Morris and Sally Brown, authors of Get Cooking in the Classroom, have created a great video to help teach children the two-spoon method.
February 23, 2017 -
Il fait du vent – il y a du vent…
Nowadays ‘il y a du vent’ has become so common that even French people feel that ‘il fait du vent’ sounds odd. Rest assured though – it is perfectly correct.
October 9, 2015
Recent Posts
- Boost Key Stage 2 reading comprehension skills June 11, 2026
- Get sporty to learn times tables June 4, 2026
- Support healthy eating in primary school June 2, 2026
- Dicken’s in graphic form – Bah! Humbug! May 28, 2026
- What if teaching didn’t have to feel this hard? May 27, 2026







