The Soldier - GCSE WJEC Eduqas War Poetry
This two-lesson unit teaches students about Rupert Brooke’s ‘The Soldier’ in detail. Designed for GCSE pupils studying WJEC Eduqas War Poetry, the resource explores the poem in depth and explains how to compare it to another poem from the anthology. It is made up of a 40-slide editable PowerPoint presentation and 3 accompanying worksheets. The lessons contain the following:
Lesson One
Context - An introduction to Rupert Brooke and the romantic optimism of the early months of World War One.
First Reading - A reading of ‘The Soldier’ with comprehension / consolidation questions - answers included.
Language and imagery - Analysing the poem closely; exploring language and answering questions that delve deeper. Model answers provided.
Essay Writing - An essay question to assess students’ initial understanding. An example response is included.
Lesson Two
Imagery - Analysing Brooke’s use of imagery.
Themes - Discussing the themes of ‘The Soldier’.
Structure and Form - Considering how Brooke uses form and structure.
The GCSE exam - Comparing ‘The Soldier’ with ‘Dulce et Decorum Est’ and explaining how to write a comparison essay in the exam.
This is a comprehensive resource containing a range of activities, however it can also be edited, personalised and differentiated to suit your teaching needs. To preview 'The Soldier’, please click on the images.
Not quite what you’re looking for? Click below to see more GCSE Poetry resources for Eduqas and Edexcel:
The Manhunt
Sonnet 43
London
Living Space
As Imperceptibly as Grief
Cozy Apologia
A Wife in London
Death of a Naturalist
Hawk Roosting
To Autumn
Afternoons
Dulce et Decorum Est
Excerpt from The Prelude
Mametz Wood
Ozymandias
A Complaint
My Father Would Not Show Us
My Last Duchess
Neutral Tones
Something went wrong, please try again later.
We are pleased to let you know that your resource The Soldier Rupert Brooke, has been hand-picked by the Tes resources content team to be featured in https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/blog/war-poetry in October 2024 on https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/blog. Congratulations on your resource being chosen and thank you for your ongoing contributions to the Tes Resources marketplace.
Report this resourceto let us know if it violates our terms and conditions.
Our customer service team will review your report and will be in touch.