A range of resources for English across Key Stages 3, 4 and 5, as well as Literacy resources. I create schemes of work, individual resources, revision games, and exam-style papers.
A range of resources for English across Key Stages 3, 4 and 5, as well as Literacy resources. I create schemes of work, individual resources, revision games, and exam-style papers.
This resource would be best enlarged onto A3 and could be used during teaching this paper, before an assessment or after a marked piece of work in order for students to make improvements.
This focuses solely on the reading section of Language Paper 2 and uses ‘One’s Company’ and ‘Records of a Girlhood’ (2023 exam) as its focus. It is three pages in length. The sections could be potentially highlighted by students or folded to look less overwhelming and to seem more like a bookmark style tool.
This is a grid which includes
the key things to remember about the reading section
emphasis on the importance of the context box at the top of the extract
what each question looks like (based on ‘One’s Company’ and ‘Records of a Girlhood’ (2023 exam)
questions they should ask themselves for each question to help reading for meaning
how to plan (or what I tell mine to do)
what should be included to gain specific levels with a short example
sentence openers
a rough breakdown of marks for grade boundaries
the mark scheme with bracketed simplification of some words for students to understand
This resource would be best enlarged onto A3 and could be used during teaching this paper, before an assessment or after a marked piece of work in order for students to make improvements.
This focuses solely on the reading section of Language Paper 1 and uses ‘The Life of Pi’ (2023 exam) as its focus. It is three pages in length. They sections could be potentially highlighted by students or folded to look less overwhelming and to seem more like a bookmark style tool.
This is a grid which includes
the key things to remember about the reading section
emphasis on the importance of the context box at the top of the extract
what each question looks like (based on ‘The Life of Pi’ 2023 paper)
questions they should ask themselves for each question to help reading for meaning
how to plan (or what I tell mine to do)
what should be included to gain specific levels with a short example
sentence openers
a rough breakdown of marks for grade boundaries
the mark scheme with bracketed simplification of some words for students to understand
This workbook is designed to guide students through independently re-reading the play and making notes. It breaks the play down across twelve revision sessions, each of which has three parts:
Direction of which pages to read.
A set of comprehension questions on this part of the play.
A choice of further revision tasks, encouraging students to further reflect on the scenes they have explored. Many of these tasks include challenge questions to encourage higher order thinking.
There is also a relevant exam question provided for each of the twelve sessions.
I created this because many of my students don’t really know where to start with independent revision, and I also want to see evidence that they’ve read back through the text. It could also be used in school revision sessions.
The page numbers used relate to a copy of the play that is available online (link within the resource) but could be adapted for students’ own physical copies of the text.
This booklet contains a series of 13 sessions, designed for students to work through ‘A Christmas Carol’ independently. Each session would last around two hours, and they can be easily broken down or adapted depending on your students’ needs. Useful for setting independent work (e.g. if a student is out of lesson), homework, or directed revision.
Students are guided through which pages to read each time (referencing a freely available online copy of the novel, in pdf form so it could also be printed) followed by questions based on comprehension and interpretation. There are then a series of other tasks to ensure students engage with the section they’ve read on a deeper level.
This workbook is designed to guide students through independently re-reading the novella and making notes. It breaks the text down across eleven revision sessions, each of which has three parts:
Direction of which pages to read.
A set of comprehension questions on this part of the novella.
A choice of further revision tasks, encouraging students to further reflect on the section they have explored. Many of these tasks include challenge questions to encourage higher order thinking.
There is also a relevant exam question provided for each of the eleven sessions.
I created this because many of my students don’t really know where to start with independent revision, and I also want to see evidence that they’ve read back through the text. It could also be used in school revision sessions.
The page numbers used relate to a copy of the novel that is available online (link within the resource) but could be adapted for students’ own physical copies of the text.
A complete series of lessons, with 17 PowerPoints and accompanying resources to work through the play from the beginning to the end, developing relevant skills (AO1, AO2, AO3 and AO4).
Includes opportunities for peer/self reflection using green pen (you may wish to change this if your school has a different colour/policy for independent reflection). Aimed at middle-higher ability but can be adapted. Lessons are designed to be one hour each but many can be stretched to allow for more detailed exploration of ideas where relevant.
Useful for any study of An Inspector Calls but created with the new AQA specification (8702, Paper 2) in mind.
Note: there are a range of original resources within the package, but two of these are freely available on TES (dominoes task and tension ordering in lessons 1 and 6). I am absolutely not claiming these as my own but including them within the scheme as they are incorporated in the two of the lesson plan PowerPoints I’ve created :)
After discounting all extracts and questions used in AQA’s sample and past papers, and considering the length of extract and question styles used by AQA, I came up with six potential extracts and questions AQA could use this summer.
This resource consists of those extracts, each with a question, in the style of the AQA GCSE English Literature exam. Please note that these are purely predictions and I have no advance knowledge of the content of the exam!
Included is also an additional further range of sample Romeo and Juliet exam tasks I’ve put together.
AQA style GCSE English Literature exam papers on Romeo & Juliet, A Christmas Carol, Blood Brothers, Power & Conflict and Unseen Poetry, based on what I anticipate might come up this year.
I have no inside knowledge in terms of what will be on the exams - this is done by considering aspects such as typical extract length, question styles etc. that AQA use and eliminating anything that has already appeared on their published SAMS and past papers.
Extremely useful if you want full sets of English Literature exam papers that don’t cover past content that clearly won’t come up again!
AQA style GCSE English Literature exam papers on Macbeth, A Christmas Carol, Blood Brothers and Power & Conflict, based on what I anticipate might come up this year.
I have no inside knowledge in terms of what will be on the exams - this is done by considering aspects such as typical extract length, question styles etc. that AQA use and eliminating anything that has already appeared on their published SAMS and past papers.