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Cartoons, photos, songs - fun, imaginative ways with teaching are here for you and they're all free as birds!

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Cartoons, photos, songs - fun, imaginative ways with teaching are here for you and they're all free as birds!
DON QUIXOTE - CERVANTES
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

DON QUIXOTE - CERVANTES

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Resources and a lesson idea for introducing this wonderful character to children and older pupils, too. Children in particular can find it absolutely hilarious when adults do ridiculous things. Don Quixote can really provide some funny and stimulating lessons if you let him ride into the classroom! Lesson plan contains ideas on how pupils can create and act out stories about a modern Don Quixote. Perhaps this person has watched too many Batman films and thinks the world needs someone to fly around in a bat costume trying to solve the world's problems...in Spanish, of course! Have fun! }:o)
THE WITCH - DESCRIPTIVE SONG
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THE WITCH - DESCRIPTIVE SONG

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A song which creates a character mostly through setting, detail & imagery. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own songs/poems é learn about rhythm é rhyme. Other creative tasks: 'Meeting a Witch&', diaries, letters, posters éc. it can also introduce ballad form. This helps quatrains, dialogue, imagery, repetition, refrains é rhymes to make more sense. The use of metaphor é simile to create mood can be studied, too. Enjoy using the song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
YOU'RE SHAKESPEARE - CHOOSE A WORD!
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YOU'RE SHAKESPEARE - CHOOSE A WORD!

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'Comment on the choice of words&' often puzzles pupils. &';You're Shakespeare - Choose A Word!&' gets pupils to choose their own words to fill in the gaps in 10 lines of Shakespeare. Pupils then speak the lines aloud to see what effects their word choices have had on meaning, feeling and sound. &';Which Words Did Shakespeare Choose?' gives them the complete lines with the names of the characters and plays. Of course, you could compile your own examples from a play you&'re teaching. It’s worth teaching &';effect' = noun, &'affect&'; = verb, before they write their analysis.
HOW TO WRITE AN OLYMPIC VICTORY ODE
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HOW TO WRITE AN OLYMPIC VICTORY ODE

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Tells you about the structure and content of Pindar's Olympic Victory Odes and then tells you how to write your own! You can write about a sporting celebrity such as Rebecca Adlington and there is an excellent example at the end of these sheets. &'English - Prize poetry&'; is the article I wrote in Resources with more ideas about how to use these worksheets: http://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=6257863
VICTORY ODES AT THE GREEK OLYMPICS
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VICTORY ODES AT THE GREEK OLYMPICS

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A Powerpoint about Pindar’s Victory Odes at the Greek Olympics, prepared by Professor Edith Hall, Kings College London, for a Poet in the City event: Poetry and the Greek Olympics. Teacher can tell the class how the athlete’s training was military, the victory odes were performed for the victors in front of thousands and some of the games were very violent!
WHEN THIS LOUSY WAR IS OVER
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WHEN THIS LOUSY WAR IS OVER

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The pupils’ activity is simply the lyrics for the song ‘When This Lousy War Is Over’, with guitar chords. The MP3 is a recording of a female voice. Also find the song on YouTube from the film, ‘Oh What A Lovely War’, with male voice choir - the link is included here. The other website has lyrics for the same song and a few others.
'I SHOP SMARTLY' - ADVERTISING MNEMONICS
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'I SHOP SMARTLY' - ADVERTISING MNEMONICS

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‘I Shop Smartly’ presents the main advertising techniques as a mnemonic that can be learnt. ‘If Seal Puppies Shop Smartly, Do You?’ is more detailed, and you might just want to select from this sheet in your own way. Pupils could pick the techniques they tend to forget & make up their own mnemonic! The last page of this has ideas for written work. One way to teach the idea of target audience is to get pupils to design adverts for different year groups. They are so close to the distinctions between Years 7, 8 and 9 that their observations on concerns and language can be very sharp and funny!
KATE BUSH PARODY - 'BICKERING SPRITES'
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KATE BUSH PARODY - 'BICKERING SPRITES'

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A filmed parody of the Kate Bush song, 'Wuthering Heights&', which sends up the original novel as much as it does the song! Fun to watch as part of a term&';s work on the Gothic genre: pupils can spot the elements of the Gothic in the whole style in which the film is shot as well as the performance itself. Good for teaching them what parody and satire are as well. Fun if you've studied &'Wuthering Heights&';, too! I enclose leadsheet (lyrics and chords) and video script. There may be some differences between the leadsheet, script & final film.
LA VITA DI UN PIRATA PER ME!
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

LA VITA DI UN PIRATA PER ME!

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These are the lyrics to an Italian song about pirates, but I have so far been unable to find the tune. (I find that if I ask the class if anyone would like to make up a tune there is always someone who offers!) In any case, the rhythm is what helps pupils to remember the words, so speaking or chanting it and it works just as well. Great for revising first person plural verbs. Fun to get the class to write new verses for this song using the vocabulary of everyday life. So pirates are not only the demons of the sea - they also do the washing up!
STAR MOUNTAIN - BALLAD
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STAR MOUNTAIN - BALLAD

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This song tells a story in the first person. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own ballad songs/poems. Use it as a springboard for stories: who was the Star Mountain Girl? What was her story? Diaries, posters etc. Pupils learn to create feeling with detail, imagery, rhythm & rhyme. In lit. lessons, the song can introduce ballads, monologues, setting, repetition é cyclical structure.Enjoy using the song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
POETIC RHYTHM ( + THE TIGGER SONG)
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POETIC RHYTHM ( + THE TIGGER SONG)

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Poetic rhythm is often neglected as it can be hard to write about. You can scoop up marks for doing it, though. The sheet 'Poetic Rhythm&' explains how rhythm can suit subject & feelings of a poem, é how to write well about this. You can give pupils this sheet on its own, then use it for anthologies é unseen poems. ‘The Tigger Song’ is a clear é memorable eg of how rhythm suits subject é feeling. Onomatopoeia, repetition, refrains é made-up words come up, too. Pupils analyse lyrics then watch the YouTube video, to experience the techniques in action! See Lesson Plan for more ideas.
GHOST - A MYSTERIOUS SONG
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GHOST - A MYSTERIOUS SONG

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This song tells a story through first-person description. As well as performing it, pupils can write stories, poems, songs e.g. ‘Letter from a Ghost’. They learn about creating atmosphere with detail, imagery, rhythm & rhyme. In literature lessons, the song can introduce storytelling poems, monologues, setting, repetition é cyclical structure. Enjoy using this song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
THE BOLD GRENADIER - TRADITIONAL BALLAD
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THE BOLD GRENADIER - TRADITIONAL BALLAD

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A song that tells a story: so you can use it to help students understand ballad form. The use of quatrains, dialogue, repetition and rhymes will then make more sense. You can also use the song to inspire creative writing e.g. 'The Soldier&'s Letter&'; and 'The Maid&'s Diary&';. Pupils can write their own ballads & learn about rhythm é rhyme. Enjoy using this song as a resource for lessons and concerts! This is my arrangement é recording of a traditional song. See base of lyric sheet for details.
IT'S NOT A BOOK - IT'S A PLAY ON A STAGE!
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IT'S NOT A BOOK - IT'S A PLAY ON A STAGE!

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This sheet is designed to help students to think of the play they are studying as a drama to be acted onstage, not a book to read in silence. You can do some of the exercises in class or as a homework. Reading a section of dialogue with sock puppets is a fun way to explore who is speaking to whom, who has power in a scene and who is silent. Encouraging students to do this at home can make revision stimulating and memorable. Theatrical observations start to creep into essays as a result.
THE TOOTH FAIRY - SONG
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THE TOOTH FAIRY - SONG

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This song tells the story of a tooth fairy who wants to become a surgeon. It may comfort children worried about a wobbly tooth or going into hospital. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own songs/poems about a character who is fed up wants a change. Other creative tasks: diaries, letters, posters &c. The subtext for anyone worried about career choices is: one thing can lead to another. Enjoy using the song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
LOOK BACK - UPLIFTING, REFLECTIVE SONG
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LOOK BACK - UPLIFTING, REFLECTIVE SONG

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This song suits a final assembly for a year group that is leaving, and end-of-year song for the whole school. When under pressure we tend to look forward, anxious about what is yet to be tackled. This song is about fortifying yourself with a look back at what you have achieved: 'look back and see how far you&'ve come&';. I wrote it for a class of Matric students in South Africa for their Matric Dance (like the School Prom). So I own the copyright. You can use this song and the recording in lessons, assemblies & school events!
CHANSON: LA FIANCEE DU PIRATE
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CHANSON: LA FIANCEE DU PIRATE

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Link to YouTube audio of Juliette Greco singing this dramatic song by Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht. There are some extra contractions in the lyrics so it is worth letting students know this. Pupils could write diaries or letters after listening to the song. There were a few female pirates, so pupils could write a letter from a pirate to a girlfriend or boyfriend. Or they could write a reply from the pirate to the woman in this song!
THE FIRE OF THE WEST - BALLAD
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THE FIRE OF THE WEST - BALLAD

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Who or what is the Fire of the West? Get children to guess before they listen to the song. Get them to guess again after hearing you read aloud the first verse. Then listen to the song! Pupils could write their own ballads or stories with mysterious titles. Other creative tasks: diaries, letters, posters &c. For literature, use it to introduce ballad form: originally, a song that tells a story. Listen out for metaphor, simile, repetition, refrain, é rhymes. Enjoy using the song for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See lyric sheet for details.
THUNDER GOLD - WESTERN BALLAD
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THUNDER GOLD - WESTERN BALLAD

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This song tells a story in the first person. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own ballad songs/poems, creating feeling with detail, imagery, rhythm & rhyme. In lit. lessons, the song can introduce storytelling poems, monologues, setting, repetition é cyclical structure. Interpretation, too: is ‘Thunder Gold’ a place? A symbol? In creative writing, use it as a springboard for stories: who is/was this person? Diaries, posters etc. Enjoy using the song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.