Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
This 28-slide lesson is a thorough and comprehensive exploration of Seamus Heaney’s poem ‘Follower’.
This PowerPoint unpicks key themes of admiration, childhood and identity with close analysis of the poem’s language, form and structure.
Attention is paid to the demands of AQA’s GCSE Literature, through which this poem is studied in the ‘Love & Relationships’ anthology.
Questions and discussion points are included for students, as well as a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Follower’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
What kind of king is Macbeth?
The perfect holistic study of how power corrupts Macbeth in Shakespeare’s tragedy, this detailed lesson traces what happens to Macbeth after he chooses the heretical path of regicide.
This is an ideal lesson for GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This is a thorough and comprehensive 26-slide lesson on Simon Armitage’s poem ‘Mother, Any Distance’, which is studied as part of AQA’s GCSE Literature anthology on ‘Love & Relationships’.
This PowerPoint unpicks key themes of distance, growing up, independence, family bonds and letting go with close analysis of language, form and structure.
Also included are many small questions for students and a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Mother, Any Distance’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
PowerPoint is saved as PDF.
This 20-slide poem analyses Alan Gillis’ poem, ‘Bulletin from The Daily Mail’.
Exploring Gillis’ use of humour to satirise how tabloid newspapers demonise supposedly anti-social members of society, this lesson deconstructs the poem’s use of hyperbole, repetition, rhyme, and - of course - language.
Questions and discussion points are included around the subject of news - its dissemination, agenda, and importance to our modern society. An essay question is included for students at the end.
A copy of the poem is included within the PowerPoint.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This crossword on John Steinbeck’s ‘Of Mice and Men’ provides an enjoyable but academic activity for pupils to test their knowledge of the novella.
It always works as a great starter or plenary task.
This crossword on George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’ provides an enjoyable but academic activity for pupils to test their knowledge of the novella.
It always works as a great starter or plenary task. Ideal for KS3 or KS4.
Designed to introduce a unit on World War 1 Poetry for KS3, this 22-slide lesson includes a brief outline of the Great War and aims to teach critical vocabulary.
Ideas introduced include propaganda, pacifism and patriotism.
Students are encouraged to think about and analyse World War 1 propaganda.
Also included for analysis is the popular wartime song: ‘Your King and Country Want You’.
This lesson could also be used for a general contextual introduction to World War I in History lessons.
Top band essay analysing how Priestley explores the ‘generation gap’ in ‘An Inspector Calls’.
Perfect for high-attaining students studying the play at GCSE.
Includes a key for reading and highlighting the essay with your class.
PowerPoints for teaching all 15 of AQA’s GCSE Love and Relationships Poetry cluster.
Presentations include key themes, ideas and questions for students. Designed to supplement your teaching of the poems.
15 PowerPoints included. All designed by Mr_Gradgrind.
This resource includes a top-band exemplar piece of creative writing about the touching relationship between an old man and a dog.
As per Section B of AQA’s English Language Paper 1 (worth 40 marks), this creative writing is a response to an image, which is also included here in a PowerPoint.
Students could read, annotate, and discuss this response either before or after trying to produce a story of their own from the image.
The creative writing exemplar could equally be used as a model to other GCSE pupils not studying the AQA syllabus.
Help students to score high marks in the hugely significant 40-mark persuasive writing question of AQA’s English Language Paper 2 (Section B).
This top-band exemplar response (responding to the statement: ‘Superheroes are bad role models for children.’) always engages students with its relevance, reasoning and relatability.
Layered with an abundance of lingustic techniques, sophisticated vocabulary, advanced punctuation, and coherent structure, this exemplar response is perfect for showing students how to impress examiners in this challenging part of the exam.
11 specially designed posters on linguistic techniques designed to aid students’ learning of key vocabulary.
Each poster uses an example to explain each technique.
Perfect for your classroom or corridor displays!
Features:
Simile
Metaphor
Personification
Alliteration
Rule of Three
Hyperbole
Repetition
Onomatopoeia
Rhetorical Question
Imperative
Oxymoron
This top-band essay on Priestley’s presentation of Sheila in ‘An Inspector Calls’ is an excellent exemplar for students.
At the end of the essay is a highlighting key for students to unpick the essay’s techniques and structure, allowing for detailed discussion of the exemplar in class.
This resource is particularly useful for challenging HA pupils to reach the top bands.
This lesson includes three resources designed to teach Tatamkhulu Afrika’s harrowing apartheid poem ‘Nothing’s Changed’.
Included is a PowerPoint with some background on Afrika’s life and Apartheid, and questions on the poem; a copy of the poem with contextual notes (as per Section A of the AQA exam); and a top-band exemplar response to a Section A question. This final resource is a detailed and sophisticated essay analysing Afrika’s poem.
These resources are perfect for those studying POLITICAL AND SOCIAL PROTEST WRITING at A level with AQA, but could be adapted to teach the poem in a broader context.
This 47-slide lesson explores Charlotte Mew’s poem, ‘The Farmer’s Bride’.
The poem is studied as part of AQA’s ‘Love & Relationships’ anthology. This lesson explains Mew’s life and context against the backdrop of the Suffragette movement, before exploring the poem’s language, themes, imagery, structure, and form in comprehensive detail.
Questions, discussion points and tasks for students are included throughout. Extended essay questions are set at the end of the lesson, and an exemplar essay introduction is provided for one of the questions.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 40-slide lesson is a thorough and comprehensive study of Daljit Nagra’s poem, ‘Singh Song!’, included in AQA’s GCSE English Literature ‘Love and Relationships’ poetry anthology.
The lesson unpicks key themes of excitement, passion, rebellion, identity, duty, romance, and infatuation.
Also included are small questions for students and a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Singh Song!’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
PowerPoint is saved as PDF.
This is a thorough and comprehensive 30-slide lesson on Owen Sheers’ poem ‘Winter Swans’, which is studied as part of AQA’s GCSE Literature anthology on ‘Love & Relationships’.
This PowerPoint unpicks key themes of romantic love, separation and reconciliation with close analysis of language, form and structure.
Also included are questions/tasks for students and a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Winter Swans’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
Also included is a table for students to complete on the poem to help compartmentalise their notes.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 24-slide lesson explores the character of Lady Bracknell from Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’.
Wilde’s presentation of Lady Bracknell is thoroughly deconstructed, with students asked to consider her theatrical heritage via Greek stock characters and the Comedy of Manners. We debate to what extent Lady Bracknell can be called the play’s ‘antagonist’, and how Wilde uses her to catalyse key events or provide comical obstacles in the play.
Wilde’s structural use of Lady Bracknell is analysed, and important quotations from her and relating to her are dissected. We think about what we can learn from the stage directions about Lady Bracknell, and discuss how Wilde uses the offstage character of Lord Bracknell to inform Lady Bracknell’s character.
We consider Lady Bracknell in the context of the ‘New Woman’ and students are provided with key vocabulary that might be used to analyse Lady Bracknell. Modern theatrical interpretations (including gender inversions) of Lady Bracknell are discussed. Students are also encouraged to think critically about how Lady Bracknell interacts with props and how Wilde positions her at the end of the play.
Questions and discussion points are provided for students throughout the lesson. An exam-style essay question is featured at the end. Exemplar sentences and sentence openers are provided for students to enable sophisticated analysis, including purposeful introductions to extended essays.
This lesson is ideal for high-level analysis of Lady Bracknell.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 36-slide lesson explores the character of Feste in Shakespeare’s ‘Twelfth Night’.
With academic scrutiny, the lesson analyses one of Shakespeare’s most complex comic characters, beginning with an overview of his key lines, attributes, and role in the plot. This then leads to analysis of Feste’s name, key vocabulary that we might use to describe him, and how his role as a jester grants him special privileges and licence.
Important historical and theatrical context is explored alongside Feste’s character, and we look at the development of Shakespeare’s ‘Fools’ across his plays. Feste’s relationship with music and song is analysed, as well as his engagement with the play’s fascination with disguise when he becomes ‘Sir Topas’. Interesting viewpoints from a range of critics, directors, and actors are discussed.
Crucially, we also explore how Feste’s character relates to the key themes of the play and is central to the comedy of ‘Twelfth Night’. We look at how Feste interacts with other characters in the play, such as Malvolio, and compare him to Viola in his liminal and transgressive state. The Carnivalesque atmosphere of the play is analysed in light of Feste’s character.
Questions, discussion points, and essay questions are featured throughout. Students are encouraged to consider Feste’s character at a high level, so this lesson would be ideal for students aged 16+.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 24-slide lesson explores Boey Kim Cheng’s poem, ‘The Planners’.
The lesson introduces the life and work of Boey Kim Cheng before interrogating the philosophical relationship between construction and destruction. We consider the purpose of history and discuss the concept of cultural amnesia. Students are taught about the growth of Singapore since its independence from the British Empire.
Students then read the poem and delve into its language and imagery. Analysis of extended metaphor leads to exploration of form, structure, and rhyme. We think about the tone and key themes of the poem, and Boey Kim Cheng’s message in view of ever-expanding urban environments and global industrialisation. Students are given ambitious vocabulary to help them to produce sophisticated and precise analysis of the poem.
Questions and discussion points are included throughout for students. An exam-style question is also featured at the end of the lesson.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.