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 22-slide lesson explores Mervyn Morris’ poem, ‘Little Boy Crying’.
The lesson explores Morris’ life and work before asking key questions related to parenthood, children, and perspective.
The poem’s language, form, structure, and imagery are deconstructed, with close analysis of Morris’ methods. We consider the poem’s key themes and ideas - including masculinity and violence - and think about how Morris’ choice of narrative tone and style informs the poetic vision.
Ambitious vocabulary is included to aid students with sophisticated analysis. We also consider philosophical questions raised by the poem.
An exam-style essay question is featured at the end of the lesson.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 23-slide lesson explores Philip Larkin’s poem, ‘The Mower’.
The lesson considers how the hedgehog in the poem - as well as the speaker’s reaction to what he has done to it - functions symbolically and metaphorically. Close attention is paid to Larkin’s language, structure, form, and rhythm, while the poem’s message is deconstructed in light of the elegy’s suspiciously neat conclusion.
Larkin’s poetic and literary influences are also explored with regard to the poem’s genre and imagery.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included. An essay question is also featured for students.
This resource includes a copy of the poem.
The lesson is ideal for analysing this poem as an ‘unseen’ text at GCSE, but could also work with KS3 or A level groups.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 20-slide lesson offers a comprehensive introduction to print journalism.
In this lesson, students reflect on the trustworthiness of the news and their engagement with it. They learn what ‘journalism’ means and explore its different written forms, thinking about how it has adapted and evolved in the modern world.
Students learn how to write journalistically, thinking about style, layout, and form. We consider the role of the ‘front page’ and analyse some examples, learning about the specialised vocabulary for describing different aspects of front pages. Students learn about the main printed newspapers of the UK - noting differences between broadsheet and tabloid - and we reflect on the angles, agendas, and demographics to which each newspaper is adhering.
Students are also encouraged to reflect on their engagement with international news, and we ask important questions about what makes us ‘interested’ in a journalistic story. We also ask whether there is a place for printed journalism in the modern world, and if we are experiencing the ‘death of print’.
The lesson ends with a research task for students to look up and define key journalistic terms. This is an ideal lesson for introducing students aged 10+ to print journalism.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
A superb extract from Patrick Marber’s ‘After Miss Julie’, perfect for analysis as an ‘unseen’ text for Section A of AQA’s Political and Social Protest Writing A level paper.
Extract is attached with PowerPoint featuring questions for students to consider/discuss/answer and an exemplar INTRODUCTION to an essay response.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 23-slide lesson explores W.H. Auden’s ‘Funeral Blues’.
The lesson begins with questions for students about the poem’s title and information about the poem’s history (including how it’s now so famous from ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’).
Students then read the poem (a glossary of key terms is provided) and discuss their first impressions. The poem is summarised and explained generally before the lesson moves into detailed questions about the poem: its speaker, its tone, its language, its imagery, its ending, and its message. Notes are given about the poem’s key tensions, as well as form, structure and rhyme.
Key themes are listed, and there is a list of sophisticated vocabulary to allow students to conduct precise and high-level analysis. There is an image-based task for students to match pictures to the poem.
There are questions provided throughout, including comprehension and though-provoking questions at the end. An example of an essay question (particularly relevant to the Cambridge IGCSE) is also included.
PowerPoint is attached as a PDF and in its original format. The PDF is recommended if you wish to retain the fonts, layout, and design.
This bundle includes 10 mock extracts for students to practise analysing elements of political and social protest writing according to the AQA A level syllabus.
Also included is a double-sided worksheet with key vocabulary/terminology linked to protest writing.
These resources are collectively worth £19.70, so this bundle offers a discount of over £10.
A PowerPoint all about the importance of names in Dickens’ ‘Hard Times’.
Ideal for those studying the novel for AQA’s Political and Social Protest Writing A level course.
A worksheet which presents students with visual stimuli to prompt critical thinking about the key themes and imagery in Dickens’s ‘A Christmas Carol’.
Students annotate the worksheet with their knowledge of the theme; they may wish to write down key quotes, important ideas, or significant plotpoints/staves of the novella which apply to each image. It’s up to you how you use this versatile resource.
This is an ideal starter or revision activity for studying the text.
A series of posters designed to help students to understand word classes.
Included: Nouns, Adjectives, Verbs and Adverbs (with examples).
Designed by Mr_Gradgrind to help support SEN students but equally useful for promoting whole-school literacy.
Four posters included.
Portrait and landscape posters featuring a quote from J.K. Rowling’s ‘Harry Potter’ series: “Words are our most inexhaustible source of magic”.
Perfect for classroom and corridor displays, and promoting literacy across the school.
A great lesson activity or homework task designed to test and consolidate students’ understanding of homophones. This is a fun visual activity with an element of critical thinking/problem solving involved.
Ideal for KS2 or KS3.
A great lesson activity or homework task designed to test and consolidate students’ understanding of proper nouns and common nouns.
15 questions included. Ideal for KS2 or KS3.
A great double-sided lesson worksheet or homework task designed to consolidate students’ understanding of apostrophes (denoting both contraction and possession).
Ideal for UKS2 as well as KS3.
An A4 landscape poster all about similes - perfect for your classroom or corridor display.
Useful for helping students remember key linguistic vocabulary.
Three E-Safety posters promiting online awareness to students.
Each poster presents succinct and vital information for staying safe on the web, including questions that you should ask yourself before you post anything online.
Posters read:
THINK BEFORE YOU POST
STAY SAFE ONLINE
DON’T BE MEAN BEHIND THE SCREEN