I am currently teaching in a state secondary school although I have also taught in primary, independent and international schools. I really hope you find my resources useful!
I am currently teaching in a state secondary school although I have also taught in primary, independent and international schools. I really hope you find my resources useful!
An engaging, super clear 28 slide powerpoint which takes a class through the theme of manipulation in ‘Macbeth’.
There are plenty of opportunities for short, focused activities by the students to help consolidate skills of language analysis and writing about context. The lesson finishes with an exam question, using an extract from Act 2 scene 2, with two separate detailed plans showing how to tackle a GCSE essay.
This is suitable for the AQA exam board but can easily be adapted for other exam boards.
A super clear, colourful 50 slide powerpoint that covers the presentation of women in ‘Macbeth’.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is a full sample answer at the end. Please note: this essay and the activities cover AO2 and AO3. Depending on whether you are teaching Edexcel or Eduqas, you would want to play up or down the AO2 or AO3. None of it is irrelevant- although context is not assessed in Eduqas, good use of it can enhance students’ points. Similarly, AO2 is assessed in the extract question for Edexcel which means the practice of the skills here for the essay question can help students improve these important skills.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
If you find it useful, please do leave a review and have a look at other lessons and activities in my shop.
A super clear, colourful 47 slide powerpoint that covers the theme of violence in ‘Romeo and Juliet’.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There is an AQA style essay question at the end with structured guidance to help the students annotate and plan an answer. There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is a full sample answer at the end.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
A super clear, colourful 36 slide powerpoint that explores the poems ‘Presents from My Aunts in Pakistan’ and ‘Search for My Tongue’.
I have delivered this lesson to KS3 and KS4 students very successfully.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for most tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
A super clear powerpoint (20 slides) which takes a class through the stages of tackling an extract question.
The extract is from chapter 9 and the question is based on the character of Dr Lanyon. There are opportunities for short, focused activities by the students and also a ‘moving up the levels’ illustration of how to analyse language and structure closely. It finishes with a complete model answer at grade 9 standard.
This is written for the Edexcel exam board but can easily be adapted for other exam boards.
A really clear 30 slide powerpoint that takes students step-by-step through the unseen poetry questions of the Eduqas exam board. It uses two lovely, accessible poems that deal with the relationships between a child and an older person.
The first half of the powerpoint tackles the single poem using ‘Follower’ by Seamus Heaney’ and includes a sample top mark answer.
The second half then helps students develop the skills to compare the poems, using ‘Climbing My Grandfather’ by Andrew Waterhouse. Again, there is a sample top mark answer.
I have used this powerpoint many times with my students and it works really well.
With a little adaptation (just cutting down the sample comparison answer), it can easily be used for the AQA unseen poetry question.
Poems not included.
An engaging, super clear 51 slide powerpoint which takes a class through the presentation of women in ‘Macbeth’, using key quotations which are then used to tackle an exploding extract question.
There are plenty of opportunities for short, focused activities by the students with slides giving answers for all activities. The lesson finishes with an exam question and guided activities to help students plan and then write their answers.
A full model answer is also included.
The lesson works best as revision. It takes between 1 and 2 hours, depending on how much writing the students complete.
This is suitable for the AQA and OCR exam boards but can easily be adapted for other exam boards.
A super clear, colourful 50 slide powerpoint that covers the character of Romeo as a tragic hero in ‘Romeo and Juliet’.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There is an essay question at the end with structured guidance to help the students annotate an extract and plan an answer. There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is a full sample answer at the end.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
If you find it useful, please do leave a review and have a look at other lessons and activities in my shop.
This is a super clear powerpoint consisting of 73 slides that guides the class through the theme of social class in ‘An Inspector Calls’.
There are lots of activities for the students which can be completed as a class, in groups/ pairs or individually. There are answers on separate slides to all questions/activities.
Use of short key quotations allow plenty of opportunities for students to closely analyse language.
Additionally, there are also some ideas for top-level context and exploring the text in different ways which helps students reach the highest grades.
The lesson finishes with two essay questions so teachers can choose the one they need to teach according to their exam board.
One is an essay question which follows the format of AQA and Edexcel. There is a full top level answer as well for students to read.
One is with an extract-based exam paper suitable for Eduqas students. This includes detailed slides showing how to annotate, how to plan and, really usefully, an example of a top level answer.
My students found this really helpful- I hope yours do too!
If you like this resource, please do leave a review and have a look at my TES shop MsLarkinsResources for more material that will help your GCSE students achieve their best.
MsLarkinsResources
A super clear, colourful 46 slide powerpoint that covers a comparison of ‘Extract from The Prelude’ with ‘Storm on the Island’.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There are also two planning exercises where the students use the same points for ‘Extract from The Prelude’ to compare to ‘Exposure’ and ‘Ozymandias’. Students find this very useful.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
A super clear, colourful 50 slide powerpoint that covers the character of Lady Macbeth.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is an AQA style essay question at the end with structured guidance to help the students annotate an extract and plan an answer. There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is a full sample answer at the end.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
If you find it useful, please do leave a review and have a look at other lessons and activities in my shop.
Tes paid licence
A super clear, colourful 31 slide powerpoint that covers the character of Macbeth as a tragic hero.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is a full sample answer at the end suitable for Eduqas/Edexcel/OCR exam boards.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
If you find it useful, please do leave a review and have a look at other lessons and activities in my shop.
A super clear, colourful 37 slide powerpoint that explores the poem ‘What Were They Like?’.
Although this poem is on various GCSE specifications, I have delivered this lesson to KS3 students very successfully.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for most tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
A super clear, colourful 44 slide powerpoint that explores gender in ‘An Inspector Calls’.
There are plenty of opportunities for students to work individually, in pairs or small groups, depending on the class dynamics. There are sample answers for all tasks and engaging activities which help students improve their skills.
There is an AQA/Edexcel style essay question at the end with structured guidance to help the students annotate and plan an answer. There are guided writing tasks as well to support students.
There is a full sample answer at the end.
This lesson takes 1-2 hours, depending on how much writing you ask the students to complete.
My students have found it engaging and really helpful. I hope yours do too!
Adlestrop - Edward Thomas and First Flight - U. A. Fanthorpe
This is a colourful document in the form of a super clear grid that shows students how to compare the poems.
5-6 short key quotations from each poem
high-end language analysis
context fully covered
tight comparison
It is really useful for effective revision. I created this for a student who went on to get a grade 9 just using this (and others I have made- see bundle) as her revision aid.
To Autumn by John Keats and Home Thoughts from Abroad by Robert Browning
This is a colourful document in the form of a super clear grid that shows students how to compare the poems.
5-6 short key quotations from each poem
high-end language analysis
context fully covered
tight comparison
It is really useful for effective revision. I created this for a student who went on to get a grade 9 just using this (and others I have made- see bundle) as her revision aid.
Postcard from a Travel Snob by Sophie Hannah and First Flight by U A Fanthorpe
This is a colourful document in the form of a super clear grid that shows students how to compare the poems from the Edexcel GCSE Time and Place cluster.
5-6 short key quotations from each poem
high-end language analysis
context fully covered
tight comparison
This is really useful for effective revision. I created these for a student who went on to get a grade 9 just using this grid (plus other grids-see bundle) as her revision aid.
Search for My Tongue by Sujata Bhatt and Half-caste by John Agard
This is a colourful document in the form of a super clear grid that shows students how to compare the poems using the themes of identity and strong feelings.
5-6 short key quotations from each poem
high-end language analysis
tight comparison
It is really useful for effective revision. I created this for a student who went on to get a grade 9 just using this (and others I have made) as her revision aid.
A super clear 47 slide powerpoint which revises the role of the ghosts in ‘A Christmas Carol’.
There are plenty of opportunities for short, focused activities by the students. A student worksheet is included which the students can either fill in independently or in pairs/small groups. Alternatively, depending on the ability of the class, the worksheet can be completed as a class with the teacher modelling. The powerpoint easily allows the teacher to be flexible with how the lesson is delivered.
The lesson finishes with an exam question using an extract from Stave 4. A full model answer is also included with suggestions for revision at the end.
This is suitable for the AQA and Eduqas exam boards but can be adapted for other exam boards.
A really clear 30 slide powerpoint that takes students step-by-step through the unseen poetry questions of the Eduqas exam board. It uses two lovely, accessible poems that deal with ideas of grief and death.
The first half of the powerpoint tackles the single poem using ‘Do Not Stand by My Grave and Weep’ by Mary Elizabeth Frye and includes a sample top mark answer.
The second half then helps students develop the skills to compare the poems, using ‘Do Not Go Gentle into that Good Night’ by Dylan Thomas. Again, there is a sample top mark answer.
I have used this powerpoint many times with my students and it works really well.
With a little adaptation (just cutting down the sample comparison answer), it can easily be used for the AQA unseen poetry question.
Poems not included but easily available with an online search.