I teach English across Key Stages 3-5, and I teach Film Studies at A Level. I try to create resources which are easy to use and which, for KS4 and 5 pupils, will aid their revision for exams. My resources tend to be word documents, so they can easily be adapted to suit your students' needs.
I teach English across Key Stages 3-5, and I teach Film Studies at A Level. I try to create resources which are easy to use and which, for KS4 and 5 pupils, will aid their revision for exams. My resources tend to be word documents, so they can easily be adapted to suit your students' needs.
This document can be enlarged to A3 and laminated to provide a help mat to aid students get to grips with the Eduqas GCSE Language Component 2 exam.
One side has prompts to help with the Reading section, while the other gives advice useful in the Writing section.
It reminds students of things such as:
how long each section is;
how many marks each question is worth;
the emphasis of each question;
techniques to use in each question.
There’s also advice about planning for and proof-reading the writing tasks.
It’s a word doc, so you could adapt it as you wish.
This is a blank workbook for students to fill in as they study the novel. Because it’s a Word doc, you can easily adapt it. I have taken the characters and themes which have appeared in past questions on the Edexcel IGCSE Lit course, but you could easily add/remove pages if needed.
There’s a title page and an index. After that the rest of the booklet consists of two pages per character or theme.
The first page has a small picture in the middle and plenty of room around it so students can write a few key key quotations about that character, or create a mindmap about them, as appropriate.
The second page contains a table, divided as per the three main sections of the novel (Part One, Tom’s trial, and the aftermath of the trial) giving room for students to collect key moments/quotations from those sections that they could use in their exam essays. There’s also a box for recording key social and biographical contexts relevant to that character or theme.
It’s useful for helping them consolidate their knowledge as they study the novel, and is an invaluable revision resource.
I have created this expandable word doc to enable students to throughly analyse the whole of the film. The resource is divided into sections which correspond with the various episodes in this film.
Each section has three sections for the students to fill in:
Interesting uses of film form
How this creates meaning and response
Relevant context
These columns cover the three areas students need to write about in the Global Film essays in the exam.
I have found that gathering all three areas together on a sheet like this helps enormously when it comes to revision. Students can work alone or in groups to fill in each section. Because it’s a one-stop-shop with expandable boxes, it can be added to throughout the course.
I have created this expandable word doc to enable students to throughly analyse the whole of the film. The resource is divided into sections which correspond with the various episodes in this film.
Each section has three sections for the students to fill in:
Interesting uses of film form
How this creates meaning and response
Relevant context
These columns cover the three areas students need to write about in the Global Film essays in the exam.
I have found that gathering all three areas together on a sheet like this helps enormously when it comes to revision. Students can work alone or in groups to fill in each section. Because it’s a one-stop-shop with expandable boxes, it can be added to throughout the course.
This resource contains 11 key extracts from Book 1 of the novel. They have been selected because: they are, in themselves, interesting and revealing moments which shine lights on the settlings and characters of the novel; they are often good examples of Braddon’s style and techniques; and they match very well with extracts from The Cutting Season, which is the novel I pair this one with.
Each extract is followed by two boxes: one which allows the students to make notes on any relevant social, historical or biographical contexts which shed light on this extract; the other which encourages the students to make explicit links between this novel and The Cutting Season.
If you are pairing Lady A with a different novel, you can easily change the wording in these boxes so they match your choice.
This novel by Attica Locke is new on the Edexcel A Level Lit course in the Prose Unit. There’s very little out there yet to support students’ learning as they read, so I have developed an analysis sheet to accompany each chapter.
These sheets are for the third part of the novel.
Depending on the importance of each chapter, each sheet has all or some of the following:
A space for the students to write a brief synopsis of the events of the chapter;
1 - 8 short answer questions to develop their understanding of the plot and characters;
A space to record anything interesting or important they found about the language, form and structure;
A space to record any relevant contextual information which aids understanding of the chapter.
Some of the sheets also contain a Deep Dive question, which requires them to write a 500 word response to a character or theme based question.
Each sheet has fields for the students can type directly into.
This novel by Attica Locke is new on the Edexcel A Level Lit course in the Prose Unit. There’s very little out there yet to support students’ learning as they read, so I have developed an analysis sheet to accompany each chapter.
These sheets are for the second part of the novel.
Depending on the importance of each chapter, each sheet has all or some of the following:
A space for the students to write a brief synopsis of the events of the chapter;
1 - 8 short answer questions to develop their understanding of the plot and characters;
A space to record anything interesting or important they found about the language, form and structure;
A space to record any relevant contextual information which aids understanding of the chapter.
Some of the sheets also contain a Deep Dive question, which requires them to write a 500 word response to a character or theme based question.
Each sheet has fields for the students can type directly into.
This novel by Attica Locke is new on the Edexcel A Level Lit course in the Prose Unit. There’s very little out there yet to support students’ learning as they read, so I have developed an analysis sheet to accompany each chapter.
Depending on the importance of each chapter, each sheet has all or some of the following:
A space for the students to write a brief synopsis of the events of the chapter;
1 - 8 short answer questions to develop their understanding of the plot and characters;
A space to record anything interesting or important they found about the language, form and structure;
A space to record any relevant contextual information which aids understanding of the chapter.
Some of the sheets also contain a Deep Dive question, which requires them to write a 500 word response to a character or theme based question.
Each sheet has fields for the students can type directly into.
I have copied the text from the Edexcel Anthology and interspersed it with boxes for students to write notes in. The boxes have questions, headings or quotations in them to help guide the learners.
I have copied the text from the Edexcel Anthology and interspersed it with boxes for students to write notes in. The boxes have questions, headings or quotations in them to help guide the learners.
I have copied the text from the Edexcel Anthology and interspersed it with boxes for students to write notes in. The boxes have questions, headings or quotations in them to help guide the learners.
I have copied the text from the Edexcel Anthology and interspersed it with boxes for students to write notes in. The boxes have questions, headings or quotations in them to help guide the learners.
After teaching each scene to my A Level students, I give them these sheets.
They are Word docs, which can be given to students so they can type their responses directly into the fields provided. Alternatively, you could hand out paper copies and they could handwrite their responses.
The tasks include:
stating when this scene is set
giving a brief synopsis of the scene
lots of deep-dive questions into the characters and dialogue
exploring the use of stagecraft and plastic theatre in the scene
examining relevant contextual factors
They are ideal for use with A Level English Literature students, but could be used in Drama lessons, too.
Note: There isn’t a sheet like this for scene 11 as I tend to teach that scene quite differently.
This worksheet can be given to students so they can type their responses directly into the fields provided. Alternatively, you could hand out paper copies and they could handwrite their responses.
The tasks include:
stating when this scene is set
giving a brief synopsis of the scene
8 deep-dive questions into the characters and dialogue
exploring the use of stagecraft and plastic theatre in the scene
examining relevant contextual factors
It is ideal for use with A Level English Literature students, but could be used in Drama lessons, too.
This worksheet can be given to students so they can type their responses directly into the fields provided. Alternatively, you could hand out paper copies and they could handwrite their responses.
The tasks include:
stating when this scene is set
giving a brief synopsis of the scene
8 deep-dive questions into the characters and dialogue
exploring the use of stagecraft and plastic theatre in the scene
examining relevant contextual factors
It is ideal for use with A Level English Literature students, but could be used in Drama lessons, too.
This worksheet can be given to students so they can type their responses directly into the fields provided. Alternatively, you could hand out paper copies and they could handwrite their responses.
The tasks include:
stating when this scene is set
giving a brief synopsis of the scene
8 deep-dive questions into the characters and dialogue
exploring the use of stagecraft and plastic theatre in the scene
examining relevant contextual factors
It is ideal for use with A Level English Literature students, but could be used in Drama lessons, too.
This booklet takes a deep dive into the text. I created it for middle-ability GCSE students, but it would work well with sparky Year 9s, too.
It’s organised by chapter (with an extension unit on Chapter 3) and looks closely at language and structure as well as plot and characterisation.
Each chapter has a range of guided activities, plus plenty of room for students to make notes.
As it’s a word doc, students could access it electronically, and fill in the boxes using a computer if they like.
At 40 pages long, it’s ideal for someone preparing to write about it in an exam (such as Edexcel IGCSE Lit), or as a classroom resource for students reading it at KS3.
All the page numbers in the booklet refer to the hardback Longman edition, but you could easily change these if you’re using a different one.
For Edexcel IGCSE Literature, pupils need to include lots of relevant context in their exam essays on the novel. I have designed this booklet as a handy way for students to collect lots of context stuff in a way that makes it easy to refer to and revise from.
There’s a page for exploring how the title, taken from Burns’ To a Mouse links to each chapter in the novel.
Next, there are pages dedicated to each chapter, with plenty of room for recording textual examples and quotations as well as context.
The final pages are organised by character, so the students can quickly revise the relevant context connected to each of them.
Please note: I haven’t included the contextual information in the booklet. This is merely a handy way of organising what they find out.
This worksheet can be given to students so they can type their responses directly into the fields provided. Alternatively, you could hand out paper copies and they could handwrite their responses.
The tasks include:
stating when this scene is set
giving a brief synopsis of the scene
8 deep-dive questions into the characters and dialogue
exploring the use of stagecraft and plastic theatre in the scene
examining relevant contextual factors
It is ideal for use with A Level English Literature students, but could be used in Drama lessons, too.
This worksheet can be given to students so they can type their responses directly into the fields provided. Alternatively, you could hand out paper copies and they could handwrite their responses.
The tasks include:
stating when this scene is set
giving a brief synopsis of the scene
6 deep-dive questions into the characters and dialogue
exploring the use of stagecraft and plastic theatre in the scene
examining relevant contextual factors
It is ideal for use with A Level English Literature students, but could be used in Drama lessons, too.