Thank you for visiting my shop. My aim is to provide high quality teaching resources that reduce the
need for hours of planning and help learners to achieve their potential in English and English Literature.
Please feel free to email me at sdenglish18@gmail.com with any queries, requests or comments.
Thank you for visiting my shop. My aim is to provide high quality teaching resources that reduce the
need for hours of planning and help learners to achieve their potential in English and English Literature.
Please feel free to email me at sdenglish18@gmail.com with any queries, requests or comments.
A lesson ‘Storm on the Island’ for lower ability learners. It includes:
Do Now task: learners examine an image of storm in a coastal area, identifying how it represents power and conflict.
Context sheet with corresponding tasks
Quotation hunt
Comparison with Exposure in terms of 1) power and 2) conflict
Review
A PPT that enables an exploration of Blake’s ‘London’. It is aimed at lower ability learners whose primary focus is understanding with some analysis of language and contextual ideas.
The starter/Do Now task is a multiple-choice, general knowledge quiz about London as a city.
Learners then read a context sheet for the poem and respond to the associated tasks.
They then read a translation of the poem and annotate their copies in their anthology. Suggested annotations included.
After this, they compare ‘London’ with ‘Tissue’ in terms of the presentation of human power.
The PPT concludes with a learning review.
Estimated time required: 1.5 hours.
This is the eleventh in the KS3 Creative Writing for lower ability learners. It follows on from this introduction to creative writing techniques:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/introduction-to-creative-writing-la-ks3-12065152
This lesson includes:
Do Now Task (see cover image)
Feedback slide
An introduction to flashback as a device + what is a flashback?
Links to YouTube videos in which flashback is used in 3 different films. Learners watch the clips and then say at what point the flashback occurs
An introduction to flashback as a structural technique + the difference between language and structure
Different ways of incorporating a flashback (worksheet)
Feedback slides
Flashback writing task with basic and challenge success criteria
Peer assessment
Review
Estimated time 1:5 hours
These resources were created for lower ability KS4 groups looking to study ‘Macbeth’ over the course of around five weeks.
For each act, there is a PPT with the full text translated into modern English. There is also a range of worksheets to develop understanding.
Act One also contains simplified contextual notes with a corresponding worksheet.
This is a newly differentiated version of this resource:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/macbeth-annotated-act-two-11875453
This lower ability version contains:
The full text of Act 2, translated (same as original)
Scene summaries for Scenes 1-4
Scene 2 (the immediate aftermath) full text with corresponding questions
5 Worksheets to be carried out alongside the reading of Act 2.
This unit contains fewer resources than the corresponding unit for Act 1, but this reflected in the price. It was created with the issue of time pressure in mind.
A fully-resourced unit of work for SEN students who need a general understanding of the play before approaching the original text in KS4.
The unit includes an adapted script in modern English.
The PPT is just over 140 slides long and is intended to provide 8-10 weeks’ worth of work for low ability and SEN students. It guides students through the adapted Acts 1-5 and provides a range of comprehension and vocab exercises.
It culminates in an assessment that makes use of both short-answer questions and one long-answer question on Romeo as a tragic hero.
Suitable for teachers and non-specialists with a low ability KS3 group.
If you would prefer to buy the adapted script separately, it is available here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/romeo-and-juliet-sen-script-11892212
NB. On slide 128, I’ve discovered that the multi-coloured text boxes look slightly out of place on different computers. If this is the case, it is simply a question of adjusting them slightly to put them back over the appropriate squares.
UPDATE: Core PPT tweaked and 2 new starters added. Please email me with any queries.
A handy summary mat that provides key points and guidance in relation to several forms of transactional writing.
UPDATED to include the original PPT slide.
A 9-10 week unit of work aimed at upper ability Year 8 learners.
The activities are based on a range of extracts that focus on popular female literary characters. Links are provided to the relevant extracts which are from:
‘Great Expectations’ (sample answer included)
‘The Hunger Games’
‘Gone With the Wind’ (sample answer included)
‘Wuthering Heights’
There are also activities that focus on Roald Dahl’s Miss Trunchbull (from ‘Matilda’) and Mrs Pratchett (From ‘Boy’).
Lastly, learners read and explore ‘The Lady of Shalott’ (Tennyson).
The assessment tasks focus on two different extracts from ‘The Hunger Games’.
This unit of work uses AQA 8700/1-style questions but could be adapted with other exam boards in mind.
A PPT that enables an exploration of ‘London’ by William Blake. The lesson includes:
A true or false entry task that provides some hints about the context of the poem.
A handout on the context of the poem with an accompanying worksheet.
A guidance sheet to prompt annotation of the poem.
3 differentiated extended response questions.
The lesson is aimed at upper-ability learners and should last 1.5-2 hours approximately.
A PowerPoint that can be used to teach or revise AQA 8700 Language Paper 1, Question 2 - the 8 mark language question.
The main question is based on an extract from George Orwell’s ‘1984’. If you purchase this resource, please be aware that you will need to source the extract for yourself. It is from the opening chapter of the novel, from ‘It was a bright, cold day in April’ down to, ‘Only the Thought Police mattered’.
The entry task is based on a link to a YouTube video which outlines the plot of the novel. Learners listen out for the answers to 9 questions.
After a short Q1-style task, the lesson then moves onto the main extract, which is accompanied by a sample exam question. Learners read and highlight the extract in relation to the question and then feedback. There are some key point on the language question to go through followed by a sample answer/WAGOLL.
Learners then taken ten minutes to write their own responses and peer assess.
The 11th in the KS3 Basic Literacy Range. This lesson is aimed at middle ability learners. It includes:
Do Now task based on previous lesson on inference-making. Learners examine a range of texts and images and say what conclusion can be drawn from them.
Feedback slides
Revision of the terms subject and verb
Identifying the subject and verbs in a range of sentences (worksheet + answers)
What does subject-verb agreement mean?
An information sheet covering six of the rules relating to subject-verb agreement, each with its associated task. Teacher answers included.
Feedback slides
Learning Review
This is the tenth in the KS3 Creative Writing for lower ability learners. It follows on from this introduction to creative writing techniques:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/introduction-to-creative-writing-la-ks3-12065152
This lesson includes:
Do Now task: learners identify the ‘typical’ sights and sounds on a street, with extension task
Feedback slide
MRS SOAP revision task
Learners then go on to complete a worksheet that asks them to apply their knowledge of creative writing techniques to their own street. Teacher examples and challenge task included,
Peer assessment
Learning review
A full lesson on GCSE discursive essay writing for lower ability learners. The PowerPoint covers:
The purpose of a discursive essay, with a sample question that learners are encouraged to ‘break down’. This includes an extension question.
Planning a response + extension question
Structuring a discursive essay
PEA paragraphs in a discursive essay
Counterargument
A sample response for annotation + extension activity
An opportunity for learners to produce their own responses
A peer assessment activity
Self-reflection
The lesson was produced with AQA 8700/2 in mind but could apply to other exam boards.
These files were last saved in Office 2016.
A set of three differentiated lessons on speech writing for AQA English Language, Paper 2, Question 5.
They are not lessons in series. You will download speech writing for higher, middle and lower ability learners.
Higher Ability
The higher ability lesson begins with a starter on the concept of foreign aid. No prior knowledge is required. The questions should be treated as a way of encouraging learners to start thinking about the topic. The answers are provided.
After a brief focus on Paper 2, Q5, learners then identify the PAF in a sample speech-writing question.
For the next activity, learners then consider the concept of rhetorical devices by watching a YouTube clip of Gary Oldman performing the ‘We’ll fight them on the beaches’ clip.
They then read and annotate a WAGOLL speech on the topic of climate change in conjunction with a table of rhetorical devices.
To follow, learners read a sheet in which key arguments for foreign aid are outlined. They are asked to make a summary of the ideas.
The main speech task is set as HWK and the lesson ends in a review task.
Middle Ability - Similar to Higher but with AFOREST
The middle ability lesson begins with a starter on the concept of foreign aid. No prior knowledge is required. The questions should be treated as a way of encouraging learners to start thinking about the topic. The answers are provided.
After a brief focus on Paper 2, Q5, learners then identify the PAF in a sample speech-writing question.
For the next activity, learners then consider the concept of persuasive language by watching a YouTube clip of Leonardo DiCaprio delivering a speech on climate change for the 2014 UN Climate Summit.
They then read and annotate a WAGOLL speech on the topic of climate change in conjunction with a table of AFOREST features.
To follow, learners read a sheet in which key arguments for foreign aid are outlined (differentiate from the higher lesson). They are asked to make a summary of the ideas.
The main speech task is set as HWK and the lesson ends in a review task.
**Lower Ability **
The middle ability lesson begins with a starter on the concept of climate change. No prior knowledge is required. The questions should be treated as a way of encouraging learners to start thinking about the topic. Suggested answers are provided.
After a brief focus on Paper 2, Q5, learners then identify the PAF in a sample speech-writing question.
For the next activity, learners then consider the concept of persuasive language by watching a YouTube clip of Sir David Attenborough deliver a short speech on climate change.
They then read and annotate a WAGOLL speech on the topic of climate change in conjunction with a table of AFOREST features (differentiated from middle ability task).
To follow, learners read a summary sheet on the topic of climate change in which
The main speech task is set as HWK and the lesson ends in a review task.
This is a straightforward lesson that follows on from prior teaching of broadsheet article writing. The question is styled in the form of AQA but could be adapted for other boards.
After a true or false Do Now task, the question is introduced and discussed.
This is followed by brief coverage of a suggested article structure (heading, introduction, main body and conclusion).
Students then work through a series of questions in response to a sample answer/WAGOLL. This sheet could be printed on A3.
Staff then take feedback from students.
Students write their own responses.
The lesson concludes with a learning review composed of five key questions.
A 63-slide PowerPoint that explores Act Two of ‘An Inspector Calls’. It covers:
Revision of some of the key ideas from Act One
Two separate keywords activities for Act Two (worksheets included)
A sequencing of Gerald’s affair task
Three differentiated questions to encourage analysis of Gerald’s affair: a) in terms of his relationship with Sheila; b) In terms of the patriarchal society of the Edwardian Era; c) In term of Marxist theory (worksheet + sample answers for B and C included)
Daisy’s Diary creative writing task
Notes on the contextual background of the Brumley Women’s Charity Organisation e.g. noblesse oblige and the deserving and undeserving poor
A quotation hunt based on some of the key ideas in early Act Two
The Literature Assessment Objectives and an example analysis paragraph based on a Sybil quotation
Inference-making activity based on a range of things Sybil says in Act Two
True or False statements relating to Eva Smith’s application for charity
A ‘why do you think’ series of statements relating to Eva Smith’s application for charity (suggested answers included)
A final extended-response question: How does Priestley present Sybil Birling in Act Two? (high level sample answer included)
A 20-question quiz on Act Two.
Review
This unit of work follows on from:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/-an-inspector-calls-act-one-unit-of-work-11839609
It can exist independently but it assumes some pre-teaching of contextual ideas including Marxist Theory and capitalism v socialism.
A 100-slide PowerPoint that provides the full text of ‘Macbeth’, Act Three, translated and annotated. The PPT uses layered text boxes with translations appearing first in blue, followed by analysis and critical commentary in different colours. The annotations include:
AO3 detailed contextual background information and its relationship with the text (e.g. features of Greek tragedy, biblical allusions, cultural expectations of women, fear of witches etc.)
Analysis of writer’s methods
Analysis of effects of structural devices
There are a series of comprehension and analysis activities to work through and the PPT will indicate when these should be undertaken.
With the appropriate school licence, this could be uploaded onto a network and accessed by students for revision.
NB: on the cover image, the translations may be hidden under additional text boxes. However, they do exist!
A 99-slide PowerPoint that provides the full text of ‘Macbeth’, Act Five, translated and annotated. The PPT uses layered text boxes with translations appearing first in blue, followed by analysis and critical commentary in different colours. The annotations include:
AO3 detailed contextual background information and its relationship with the text (e.g. features of Greek tragedy, biblical allusions, cultural expectations of women, fear of witches etc.)
Analysis of writer’s methods
Analysis of effects of structural devices
There are a series of comprehension and analysis activities to work through and the PPT will indicate when these should be undertaken.
With the appropriate school licence, this could be uploaded onto a network and accessed by students for revision.
NB: on the cover image, the translations may be hidden under additional text boxes. However, they do exist!
The 5 Acts of ‘Romeo and Juliet’, highly simplified and translated into modern English for SEN groups. Ideal to promote understanding of the play and some of the main ideas surrounding the characters. Written for a Year 9 nurture group.