The shop is full of high level resources targeting top grades in English Literature, History and French. Resources have been thoroughly researched and put together by a current undergraduate at the University of Oxford in order to contain optimum detail and apprehension. Revision can be challenging to say the least, but these resources have been designed to make it enjoyable and as 'easy' as possible.
The shop is full of high level resources targeting top grades in English Literature, History and French. Resources have been thoroughly researched and put together by a current undergraduate at the University of Oxford in order to contain optimum detail and apprehension. Revision can be challenging to say the least, but these resources have been designed to make it enjoyable and as 'easy' as possible.
Early Tudors History A-Level Revision: The reign of Henry VIII after
Looking for extensive and highly detailed notes? Then these are just for you! 29-pages of highly easy to understand notes to help you revise the Henry VIII government after 1529 module of the Early Tudors History A-Level course.
Included is a sharable PDF document and a editable word document.
It is advisable to take what you want from these notes. They have been written from using a variety of textbooks, historical books (such as Richard Rex’s ‘The Tudors’) and sources.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding the resource or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Early Tudors History A-Level Revision: Henry VIII and Wolsey.
Looking for extensive and highly detailed notes? Then these are just for you! 25-pages of highly easy to understand notes to help you revise the Henry VIII and Wolsey module of the Early Tudors History A-Level course.
Included is a sharable PDF document and a editable word document.
It is advisable to take what you want from these notes. They have been written from using a variety of textbooks, historical books (such as Richard Rex’s ‘The Tudors’) and sources.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding the resource or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Early Tudors History A-Level Revision: Henry VII’s Foreign Policy
Looking for extensive and highly detailed notes? Then these are just for you! 17-pages of highly easy to understand notes to help you revise the foreign policy module of the Early Tudors History A-Level course.
Included is a sharable PDF document and a editable word document.
It is advisable to take what you want from these notes. They have been written from using a variety of textbooks, historical books (such as Richard Rex’s ‘The Tudors’) and sources.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding the resource or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
The Mid-Tudor Crisis Extensive Revision Notes for A-Level History OCR
Are you looking for some detailed notes to help with your study of the Mid-Tudor Crisis for OCR A-Level History? If so, these highly detailed notes are certainly for you.
Enquiry Topic: The Gateway to the Mid-Tudor Crises 1547-1558
Notes for each module : The Stability of the Monarchy; Religious Change and Rebellion and Unrest (60-pages of notes in total). Please be aware that these notes have been taken from a variety of resources, historical books and textbooks. Please also feel free to cut and change the notes, hence why you can download them as a sharable PDF document or an editable word document.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you have any questions concerning the course or the resource, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Henry VII and Henry VIII Top-Graded Essays for the Early Tudors Module (History A-Level OCR)
Do you struggle to write essays for the Early Tudors Module of the History A-Level? Then, this resource is most certainly the one for you!
32-pages of essays (roughly 1.5-2pages per essay) covering all four themes for the Early Tudors paper.
These essays could well be used as exemplars or broken into essay plans to help you revise the content.
Thank you for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
The Handmaid’s Tale and Frankenstein Comparison Tables / Essay Plans.
Do you find comparing the two texts (Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Shelley’s Frankenstein) rather challenging? Are you in need of some pre-written essay plans where the challenging comparison has already been done for you? Do you struggle finding the correct quotes and context? Do you struggle with language analysis? Do you find breaking your essay up into an introduction, three comparative themes and a conclusion rather hard? Then, this extensive and highly detailed resource is just for you!
54-pages of detailed essay plans ranging from looking at science in both essays to power and control to fear to isolation to ambition to knowledge to men and masculinity and many many more…
Please see the preview for an example, but language, context, structure and critical analysis are all covered in EVERY SINGLE plan. Quotes have been put in bold with the correct page numbers, so that you can easily find the quotes in the text (The Handmaid’s Tale - Vintage Classics Edition and Frankenstein - Wordsworth Classics Edition).
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any more information concerning this resource, or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Doctor Faustus Act-by-Act, Scene-by-Scene A-Level English Literature Detailed Analysis (35-pages)!
Looking to achieve a high grade in your A-Level English Literature Doctor Faustus question? Looking to have a really good grasp of the play? Need help understanding Marlowe’s language? Then, this document is most certainly the one for you!
Listed in both a sharable PDF form and a editable word document to aid your study.
The document is laid out in a very easy way to improve your understanding of the text. Skeletal overview followed by a more detailed overview combined with a breakdown of the important quotes and language techniques.
Example:
Scene Analyse in Doctor Faustus
Act V Scene II (Scene 13)
Overview:
o The last hour of Faustus’ life: cements the play as a tragedy.
o A long monologue ends the play: it is an accelerated representation of the last hour of his life, marked by the chimes of the clock, which show Faustus in a sequence of emotional turmoil.
o Faustus goes to hell.
The Terrors of Hell:
o Faustus communicates to the Scholars the nature of his contract with Lucifer. This shows him finally accepting and acknowledging the nature of eternal damnation: “but now I die eternally”. Repetition of “hell for ever” emphasises the realisation of his destiny.
o “A surfeit of deadly sin that hath damned both body and soul” - Faustus is now losing control of his body as well, not just his soul. Hell/damnation is an all-consuming force. This is further emphasised by the way in which “the devil draws in my tears”, and “O, he stays my tongue!”, as the Devils prevent Faustus from weeping or praying for repentance. This, in combination with Marlowe’s use of emphatic punctuation thereby induces a fearful and anguished tone into Faustus’ words. Henceforth, we can see that this reflects how Marlowe portrays Hell as a merciless and unforgiving environment of endless, dreaded torture.
o Faustus continues to blame the devil for his sins: “the devil threatened to tear me in pieces if I named God” – Not acknowledging responsibility for his own actions.
Faustus’ final soliloquy:
o This soliloquy is one of the most impressive and moving passages in theatrical tradition. Faustus, isolated from human companionship and alone on stage moves through the final hours of his life in a condition of intense feeling and anguished thought.
o The question of belief is now taken for granted
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding this resource, or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Doctor Faustus Cambridge University Lecture Notes for A-Level English Literature
Looking to achieve a high grade in your A-Level English Literature Doctor Faustus question? Then this extensive resource of notes taken from a lecture on Doctor Faustus given at the University of Cambridge is certainly for you!
Listed in both a sharable PDF form and a editable word document to aid your study.
The document looks at the life of the real Doctor Faustus, the Faust Book and the Puritans, The Sources of Doctor Faustus and The Fortunes of Doctor Faustus. This is definitely complex content for the advanced and curious learners, but it will certainly elevate your essays to a completely new level!
Extra reading ideas are included throughout the document.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding this resource, or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Doctor Faustus Context and Critical Approaches for A-Level English Literature
Looking to achieve a high grade in your A-Level English Literature Doctor Faustus question? Then this extensive context and critical approaches resource is definitely for you.
Listed in both a sharable PDF form and a editable word document to aid your study.
The document discusses the literary (gothic literature…) and historical (calvanism…) background of the play as well as lists numerous critical approaches. Although critical approaches are needed in your essays, informing yourself of the various critics might be very helpful for aiding your study.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding this resource, or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Early Tudors History A-Level Revision: The government of Henry VII and threats to his rule.
Looking for extensive and highly detailed notes? Then these are just for you! 17-pages of highly easy to understand notes to help you revise the government module of the Early Tudors History A-Level course.
Included is a sharable PDF document and a editable word document.
It is advisable to take what you want from these notes. They have been written from using a variety of textbooks, historical books (such as Richard Rex’s ‘The Tudors’) and sources.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information regarding the resource or the course in general, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
A* Khrushchev Interpretation Essays for Russia and its Rulers 1855-1964 Study (History A-Level OCR)
Are you looking to achieve a good grade in the Russia and its Rulers unit of the OCR History A-Level? Are you worried about the thematic question and how to write a top-grade answer? Do you know how to establish criteria? Do you know how to include synthesis successfully? Then this MASSIVE resource is certainly the one for you!
This resource is great for those looking for top graded exemplar answers to follow and use to replicate in the exam. Criteria has been established for every single essay, which will hopefully be helpful to you in showing how to establish criteria.
Included in this resource:
‘The most important social changes in Russia from 1855 to 1964 concerned education provision’. How far do you agree?
Assess the view that no Russian ruler improved the lives of the peasantry between 1855-1964
‘Communists and Tsars ruled Russia in the same way.’ How far do you agree with view of the period from 1855 to 1964?
How far did the working classes suffer more from Bolshevik rule than Tsarist rule during the period 1855-1964?
‘Opposition to Russian government was ineffective in the period from 1855 to 1964.’ How far do you agree with this view?
To what extent were the Communists more effective than the Tsars in their use of repressive measures to govern Russia from 1855 to 1964?
‘The Russo-Japanese war of 1904-1905 changed the lives of the peasantry more than any war in the period 1855-1964’. How far do you agree?
“The fall of the Provisional Government in October 1917 was the most important turning point in the development of Russian government”. How far do you agree?
‘Stalin changed the nature of government more than any other ruler.’ How far do you agree?
Thank you for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
A* Khrushchev Interpretation Essays for Russia and its Rulers 1855-1964 Study (History A-Level OCR)
Are you looking to achieve a good grade in the Russia and its Rulers unit of the OCR History A-Level? Are you worried about the interpretations question and how to write a top-grade answer? Then this resource is certainly the one for you!
Included in this resource is…
Khrushchev passages for all four themes. You could use these passages as practice. You must summarise the passages and then look at the main argument, quotes and what can be inferred.
Essay on Khrushchev and De-Stalinisation.
Essay on the Cold War.
Essay on the Economic and Social Reforms under Khrushchev.
Essay on the Sino-Soviet Split / Mao.
Thank you for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Advanced French Phrases to achieve top grades at A-Level and beyond.
Super advanced and detailed grammatical phrases to set your answers apart from the rest. Want to speak like a native? This is most certainly the 11-page resource for you! Examples are included for every grammatical point!
*Example:
Did you know about my upstairs neighbour? His wife dumped him and she took off with her lover.
Tu étais au courant pour mon voisin du dessus ? Sa femme l’a plaqué et elle s’est tirée avec son amant.
Être au courant quelque chose – to be aware of something
Plaquer quelqu’un (laisser tomber quelqu’un) – to dump someone
Se barrer / Se casser / Se tirer – to leave with someone *
Thank you for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information, please do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Multiple Practice Questions for The Early Tudors (Henry VII and Henry VIII). These questions are detailed to the OCR Early Tudors and Mid-Tudor Crisis course. Have you run out of past paper questions? Are you trying to predict what the questions for this year will be and get ahead of the game? This resource will certainly help you out! Multiple questions for all four themes (Henry VII and Henry VIII) that have not yet come up in the exam, but could very likely be questions.
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you require any further information, do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Super easy overview of ‘Frankenstein’ and ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ for A-Level English Literature Prose Study.
Included are the page numbers to help you with your study.
Frankenstein - Wordsworth Classics.
The Handmaid’s Tale - Vintage Classics.
Thank you for your interest in this resource.
A massive and highly comprehensive synopsis for your prose A-Level English Literature study of Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’ and Margaret Atwood’s ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’.
18-pages of detailed quote breakdowns for both texts. This document will allow you to nail the A02 Language element of the essay requirements by showing you the most crucial quotes in both texts and how to analysis them in a comprehensive fashion.
*Example Quote Breakdown: *
• Victor pursues ‘nature to her hiding places’ – Chapter 4, pages 40-45
• Victor to Walton: ‘Learn from me, if not by my precepts, at least by my example, how dangerous is the acquirement of knowledge, and how much happier that man is who believes his native town to be the world, than he who aspires to become greater than his nature will allow’ (Page 42).
• ‘I became myself capable of bestowing animation upon lifeless matter’ (page 41) and how, rather arrogantly, he didn’t’ doubt his ‘ability to give life to an animal as complex and wonderful as man’ (page 42).
The page numbers have also been provided so that you are aware of where the quotes can be located in the text (The Handmaid’s Tale - Vintage Classics and Frankenstein - Wordsworth Classics).
Thank you very much for your interest in this resource. Should you have any questions regarding the resource or the course in general, please do not hesitate to send an email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Want to aim high with A-Level English Literature? Want a good grade for your Othello essay? This is most certainly the resource for you in order to nail essay writing and planning. Pleased to say that this essay received full marks from an Edexcel A-Level Examiner, thus it could be used as an ‘exemplar’.
Deception and Manipulation:
‘Cunning manipulation and deception is key to the tragedy in Othello’. In the light of this statement, explore Shakespeare’s presentation of duplicitous scheming and plotting in Othello. In your answer, you must consider relevant contextual factors and ideas from your critical reading.
Included: Introduction, Iago the Deceiver, Victims of Deception and Deceptive Women.
Although tailored to the Edexcel course, this resource is great for the AQA, OCR and WJEC courses as well.
Hopefully you will find this resource very useful, but should you have any questions regarding this resource or the course in general, do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Want to aim high with A-Level English Literature? Want a good grade for your Othello essay? This is most certainly the resource for you in order to nail essay writing and planning. Pleased to say that this essay received full marks from an Edexcel A-Level Examiner, thus it could be used as an ‘exemplar’ (added elements from critics and websites included that can easily be cut if needed).
Power of Language (Fantastic for nailing A02 for the Edexcel Board).
Explore the ways in which Shakespeare explores the power of language in Othello. You must relate your discussion to relevant contextual factors and ideas from your critical reading.
Although tailored to the Edexcel course, this resource is great for the AQA, OCR and WJEC courses as well.
Hopefully you will find this resource very useful, but should you have any questions regarding this resource or the course in general, do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Want to aim high with A-Level English Literature? Want a good grade for your Othello essay? This is most certainly the resource for you in order to nail essay writing and planning. Pleased to say that this essay received full marks from an Edexcel A-Level Examiner, thus it could be used as an ‘exemplar’ (added elements from critics and websites included that can easily be cut if needed).
Othello:
Explore the ways in which Shakespeare presents Othello in Othello. You must relate your discussion to relevant contextual factors and ideas from your critical reading.
‘Othello is too stupid to be considered a tragic hero’. In light of this statement, explore Shakespeare’s presentation of Othello in the play. In your answer, you must consider the relevant contextual factors and ideas from your critical reading.
Introduction, Dramatic Function, Thematic Function, Tragic Hero and Fool.
Although tailored to the Edexcel course, this resource is great for the AQA, OCR and WJEC courses as well.
Hopefully you will find this resource very useful, but should you have any questions regarding this resource or the course in general, do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com
Want to aim high with A-Level English Literature? Want a good grade for your Othello essay? This is most certainly the resource for you in order to nail essay writing and planning. Pleased to say that this essay received full marks from an Edexcel A-Level Examiner, thus it could be used as an ‘exemplar’ (added elements from critics and websites included that can easily be cut if needed).
Desdemona:
Explore the ways in which Shakespeare presents Desdemona in Othello. You must relate your discussion to relevant contextual factors and ideas from your critical reading.
Introduction, Chasteness, Rebellious Nature, Loyal Devotion and True Victim.
Although tailored to the Edexcel course, this resource is great for the AQA, OCR and WJEC courses as well.
Hopefully you will find this resource very useful, but should you have any questions regarding this resource or the course in general, do not hesitate to email alevelrevisionmadeeasy@gmail.com