6 lessons building towards an assessment comparing two literary texts:
Touching the Void and Red Dust by Ma Jian.
Focus on the author’s perspectives on survival. Lots of differentiated embedded into the lessons.
Lessona 1 and 2. Analyse Red Dust
Lessons 3 and 4. Analyse Touching the Void
Lesson 5. Prepare for comparative assessment through the learning journey.
Lesson 6. Complete assessment
A lesson aimed an understanding and analysing the prologue to Romeo and Juliet. Originally aimed at a relatively low ability group but there are extension tasks on the main activity to stretch the more able. There is a further optional extension worksheet attached.
A detailed 19 slide lesson analysing the character of Piggy. Includes detailed inferences for several key Piggy quotations and also includes advice and model paragraphs for how to write an introduction and conclusion for answering the following exam-style question:
How far does Golding present Piggy as a character with useful and important ideas in
Lord of the Flies?
Write about:
• what Piggy says and does that can be seen as useful and important
• how far Golding presents Piggy as a character with useful and important ideas.
Also includes a full length grade 9 exemplar response.
A lesson to guide students on how to write a film review of Stone Cold by Robert Swindells.
The writing frame on the PowerPoint is differentiated which works well as a carousel activity so that students can write up the review first in a group before working independently.
There is also a graphic organiser to help students plan their film review.
As I am sure you are aware, the film is available on youtube.
Detailed lesson that guides students through annotating the key lines in Act 1 Scene 4. There is also a starter, comprehension questions, sample paragraph analysing the ‘stars hide your fires’ quotation and extended writing activities based on the scene with a modelled example.
A detailed lesson that guides students through how to turn the ‘crutch without an owner’ moment from A Christmas Carol into a piece of narrative writing. Students are provided with ambitious vocabulary to help them effectively describe Bob’s face, the symbolic candle and the empty chair.
This lesson helps students write the introduction to a persuasive speech for a Year 8/9 assembly on which subject to take at GCSE.
Includes a differentiated starter, model examples and a review task within a 4 page student booklet.
A prompt sheet to help students to peer assess poetry comparisons against the marking criteria. I have used this with the AQA Power and Conflict poems; however, it can easily be adapted for other specifications.
This lesson was inspired by the AQA 2018 English Language Paper 1 Question 5. Students were asked to describe the face of an old man. To help students improve their description, I have created a bank of 275 words that students can use to add precision to their descriptions.
The follow up tasks gives students 8 images of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth (Polanski version). Students must select the adjectives carefully to describe one of the 8 images. Peers then have to work out which image they have described from the quality of the description.
The plenary asks students to write down their favourite words to describe each aspect of the face.
Example high level comparison of War Photographer and Exposure.
Save money by purchasing as part of a bundle of grade 9 responses:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/power-and-conflict-grade-9-model-essays-12213236
Or buy my full power and conflict bundle also containing lessons and various revision activities:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/power-and-conflict-bundle-2018-11881499
Writing frame for comparing Storm on the Island and Exposure (AQA Power and Conflict).
The AQA style exam question is as follows:
Compare the ways the poets in Storm on the Island and one other poem (Exposure) present conflict with nature.
A grid of key quotations from Stave 2, a model example and a success criteria.
Students analyse the quotations which have the biggest impact on Scrooge.
A lesson for exploring Storm on the Island in the Power and Conflict AQA anthology.
Step 1: Students use the hint questions to prompt them to gain an independent understanding of the poem.
Step 2: Read through the answer and complete.
Step 3: Questions to test understanding of new annotations.
Step 4: Review by creating thesis statement about Heaney’s purpose.
40 questions on Stave 3 of A Christmas Carol.
Useful to set after reading the Stave to check understanding.
Includes 8 extension questions based around A03 to develop understanding of context and Dickens’ purpose.
Also includes a revision PowerPoint guiding students on how to make a mind map to revise the key quotations from the Stave.
PowerPoint revising theme and character quotations.
Each quotation is click activated so you can go through them one by one after first giving students a chance to select and explaining quotations themselves.
Covers 4 themes:
Don’t trust the supernatural
Don’t trust appearances
Ambition is toxic
Guilt is inescapable
and covers 3 characters
Macbeth
Lady Macbeth
Banquo
Comprehension questions on Stave 4 of A Christmas Carol.
Also contains a revision PowerPoint guiding students through how to make a mind map to revise the key quotations from the two staves.
Graphic organisers to help guide students on how to structure their responses to each question on the English Literature AQA 9-1 GCSE.
This structure will work for any text you are studying.
You will just need to change the headings if you are not studying Romeo and Juliet, A Christmas Carol or An Inspector Calls.
2 differentiated worksheets to support students with gaining a perceptive understanding of how Dickens presents Scrooge’s past in Stave 2.
Worksheet 1: I have broken up Stave 2 into 5 extracts. Each group will explore the an extract in detail and carousel to share their ideas with the other groups.
Worksheet 2: Differentiated questions to help students explore Stave 2.
Stave 4 differentiated comprehension questions on A Christmas Carol.
Includes a differentiated starter which asks students to summarise the Stave using 7 images.
Aimed at mid - ability GCSE with target grades 4-6.