Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
This is a top-band exemplar essay on how Dickens presents Scrooge as an outsider in ‘A Christmas Carol’.
Based on a genuine AQA Literature past paper, this essay is perfect for HA pupils to see how to structure a sophisticated and perceptive essay.
The extract and exam question are included on the first page.
Portrait and landscape posters featuring a quote from J.K. Rowling’s ‘Harry Potter’ series: “Words are our most inexhaustible source of magic”.
Perfect for classroom and corridor displays, and promoting literacy across the school.
This resource contains four well-known recent speeches by famous women (Angelina Jolie, Emma Watson, Michelle Obama and Theresa May) which are excellent for linguistic and rhetorical analysis.
This is a useful exercise for pupils studying persuasive writing and effective rhetoric. Not only do these speeches allow students to analyse how famous orators have used language, but they also inspire and teach how pupils can use language in their own persuasive writing too.
Each speech is transcribed here and some contain designated space for analysis and answers to questions based on common GCSE exam tasks.
This resource bundle is ideal for those studying English Language at GCSE, but is equally useful for KS3 language analysis or any other unit on rhetorical or persuasive writing.
This is a perfect stand-alone lesson aimed at KS3 or KS4 for thinking about how language is used every day in advertising.
Have you ever thought about how many adverts you read in a day? What are the most powerful words in advertising? Are you aware of when and how advertising tries to entice you? This lesson uses a wide range of adverts to demonstrate the different techniques used by advertisers.
At the end of the lesson, students are tasked with creating their own advert/brand.
PowerPoint saved as PDF. 23 slides in total.
This is a complete mock exam paper on J.D. Salinger’s ‘The Catcher in the Rye’ in the style of AQA’s English Language Paper 1 Section A.
The resource includes the extract and an exam booklet featuring four questions (as per the exam) based upon it. A PowerPoint supports the question booklet and offers top tips for how to answer each question.
This is an ideal practice paper/mock for students to sit.
Designed to introduce a unit on World War 1 Poetry for KS3, this 22-slide lesson includes a brief outline of the Great War and aims to teach critical vocabulary.
Ideas introduced include propaganda, pacifism and patriotism.
Students are encouraged to think about and analyse World War 1 propaganda.
Also included for analysis is the popular wartime song: ‘Your King and Country Want You’.
This lesson could also be used for a general contextual introduction to World War I in History lessons.
An A4 landscape poster all about similes - perfect for your classroom or corridor display.
Useful for helping students remember key linguistic vocabulary.
This 26-slide lesson provides a comprehensive introduction to the context and comedy of Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’.
The lesson features information on Wilde’s life and literary career and on Victorian contexts of gender, sexuality, and morality. The genre of comedy is considered in detail, and the key themes, characters, and conventions of ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ are outlined. Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
This lesson would work particularly well for those teaching Wilde on AQA’s Aspects of Comedy paper for English Literature A level, but is still useful for those exploring the play for other courses.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
Six posters featuring key elements of different genres.
Genres included are comedy, tragedy, crime, gothic, fantasy and science fiction.
Perfect for classroom display and accompanying teaching of genre.
PowerPoints for teaching all 15 of AQA’s GCSE Love and Relationships Poetry cluster.
Presentations include key themes, ideas and questions for students. Designed to supplement your teaching of the poems.
15 PowerPoints included. All designed by Mr_Gradgrind.
This resource includes a top-band exemplar piece of creative writing about the touching relationship between an old man and a dog.
As per Section B of AQA’s English Language Paper 1 (worth 40 marks), this creative writing is a response to an image, which is also included here in a PowerPoint.
Students could read, annotate, and discuss this response either before or after trying to produce a story of their own from the image.
The creative writing exemplar could equally be used as a model to other GCSE pupils not studying the AQA syllabus.
A lesson (or two) designed to introduce pupils to Section B of AQA English Language Paper 1, where they are required to produce a piece of creative writing worth 40 marks.
This PowerPoint (and accompanying worksheet) aims to break down the demands of the question into manageable chunks for pupils who may find extended writing challenging. By the end of the lesson/s, pupils will write their own short piece of writing based on an image, as per the exam question.
This may be particularly useful for SEN groups and support classes.
A series of posters designed to help students to understand word classes.
Included: Nouns, Adjectives, Verbs and Adverbs (with examples).
Designed by Mr_Gradgrind to help support SEN students but equally useful for promoting whole-school literacy.
Four posters included.
This resource includes two comprehensive lessons for analysing William Blake’s ‘Holy Thursday’ poems from the Songs of ‘Innocence’ and ‘Experience’.
The first 28-slide lesson covers ‘Holy Thursday’ from ‘Innocence’. The second 32-slide lesson covers ‘Holy Thursday’ from ‘Experience’.
Both lessons include detailed explorations of the poems’ language, context, imagery, structure, and ideas, especially in relation to Blake as a protest writer and critic of institutionalised systems of power. We think about Blake’s role as a Dissenter from the Church of England, and his use of recurring symbols (such as children) throughout the ‘Songs’. The image of Ascension Day in the ‘Holy Thursday’ poems is analysed, reading the poems as Blake’s critique of ecclesiastical hypocrisy and his attempt to understand the extent of the poverty to which he bore witness. Crucially, both lessons work in tandem to read both versions of the poem alongside one another, exploring Blake’s collective message through ‘Innocence’ and ‘Experience’.
Blake’s singular poetic voice and ironic tone are also deconstructed, and we consider how the poems relate to 18th century children’s literature.
Questions, tasks, and discussion points are featured throughout. Both lessons end with comparative essay questions.
These lessons are ideal for those studying Blake as a ‘protest writer’ with AQA at A level, but could easily be used for any KS5 study of the ‘Songs’.
*This resource is new and updated in March 2021.
PowerPoints are saved as PDFs.
These two lessons are perfect for analysing William Blake’s two ‘Chimney Sweeper’ poems from the 'Songs of Innocence and ‘Experience’.
Both lessons contain detailed explorations of language, context, themes and ideas, especially in relation to Blake as a protest writer.
Each stanza is deconstructed individually, and questions/tasks are included for students, including comparative and extended essay questions.
These lessons are ideal for those A level students who are analysing Blake’s poetry as part of the AQA Political and Social Protest Paper, but easily adaptable for other exam boards too.
The lesson on the ‘Chimney Sweeper’ of ‘Innocence’ is 36 slides in length. The lesson on the ‘Chimney Sweeper’ of ‘Experience’ is 26 slides in length.
Two PowerPoints (saved as PDF) included.
Based on AQA’s English Literature exam, this resource features an example question and TOP-BAND essay on violence and crime in Stevenson’s ‘Jekyll and Hyde’.
Perfect for HA pupils studying the text at GCSE.
PowerPoints on all 10 chapters of Robert Louis Stevenson’s ‘Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’.
These can be used in conjunction with reading the text as a class or for revision purposes.
Each PowerPoint contains key quotes, themes, ideas, and questions/activities for students.
These PowerPoints will produce at least 10 lessons.
Perfect for studying the novella at GCSE.