Shakespeare, Creative Writing and TEFL resources.
Created by a qualified secondary school teacher who has taught KS3, KS4 and KS5.
Browse my shop to find a variety of affordable resources, full lessons and worksheets related to the study of Language and Literature across the age ranges.
Shakespeare, Creative Writing and TEFL resources.
Created by a qualified secondary school teacher who has taught KS3, KS4 and KS5.
Browse my shop to find a variety of affordable resources, full lessons and worksheets related to the study of Language and Literature across the age ranges.
Students fill out the spiderweb diagram to create a handy revision tool for the key quotations and analysis from the play ‘Macbeth’.
I have included amendable files in Word Doc and PDF files for ease of printing.
The worksheets could also be printed as a larger A3 size and used as a group task.
Please leave a review if you found these helpful :) or browse my online shop for other Macbeth resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
A lesson on Act 1 Scene 5.
It begins with looking at gender roles and Shakespeare’s portrayal of women.
Students then make predictions about Lady Macbeth, based on the historical context.
Students complete the worksheet on Lady Macbeth’s soliloquy- analysing the language and imagery.
Finally, students consider the portrayal of Lady Macbeth and the witches. Using an extract from the British Library, students complete the Exit Card plenary and decide which would be scarier for a Shakespearean audience.
**Please leave a review if you found this helpful :) **
Or browse the other Macbeth/Shakespeare resources in my online shop:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Students use the images and sentence starters to write a short piece of descriptive writing based on christmas/Victorian London.
Includes worksheets and a short powerpoint to introduce the creative writing task.
Suitable for a christmas themed creative writing class or cover lesson .
Please leave a review if you found this helpful or look at my online shop for other resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Overview:
Students stick the Bingo sheet in the front of their exercise books.
They can then choose any of the reading challenges that they would like to complete in their spare time
(or set one for homework!)
Students fill out a worksheet for each of the tasks, stick it in their exercise book and cross off the Bingo square.
If they complete 5 tasks in a row they get a certificate and win a prize!
I have included the ppt so that tasks and worksheets can be amended. I have also included PDF versions of the worksheets so that they can be printed easily.
Please leave a review if you found this helpful or browse my online store for more resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
A whole lesson focusing on the structure and language used by Dickens in the opening of ‘A Christmas Carol’.
Starter: Looking at the effect of the opening sentence ‘Marley was dead: to begin with’ and the impact it has on a reader.
Students stick in the worksheet (two versions included- differentiated for less able students with pre-highlighted quotations)
and use it to make notes and highlight throughout the lesson.
Each paragraph has been broken down to be analysed in-depth. Each slide includes guided questions to encourage discussion and modelling of how to select appropriate quotations from the text in order to answer the question.
Finally, students must choose one question to answer for their homework. Each question builds upon the discussion points and notes made in the lesson. This can be peer assessed at the beginning on the following lesson to recap and check for understanding.
Please leave a review if you found this resource helpful :)
Four creative writing lessons and planning worksheets on the theme of ‘Adventure’.
Suitable for KS2 and KS3 students.
I used these series of lessons to help students prepare for an extended piece of imaginative writing.
Each lesson follows the same format:
Show an image and ask students to jot down their initial impressions and what they can see. Pair and Share their ideas.
2 Individually, students choose a number between 1-10. Each number corresponds to a character they must write as.
3 Then students choose a second number between 1-5. Each number corresponds to what they must write about.
4 Students are given a planning sheet and must spend time deciding key components of their writing- plot/character/setting
5 For the rest of the lesson (or as a homework task) they must complete an extended piece of adventure writing.
6 Peer assessment- students swap and read another piece of work. They must comment on the things that went well and the specific marking criteria.
-Starter activity which encourages students to think about the metaphors of beauty in this scene used to describe Paris.
-A contextual slide about wet nurses during his era.
Summary of the scene and key themes.
Guided questions that encourage students to think about Shakespeare’s language, the delivery of lines and characterisation in this scene.
Comparisons of Lady Capulet and the Nurse.
Essay question
Do you think Juliet’s relationship with her mother and the pressures she faces as a woman in this era influence the tragic outcome of the play? To what extent is it Lady Capulet and the Nurses’ fault that Juliet’s love story ends in tragedy?
Creative writing homework task.
If you found this resource helpful please leave a review :)
Or browse my online shop for other Romeo and Juliet resources:
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Students learn about the different features of a successful piece of travel writing.
For each feature the ppt explains how to recognise it, the intended effect on the reader and an example.
Students must then apply this knowledge by annotating a short extract from Bill Bryson’s ‘Walk in the Woods’.
This was an introduction to a travel writing scheme of work that culminates with students crafting their own piece of travel writing. For homework the task was to research a country of their choice so that they can then write about it next lesson.
I have also included the checklist for their travel writing of all of the features covered in the lesson and a self-reflection/assessment page.
In teams students choose two numbers.
Click on the squares to reveal the pictures and quotations.
If they manage to match the quotation to the speakercorrectly they gain 5 points for their team.
If you found this resource helpful please leave a review :)
Or browse my online shop for other Macbeth related resources:
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Day 3 of my Roald Dahl themed summer camp (originally taught to Korean EFL students)
It includes:
*A simplified version of the story using Quentin Blake illustrations.
* A memory game based on food items found in Mr Twit’s beard and worksheet.
*Scavenger Hunt worksheet and clues (which are printed and hidden around the school- the first pair to find all the words win!)
*Birds Nest Crispy Cakes Recipe
*Mrs Twit’s spaghetti toasties recipe
*Wordsearch and colouring page
Day 2 of my Roald Dahl themed Summer Camp (originally for Korean EFL students)
Includes:
* A short summary of the story- using images from the film and Quentin Blake illustrations
* A board game and counters that I made (the same rules as 'snakes and ladders')
*Team activity 'Egg Drop' where students must construct a contraption using art supplies to protect their egg when it is dropped from a window.
*Instructions to make decorative peach ornaments out of string, paint, balloons and PVA glue (original idea found on pinterest)
*Links to recipes for making cookies, peach trifle, ladybird cracker snacks and peach pancakes.
*Wordsearch and colouring worksheet.
Day 1 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' activities and worksheets are available here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/charlie-and-the-chocolate-factory-summer-camp-worksheets-cooking-and-fun-activities-ks2-efl-tefl-11818679?theme=1
This was Day 1 of my Roald Dahl themed EFL summer camp.
It includes art activities, games and cooking ideas based on the book ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’.The day followed this plan:
Introduction
1. Introduce the story and characters
2. Students use the worksheet to draw themselves in the style of Quentin Blake and write about their favourite things.
3. Allocate students into teams and they introduce themselves to the rest of their team.
Team Games
1. Chocolate relay Race
- Students must run to unwrap the chocolate twix bar and then feed it to the next person in their team.
2. Balloon Popping Game
- In teams students must throw the darts to try and pop the balloons. The team to pop the most wins points.
3. Golden Egg and Spoon Race
- Students must race around the room, against the other team, whilst balancing an egg on a spoon. If they drop the egg they must restart and go again. The winning team wins points.
4. Design a candy
-Introduce different ingredients (unscramble the letters for EFL)
-Taste Test (students try to describe what they are eating whilst blindfolded)
- Introduce Willy Wonka’s strange inventions.
- In teams the students must think of a new type of chocolate bar/candy.
-Students draw and describe their invention using the worksheet and make posters.
- Teams present their invention to the rest of the class (my personal favourites were flying insect sweets and ‘King Candy’ that tasted like gold and made you feel like royalty for an hour… kids can be so imaginative!)
-The most interesting new candy invention will win points.
Art and Crafts
1. Clay Photo frames
-Using coloured card, PVA glue, paints and clay students decorate their individual photo frames.
2. Photobooth Props
- Students make props and costumes for the photobooth- including small hats, funny hairstyles, bowties, cut out candy bars and golden tickets on sticks that they can hold and pose with. A group photo is then chosen and printed to go in the frame as a fun reminder of the camp.
Cooking
1. Willy Wonka Bread
- Students spread butter or Nutella onto their sliced bread and decorate with sprinkles. These sandwiches can be cut into shapes and eaten…
- As they eat their sandwiches students can watch the movie with subtitles.
- If they finish early or don’t want to watch the movie they can complete the wordsearch worksheet.
2. Chocolate fondue and fruit slices on sticks.
3. Wonka fudge and Oompa Loompa cheesecake pops- I found these online and have included images and links to the recipes in the ppt.
4. Augustus Gloop Chocolate Slime
-Again found online. I did not have time to try this with my students but there is a link to the instructions. *Not edible!
*Encourage students to analyse different stage productions and interpret costume, lighting and prop decisions. (Video clip included)
*Discussion of Jacobean audiences, the Globe Theatre and the opening of their 2016 production of Macbeth. (Video clip included)
*Planning worksheet for students to decide how they would produce the opening of Macbeth on stage.
Please leave a review if you found this helpful :)
If you like this lesson check out my other Macbeth resources! Available here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/macbeth-13-whole-lesson-and-resources-bundle-ks4-11508384
Or alternatively browse my online shop for other lessons and worksheets:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Lesson Overview
Starter question/ quick activity to get the students thinking about language/imagery in the scene.
Questions alongside the text to check understanding and develop interpretations of characters/plot/themes.
Worksheet for students to record their own ideas/points raised in class discussion.
Personal response question with sentence starters ‘What are your impressions of Lord Capulet and Paris in this scene?’
Group activity: differentiated questions and extracts are discussed, students feedback to the rest of the class.
EXIT Card plenary- students quickly jot down their opinion of Lord Capulet and whether they agree with the critical interpretation ‘Juliet is regarded as little more than a precious possession to her father’. (this can then be discussed as the starter next lesson)
Homework task: to research an Elizabethan Masquerade Ball/ banquet and design a formal invitation for the Capulet’s to send to their guests.
Please leave a review if you found this resource helpful :)
**I am currently working on the following lessons in the series. **
Act 1, Scene 3 is available to purchase here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/romeo-and-juliet-act-1-scene-3-lady-capulet-and-the-nurse-ks4-11976732
Or alternatively you can browse my online shop for Shakespeare and Creative Writing lessons:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Suitable for KS3 or a support group
Worksheet plus ppt with instructions & additional tasks/answers
Tasks:
1: Cut and stick each quotation with the correct corresponding image.
2: Identify which character said each of the quotations.
3: Find another example of Shakespeare’s imagery. Draw your own picture and label it with the quotation in your workbook.
Challenge : ‘Love is too powerful to be described through a metaphor.’
Do you think Shakespeare has managed to convey this emotion well, or not? Explain your opinion.
Please leave a review if you found this resource helpful :)
I am currently working on the rest of the lessons in the series.
Act 1, Scene 1 is available to purchase here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/romeo-and-juliet-opening-analysis-act-1-scene-1-whole-lesson-and-worksheet-ks4-11525718
Act 1, Scene 2 is available to purchase here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/romeo-and-juliet-act-1-scene-2-capulet-and-paris-whole-lesson-and-worksheet-ks3-ks4-11625209
Act 1, Scene 3 is available to purchase here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/romeo-and-juliet-act-1-scene-3-lady-capulet-and-the-nurse-ks4-11976732
Or alternatively browse my online shop for Shakespeare and Creative Writing resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Two worksheets which encourage students to reflect on the plot and main characters.
Useful for revision, recapping or making connections throughout the study of a class novel/play.
I have included both PDF versions of the worksheets as well as word documents that can be altered with ease.
Suitable for KS4 support groups or KS3 learners.
Lesson one: Focus on Gothic descriptions and the door. Students read an extract from Dracula then complete as peer-assessed piece of creative writing about a doorway and the occupant.
Lesson two: Analysis of the introduction to Mr Hyde including highlighted focus points and guided questions.
Lesson three: Looks at non-fiction. Students analyse a newspaper report for emotive language and then must produce their own for the girl trampling incident in chapter one.
Activities encouraging students to analyse the characters of Mr Utterson and Mr Einfield from the opening on the novel, based upon contextual understanding of Victorian gentlemen and their own interpretations.
If you found this lesson helpful please leave a review :)
The next lesson in the sequence is available for purchase here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/the-strange-case-of-dr-jekyll-and-mr-hyde-chapter-1-story-of-the-door-3-lessons-and-worksheets-11528517
Or browse my shop for more lessons and resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Includes:
A ppt with guided questions for students to develop their own interpretations about the opening of the play/characters.
A worksheet where students plan how they would stage the scene.
A homework task based on the Prince.
Please leave a review if you found this resource helpful :)
I am currently working on the following lessons in the series.
Act 1, Scene 2 is available to purchase at:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/romeo-and-juliet-act-1-scene-2-capulet-and-paris-whole-lesson-and-worksheet-ks3-ks4-11625209
Or alternatively browse my online shop for other Shakespeare and Creative Writing lessons:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK