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.
My Reading Journey
Students stick this worksheet in the front of their exercise books or homework diaries.
It can be used to keep a record of their reading and encourage them to reflect on the texts they have read.
Please leave a review if you found this worksheet helpful or browse my online shop for more resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Students look at promotional posters for the play Romeo and Juliet to make assumptions about the society and characters.
Then after reading through the prologue students cut and stick the explanations in the right box.
Some guided questions to develop their interpretations.
Exit card question plenary.
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
15 whole lessons and worksheets focusing on Macbeth. The lessons use drama, group work, creative writing, non fiction, video clips and guided questions to explore the play Macbeth in depth and to encourage students to develop their own interpretations.
Included are lessons on:
Act 1, Scene 1
Act 1, Scene 2
Act 1, Scene 5
Act 2, Scene 2 -Theme of Guilt
Act 3, Scene 1 Banquo and Macbeth soliloquy analysis
Act 3, Scene 6 (Lennox) and Act 4, Scene 2 (Lady Macduff)
Act 4, Scene 1 the witches and apparitions
Act 5, Scene 1 (4 lesson sequence) and assessment on Lady Macbeth
Macbeth (Acts 1-3) quotation and imagery activity & worksheet
The rise and fall of Macbeth activity sheet
Macbeth film review nonfiction activity
Macbeth nonfiction and context lesson- writing a leaflet on how to spot a witch.
Macbeth quotation analysis worksheets (for revision) and quotation revision quiz.
Students read contextual sources for information about witches (included for printing) before collating their knowledge and using it to produce a leaflet about how to spot a witch. I made my students complete the leaflet for homework and they produced some very imaginative responses.
You could read an extract from Roald Dahl’s ‘The Witches’ as a starter.
I’ve also included some extracts produced by my students as examples for the creative leaflets .
Overall it was fun to teach and my students loved it. Suitable for K34 GCSE groups to develop language and literature skills.
If you found this resource helpful please leave a review :)
Or browse my online shop for other Macbeth resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
New updated powerpoint and worksheets 06/11/18
Overview:
Three different activities/worksheets designed for a low ability group studying A Christmas Carol. The tasks help consolidate knowledge of the plot and approach complex language in Stave one. I have also included the powerpoint and instructions. I used these for cover lessons which worked nicely.
Activity 1: cut and stick images and summaries from the plot in the correct order.
Activity 2: Answer 24 (one-word answer) questions about Stave 1 using own knowledge and skimming and scanning the text (could be done in pairs) then find the answers from this section in the following wordsearch.
Activity 3: Decoding the nineteenth century language. Read the quotation from the text and write the correct synonym and definition in the box (creates a glossary resource of difficult words that they can return to).
Short extract from 'My Family and Other Animals' by Gerald Durrell with questions.
AO2 example analysis and focus on how writers 'show rather than tell' through their descriptions.
Video clips and images to help students write the opening of a story about the strong bond between an animal and human.
A 40 page revision booklet for the AQA pre 900s poetry syllabus which includes questions and contextual information for the poems:
‘Whoso List To Hunt’
‘Sonnet 116’
‘The Flea’
‘To His Coy Mistress’
‘The Scrutiny’
‘Absent From Thee’
'The Garden Of Love’
‘Ae Fond Kiss’
‘She Walks In Beauty’
‘Remember’
‘The Ruined Maid’
‘At an Inn’
‘La Belle Dame Sans Merci’
'Non Sum Qualis Eram Bonae Sub Regno Cynarae’
A 40 page word document booklet with activities for ‘A Christmas Carol’ by Charles Dickens.
Suitable for KS3 or LA KS4
A range of comprehension questions, practice essays and creative writing activities.
20 lessons worth of resources.
Two full lessons and activities looking at extracts from Act 3, Scene 6 and Act 4, Scene 2 so students develop a personal response and consider whether Macbeth is a tyrant.
A detailed lesson which includes:
*Creative starter question
Analysis of the scene,
*3 x video clips,
*Group work/drama activity and recording sheet
*Creative writing extension task.
Four detailed lessons with clearly explained tasks, starters and plenaries.
Each lesson includes guiding questions,a corresponding worksheet and multiple activities for students to complete.
The final ppt introduces the assessment task, objectives and an example of how to select and analyse quotations.
The assessment question focuses on Lady Macbeth and her descent into madness.
There is also a homework choice slide that includes extension creative writing tasks for students to choose from.
Lesson 1 in the series was observed and rated outstanding
If you found this resource helpful please do leave a review :) or browse my shop for other lessons and resources.
Overview:
Students select one quotation for each key scene from the table provided and use it to analyse Macbeth’s character.
Students evaluate on a scale of 1 to 5 whether he comes across as strong or weak.
They then use this to plot Macbeth’s changing character and have a visual representation of his power/weakness across Acts1-5.
This can then be compared to Lady Macbeth’s (included in ppt) and students develop their own interpretations/ justify their opinions.
Powerpoint and worksheets included.
Please leave a review if you found this resource helpful :)
Or browse my online shop for more Macbeth resources:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/NovelTeachingUK
Students write a film review for the play Macbeth (suitable for a homework task or lesson)
Includes:
PowerPoint outlining the activity
Review examples
guidance sheet
A lesson that my students found quite engaging. The task involves selecting information and clues from the extract in order to form predictions and create a missing person poster for Mary's father.
How to make a scene more vivid and engage a reader through altering adjectives, verbs, nouns and adverbs.
Crafting a unique narrative voice
Powerpoint includes:
*An image prompt and choice of narratives
Creative starter question
Banquo’s soliloquy , modern English version plus questions
Analysis of the imagery of the ‘fruitless crown’ before introducing Macbeth’s soliloquy.
Key quotations from the soliloquy and an activity for students to predict the fears he will be addressing
YouTube video clip link plus specific focus criteria for students
Macbeth’s soliloquy , modern English version plus questions (includes extension questions for challenge)
Plenary question (using EXIT CARDS)
Students look at the images which are connected to key quotations from the play
(Act 1-Act 3) and must put them into chronological order.
PowerPoint plus worksheet.
Extension tasks:
1. identify which character said each quotation,
2. consider which is the most significant and justify your opinion
3. Find your own example of Shakespeare's imagery and draw an image for it