High-quality, value for money teaching resources covering English language and literature; literacy; history; media and Spanish. With twenty-seven years' teaching experience I know what works in the classroom. Engaging, thorough and fun, your students will love these lessons.
High-quality, value for money teaching resources covering English language and literature; literacy; history; media and Spanish. With twenty-seven years' teaching experience I know what works in the classroom. Engaging, thorough and fun, your students will love these lessons.
Have oodles of fun designing your own theme park. This step-by-step Word guide explains how to create a marketing campaign for your very own theme park. The steps include:
Create a name and a logo for your theme park.
Design four new rides for your park and write a sentence to sell each of them.
Create two areas to appeal small children.
Create a new on-site hotel with themed rooms.
Put it all together in a leaflet to publicise the theme park.
This sixteen-page booklet contains example texts which have been marked-up to highlight key features.
Twenty-seven lessons with powerpoint and worksheets on this popular novel by Suzanne Colllins.
Lessons include:
District 12
Theseus and the minotaur - the influence of the myth
The Reaping
Katiniss’ character
Peeta’s character
Going to the capitol
Role of reality TV
In the arena
Using a variety of sentences, emulate Collin’s style.
Describe your own muttation.
Describe places.
Create a Hunger Games board game.
Students enjoy this film and you can treat them with the DVD too!
Help your students to learn their homophones with fun activities. Two worksheets packed full of sentences and activities to help them learn the differences, followed by a powerpoint with varied activities, such as creating a homophones educational poster; a quiz; plus a list of pairs of homophones for students to create a worksheet themselves for their classmates. Over three lessons worth of material.
Travel writing is one of the best ways to teach students to use language in a sophisticated way. In this project students choose a city or region of the world that they are interested in and create a travel guide on it using the example provided as a style model. The style model is about the Spanish city of Girona and the sections of the travel guide include:
An introduction
3 Days in your chosen destination.
Four of the best things to do there.
Essential information with top tips for visiting.
Final section original to the student.
Students’ attention is drawn to the use of premodifying adjectives and imperatives, which are typical of this style of writing. Students are able to see how travel writers sell destination through interweaving information about history, modernity and cuisine to make their locations sound exciting and attractive. There is also the possibility to turn the travel guide into a speaking and listening activity as students imagine that they work for the tourist board of their destination and wish to promote it.
This student workbook contains activities based on poems from Benjamin Zephaniah’s poetry antholgy entitled “Talking Turkeys”. There are twelve lessons covering the following poems - “Greetings”, “Bodytalk”, “Running”, “Fear Not”, “Little Sister”, “According To My Mood”, “De Generation Rap”, “Civil Lies”, “For Sale”, “Who’s Who”, “Heroes” , “Memories” and “Pride”. There is also “Checking Out Me History” by John Agard included for comparison. Creative writing tasks include writing about a hero and writing about a time when you felt proud. This is designed to engage and enthuse low ability students with fun activities on the great Benjamin Zephaniah. An added bonus is a powerpoint that encourages students to write about a relative.
Calling all budding journalists. This twenty-three slide Powerpoint helps your students to analyze the key features of headlines and the key language techniques used. They are then prompted to write their own headlines for fictional news stories, culminating in them creating their own intriguing headline to grab the reader’s attention. Worksheet with techniques included. A fun lesson that might inspire your students to become the hacks of the future.
Introduce your students to the fascinating story of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre with this thirty-four slide powerpoint, complete with visually stimulating images to illustrate the information.
The follow-up activities include:
A twenty-three sentence cloze exercise to help students embed and remember the information.
Diagrams of the theatre to label.
An interview with an imaginary theatre-goer to stimulate further understanding of the context.
Support for a writing task where students imagine that they have been to see a Shakespeare play.
True or false on Shakespeare’s Globe.
Written information on Shakespeare’s Globe that could be used for homework.
Transport your students back in time to the seventeenth century with this comprehensive folder of resources!
A basic scheme of work aimed at weaker students that you can build on and develop for students of higher ability. Eleven powerpoints guide you through the text with ideas for development. Many storyboards of the action are included to reinforce understanding of the plot. Background work includes a powerpoint on Mary Shelley and the history of the discovery of electricity.
Twelve lessons with powerpoints and resources to help students to create their own magazine on a topic of their choice.
Scheme comprises of:
Analyse the title of magazines and decide on your own title.
Analyse mastheads and create your own masthead.
Design your own front cover.
Write a celebrity profile features article.
Write a travel article.
Write a how-to article.
Design a competition.
Write an article on a food of your choice.
Use emotive and sensationalising language.
Create a contents page.
There are extra folders with a GCSE media task comparing two front covers and a WAGOLL analysis of a front cover.
Students love this scheme of work as it allows them to be creative while exploring their own interests.
Have fun exploring ideas about animal cruelty with Benjamin Zephaniah’s hilarious poem “Talking Turkeys”. This folder contains a cloze exercise on the poem to engage students directly with the text with follow-up comprehension questions. There are then three more powerpoint options for further exploration. Students can either create a leaflet to persuade people to give up turkey and eat something else at Christmas. Or if you are looking for a Christmas themed activity, students can use the poem as inspiration for their own Christmas poem. And don’t forget to watch Mr Zephaniah in action on Youtube, performing said poem in a bright pink shell suit. Not to be missed!
This forty-four slide powerpoint on “The Lady of Shalott” by Alfred, Lord Tennyson contains four lessons covering the four sections of the poem and a final writing assessment task. The folder includes:
Powerpoint with four lessons, using paintings by Sir John Waterhouse and others to inspire and engage students.
A storyboard of the setting in Part 1.
Comprehension questions on Part 2.
Image of Sir Lancelot to analyse his presentation in Part 3.
Opportunities to explore the themes and symbolic meaning of the poem.
Two worksheets to support the task of writing about the lady and the events in the poem from the point of view of Sir Lancelot.
These resources will help your students to fully engage with Lord Tennyson’s beautiful, magical and mysterious poem.
Designed to help students connect and extend sentences, this eighteen slide Powerpoint contains a variety of exercises, with answers. It would take one hour to deliver all the exercises or two lessons of thirty minutes, as the exercises increase in difficulty. Fully adaptable for you and your students.
Two lessons using the opening of 1984 to introduce students to the features of dystopian fiction with a particular emphasis on Orwell’s use of pathetic fallacy in the introduction. The lesson sequence is as follows:
Lesson 1
Starter on what students think makes a perfect world.
Explanation of origin of term dystopia.
Examples of dystopian fiction for children.
Overview of 1984 without spoilers.
Analysis of techniques used in opening to establish the dystopian atmosphere of the novel.
Zoom in on Orwell’s use of pathetic fallacy. Students identify examples. Answers on slide.
Discussion regarding living in this kind of world.
Lesson 2
Students return to their original thoughts on what makes a perfect world.
Narrative writing in preparation for AQA GCSE English Paper One Narrative Writing. Choice of writing a story about a perfect world or writing a story inspired by a picture of the Earth. Both with focus on using pathetic fallacy and sensory description.
Folder includes 24 slide powerpoint and copy of extract of opening.
Students are quite rightly fascinated by this amazing novel.
Full scheme of work comprising of lessons on each of the twenty-three chapters of the book. This powerpoint contains approximately two hundred slides. Each lesson features a starter, main and plenary and is designed to encourage students to create their own autobiographical writing, inspired by Roald Dahl’s experiences.
Many students write stories in which they jump between the present and the past tenses. This Powerpoint explains the difference between the simple past and the simple present tenses and contains a variety of exercises to encourage tense consistency and to help them to feel more confident. The zipped file also contains two informative and practical follow-up worksheets which ask students to put a passage about William the Conqueror into the past tense. The other worksheet asks them to put information about the Titanic into the past tense also.
In Act One Scene One of “Romeo and Juliet”, we meet Romeo for the first time and realise that he is in love with the idea of being in love with Rosaline due to his use of elaborate oxymorons to describe his feelings. This powerpoint explains the context of the play, the definition of oxymorons. The accompanying worksheet guides students to identify Romeo’s oxymorons and then gives them the beginning of oxymorons for them to create themselves. Could be used with the play or as a stand alone lesson on oxymorons.
Teach your students how to write a ballad poem using the life of ex-slave and slave rescuer, Harriet Tubman. Celebrating the heroic life of Harriet Tubman, this twenty slide powerpoint shows how her life story was made into a ballad by Eloise Crosby Culver. Students then study the key features of ballads and are invited to add an extra verse of their own to the ballad, with historical information about the great lady. Students are then tasked with writing their own ballads about either a fictional or real person. Links in well with writing a ballad about Kissin' Kate Barlow from "Holes".
Working on the assumption that people remember things better if like is grouped with like, this booklet contains twenty-one lists of commonly mis-spelled words, all under different categories. Ranging from adjectives to adverbs to animals to birds to body parts to food and sports, the concept is that students will remember the spellings more easily if they can remember patterns and connections between words. This free resources complements the booklet “The Definitive Guide to Spelling” found at Mrs Shaw’s Shop, which is a seventy-four page booklet covering all the major spelling rules with exercises and answers, on sale at just £10. This photocopiable resource is a bargain for anyone wanting to help their students improve their spelling.