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.
This powerpoint contains twenty sentences with a word beginning with the silent “k” missing. Students have to guess what the missing word is. They are provided with a visual clue to help them and the answers are included at the end. This activity would help EAL students as well.
How influential has the term “gothic” been throughout history?
This powerpoint explains the origin of the term “gothic” and how it applies to architecture and fashion, not just to literature.
It then explains the history and conventions of gothic literature with examples, followed by an explanation of gothic characters.
It ends with a gothic writing task for students, imagining that they have been forced to move into a new spooky house and they must describe the exterior, interior and their bedroom using the conventions of gothic literature. Eighteen slides in total, which students find fascinating.
Covering pre-modification, post-modification and the use and creation of compound adjectives. This twenty-three slide powerpoint full of exercises and answers concludes with a fun activity where students are shown how Shakespeare used compound adjectives to be inventive. They are then challenged to be inventive themselves. The lesson would take one hour or two thirty minutes sessions.
Designed as a follow-on to the powerpoint on colons, this lesson explains the three uses of semi-colons with activities for students, complete with answers. Activities then become more complicated as students are given passages to punctuate with both colons and semi-colons, helping them to become supremely confident in the use of these two pieces of punctuation.
Have fun with your students by teaching them how puns are used in many walks of life, from names of shops, to advertising and jokes. Then inspire your students to come up with their own jokes on the theme of death. Will work well for Halloween.
This powerpoint provides pieces of information about ten classic films, which students have to build into multi-clause complex sentences. All answers are provided.
Did you know that sixty percent of words in English are derived from Greek and Latin?
This thirty-six slide Powerpoint contains clues to at least two words derived from fourteen different Greek roots.
Students work independently or in groups to guess the words from the clues.
A brief explanation of why there are Greek roots in English is provided at the beginning and the answers are provided at the end.
Designed to engage your students as an interactive quiz.
Did you know that sixty percent of words in English come from Greek and Latin?
With a brief explanation of how Greek has influenced English, students can work independently or in groups to guess the words from the clues. All answers are provided, along with a table for students to fill in with all the suffixes, in order to consolidate the activity.
Provide your students with a deeper understanding of the English language with this fun Powerpoint activity.
A twenty question quiz on spelling words ending in “ible” or “able”.
Students are given some guidelines and a look/cover/spell/check worksheet to learn the spelling before the quiz.
All answers provided on the powerpoint, so students can mark their own work.
A consolidation worksheet is included to complete at home or in class.
These spelling activities are divided into four rounds.
In Round 1 students have to guess if the word ends in “tion” or “sion” from the pronunciation and the clue.
In Round 2 students have to choose the correct spelling from a choice of two.
In Round 3 students are introduced to the “cian” ending and have to guess the profession from the clue.
Round 4 is twenty-two clues to words ending in either “tion”,“sion” or “cian”.
Cartoon graphics add interest and help second language speakers.
All answers are provided on the slides, so students mark their own work.
A worksheet is included for consolidation in class or at home.
Approximately 100 slides in total.
To amuse us tabloid newspapers often use puns and innuendos in their newspaper reports. Using a real report that was published in the 1990s about George Clooney playing the part of Batman and how his costume was too small for him, this lesson explores how and why tabloids use these techniques. After identifying the techniques, students are then given prompts to create their own puns. A fun lesson that will induce a lot of groaning!
Many words have come into English from Latin and Greek, making the formation of some plurals quite tricky. Other words just seem to have random plurals like ‘foot and feet’. This 45 slide powerpoint take you through 18 of the most common irregular plurals. Then you have a memory test to see if you can remember them. Finally a worksheet is included to consolidate the learning. With fun cartoon graphics and all answers provided. Designed to be completed as an individual or as a class.
Lots of words in English drop the -e when adding a suffix. This eighty slide Powerpoint contains two exercises - one where you decide whether to add an -e or not and another where you take the word back to its root, with or without the -e. All answers provided on the Powerpoint and a back up worksheet is included to reinforce the learning. Designed to be completed individually or as a class.
A seventy-slide powerpoint that introduces and describes the twelve main Roman Gods with colourful graphics, followed by two quizzes. Firstly, students have to guess the blanked out words from the description of the gods. Secondly, a random ten question quiz. All answers are provided and a worksheet to help remember the gods is included in the folder. A final slide with ideas for further activities and research. A fun lesson that will make the gods memorable and enjoyable for your students.
Spanish is spoken widely around the world and many words have passed into English from this language. Have fun with your class guessing the forty words that have enriched English. The powerpoint first gives a clue and then the first letter of the word is given if needed. All answers are provided on the slides. A back-up worksheet is included to consolidate the learning.
Approximately 7,000 words have come into English from French and there are several ‘true friends’, words that are the same in both languages. Surprise your students with how much French they know already with these forty clues to French words. If the clue is too difficult, the first letter of the word is also included on the slide. All answers provided. Students can work independently or in groups and mark their own work.
Ten multiple choice questions on famous authors and their work. Answers included. Lesson concludes with students considering their own favourite authors and creating a poster to promote them. Great activity to celebrate World Book Day.
After a re-cap of the rules of the apostrophe of possession with an exercise with answers, students become language detectives to decide whether given examples, some from real life use, are right or wrong. A fun revision activity for students.
Students learn to spell irregular plurals that end in -es with this sixty slide powerpoint. Students decide whether the twenty-five words presented on separate slides end in -s or -es. Cartoon graphics are used as extra clues and to help English as a second language speakers. A further consolidation worksheet is included to embed the learning, which students can fill in at the end of the activity or at home. A fun way to learn irregular plurals.
Did you know that sixty percent of words in English come from Greek and Latin?
Consolidate your students’ knowledge of the building blocks of the English language with slideshow designed to be delivered as a quiz.
Containing several clues to eighteen Greek roots, answers are provided at the end.
There is also a final worksheet that can be used for consolidation of the learning.