This A Christmas Carol Bundle includes model paragraphs and essays on a range of themes and rich visuals that support struggling learners.
The use of PEEL paragraphs demonstrate to students the structure of a successful paragraph and the model essays show how to write a cohesive response with an introduction and conclusion.
Numerous storyboards and pictures provide a context in which to summarise the important aspects of different Staves.
An engaging quiz helps students navigate the whole text and learn key quotations, character information and themes.
This resource contains a storyboard of the main events that occur in Stave Three of the novella.
You can use the storyboard to recap the main events or to write a descriptive summary. This summary is useful to contextualise key quotations.
Unlock the potential of your students with these visually appealing, A Christmas Carol resources tailored to support GCSE English Literature teachers. Perfectly aligned with the curriculum, these tools focus on Stave 4, providing deep insights into character relationships, narrative developments, and key thematic explorations.
Key Features of the Resources:
Analytical Extract-Based Questions
Develop critical thinking with detailed prompts centered on key scenes, such as the businessmen’s indifference to Scrooge’s death in Stave 4. Students analyze language, tone, and societal critique through scaffolded questions and PEEL-style model paragraphs.
Narrative Writing Practice
Engage students in creative tasks like rewriting or continuing narratives inspired by Stave 4. With comprehensive vocabulary lists and structured storyboards, students can explore Scrooge’s emotional arc - from fear and dread to hope and resolution.
Stave 4, Sequential Activity
Reinforce understanding with a sequence-building task that aligns Stave 4 events in chronological order. This activity helps students visualize Scrooge’s journey and identify the pivotal moments of his character’s redemption.
This A Christmas Carol, GCSE resource focuses on the theme of Joy. Included in the pack are visual elements which help the students write descriptively with the novella.
The booklet includes a storyboard, an extract from Stave 5, A PEEL paragraph model to support students in structuring a paragraph and more extracts for students to explore the novella. This booklet has been successful in helping struggling students engage with the text and write a successful essay,
To further engage students, a skit of the opening scene is provided for students to have fun with the text. They are encouraged to write another skit from the novella.
This resource is an imaginative and creative way to help GCSE, English Literature students make progress!
This GCSE, English Literature, A Christmas Carol resource focuses on Stave 2 of the novella. It includes a storyboard, model descriptive sentences, an essay task, model PEEL paragraph and a Gap Fill.
The Visual element of the pack helps students visualise a key moment from the Stave and helps them write descriptive sentences with flair. These sentences are shown how they can help introduce quotations.
There is a question about Scrooge’s emotional state during the stave, accompanied by a clear PEEL paragraph to show students how to structure their ideas.
The gap fill activity includes descriptive adjectives to describe Scrooge’s emotions and will provide them with the vocabulary needed to complete the essay.
This resource is an effective way to encourage students to write an extended response about the novella!
Engage your students with comprehensive and versatile GCSE, English Literature resources designed to deepen their understanding of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. These materials cater to various learning styles and include:
A complete revision guide with multiple-choice quizzes, short-answer tasks, PEEL paragraph examples, and essay plans.
Character analysis quizzes for Romeo, Juliet, Mercutio, Tybalt, and Friar Lawrence.
Theme exploration with questions on love, fate, loyalty, and conflict.
Creative writing prompts like alternative endings or diary entries.
This unit can be used for classroom or home us and encourages independent study and solid exam preparation through structured activities.
A creative writing guide based on picture prompts and storyboards is also included. Students craft descriptive stories inspired by scenes from Romeo and Juliet. This will enhance descriptive writing skills while fostering an imaginative connection to the play’s themes. It incorporates visual stimuli to support learners needing extra guidance in building their narratives.
This resource is useful as an additional guide and can be used as a revision guide during school holidays.
The GCSE, Macbeth Homework and Study Booklet is a detailed resource designed to support GCSE, English Literature students in mastering Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Tailored for classroom use and independent study, this guide provides comprehensive coverage of the play’s key characters, themes, scenes, and literary devices. It is structured to build students’ analytical and creative writing skills while helping them develop a deep understanding of the text.
Key Features
Character Quizzes: True/false and multiple-choice questions focus on Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, Banquo, and others, ensuring students retain essential plot and character details.
Scene Analysis Tasks: Targeted practice for pivotal scenes, including Act 1 Scene 7 (Macbeth’s Doubts) and Act 5 Scene 1 (Lady Macbeth’s Madness), with guiding questions and practice tasks.
Themes Exploration: Short-answer questions delve into ambition, guilt, fate, and deception, encouraging students to connect textual details with broader thematic ideas.
PEEL Paragraph Examples: Model answers illustrate how to construct high-quality analytical paragraphs.
Creative Writing Tasks: Activities such as writing diary entries from Macbeth’s perspective or imagining additional prophecies engage students creatively while deepening their textual understanding.
Essay Plans and Tips: Guidance on structuring essays for key characters and themes using evidence-based analysis.
Glossary and Revision Tips: A literary glossary ensures students are familiar with key terms, such as soliloquy and hubris, while revision tips focus on memorizing quotes and linking analysis to questions.
Assessment Practice: Multiple-choice quizzes and structured essay questions provide opportunities for formative assessment, allowing teachers to track progress and address gaps.
Holiday and Homework Focus: This booklet is ideal for assigning homework tasks during term breaks or as ongoing revision. The scaffolded activities help students prepare for exams independently, with a mix of creative, analytical, and memory-based tasks.
A second version has been included with answers removed for assessment purposes.
This unit prepares students for the AQA, GCSE, English Literature, Unseen Poetry Section. It includes poems by Thomas Hardy and Emily Dickinson, an analysis framework, exam question and model PEEL paragraphs. A practice question is also provided.
The unit begins with ‘The Darkling Thrush’ by Thomas Hardy. Students complete a table about the features of the poem divided into Subject, Theme, Imagery, Language and Emotion. They then look at a typical question and compare their response to a model paragraph.
Students then focus on the comparison with a poem by Emily Dickinson. Two model paragraphs are provided.
A practice paper is included for students to practice these skills.
This unit helps students with the unseen poetry section of the GCSE, English Literature exam paper and contains a poem with comprehension questions along with a model, reading response paragraph. An acronym poster ‘STILE’ is included to provide a framework to respond to unseen poems. An additional winter, descriptive writing unit is included.
The unseen poem booklet contains the poem, ‘Christmas at Sea’ and has a true/false section to help understand the content. This is followed by a variety of literal and analytical comprehension question. A final exam style question is provided along with an advanced level and differentiated PEEL paragraph.
The STILE poster can be used to help students structure their response - it helps the explore the subject, theme, imagery and language used in the poem.
A descriptive writing booklet based on a wintry scene is included as a follow up activity. This includes an adjectives and verbs list along with a picture prompt.
This Christmas Quiz is aimed at GCSE, English Literature students studying the novella, A Christmas Carol. It includes a Key Quotation Quiz, A general A Christmas Carol Quiz and an additional word search.
The key quotation quiz involves identifying the person who said the quotation in each stave of the novella. The student has to achieve five in a row, one from each Stave, to achieve redemption. A board and tokens is provided.
The general quiz includes easy - medium -difficult questions. The first to collect 15 marks wins. There are a variety of question types such as true - false, multiple choice and gap fill.
An additional key themes word search is provided.
All quizzes have answers provided.
This comprehensive resource focuses on the theme of fear in A Christmas Carol, particularly through the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come in Stave 4. It provides an analytical, GCSE, English Literature essay designed to demonstrate high-level critical thinking and essay structure, alongside a simplified version for differentiation. Additionally, a storyboard summary task with a picture prompt is included, engaging students in visualizing the key moments of Stave 4 while reinforcing their understanding of the ghost’s symbolic role.
Key Features:
Detailed Model Essay
-Explores how Dickens conveys fear through imagery, symbolism, and Scrooge’s physical reactions in the extract.
-Links the ghost’s portrayal to wider themes in the novella, such as societal critique and personal transformation.
-Examines role of fear as a catalyst for change, both for Scrooge and Dickens’s Victorian readers.
-Simplified Essay Version (Written in accessible language for students requiring additional support).
Storyboard Summary Task
Visual activity using picture prompts to help students summarize the key events of Stave 4.
Encourages creativity while ensuring comprehension of critical moments, such as Scrooge’s reaction to the ghost and the depiction of his grave.
Engage your students with a comprehensive analysis of violence in Macbeth, designed to deepen their understanding of Shakespeare’s language, themes, and character development. It is an ideal resource to prepare students for the GCSE, English Literature, Macbeth question.
Two model essays are provided about the portrayal of violence in the play:
Version One: A straightforward, student-friendly essay that explores how Shakespeare presents violence in Act 1, Scene 2, and throughout the play. Perfect for mid-level students, this version emphasizes the basics of thesis development, PEEL structure, and integrating evidence.
Version Two: A more advanced essay, ideal for higher-achieving students. It offers a nuanced thesis and detailed analysis of Shakespeare’s use of language, imagery, and themes, with connections to ambition, tyranny, and moral decay.
Targeted questions on content, structure, language, and style to support critical thinking and essay-writing skills are included to analyse the relevant essay.
The questions will encourage students to identify thesis statements, evaluate the use of evidence, and assess how the essays connect ideas from the extract to the wider play.
A Picture Sequence Resource is also included focusing on Act 1, Scene 2.
It contains a sequence of key images representing the battle scene and Macbeth’s heroic violence, designed to help visual learners. These images are accompanied with questions about the plot.
Equip your students with the tools they need to master the theme of violence in Macbeth. Perfect for class activities, homework assignments, or revision sessions!
These resources offer an in-depth exploration of the settings in Macbeth, helping GCSE, English Literature teachers guide their students through the significance of the locations in the play. The resource includes a detailed map of Scotland, marking key locations such as Duncan’s Castle at Forres, Macbeth’s Castle at Inverness, the Heath, and Dunsinane Hill. Each location is linked to its thematic importance and the events that unfold there, providing a clear structure for classroom discussions and essay planning.
Each location is carefully explained in terms of its thematic role in the play. For example, King Duncan’s Castle at Forres is presented as a symbol of legitimacy and order, while Macbeth’s Castle at Inverness is associated with deception and treachery.
These descriptions allow students to connect the physical settings with the play’s broader themes, such as kingship, ambition, and fate.
Key Moments & Themes:
Each location is linked to important scenes and moments in the play, helping students understand how the settings are woven into the narrative structure. For instance, Macbeth’s Castle is tied to Duncan’s murder, while Dunsinane Hill is connected to Macbeth’s downfall and the fulfillment of the witches’ prophecy.
Themes like ambition, power, fate, and deception are highlighted in relation to specific settings, providing students with clear context for their analyses.
PEEL Paragraph Guide:
Teachers can use the included PEEL paragraph structure to help students craft clear, focused responses about the significance of each location. The resource includes an example PEEL paragraph for Macbeth’s Castle at Inverness, demonstrating how to analyze a setting in terms of its symbolic meaning, character development, and thematic relevance.
Comprehension Questions:
Thought-provoking comprehension questions are provided for each location, designed to encourage critical thinking and guide students towards deeper insights into the play. These questions help students explore the symbolic meanings of each setting and link them to character motivations and thematic concerns.
Battle Locations Summary:
The resource includes a comparison of the opening and final battles, highlighting how the two settings symbolize the rise and fall of Macbeth’s power. Teachers can use this to discuss the cyclical nature of violence and the conflict between loyalty and ambition, reinforcing the significance of battle scenes within the play’s larger narrative.
Teaching Benefits:
Engagement with Themes: Teachers can use the settings to engage students with the complex themes of Macbeth, making it easier for them to connect literary elements like setting with character development and plot progression.
This resource is designed for GCSE English Literature teachers looking to deepen their students’ understanding of key themes, character development, and dramatic techniques in J.B. Priestley’s An Inspector Calls, particularly focusing on the themes of responsibility and generational conflict. It includes a comprehensive set of key vocabulary and phrases, a detailed essay analysing how Priestley explores these themes, and a range of discussion questions to encourage critical thinking and class debate.
Key Features:
Key Vocabulary and Phrases: A carefully curated list of essential terms, such as “responsibility,” “generational conflict,” and “moral failings,” alongside character traits and literary devices. These will help students grasp important concepts and enhance their analytical skills.
Detailed Essay: A model essay exploring how An Inspector Calls critiques generational attitudes to responsibility, focusing on the contrasting perspectives of the older and younger characters. The essay discusses the dramatic techniques Priestley employs, including dramatic irony, foreshadowing, and cyclical structure, as well as the symbolic use of characters like Mr Birling, Sheila, Eric, and Mrs Birling.
Key Phrases from the Play: A selection of notable quotes from the play, offering insight into the themes of responsibility, societal change, and moral conflict. Each quote is accompanied by a discussion question to help students analyze the significance and implications of the dialogue.
Discussion Questions: Thought-provoking questions exploring the generational divide in the play, helping students to critically engage with the text. These questions focus on character development, moral responsibility, and Priestley’s social critique, offering opportunities for deeper analysis and class discussions.
Reflection on Relevance Today: An exploration of how the generational conflict in An Inspector Calls mirrors societal attitudes during Priestley’s time and its continued relevance in today’s world, prompting students to consider the ongoing importance of social responsibility and change.
An additional resource is provided which focuses on understanding the key moment when The Inspector leaves. Students have to write in speech bubbles about what each character would say in their disagreement.
Packed with differentiated resources, visuals, model essays, extracts and comprehension questions, this pack will provide everything you need to teach A Christmas Carol and help students of all abilities achieve exam success!
Resources to understand every Stave are included which will reinforce recall of the main events.
Students will learn about the major themes of the novella in an engaging and effective way. They will also learn how to structure successful essays.
The unit is particularly useful for students with additional needs with key vocabulary, phrases and paragraphs provided.
This A Christmas Carol resource is designed to help GCSE, English Literature teachers guide students in analyzing the theme of redemption in Charles Dickens’ novella. An extract from Stave Two is provided alongside the question: ‘How does Dickens present the theme of redemption in this extract and in the novella as a whole?’ This allows students to focus their analysis on specific text examples while linking back to the novella’s broader themes.
Tailored for both classroom learning and independent study, the resource includes:
Model Essay Response - A detailed and well-structured exemplar response that explores how Dickens presents redemption through vivid imagery, symbolism, and character development. The essay addresses the novella as a whole, focusing on the role of each Spirit in Scrooge’s transformation.
Key Vocabulary and Analytical Phrases - A curated list of phrases such as “transformative power of redemption,” “motif of light as a symbol of enlightenment,” and “systemic inequalities of Victorian England.” This vocabulary aids students in developing high-quality responses.
Storyboard summaries of Stave Two to provide visual and contextual support for the extract. Ideal for paired discussions and comprehension.
Independent Extract Tasks - Another extract is provided to assess students’ understanding of text analysis and thematic understanding.
This resource equips students with the tools to critically evaluate the text while ensuring they meet assessment objectives. Perfect for building analytical skills and boosting confidence for exam responses.
Enhance students understanding of Charles Dickens’ timeless novella A Christmas Carol with this comprehensive resource, focusing on the role of the supernatural. This study guide is designed to support GCSE, English Literature students in exploring key themes, character analysis, and Dickens’ use of vivid imagery and symbolism.
Key Features:
Extract and Question: Includes two questions and extracts.
Model Answers and Phrases: Step-by-step guidance and exemplar responses help students develop insightful answers, using evaluative language and subject-specific terminology. A list of phrases taken from the model answer is provided for students to familiarise themselves with the language used in a literary essay.
Themes and Symbolism: Detailed exploration of the supernatural elements in each stave, including the moral and societal messages conveyed by the ghosts.
Critical Questions: Thought-provoking questions for every supernatural event in each stave, encouraging deeper engagement with the themes, such as social inequality, reflection, and transformation.
This resource equips students with the skills to analyse Dickens’ narrative techniques and effectively address exam questions, making it an essential tool for GCSE success.
This GCSE, AQA, English Language, Practice Paper One also contains model responses to each question - Reading and Writing, so that you can help students understand a successful response.
The reading extract is entitled The Barren Vineyard and presents a character called Silas who has a complex character. This extract will allow students to develop a more nuanced response to characterisation.
After students have completed the exam paper, they can read the model answers, which contain successful features needed to write an effective response.
For the writing, a picture prompt and story prompt are provided. The model responses demonstrate use of sensory detail and interesting sentence openers.
An additional punctuation worksheet is provided to support students who struggle in this regard.
The practice paper will help students develop their exam skills and confidence!
These booklets provide a scaffolded approach to teaching A Christmas Carol Stave One, with a focus on making the material accessible and engaging for ESL and SEN students. The resources include:
Stave One Summary and PEEL Activities
-A clear and simplified summary of Stave One, broken into manageable sections.
-Sentence openers to support students in constructing their understanding of the text.
-A selection of key quotations for sequencing and comprehension activities.
-Guided PEEL (Point, Evidence, Explanation, Link) paragraph writing exercises, with examples and prompts to help students analyze Scrooge’s character effectively.
Picture Prompts and Visual Descriptions
-Illustrated scenes and character images from Stave One, designed to promote visual learning.
-Activities include labeling, descriptive sentence writing, and imaginative responses based on the pictures, encouraging creative engagement with the text.
Character and Scene Analysis with Questions*
-Focused questions on key figures like Scrooge, Bob Cratchit, Fred, and Marley to develop comprehension and empathy.
-Students are guided to describe appearances, feelings, and relationships, enabling a deeper connection to the story.
Why This Resource?
For ESL Students: The structured activities, visual aids, and simplified language make the material approachable for learners with varying levels of English proficiency.
For SEN Students: The focus on visual and structured learning supports comprehension and engagement.
This extensive resource is designer to support newly arrived, EAL students who have very little basic English. It contains workbooks, picture prompts, model paragraphs and basic descriptions, as well as an EAL beginner pack.
The beginner pack provides a sequence to teach newly arrived, EAL students, moving from letter sounds, to basic vocabulary and sentences. It is full of useful ideas.
To compliment this resource picture prompts and some flashcards are included to provide a context for students to learn. These provide pictures of different settings EAL students will experience such as a classroom or living room. There are flashcards of the colours.
Once students have acquired these basic skills, there are two courses to learn to write simple descriptions and recounts. Each of these courses contain scaffolds, key vocabulary and paragraphs.
This pack containing four pdfs will ensure the right support for newly arrived, EAL students!