A series of A Level lessons on Wilde’s ‘Dorian Gray’ including the quotations and analysis from the text, covering such themes as Influence/gothic/Art and Aesthetics/doubles, dopplegangers and splitting/hereditry/flowers, colour and decadence/ context/women and gender. Some of these themes may be in these first two chapters or may be in subsequent chapters (also uploaded) or you may purchase all together as a bundle.
This test provides you with quotations from the text and invites students to make links to relevant contexts. A filled in version is supplied for the teacher.
A series of A Level lessons on Wilde’s ‘Dorian Gray’ including the quotations and analysis from the text, covering such themes as Influence/gothic/Art and Aesthetics/doubles, dopplegangers and splitting/hereditry/flowers, colour and decadence/ context/women and gender. Some of these themes may be in these first two chapters or may be in subsequent chapters (also uploaded) or you may purchase all together as a bundle.
Poetry often manages to engage our interest in issues and characters which we do not necessarily like or admire. How far would you support this remark?
A detailed essay plan on ‘The Wife of Bath’ with quotations
This was a really useful task which invited students to visualise the town of Maycomb and to answer the question: How does Harper Lee use the settings of Maycomb to reflect aspects of life in 1930s America. I’ve included my filled in version for teacher use.
A Christmas Quiz on the play ‘Othello’ which should also help students to learn quotations. The first letter of each answer is a clue to a final well-known Christmas carol. The team that also works out the carol could have extra points. Enjoy!
A powerpoint on the presentation of desire in the play as deviant. This can be used to prepare the students for an essay on this theme - the extract and question are also included. The presentation covers: jealousy, homoerotic desire, homosocial desire, desire of the exotic and of the whore. The essay question is on slide 2.
This presentation is a very useful revision of all the contexts of the GCE AQA spec A pre 1900 poetry anthology. Slides ask students to identify aspects of the following periods: Renaissance, Restoration, Romantics, Victorian, Decadent movement and then to consider how love is typically reflected in poetry from each of those eras. Suggested answers are given in subsequent slides. I encourages students to see the poems as part of a period or movement and prompts discuss about what is typical of the poems from each age.
Support your students preparing essays for the Edexcel spec comparing Dorian Gray with Dracula. This presentation provides a skeleton structure for the theme of concealment.
Two essay titles with all the appropriate quotations gathered together for students to analyse:
Why do you think it is important that Golding portrays the natural world as a character with malevolent characteristics?
How does Golding establish a contrast between the two boys in the first five pages?
A mini unit on writing a Gothic chapter or scene. This includes material suitable for key stage 3. There are prompts within the tasks as well as scaffolded sheets.
This bundle includes an ofsted prepared group of lessons (probably would last 3/4 lessons at least depending on ability) which covers how to write an essay on Lord of the Flies with the objective for students to provide both an overview and to zoom in on detail. Also included in this bundle is a presentation on comparing Lord of the Flies to Coral Island which is very useful context considering how Golding satirises the genre. It also includes three essay plans on conflict/power and Fear
This is a unit I put together for Eduqas new spec. However, the tasks and information would suit any GCSE study of this text. Everything is embedded within the slides.
An excellent revision session which involves the students working in teams to work out the clues to quotations and questions from An Inspector Calls. The first letter of the answers will then need to be unscrambled to name a well known Easter food. There are two rounds. This took my class all lesson (50 minutes)
Written for the AQA Literature A spec but suitable for other A Level study of ‘Othello’ an essay question on:
Read the passage from Othello, provided below, and respond to the following:
• ‘Othello is too easy to pity, too hard to like’.
• In light of this view, discuss the presentation of Othello as the jealous husband, here and elsewhere in the play.
With an annotated text version for teaching close analysis to the class.