Suitable for any A level spec, the slides cover the theme of Love and are structured to cover the following ideas:
Love is unbalanced and dependent
Lust/sex is expressed in place of love
Self-preservation is more important than love
Available as both a pdf or powerpoint
A presentation which covers the theme of the past and how Williams presents it in A Streetcar Named Desire, covering the main ideas of:
The past is significant to personal identity.
The past is traumatic and detrimental
The past is symbolised through music
Some slides have just the relevant quotations for the students to reflect and plan around with other ‘teacher’ slides padded out with ideas related to these quotations.
A powerpoint to support the AQA Love Through the Ages Paper 1, looking at how the female characters are presented. This is in preparation for an essay title which is also included.
All you need to teach a unit on unseen poetry. I have put this presentation together which includes AQA spec A type questions for the new syllabus Love Through the Ages Unseen Poetry. However, the tasks would work for any A Level unseen poetry work. I have tried to cover a range of literary periods and include brief bios on poets and key words to prompt students with each poem.
Everything you need to teach a detailed unit of poetry at Key Stage 3. Texts range from Beowulf to contemporary poetry from today: covering War poems, Ballads, sonnets, Romantic…this is a really comprehensive unit with sections on caesura, enjambement, plosives, etc…
This is a brilliant book covering lots of thoughtful issues around friendship, grief and it is also utterly magical and enchanting. This unit of work contains over 170 slides covering comprehension skills, reading implicit meaning, punctuation, report writing, descriptive writing, speech writing to name a few. It was used for year 8 students but could be used for top primary as well as early secondary. Lots of consolidated work here, fun and enough to keep students busy for at least a term.
Everything you need for covering the teaching of the Eduqas poetry: this first presentation has lessons on Heaney, Wordsworth (comparing them on childhood) then Valentine and Cozy Apologia (comparing them on relationships - finally adding on Manhunt as a bridge between relationships and the next collection I do will look at the war/conflict poems. The slides cover questions on the poems, detailed analysis of the poems, plus modelled essay structures, plus essay charts and assessment titles. Slides include highlighted annotations and links to relevant videos. 65 slides
Support your students preparing for the Edexcel spec comparing Dracula and Dorian Gray — exploring how both writers present gothic elements in their texts. This has paragraph planning sheets on the following and includes quotations, analysis and context prompts.
Settings:
portrait/mirror/poisonous book/ crucifix/ animals/
Windows:
Faustian bargain
Violence:
Secrets:
Influence: mesmeric/psychic in its suggested power.
Very detailed slides on Miller’s presentation of both Catherine and Beatrice in ‘A View from the Bridge’. These were written to teach the iGCSE coursework essay but would be suitable for any GCSE -
Note, there are not any references to context in these slides as the iGCSE coursework did not require it but all of the quotations and ideas are there.
Exemplar answers. A worksheet for students to grade and a powerpoint with gradually improving paragraphs to show how detailed answers may be developed. Other examples of close analysis and an essay on the Red Room for critical reading. These resources are suitable for both the new GCSE courses and A Level.
49 slides to take you through these four poems with a scaffolded structure for writing both the a) and b) essays. This resource should help students to phrase the comparative element and also to include the context. Success criteria included for students to peer assess. All videos and poetry annotations included. This should cover a couple of weeks work if you are taking them through the assessment in class in order to teach them how to approach it.
This is the second in a series of Who Wants to be a Millionaire commas review. This quiz deals with the following comma types:
When the group of words begins with who, which, whose or whom and isn’t essential to the sentence.
When the first word of the group of words ends in ed or ing.
when the group of words is used as a description of something already mentioned in the sentence.
This is the first in a series of commas quizes in the style of ‘Who Wants to be a Millionaire’. This first one deals with the following commas types:
To separate items in a list
In a term of address
Yes, no, please or thank you as part of a spoken answer
To separate question tags from the rest of a sentence
This includes both a pdf and a powerpoint version covering the two titles as follows:
Typically, texts present men as the authority figures in relationships’.
In the light of this view, how does Shakespeare present husbands and wives in this extract and elsewhere in the play? Act 3 scene 3 lines 294 -323 AND
‘Typically, texts about husbands and wives present marriage from a male point of view.’
In the light of this view, discuss how Shakespeare presents the relationship between Othello and Desdemona in this extract and elsewhere in the play.
(This is Act 3 scene 3 Line 235 -278)
This includes the passages from the text and two detailed slides of notes with quotations gathered from the play.
Everything you need to teach the following poems from the Eduqas poetry anthology for GCSE:
Sonnet 43, She Walks in Beauty, London, Living Space, As Imperceptibly as Grief, Afternoons, Hawk Roosting, Ozymandias, To Autumn.
This presentation includes 87 slides and covers both the context of each poem and a close anlaysis of each poem. There is also a sample exam question with scaffolded support on power in Living Space and London.
Ever wondered what the significance of Coral Island was to Lord of the Flies? I made myself read it and put together this presentation which takes you through all the connections. It was a painful but fascinating read and provides useful context for the class as Golding clearly drew on this little book and satirised its contents.
This is a very detailed scheme which should last a few weeks. It includes lots of creative writing ideas and exercises to encourage students with the narrative writing task. Although separate presentations will cover other aspects in more details such as character, plot, structure, this presentation covers creating conflict, ensuring your character grips the reader and exercising restraint with regards to the opening gambit of the plot. I also teach the AFA in Creative Writing and have taught the A level in this subject so have included lots of exercises for the budding writer.
This presentation was made for the Edexcel English Literature spec and includes key ideas for an essay on how religion is presented in the play. It includes key quotations and critics and is available both as a pdf or a powerpoint.
This presentation was prepared to support students writing essays tackling the themes of power, government and politics. It covers imagery, justice, corruption, the role of the Duke and there are also some critical quotations which they may weave into their arguments. It was prepared for Edexcel A level spec.