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K2SR7's Resources

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Teacher of English, Reading Co-Ordinator & Strategic Lead Ambassador for RFP.

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Teacher of English, Reading Co-Ordinator & Strategic Lead Ambassador for RFP.
LP1: Fool Me Once
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LP1: Fool Me Once

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This fully-resourced Language Paper 1 sequence is designed to develop students’ analytical and writing skills through the opening extract of Harlan Coben’s Fool Me Once. It provides a question-by-question breakdown, model responses, and targeted strategies to help students maximize their performance across the paper.
Tracking Vocabulary
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Tracking Vocabulary

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A collection of material to track vocabulary across the curriculum, building up to the demands of KS4 and the GCSE examinations.
Animal Farm - Academic Reading
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Animal Farm - Academic Reading

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This comprehensive resource collection is designed to support a full study of George Orwell’s Animal Farm. It includes a variety of engaging starter tasks and academic reading sheets aimed at building students’ critical understanding of the novella, its themes, and Orwell’s use of allegory. Starter Tasks: Each lesson begins with thought-provoking activities that introduce key themes and concepts, setting the stage for deeper analysis. These tasks help students connect the novella’s themes to real-world contexts and promote critical thinking before diving into the text. Historical Context: Quick activities introducing the Russian Revolution, communism, and Orwell’s political views. Character Predictions: Pre-reading tasks where students predict character roles based on animal symbolism. Key Quotes Exploration: Students analyze key quotes from the text to infer possible themes and character motivations. Academic Reading Sheets: These in-depth worksheets guide students through the novella with targeted reading tasks and higher-order thinking questions. They support academic-level engagement with the text and focus on key elements such as: Themes and Motifs: Worksheets centered on the exploration of power, corruption, and propaganda. Character Analysis: In-depth tasks focusing on how Orwell uses characters to represent political figures and ideologies. Language and Style: Analysis of Orwell’s simple yet powerful language, with attention to how it serves the novella’s allegorical and satirical nature. Symbolism and Allegory: Detailed tasks exploring Orwell’s use of animals to represent political events and figures, encouraging students to decode the novella’s underlying political messages. Extension and Challenge Tasks: For more advanced learners, additional sheets include tasks on Orwell’s wider body of work and historical essays, comparative analysis with other political allegories, and discussions of the novella’s relevance today. This collection is ideal for structured study, encouraging students to build a critical, academic understanding of Animal Farm from the first reading to advanced literary analysis. Perfect for classroom use, independent study, or exam preparation.
Power and Conflict Scheme
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Power and Conflict Scheme

11 Resources
This comprehensive scheme of learning is designed to explore the Power and Conflict poetry cluster from the AQA GCSE English Literature specification. Grounded in academic reading research, each lesson helps students engage critically with the poems while developing their analytical and comparative writing skills. All resources are fully formatted, ready to be used in the classroom, and adaptable to suit a range of learner needs. Key Components: Academic Reading Approach: Each lesson incorporates academic reading techniques, encouraging students to actively engage with the texts through annotating, questioning, and re-reading. This method fosters deeper comprehension and critical thinking about the poems and their thematic connections. Guided Close Reading: Structured lessons guide students through close readings of each poem, focusing on language, form, structure, and historical context to develop a nuanced understanding of the poet’s message and intent. Poem-by-Poem Breakdown: The scheme covers all the poems in the Power and Conflict cluster, such as “Ozymandias,” “Remains,” “The Charge of the Light Brigade,” and “Exposure.” Each poem is introduced through its context and historical background, followed by a detailed exploration of its key themes, imagery, and poetic techniques. Key Themes and Comparisons: Lessons are designed to emphasize thematic links between the poems, encouraging students to make connections between ideas such as the effects of war, the abuse of power, and the fragility of human experience. Scaffolding Analytical Writing: Each lesson includes scaffolded tasks to help students structure effective comparative responses, a key skill for the exam. Model Paragraphs: Sample responses and model paragraphs are provided to demonstrate how to structure analytical essays, use subject-specific vocabulary, and incorporate quotations seamlessly. Comparison Skills: Students will practice comparing poems, focusing on how different poets present similar themes through different perspectives, using comparative grids, graphic organizers, and sentence starters. Engaging Learning Tasks: Group Discussions: Structured group discussions and debate tasks encourage collaborative learning, allowing students to develop their own interpretations of the poems while listening to diverse perspectives. Creative Writing: Students will engage in creative tasks such as writing poetry in response to the themes explored in the cluster or adopting the perspective of a character within a poem. Visual Analysis: Lessons incorporate visual aids, such as artwork or media clips, to help students visualize the historical context and themes presented in the poems. Assessment and Progress Tracking: Formative Assessments: Each lesson includes built-in formative assessments, such as quick quizzes, annotated extracts, and peer-assessed work, allowing teachers to monitor students’ understanding and progress. Summative Essay: At the end of the unit, students will complete a summative essay, comparing two poems from the cluster, using the analysis and comparison skills developed throughout the scheme. Contextual Understanding: The scheme integrates historical, cultural, and biographical context to help students understand the circumstances that influenced each poet. Students will explore how context impacts a poem’s meaning, such as the significance of the British Empire in “Kamikaze” or the psychological effects of war in “War Photographer.” Fully Formatted Resources: All resources are fully designed and formatted, ready for immediate use. This includes lesson slides, handouts, contextual information sheets, comparison grids, and exam-style question prompts.