This is a simple and straightforward powerpoint planned to support students in their preparation for the unseen poetry task for English Literature GCSE. The poem used is “The Deserted House” by Mary Elizabeth Coleridge. Slide 3 of the powerpoint is for differentiation - to support less confident students in getting to grips with the idea of the poem as an extended metaphor. This slide can be deleted for those students who don’t need it. The final slide is for peer or self assessment - or could be modified and used as a scaffold for those in need of support.
This is a 14-question multiple-choice quiz (answers provided) on John Clare’s lovely sonnet about the spring. Could be used as a starter activity prior to a deeper analysis of the poem. Could work as a homework activity. The questions could be used to stucture a guided reading activity.
This uses an excerpt from Elizabeth Gaskell’s “The Grey Woman” which uses many of the features of the gothic genre. There are 14 multiple choice questions which could be used for flipped learning or to structure a guided reading activity. Alternatively, the questions could be used as a starting point for class discussion of the extract, for homework or for cover. Answers are provided.
This is a straightforward multiple choice quiz with 17 questions (answers provided) which can be used to structure a guided reading session or discussion about the poem. Alternatively, the questions can be set for homework prior to the completion of an unseen poetry response in class. A suggested question - How does the poet present the speaker’s thoughts and feelings about death? - is written just below the poem. Useful preparation for the GCSE Unseen poetry question. If you are studying “A Christmas Carol” the ideas in this poem segue neatly into the death of Tiny Tim.
This is a simple and straightforward multiple-choice quiz using Oscar Wilde’s “Les Silhouettes”. There are ten questions (answers provided) which could be used to structure a guided reading session prior to answering an unseen poetry response. There is a suggested question typed beneath the poem. Alternatively, the questions could be set as a homework prior to tackling the question, to secure some key knowledge.
This is a quiz intended to support students in practising their response to unseen poetry. There are 14 questions (answers provided) which are designed to prompt thinking in response to an exam style question - How does the poet present the speaker’s ideas about the garden.
This is a straightforward comprehension activity focusing on the reading skills of information retrieval, inference and analysis.
The extract is from George Sims’ “How the Poor Live” and describes a large crowd of men who have assembled in the hope of being taken on as casual labourers.
Useful as a cover activity, for homework, or to structure a guided reading session.
In this extract, G.W.M.Reynolds describes a crowd gathered to watch a hanging. Alongside the extract are ten questions focusing on a range of reading skills including vocabulary, analysis and evaluation. Useful for cover, for homework or as a pre-reading activity before exploring the extract in greater depth.
I made this as a cover activity for a year 10 class with targets of 3 and 4. Could be used as a recall/revision activity, set as homework or used for cover. There are 10 questions which could also be used as a starting point for a guided reading activity.
This is Betjeman’s simple but powerful “Harvest Hymn” with six questions focusing on the presentation of the speakers in the poem, summing up by asking the students to express the poet’s viewpoint in their own words. Created for a KS3 class but could be used for stretch and challenge at KS2 or for less confident students who need a gentle way into the unseen poetry task at GCSE English Lit.
This is a worksheet using Emily Dickinson’s poem, “Fame is a Bee” (in the public domain). There are ten questions and then a task for the pupils. This could be used to structure a guided reading or literacy lesson. Alternatively, it could be set for cover or used as a homework to support a unit on poetry or metaphor.
A straightforward powerpoint to enable students to practise their skills of analysing unseen poetry prior to their GCSE English Literature exam. The poem is in the public domain.
A straightfoward worksheet with a copy of Sassoon’s poem (which is in the public domain) and 12 questions which could be used to structure a guided reading session, or for assessment. Alternatively, this work could be set as cover or as a homework to support a unit of work on poetry, particularly the poetry of the first World War.
This is an extract from Stoker’s “Dracula” with 18 quiz questions (answers provided). This could be used for revision, as a starter activity, for homework, cover or to structure a guided reading activity.
Planned for year 11 to embed the skills needed for English Language Paper 2, question 4, this powerpoint uses two short texts (shorter than would be used in the real thing), both about pigs. One is from “The Guardian”, the other from Dickens’s “American Notes”.
This 21 slide powerpoint is a walkthrough of paper 2, question 4. It uses two shortened texts, one pre-1914 and one contemporary and the lesson focuses on clear comparison and explaining how the writers’ words, phrases and patterns convey their feelings about zoos.
This activity uses an extract from “Carmilla” (public domain text) and there are ten questions which could be used in class, as cover or set as homework. Alternatively, they could be used to structure a guided reading session. Might be of use as part of a unit on gothic literature.
A way into unseen poetry. There are questions in boxes for the pupils to work through in pairs and then an exam-style question for independent work using the ideas that have come through the discussion. Created as a cover activity; could also be used in a small group, guided reading session or for revision or homework.
This powerpoint guides students through the AQA GCSE English Language paper question by question (in that there are example questions and some guidance).
There’s too much here for an hour’s lesson - could be extended over two or even three lessons.
The text is a heavily abridged segment from “Casino Royale” by Ian Fleming in which Bond faces his enemy, Le Chiffre at the casino.