High-quality, value for money teaching resources covering English language and literature; literacy; history; media and Spanish. With twenty-seven years' teaching experience I know what works in the classroom. Engaging, thorough and fun, your students will love these lessons.
High-quality, value for money teaching resources covering English language and literature; literacy; history; media and Spanish. With twenty-seven years' teaching experience I know what works in the classroom. Engaging, thorough and fun, your students will love these lessons.
This 76 slide Powerpoint contains everything that you need to explore the key themes within the animal rights debate. Students will learn to:
Identify and use persuasive language and images.
Write an article about an endagered species.
Discuss whether zoos are right or wrong.
Write a speech for a debate on an animal rights issue of their choice.
Write a leaflet to rehabilitate the image of a maligned animal.
Present their work to the class.
Reflect on their attitudes to animal rights after the topic.
This scheme of work is designed to support students to be creative for a practical audience and encourages them to carry out their own research. As a Powerpoint it is fully adaptable to suit you and your class’s needs.
This folder contains three print-based lessons with varied activities and two worksheets looking at how celebrities such as Eva Longoria and Ronaldo are represented in the media. There are articles on how race and disability are represented. All fully adaptable in Word format.
This Powerpoint introduces the historical context of witches in Macbeth with a true or false game where students have to identify the correct or incorrect statements about witches. Students are then given some information about James V1th’s role in witchcraft persecution. Before studying Act One Scene One they are presented with a modern translation so that they understand what is going on. They then read Shakespeare’s Act One Scene One and consider what was lost in the translation and why Shakespeare’s scene is much more powerful. Students enjoy reading and acting out the scene in groups. They are then asked to design three costumes for a modern version of the play, focusing on representing the witches as powerful, evil and frightening. At the end of the lesson, you can show them Roman Polanski’s opening scene and compare and contrast their costumes with Polanski’s choices. Could be used as a precursor to my lesson on the witches’ spell; as part of an introduction to Shakespeare or as part of a scheme on Macbeth.
Designed to last thirty minutes, this editable Powerpoint explains the rule of subject verb singular and plural agreement and contains three sets of exercises to clarify this rule. Firstly students are asked to choose the correct form of the verb “to be” in the present tense; next they have to choose the correct form of the verb “to have” in the present tense and finally the correct form between “was/were”. Students are also reminded about irregular foreign plurals. Help your students to become masters of standard English with this fun activity.
This introductory lesson to the greatest World War One poet includes sixteen slides about his life. The folder also contains a very moving letter that he wrote to his mother about a disastrous sentry duty that he had to undertake. The powerpoint concludes with a choice of activities inspired by this letter, such as highlighting all the powerful language and writing your own poem; responding to the letter as Owen’s mother; interviewing Owen and then writing up the interview as a newspaper report (planning sheets included). A great resource to celebrate the centenary of the end of World War One and can be used in both English lessons and history lessons. This can also be used as an introduction to the two other lessons on Dulce et Decorum Est and Exposure, both available here.
Students explore John Agard’s use of irony in this clever poem. They are then supported to write a parody of the poem, rejecting any stereotypes of themselves. A multiple choice quiz worksheet is used as a starter to get students interested in the themes and ideas.
There are eighteen lessons covering the twelve chapters of Neil Gaiman’s horror story for children, “Coraline”. Lessons explore Gaiman’s original use of language as you progress through the book, in particular his description of colours, smell and his use of similes. The scheme of work culminates in students writing their own horror story about “The Other School” that they attend and the “other teachers” who they have to battle to defend their school from. Some lesson folders contain more than one choice of activity. The key theme of bravery is also explored also.
Three lessons and two worksheets on John Agard’s brilliant poem “Checking Out Me History”. The first lesson uses a worksheet to enable students to discover the eight historical figures referred to in the poem and to discuss their own experience of history education. The second lesson covers the theme of the poem, focusing on how Agard presents identity. Using a worksheet and activity, students then explore their own identity. Finally, the third lesson looks at how Agard uses imagery of seeing in his work and students are then supported to create original and interesting imagery of their own.
Help your students to recognize and identify bias in newspaper reports. Students are presented with two newspaper reports which they have to make more biased using the techniques that they have identified throughout the lesson. Help your students to become more savvy readers of the media.
Encourage your students to use a wider variety of sentences by teaching them how to begin sentences with the present participle, “ing” form of the verb.
This powerpoint contains a clear explanation, ten sentences to re-write with answers and five fictional products to for students to sell using this type of sentence. In the final activity students choose their own product or company to promote using this sentence type. It can be used as two separate lessons of thirty minutes or a lesson of an hour, factoring in feedback from students.
Encourage your students to write a powerfully persuasive formal letter from a choice of five letter writing tasks. After studying an extract from Mahatma Ghandi’s 1940 open letter to Hitler, designed to persuade him to stop World War Two, students choose a subject that they are passionate about from the following choices:
A letter to your local council arguing that the building project should not go ahead.
. Write a letter to the organisers of an expedition persuading them that you should be on the team.
Write a letter to a well-known person persuading them to visit your school or college for the benefit of the students.
Write a letter to a celebrity of your choice persuading him or her to support a campaign to end world poverty.
Write a letter to the Manager of the School Meals Service in which you offer your advice.
Key persuasive features are identified on a twenty slide powerpoint. Students are encouraged to use emotive language; antithesis; rhetorical question; simple sentences; repetition and direct address.
Perfect for teaching GCSE transacational writing.
Have fun learning to speak like an American with this quiz on the difference between British and American English.
In teams students guess the American equivalent of thirty British English nouns.
Cartoon graphics make this accessible to second language speakers.
All answers are provided and the activity culminates by challenging students to talk like Americans, making up a script that uses as many of the thirty words that they have guessed as they can.
Give extra points for those who can add the accent!
A worksheet embeds the learning and could be completed in class or for homework.
A comprehensive explanation of the regular and irregular formations of the comparative and superlative forms of adjectives. All exercises are provided with answers for peer or self-assessment. The seventeen slide powerpoint ends by challenging students to write a piece of advertising copy, using as many superlative adjectives as they can. A useful follow-up lesson to Adjectives, this lesson should take 30 to 45 minutes.
Did you know that sixty percent of English words derive from Latin and Greek?
This thirty-five slide Powerpoint gives a range of clues for words containing ten different Latin roots. With an explanation of how Latin roots have come to be in the English language, all the answers are provided. A final table for students to fill in in class or at home consolidates the learning. Designed to allow students to work independently or in groups, this interactive Powerpoint will inspire your students to think more deeply about the English language.
Two lessons using an extract from Bill Bryson’s travelogue “Notes from a Small Island” in which he describes his disappointment at visiting Blackpool. The lesson sequence is as follows:
In the first lesson the students attempt the question “How does the writer use language to show disappointment?” in preparation for AQA English Paper One Question 2 on language.
A WAGOLL answer is provided demonstrating how the answer should be marked.
A mark scheme is provided and students peer assess each other’s work following the model, giving each other a mark and written feedback.
The second lesson uses the theme of disappointment as a springboard. Students write a story about disappointment in preparation for Section B: Writing on English Paper One.
An example of planning a story with a 3 part story structure is included, as well as a further extract from Bryson on Weston-Super-Mare in which he shows disappointment.
23 slides and two extracts included.
Students are given a look/cover/spell/check sheet with 20 words with silent letters to spell.
The powerpoint then gives each of the words with the letter missing and students write the correct spelling of the word.
The answers are provided on the powerpoint and cartoon graphics are included to help second language speakers.
A further worksheet supports a spot the silent letter activity in a passage about a ghastly day.
Students then use the words which they have learnt to write a story using as many silent letters as possible.
Adding the suffixes -ful and -fully to the ends of words can be tricky because if the word ends in y, then you change the y to an i.
This rule is explained and then there are twenty sentences that students have to complete with key words, either ending in -ful or -fully.
Cartoon graphics are included to help second language speakers.
All answers provided, so students mark their own work.
A workheet is provided to consolidated the learning either at home or in class.
A free suffix worksheet is thrown in for good measure too.
Glaciers are so important in the formation of landscape. This powerpoint explains how glaciers are formed and how they can create crevasses and moraines. It then zooms in on the case study of Hob Moor in York, which was formed by a glacier 15000 years ago. Students then have to create a storyboard of ten different stages to show the development of how the current moor was formed from an ancient glacier. Students will enjoy bringing geography to life and making it real.
Using two sources, students imagine that they were a soldier at the Dunkirk evacuation and write an eye-witness account of it.
The first source is a powerpoint with two with background information and historical contest.
The second source is a an extract from Churchill’s famous "We shall fight them on the beaches speech.
This could be used as stimulus for creative writing for English or empathetic writing for history.
A fun quiz with twenty logos that students have to guess before designing a logo to represent themselves. Could be done as a one-off lesson or as part of a Media Studies scheme.