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War Poetry "Two Fusiliers" Robert Graves HW Multi Choice Quiz Flipped Pre Reading Guided Reading
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War Poetry "Two Fusiliers" Robert Graves HW Multi Choice Quiz Flipped Pre Reading Guided Reading

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This is a straightforward, multiple-choice quiz on Robert Graves’ “Two Fusiliers”. There are twenty questions. Answers are provided. This could be set as homework once the poem has been studied in class. Alternatively, it could be used for flipped learning, to identify any gaps in knowledge and understanding prior to a lesson on the poem. The questions could be used to structure a guided reading session and spark discussion.
"Freedom" Ambrose Bierce Poetry Close Reading Unseen Pre-reading Quiz Multiple Choice HW
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"Freedom" Ambrose Bierce Poetry Close Reading Unseen Pre-reading Quiz Multiple Choice HW

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This activity uses Ambrose Bierce’s caustic poem in which Bierce is fiercely critical of government and monarchy. There are 24 multiple-choice questions (answers provided). This could be used as a homework activity after a study of the poem. Alternatively, it could be set as pre-reading to identify gaps in knowledge and understanding so that subsequent teaching of the poem can be more precisely focused. Could also be used to structure a guided reading session.
"A Birthday" Christina Rossetti - hw, multiple-choice quiz, pre-reading
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"A Birthday" Christina Rossetti - hw, multiple-choice quiz, pre-reading

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This is a multiple-choice quiz (answers provided) on Christina Rossetti’s love poem, “A Birthday”. The quiz could be set for homework to consolidate students’ understanding of the poem after it’s been taught. Alternatively, it could be used as a pre-reading activity to identify any confusion or misconception so that subsequent teaching can be more precisely focused. The quiz could be used to structure a guided reading session or to open up the poem for a wider discussion.
Robert Graves War Poetry "The Leveller" Flipped Learning HW Pre Guided Reading Unseen
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Robert Graves War Poetry "The Leveller" Flipped Learning HW Pre Guided Reading Unseen

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This multiple choice quiz has answers provided and there are 21 questions on Robert Graves’ poem, “The Leveller”. This could be used for flipped learning or pre-reading so that gaps in knowledge and understanding can be identified and then made the focus of subsequent teaching. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading session. Useful for homework or home learning.
Fiction H.G.Wells "The Grey Man" ("The Time Machine") CRR Comprehension HW Skills Inference Analysis
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Fiction H.G.Wells "The Grey Man" ("The Time Machine") CRR Comprehension HW Skills Inference Analysis

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This is a comprehension activity using a deleted segment from H.G.Wells’ “The Time Machine”, (cut from the novella but later published on its own as a short story). There are ten questions, focused on the reading skills that will be tested in the GCSE English Language exam: inference, analysis and evaluation (as well as a couple of questions on vocabulary). Could be used in class to support the development of these key skills or used as a homework or a cover activity.
Non Fic George Orwell Coal Mine "Road to Wigan Pier" Quiz HW Pre Guided
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Non Fic George Orwell Coal Mine "Road to Wigan Pier" Quiz HW Pre Guided

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This is a very straightforward activity using a short fragment from George Orwell’s “The Road to Wigan Pier” which describes a coal mine. Could be used for homework or as a starter activity. There are 10 multiple-choice questions that could be used to open up a discussion about the effect of the writer’s methods in a guided reading session.
"A Midsummer Night's Dream" Fairies Typical Atypical Acrostic Cinquain Puck Quiz
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"A Midsummer Night's Dream" Fairies Typical Atypical Acrostic Cinquain Puck Quiz

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This powerpoint was used very early in my teaching of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ to year 7. The overall aim is to establish whether Puck is a typical or an atypical fairy. The lesson begins with a focus on the meaning of ‘typical’, after which the pupils are asked to work together to create an acrostic poem using ideas about typical fairies. After that, the pupils are asked to work independently to write a cinquain about a typical fairy. The lesson then shifts to focus on a prose description of the fairy wood (from a re-telling of the play’s story) and the pupils are asked to identify aspects that are typical of fairies and aspects that are atypical, explaining their choices. This skill is then developed with a focus on Puck’s conversation with the fairy in which he outlines his role as Oberon’s jester. First of all, the extract is read and there is a quiz to aid understanding. Once any misconceptions have been identified and addressed through peer marking of the quiz, the pupils are asked to complete a grid explaining which aspects of Puck’s character are typical of a fairy and which aspects are atypical. Also provided is a multiple-choice quiz for homework, the intention of which is to embed and consolidate some of the learning from the lesson.
"A Midsummer Night's Dream" KS3 Shakespeare Egeus 'Full of Vexation come I' Characterisation
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"A Midsummer Night's Dream" KS3 Shakespeare Egeus 'Full of Vexation come I' Characterisation

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The aim of this lesson is to explore the methods Shakespeare uses to present the character of Egeus. The lesson begins with a brief prose overview of the start of of the play and then the lesson moves to focus on Egeus’s speech to Theseus. The lesson uses questioning and asks the pupils to annotate their copy of the speech as well as zooming right in on a specific quotation and exploding it (again, through prompt questioning). There is a homework - a 10-question multiple-choice quiz intended to consolidate some of the learning from the lesson.
Non Fiction CRR Close Guided Pre Read George Orwell "Road to Wigan Pier" Sheffield
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Non Fiction CRR Close Guided Pre Read George Orwell "Road to Wigan Pier" Sheffield

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This is a simple and straightforward comprehension exercise based on a short excerpt from George Orwell’s “The Road to Wigan Pier” in which he describes Sheffield. There are ten questions, four of which invite a more developed response. This could be used for cover, for homework or home learning, to structure a guided reading activity or as a pre-reading activity to identify any gaps in knowledge and understanding prior to using the text to explore the methods whereby a writer can communicate a viewpoint.
Unseen Poetry "The Walkers" Robert William Service Multi Choice Quiz Exam Style Question HW Home
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Unseen Poetry "The Walkers" Robert William Service Multi Choice Quiz Exam Style Question HW Home

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This resource uses a poem called “The Walkers” by Robert William Service. The poem uses strong contrast to explore ideas about wealth and poverty - and gender. As a consequence, this poem would sit neatly alongside the teaching of “An Inspector Calls”. The resource features a multiple-choice quiz with 14 questions (answers provided) which is intended to furnish students with some ideas that they can then use in a response to the question: How does the writer express the two speakers’ ideas about where and why they walk? Suitable for use in class, for homework or as a task for home learning. *Please be aware that the female speaker has been driven to prostitution through poverty and there are references to this in the poem. *
KS3 poetry Tennyson "Ulysses" 5 lessons reading writing analysis viewpoint
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KS3 poetry Tennyson "Ulysses" 5 lessons reading writing analysis viewpoint

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This is a 28 slide powerpoint planned for stretch and challenge in y7 exploring Tennyson’s poem “Ulysses”. There is lots of questioning to support the reading of the poem and there are two writing tasks (Ulysses’ imagined farewell letter and Penelope/Telemachus’s persuasive speech to encourage Ulysses not to leave). The two writing tasks require the pupils to use Tennysons’ methods in their own writing.
AQA GCSE Eng Lang Paper 1 'Frankenstein' 'Dracula' Q1, 2, 4 reading skills writing revision
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AQA GCSE Eng Lang Paper 1 'Frankenstein' 'Dracula' Q1, 2, 4 reading skills writing revision

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This is a 30 slide powerpoint (intended to go across more than an hour!) planned for a year 11 group who are lacking in confidence. The texts used are excerpts from “Frankenstein” and “Dracula” (older texts than would be used in the exam, but not infringing copyright!) and the focus on reading is interspersed with some recall questions focusing on writing as well as a short writing task based on an image. Modelling is used prior to asking students to tackle questions independently. There are two examples of question 1 (information retrieval). Easily editable so that you can remove/add slides to increase the level of challenge for your own class. My intention was to ask students to glue into their books the shorter extracts which is why they appear at the end of the ppt for ease of printing. The longer extract from “Frankenstein” is a separate Word document.
Non Fic Everest George Finch CRR Comprehension Analysis Methods Homework Cover Home Learning
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Non Fic Everest George Finch CRR Comprehension Analysis Methods Homework Cover Home Learning

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This is a straightforward comprehension activity using a recount by George Finch and describing extreme weather during an expedition to climb Mount Everest. There are ten questions requiring a focus on analysis of the writer’s methods as well as some inference. The questions could be used as a starting point for a guided reading session and are useful for revision of key reading skills.
Non Fic George Gissing Bank Holiday CRR Inference Viewpoint Analysis HW Cover Revision Home Learning
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Non Fic George Gissing Bank Holiday CRR Inference Viewpoint Analysis HW Cover Revision Home Learning

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This is a straightforward comprehension activity using an excerpt from George Gissing’s letter in which he airs his views about bank holidays. There are 12 questions, answering which will ensure that the student thinks about Gissing’s viewpoint and the effects of the methods used to express this viewpoint. Could be used for homework or set as cover. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading or a revision session. Straightforward enough to be set for home learning.
Reading non fiction, writers' viewpoints and perspectives, Bank Holidays, compare, analysis
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Reading non fiction, writers' viewpoints and perspectives, Bank Holidays, compare, analysis

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This is a short, simple and (hopefully) straightforward powerpoint created for revision of AQA GCSE English Language Paper 2 Question 4. It’s planned to fit a 35 minute revision session and, consequently, does not require a full answer to question 4 - the intention is that the students will focus on one point of comparison which could either be written independently for greater challenge or completed as a whole-class model. It uses very short segments from two writers, one contemporary and one writing in 1882. The entire texts are not provided and the lesson is intended to revise the skill of analysis and comparison so, for my class, it was better to use short segments. If you wish to look at more of the Gissing text, it is readily available online and easy to find. There are 14 slides in total.
"A Christmas Carol" - description of poverty from "Sketches by Boz" Reading non-fiction Dickens
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"A Christmas Carol" - description of poverty from "Sketches by Boz" Reading non-fiction Dickens

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This is a multiple-choice quiz with 14 questions used to support the teaching of “A Christmas Carol” by giving students a bit of context in terms of Victorian poverty. Answers are provided. This could be used as a starter activity, as (originally planned) as homework or to structure a guided reading activity with less confident learners - some questions lend themselves to further discussion of ‘how’ and ‘why’ the writer’s methods work as they do.