This is a 14-slide powerpoint which guides students through an exploration of Sassoon’s blistering poem, “Atrocities”. This is easily adapted to suit the ability of your class. Slides 12, 13 and 14 can be used either to structure whole-class question and answer or could be an opportunity for students to work in pairs to discuss the questions and annotate the poem with their thoughts.
The final slide reiterates the question from the lesson aim - How does Sassoon communicate his feelings towards the person being addressed in the poem?
Depending on the students’ confidence, this could be an opportunity to model a paraqraph or two or they could go straight into writing a response.
This is a simple and straightforward powerpoint intended to help students practise an approach to an unseen poetry question. It uses “At the Movies” by Florence Ripley Mastin. There are several slides of questions which can be used for whole-class discussion or to prompt paired work. The powerpoint ends with an exam-style question.
The extract used describes the first sight of the old curiosity shop of the title. There are seven questions (though some are broken down into segments, so 12 to answer altogether). Suggested responses are provided. The questions test vocabulary, comprehension, analysis and evaluation, albeit at a basic level. Useful for homework or cover. Could also be used to structure a guided reading activity.
A multiple choice quiz based on Dickens’ description of Arthur Gride from “Nicholas Nickleby”. There are 15 questions and answers are provided. This could be a cover activity or used for a reading homework. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading activity.
This is a multiple choice quiz (answers provided) based on the description of Nicholas’s arrival at Dotheboys Hall. Useful for cover or as a homework activity. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading activity or for flipped learning, to identify gaps in pupils’ knowledge and understanding so that the subsequent lesson can be more precisely focused.
This is a short and straightforward powerpoint which guides the students through a short and straightforward poem by Thomas Hood (public domain).
There are two slides with specific questions about the poem. These were planned for classroom use as a peer think/pair/share opportunity. Alternatively, these could be used to guide a student, working individually, through some thinking about the poem. The questions could be used by a tutor to prompt a discussion about the poem.
After this, students are asked to write an exam-style response and the final slide offers some further comments to add depth and detail to the response.
This is a comprehension activity (suggested answers provided) which leads into an exam-style unseen poetry response task. Could be used for cover, for revision or to structure a guided reading activity.
This is a simple and straightforward activity originally created for use as cover with a mixed-ability year 7 class but also suitable for upper primary.
There is a very short extract describing the hound from Conan Doyle’s “The Hound of the Baskervilles” and 7 questions which could be used for homework or cover or to structure a guided reading activity.
Created for a year 11 class to support their learning of the Love and Relationships cluster in the AQA poetry anthology, this is a first teaching walkthrough of the poem using questioning to secure understanding of the speaker’s intention in the poem, the use of natural imagery, rhyme and sibilance and the fact that the speaker’s love remains unrequited at the end of the poem.
This is a multiple choice quiz with 18 questions (answers provided). It could be used for homework or revision. Alternatively, it could be used for pre-teaching to identify gaps in knowledge or understanding so that the subequent lesson can be more sharply focused. For less confident students, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading session.
This powerpoint was made for a year 11 class to help them to improve their responses to AQA English Language Paper 1, question 2 and to Paper 2, question 3, both of which ask students to explain the effect of a writer’s language choices. The extract is from a short story by G.K.Chesterton which is in the public domain. Slide 1 is for recall/diagnosis of gaps. Slide 2 is an opportunity for a class model. Slide 3 offers a teacher-prepared model and slide 4 asks the students to work independently to write a second paragraph of the response.
Could be useful for home learning, revision or as a cover activity.
This is the opening of a very strange story, published in “Household Words”. There are 5 tasks to support evaluative thinking about the story. Created for a year 8 class as part of a unit of work on Dickens. Could be used as a cover activity or set for homework. Alternatively, the questions could scaffold the start of a discussion about the story.
This is a simple and straightforward powerpoint created for cover but also useful for homework - or could be taught as a lesson or used to structure guided reading and writing. There are three slides. The first focuses on writing to describe, the second is a simple comprehension activity and the third is an opportunity for more extended creative writing.
The intention was for the ppt to be displayed, reducing the need for photocopying, but the slides are easily editable if handouts are required.
This powerpoint uses three excerpts from ghost stories (all in the public domain), interspersed with three slides for revision/recall of “A Christmas Carol”. The excerpts are duplicated for ease of printing (2 slides per piece of A4); the slides on “A Christmas Carol” are not intended to be printed. Students can work from them while they are displayed on the screen.
My intention for these is that they will be used as an extended starter activity - the “Christmas Carol” slide and then the ghost story extract.
This lesson uses Jack London’s brilliant story “Moon Face” which would sit really well alongside Poe’s “The Tell Tale Heart”. Planned for a year 9 class as part of a unit on short stories but has potential to be used elsewhere at KS3. The aim of the lesson is to use inference to explore the idea of an unreliable narrator. The lesson takes the students through discussion of the effect of a simile, of personification and begins to explore the idea of the narrator’s hypocrisy. After a short time in paired discussion, students are then asked to respond to this question - In ‘Moon Face’, what do we understand about London’s unreliable narrator?
This is a straightforward, short powerpoint focused on the reading skills of inference, analysis and viewpoint, at quite a basic level. Useful for a quick assessment of students’ reading skills or for practise in polishing those skills. Could be used to structure a guided reading session with less confident learners. Could be used as a starter, for revision or for a homework.
Originally planned for KS3 students as part of a reading unit on the natural world, this could be used with much less confident readers at KS4, perhaps as part of a catch-up or intervention series. The text used is from “Nature Near London” (1905 so public domain) by Richard Jefferies. Alongside the short excerpt are some questions which can be used to diagnose gaps in reading skills and comprehension.
This short powerpoint uses a brief extract from “Man Sized in Marble” by E.Nesbit (in the public domain). There are questions on the key reading skills tested at GCSE: information retrieval, inference and analysis. Only 3 slides so easily editable. The resource can be used for homework or revision. Alternatively, it could be used to structure a guided reading activity or for intervention with less confident readers.
These were originally created as three starters to go across a week of teaching - the three excerpts used are from “The Ghost Pirates” by William Hope Hodgson. They could be combined to furnish resources for a guided reading session. Alternatively, they could be set as homework or used for revision. The main focus is on inference but there are also questions building the basic skills of analysis.
This is a very short and straightforward activity, originally planned as revision for a cover lesson. It could also be used as a taught lesson or could be set for homework. It uses an excerpt (abridged) from William Hope Hodgson’s “Carnacki the Ghost Finder” and the students are asked to identify a range of methods in the text and then select two of those methods and explain their effect. A model response is provided - and the powerpoint is very easily editable if you want to make the task more or less challenging.