Hero image

CatherinePaver's Shop

Average Rating4.41
(based on 168 reviews)

Cartoons, photos, songs - fun, imaginative ways with teaching are here for you and they're all free as birds!

106Uploads

216k+Views

110k+Downloads

Cartoons, photos, songs - fun, imaginative ways with teaching are here for you and they're all free as birds!
THE WITCH - DESCRIPTIVE SONG
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

THE WITCH - DESCRIPTIVE SONG

(0)
A song which creates a character mostly through setting, detail & imagery. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own songs/poems é learn about rhythm é rhyme. Other creative tasks: 'Meeting a Witch&', diaries, letters, posters éc. it can also introduce ballad form. This helps quatrains, dialogue, imagery, repetition, refrains é rhymes to make more sense. The use of metaphor é simile to create mood can be studied, too. Enjoy using the song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
GHOST - A MYSTERIOUS SONG
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

GHOST - A MYSTERIOUS SONG

(0)
This song tells a story through first-person description. As well as performing it, pupils can write stories, poems, songs e.g. ‘Letter from a Ghost’. They learn about creating atmosphere with detail, imagery, rhythm & rhyme. In literature lessons, the song can introduce storytelling poems, monologues, setting, repetition é cyclical structure. Enjoy using this song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
SHAKESPEARE'S HAT - WORKING WITH THE CHARACTERS
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

SHAKESPEARE'S HAT - WORKING WITH THE CHARACTERS

(0)
This works as an introduction to Shakespeare's characters and stories for young children. It also gives older pupils the experience of working with Shakespeare&'s raw materials of character, motive and props. This makes them think about how he wrote for the stage: crucial for gaining marks in Shakespeare exams!\nPlease read Lesson Notes to understand how it works.\nI have provided two of the sheets in a version with cartoons: Characters and Props. Useful if you are doing this in an MFL. The other sheets would probably need a translation on the back. Have fun!
SHAKESPEARE WROTE PLAYS, NOT BOOKS!
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

SHAKESPEARE WROTE PLAYS, NOT BOOKS!

(0)
A practical, hands-on way to get pupils to understand that Shakespeare wrote for the stage. You can print this out and give it to pupils as an introduction to speaking Shakespeare themselves - there are examples and things to listen out for, as well as connections made with how song lyrics use imagery to convey emotion. The idea is simple: these aren't books: they&'re plays - so play with them! You may want to give this sheet out one page at a time - it&';s up to you!
A BAD LOBSTER - PUPPET LOBSTER EXPLAINS DICKENS' IMAGERY IN 'A CHRISTMAS CAROL'
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

A BAD LOBSTER - PUPPET LOBSTER EXPLAINS DICKENS' IMAGERY IN 'A CHRISTMAS CAROL'

(0)
A puppet lobster explains the bizarre imagery that Dickens uses to influence our feelings throughout ‘A Christmas Carol’. ‘Like a bad lobster in a dark cellar,’ for example. This five-minute film engages pupils in finding their own examples of Dickens’ figurative language. It emphasies how important it is not just to label them ‘simile’, ‘personification’ and so on, but also to feel their emotional power. This in turn helps pupils to remember them and to write more perceptively about them.
DRAGON SLAYER - BALLAD
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

DRAGON SLAYER - BALLAD

(0)
This song is a ballad which tells a story through dialogue & third-person description. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own ballads é learn a lot about rhythm é rhyme. Other creative tasks: diaries, letters, posters éc. In literature lessons, the song can introduce ballad form to pupils. Then, when they study ballads in various GCSE Eng Lit anthologies, quatrains, dialogue, imagery and rhymes will make more sense. Enjoy using this song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
WHEN THIS LOUSY WAR IS OVER
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

WHEN THIS LOUSY WAR IS OVER

(0)
The pupils’ activity is simply the lyrics for the song ‘When This Lousy War Is Over’, with guitar chords. The MP3 is a recording of a female voice. Also find the song on YouTube from the film, ‘Oh What A Lovely War’, with male voice choir. The other website has lyrics for the same song and a few others.
VICTORY ODES AT THE GREEK OLYMPICS
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

VICTORY ODES AT THE GREEK OLYMPICS

(0)
A Powerpoint about Pindar's Victory Odes at the Greek Olympics, prepared by Professor Edith Hall, Kings College London, for a Poet in the City event: Poetry and the Greek Olympics. Teacher can tell the class how the athlete's training was military, the victory odes were performed for the victors in front of thousands and some of the games were very violent!
'I SHOP SMARTLY' - ADVERTISING MNEMONICS
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

'I SHOP SMARTLY' - ADVERTISING MNEMONICS

(0)
‘I Shop Smartly’ presents the main advertising techniques as a mnemonic that can be learnt. ‘If Seal Puppies Shop Smartly, Do You?’ is more detailed, and you might just want to select from this sheet in your own way. Pupils could pick the techniques they tend to forget & make up their own mnemonic! The last page of this has ideas for written work. One way to teach the idea of target audience is to get pupils to design adverts for different year groups. They are so close to the distinctions between Years 7, 8 and 9 that their observations on concerns and language can be very sharp and funny!
THE FIRE OF THE WEST - BALLAD
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

THE FIRE OF THE WEST - BALLAD

(0)
Who or what is the Fire of the West? Get children to guess before they listen to the song. Get them to guess again after hearing you read aloud the first verse. Then listen to the song! Pupils could write their own ballads or stories with mysterious titles. Other creative tasks: diaries, letters, posters &c. For literature, use it to introduce ballad form: originally, a song that tells a story. Listen out for metaphor, simile, repetition, refrain, é rhymes. Enjoy using the song for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See lyric sheet for details.
THUNDER GOLD - WESTERN BALLAD
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

THUNDER GOLD - WESTERN BALLAD

(0)
This song tells a story in the first person. As well as performing it, pupils can write their own ballad songs/poems, creating feeling with detail, imagery, rhythm & rhyme. In lit. lessons, the song can introduce storytelling poems, monologues, setting, repetition é cyclical structure. Interpretation, too: is ‘Thunder Gold’ a place? A symbol? In creative writing, use it as a springboard for stories: who is/was this person? Diaries, posters etc. Enjoy using the song as a resource for lessons é concerts! This is my own song é recording so I own the copyright. See base of lyric sheet for details.
FASCINATING ADVICE FOR ADVERTISERS
CatherinePaverCatherinePaver

FASCINATING ADVICE FOR ADVERTISERS

(0)
Click on the links in this Word Document to websites which advise advertisers about how to use language and images to sell products. Stimulating and thought-provoking for discussion, e.g. if you copy and paste selections from the advice and give it to a class when they have begun their study of advertising and already gained some confidence in using the terms. Reading about advertising from the advertising copywriters' viewpoint is quite revealing! The list of techniques with their effects shows how adverts carefully group consumers, then make them feel like special individuals.