Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
This crossword on George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’ provides an enjoyable but academic activity for pupils to test their knowledge of the novella.
It always works as a great starter or plenary task. Ideal for KS3 or KS4.
This bundle includes lessons for all 10 chapters of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’ as well as a detailed introduction to the novella’s social and historical context.
Lessons analyse the novella’s key characters, themes, and ideas, while offering close scrutiny of Orwell’s language. Close attention is paid to the novella’s function as an allegory of the Russian Revolution and subsequent rule of Stalin over the Soviet Union.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students throughout. Extract-based questions are also featured, as well as creative tasks.
This bundle also includes a crossword on ‘Animal Farm’, to be completed as an engaging revision/starter/homework task, and a ‘Seven Commandments Tracker’ for students to analyse when and how each commandment is broken as the novella progresses.
These lessons are ideal for KS3 or GCSE students (ages 12-16).
PowerPoints saved as PDFs.
Buyers of this bundle save 65% of the resources’ combined total price.
This 40-slide lesson explores the context and background of Shakespeare’s ‘King Lear’.
Designed as both an introduction to the play and a revision resource for students to use when recapping the play’s context, this is a comprehensive and detailed exploration of Shakespeare’s sources and influences, as well as the play’s key themes, ideas and critical debates. Students are also equipped with important and precise vocabulary for analysing the play with sophistication.
Among other key ideas, students are introduced to elements of tragedy, Jacobean ideas of kingship, Shakespearean staging and stagecraft, Christianity vs. Paganism, and the play’s preoccupation with absurdity and meaninglessness. The anonymous ‘King Leir’ is referenced along with other points about the play’s textual history, and contemporary debates around succession and the unification of Britain are discussed in detail. Images from various productions of ‘King Lear’ are included for discussion, and questions for students are included throughout the resource.
The file is included here both as a PDF and PowerPoint. The latter file will not retain precise font choices and formatting.
This 20-slide PowerPoint is an introductory lesson on the context of Shakespeare’s ‘Twelfth Night’, aimed primarily at A level students (particularly those studying the genre of comedy).
The lesson contains information on Shakespeare, Commedia dell’Arte, Elizabethan acting, Illyria in context, religious satire, and more. Questions and tasks are featured for students, including a potential homework task.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 26-slide lesson provides a comprehensive introduction to the context and comedy of Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’.
The lesson features information on Wilde’s life and literary career and on Victorian contexts of gender, sexuality, and morality. The genre of comedy is considered in detail, and the key themes, characters, and conventions of ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’ are outlined. Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
This lesson would work particularly well for those teaching Wilde on AQA’s Aspects of Comedy paper for English Literature A level, but is still useful for those exploring the play for other courses.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 22-slide lesson explores Simon Armitage’s poem, ‘I Am Very Bothered’.
The lesson encourages students to analyse Armitage’s poem as a subversion of typical love poetry, thinking about its ironic use of the sonnet form and the speaker’s distorted sense of romantic imagery.
The poem’s language, structure, and form is considered. Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. An extended essay question (including an exemplar introduction and analytical paragraph) is featured at the end of the lesson.
A copy of the poem is also included.
This lesson is ideal for Key Stage 3 or GCSE analysis.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 30-slide lesson is a detailed introduction to the context of Robert Louis Stevenson’s ‘Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’.
The lesson includes notes on Stevenson’s life; his relationship with Edinburgh and London; Deacon Brodie; science and industrialisation; theories of evolution, Degeneration and Cesare Lombroso; Victorian rationality; the Victorian class system; and contemporary gender dynamics.
It also features tips on top-grade vocabulary for students to use when analysing the text. Questions and discussion points are included throughout, and the lesson ends with a research task that could be used as a homework activity.
This lesson is ideal for those studying the novella at GCSE, but could be used with KS3 too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This is a perfect stand-alone lesson aimed at KS3 or KS4 for thinking about how language is used every day in advertising.
Have you ever thought about how many adverts you read in a day? What are the most powerful words in advertising? Are you aware of when and how advertising tries to entice you? This lesson uses a wide range of adverts to demonstrate the different techniques used by advertisers.
At the end of the lesson, students are tasked with creating their own advert/brand.
PowerPoint saved as PDF. 23 slides in total.
This 27-slide lesson explores Simon Armitage’s poem, ‘Hitcher’.
The lesson analyses each stanza in comprehensive detail, considering Armitage’s use of language, structure, form, and poetic technique. The speaker’s increasing frustration and anger is examined closely as the poem builds to its infamous climax.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. One task involves creative writing, while an essay question is featured at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is ideal for upper-KS3 or GCSE students.
A copy of the poem is also included in this resource.
PowerPoint and Word Doc saved as PDFs.
This 15-slide lesson explores Chapter 6 of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
In this comprehensive lesson, students consider how the pigs begin to violate the Seven Commandments (sleeping in beds and trading with humans) and how Squealer is able to justify these transgressions through manipulative rhetoric. The use of Snowball as a scapegoat is explored, alongside how and why Orwell emphasises Boxer’s significance to the farm’s ‘success’.
The allegorical function of the novella is also closely studied, as pupils learn about the slippery relationships between Stalin and the US, UK, and Germany.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
The lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 15-slide lesson explores Chapter 7 of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
In this comprehensive lesson, students consider how Napoleon begins to consolidate his totalitarian rule through establishing a reign of terror. As animals begin to show signs of dissent and mild revolt, the pigs’ increasing use of violence shatters any illusion of a utopian society. As ever, Squealer’s propagandistic rhetoric is analysed.
The allegorical function of the novella is also closely studied, as pupils learn about the Great Purge and the Peasants’ Revolt in the Soviet Union.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
The lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 23-slide lesson provides a comprehensive introduction to key context for studying Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’.
The his lesson covers the significance of the Prometheus, Gothic genre, Romanticism, Industrialisation and much more on Shelley’s famous novel, including the influence of ‘Paradise Lost’. Shelley’s life is explained, and the key themes are explored.
Questions and tasks are also included for students. A creative task is featured at the end of the lesson. This could be used either as a class-based or homework activity.
The lesson is ideal for GCSE students, but could be used for introducing the text for high-attaining KS3 pupils or even at A level.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 25-slide lesson serves as the perfect introduction to William Golding’s ‘Lord of the Flies’, establishing the key context and background to the novel.
The lesson includes exploration of the novel’s key themes and ideas, Golding’s life and his own comments about the text, the historical background of the Cold War and Atomic Age, as well as key terms and vocabulary to unpick the novel’s ideas.
Questions, discussion-points and tasks are included for students. At the end of the lesson is an extended task that could work either in class or as a homework activity.
The lesson is ideal for GCSE or KS3 study of the novel.
PowerPoint is saved as PDF.
This 32-slide lesson on Wilfred Owen’s harrowing portrait of the First World War, ‘Dulce et Decorum Est’, contains a detailed and comprehensive exploration of the poem.
The lesson includes context on the war, propaganda, and Owen himself, as well as analysis and questions on each stanza of the poem, including structure and form. Questions and tasks are included, with a final essay question for students (and two exemplar paragraphs) at the end.
A copy of the poem is included too.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 (particularly HA) and GCSE students, but could be easily adapted.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This resource includes a 32-slide lesson designed to introduce Greek Myths and Legends to students, accompanied by a short story in which the key Greek Gods are established.
The lesson aims to introduce the conventions of Greek myths and the most significant characters of the legends. Storytelling and myth-making are explored, as is the influence of Greek mythos on our own modern culture.
Students then read the story of ‘Zeus and His Mighty Company’, considering the characterisation of the Greek Gods.
Tasks, discussion points, and questions are included for students. A research task ends the lesson either as a class-based or homework activity.
The lesson works as an introduction to any unit of work on Greek mythology, or could feature as part of a larger unit on storytelling, heroes, or legends.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 or upper-KS2.
PowerPoint and Word Doc. story saved as PDF.
This 36-slide lesson explores Sujata Bhatt’s poem ‘Search for my Tongue’.
The lesson provides detailed analysis of the poem and includes: biographical information about Bhatt, analysis of the poem’s use of language and poetic techniques, analysis of the poem’s structure, form & rhyme, as well as a range of questions, discussion points, and tasks for students to complete. Students are encouraged to think about the significance of language and its relationship to cultural assimilation and identity.
The final task at the end of the lesson is an extended writing activity.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 pupils, but could be used for GCSE too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This resource includes a booklet containing 10 extracts from 10 works of dystopian fiction by 10 different authors.
The booklet contains imaginative and thought-provoking explorations of dystopian worlds - and each is ripe for analysis.
Authors featured include Suzanne Collins, E.M. Forster and George Orwell.
Also included is a PowerPoint with a brief introductory lesson to the dystopian genre. This explains the key features of dystopian literature and introduces the key vocabulary associated with the genre.
This is perfect for a KS3 module or unit of work on dystopian fiction. It works well in conjunction with creative writing tasks.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 26-slide lesson explores the first chapter (‘The Story of the Door’) of Stevenson’s ‘Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’.
To accompany the class reading or recapping of Chapter One of the novella, this lesson provides analytical discussion of and questions on how Stevenson begins the famous novella. Characters, setting, and key themes are analysed, with particular focus on Stevenson’s language and atmosphere.
Tasks and discussion points are included for students, and an extract from the chapter is included for students to conduct linguistic analysis.
This lesson is ideal for GCSE analysis of the text (eg. AQA), but could work for high-attaining KS3 groups too.
PowerPoint and Word Doc. saved as PDFs.
This 18-slide lesson explores Chapter 6 of John Steinbeck’s ‘Of Mice and Men’.
Students are encouraged to think about the iconic ending of the novella, considering how Steinbeck has led to this moment. George and Lennie’s relationship is discussed at length, and the key themes of dreams, hope, fate, loneliness and friendship are debated. Students always love to dissect the ending in detail!
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. An extended essay question and creative writing tasks are featured at the end of the lesson.
Ideal for upper-KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 27-slide lesson on William Blake’s ‘The Garden of Love’ from the ‘Songs of Experience’ deconstructs the poem as a tool of political and social protest.
The lesson explores Blake’s context as a radical Dissenter, his use of the pastoral genre, and considers in detail his use of language and imagery. The poem’s themes of sexual restriction, corrupt authority, and shattered innocence are considered through a variety of questions and tasks for students. At the end of the lesson, an extended essay question is included.
This lesson is ideal for those studying Blake’s ‘Songs’ through AQA’s ‘Political and Social Protest’ paper at A level.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.