Here you will find challenging, but engaging resources for all abilities, that will engage your students and support their progress in English.
Please do note hesitate to leave feedback and/or connect with me via Instagram!
Here you will find challenging, but engaging resources for all abilities, that will engage your students and support their progress in English.
Please do note hesitate to leave feedback and/or connect with me via Instagram!
This interactive lesson is designed to give students of all backgrounds knowledge of one of the West Indies' most honored entrepreneurs: Marcus Garvey.
Through the exploration of his endeavors, students will utilize their inference and writing skills to explain the social and economical impact of Garvey's achievements.
Includes peer assessment plenary covering AF2 Reading and AF2 Writing, pair work and class discussion activities and homework task.
Typically for a 50 minute lesson.
Pitched for a mixed ability group; minimum set 3.
A poignant, skills based lesson designed to fuse elements from the civil rights movement and the use of language and structure in printed media from the time.
Students will consider how language and structure was used to portray opposing approaches to protesting against segregation in America during the mid-late 20th century.
Lesson includes worksheets to help students consider the use of language and structure in printed media and an exemplary PETER paragraph to assess against AF4 Reading and AF4 Writing.
Can also be used as an SMSC lesson to evoke discussions on equality.
Homework task included.
Pitched for mixed ability; minimum set 2.
A comprehensive booklet on the civil rights movement, including enslavement, activism and the black lives matter movement.
Take your students through the fraught and intricate journey of the systemic oppression of African people, whilst empowering them to challenge misconceptions about black culture and its contributions to world history.
Contents:
Lesson 1: 20th August 1619-The Day that Changed the World
Lesson 2: The Middle Passage
Lesson 3: Caged Bird by Maya Angelou
Lesson 4: The Declaration of Independence, the American Revolution and the Silence on Slavery
Lesson 5: Frederick Douglass and the Fourth of July
Lesson 6: Philosophy for Children (P4C) Lesson
Lesson 7: The 13th Amendment
Lesson 8: The Civil Rights Movement
Lesson 9: Tulsa, Oklahoma ‘Black Wall Street’ 31st May 1921
Lesson 10: Black Entrepreneurs
Lesson 11: Philosophy for Children (P4C)
Lesson 12: Advocating for Justice
Lesson 13: Nationalism
Lesson 14: Debate: Defund the Police?
Lesson 15: Police Brutality
Lesson 16: Slave Patrols: An Early Form of American Policing
Lesson 17: Black Lives Matter Movement
Lesson 18: Don’t All Lives Matter?
Lesson 19: Put Out the Fire?
Lesson 20: President Barack Obama
Lesson 21: Dismantling Racism
Suitable for KS3 onwards.
Who was the first black astronaut? Why do we eat peanuts like we do?
How did laser eye surgery come to be?
Educate your students on some of the integral contributions of Black scientists!
Incorporate SMSC, current affairs and memory retrieval all in one lesson!
This lesson was delivered during Black History Month and explores 5 Black scientists who had a pivotal role in our science and medical industries today.
Students will explore their own experiences and criticisms of plagiarism and explore the groundbreaking inventions of:
Percy Julian
Patricia Bath
Betty Harris
Mae Jemison
George Washington Carter
The lesson includes a linked video which students will use to complete a quiz on the learning (answers and quiz sheet included on the PowerPoint.)
Suitable for ages 10+
This lesson offers the opportunity, for students to analyse language and structure in the poem ‘Infant Sorrow,’ by William Blake.
Starter task encourages students to work independently by reading and annotating the poem, utilising a dictionary for unfamiliar words.
A thorough, timed task is the main activity and focuses on the structure of the poem (stanzas, line breaks etc.) as well as the use of language to communicate ideas to the reader.
Plenary task is a self assessment against AO2.
Differentiation:
Students may work in pairs to complete the starter task.
Simplistic to complex analysis questions provided in the main task.
Extension tasks provided for closer analysis of language in the poem.
Typically for a 50 minute lesson-students can complete the main task as homework if the set is lower than a 3 and timing for the starter task goes beyond 10 minutes.
This resource was used effectively with a top set Y11 class.
The lesson begins with the students assessing their own knowledge of the poetry cluster by matching quotes to the correct poem-an effective settling activity.
They then answer a series of questions about the poems whilst using their anthologies to annotate. ANSWERS provided on the PowerPoint presentation.
A 5 minute ‘thesis challenge’ is then set and students will select a range of effective quotes that they’ve already analysed, to support their opening thesis statements.
Optional homework/follow up lesson: write a full response to the comparative question: compare the attitudes towards possessive love in Porphyria’s Lover and The Farmer’s Bride.
Differentiation: work in pairs to complete the starter and main task, exemplar thesis statement provided. Timings provided as well as check points for AFL.
Suitability: All abilities; perhaps remove some of the questions for the main task and lesson the amount of quotes to select for the plenary.
This lesson is suited to a mid-top set, however can be split into two for lower abilities.
Students will use close reading skills to retrieve information about the many themes in the infamous play.
Detailed analysis and use of quotations will enable the students to create a written response about how the themes are explored in the play through the characters, setting and plot.
Differentiation:
Extension task provided
Exemplary paragraphs and inferences
Includes a worksheet for recording inferences with an example provided
Content:
This lesson explores language and structure in the poem ‘Half-Caste’ by John Agard. Students will complete a variety of independent and paired tasks in order to pick apart the subtleties of the popular poem.
Also includes an interactive mini plenary that assesses the students’ understanding of the writer’s choices.
Differentiation:
Sentence stems provided for response task.
Separate resource includes full writing frame to comment on language and structure.
Extension and super extension tasks Links to AO2, typically for a mid-top set at KS3/4.
Lesson duration: 100 minutes (double)
Lesson recently rated good+ in an observation with outstanding features.
Content
This lesson will guide students into making inferences about George and Lennie in ‘Of Mice and Men.’
Students will select characteristics for each character and look closely at the opening of the novella, at language that describes the characteristics of them both.
Differentiation
PEAL paragraph example is provided to guide students, as well as sentence starters and extension tasks.
Typically for a double 50 minute lesson.
This lesson can be used for any group at Key Stages 2,3 and 4.
The lesson explores the features of gothic writing, and asks the students to create their own fictional character.
Some brief notes on the origin of Gothicism is explored and linked to modern day literature and film.
An ideal, light hearted, creative lesson for new classes/last lessons of the day and for cover.
Typically suited to a 50 minute lesson. Can be extended to a double if students are asked to create a story based on their fictional characters.
This starter task is aimed at French speaking students to improve their literacy and consolidate their own knowledge of phonics.
Suitable for students of all age groups.
Extension task provided.
This lesson explores the role of responsibility in the play, An Inspector Calls.
Students will complete a close reading activity and peruse a modelled paragraph, hitting AO2 and AO6.
Suitable for a mid-top set and an approximately 50 minute lesson.
This activity encourages students to identify stressed sounds.
Typically for a low ability KS3/4 group.
Can also be used for primary aged students.
Teachers need only print copies and cut in half.
This lesson explores the complexities of the war poem, Poppies.
Students will be given tasks that utilise their critical thinking skills to find out the meaning of the poem. Imagery is the focus, with the tasks geared towards a response that will show the students’ understanding of how imagery creates meaning for the reader.
Differentiated sentence starters and extension tasks provided.
Plenary encourages students to review their work, checking for spelling, punctuation and grammar accuracy.
Can be used for any set studying conflict poetry.
During this lesson, students will explore the poem ‘Quickdraw’ by Carol Ann Duffy.
Starter task asks students to identify a range of poetic devices.
They will then be expected to discuss the effects of these devices and produce a written response to their findings.
Peer assessment task concludes the lesson.
Differentiation:
Model PEAR paragraph included, as well as sentence starters and extension tasks.
Typically for a 50 minute lesson (mid-top set)
Teachers of lower sets can facilitate learning by recapping poetic devices and annotating the poem before delivering this lesson.
Teachers only need to print copies of the poem-of which can be found online/in anthology texts.
This lesson explores the social context in the novella, ‘Of Mice and Men’ by John Steinbeck.
Students will watch videos about The American Dream and The ‘Roaring Twenties,’ making notes on the grid provided.
Includes extension tasks and a starter reflection task on punctuation.
Suitable for a 50 minute lesson for all sets studying ‘Of Mice and Men.’
This lesson focuses on the imagery in the free versed poem, Quickdraw by Carol Ann Duffy.
Students will review the term ‘imagery’ and key words from the poem in pairs.
They will then read the poem and briefly annotate for imagery.
Finally, they will be shown an exemplary response and will complete their own commentaries in imagery in the poem.
Differentiation:
This lesson is targeted at KS3, however, lower KS4 groups can also benefit from the activities.
Poem has highlighted key words and phrases, with exemplary annotations.
Model paragraph provided with highlighted elements for reviewing against mark scheme.
Typically a 50 minute lesson.
This lesson is focused on question 5 (40 mark question)
Students will revise brackets, discourse markers and synonyms before completing a mock question 5 response.
Students will spend 40 minutes writing their piece.
This lesson is designed for students who are targeted at level 5 and above for the English Language exam.
Typically a double lesson (100 minutes.)
This lesson will give students the opportunity to review the structural elements in news articles.
Students will compare two articles, sharing the same story and decide how each portrays a specific portrayal of character through the use of language and selection of images.
Teachers need only to print copies of the articles (links provided.)
Differentiation
Main task includes sentence starters, stretch and challenge tasks.
Typically for a 50 minute lesson. Previously used for a Media after school club lesson.
Suitable for all sets.