High-quality, value for money teaching resources covering English language and literature; literacy; history; media and Spanish. With twenty-seven years' teaching experience I know what works in the classroom. Engaging, thorough and fun, your students will love these lessons.
High-quality, value for money teaching resources covering English language and literature; literacy; history; media and Spanish. With twenty-seven years' teaching experience I know what works in the classroom. Engaging, thorough and fun, your students will love these lessons.
Many students write stories in which they jump between the present and the past tenses. This Powerpoint explains the difference between the simple past and the simple present tenses and contains a variety of exercises to encourage tense consistency and to help them to feel more confident. The zipped file also contains two informative and practical follow-up worksheets which ask students to put a passage about William the Conqueror into the past tense. The other worksheet asks them to put information about the Titanic into the past tense also.
Free worksheet on spelling words ending in Y.
Check out Mrs Shaw’s Shop for more new interactive spelling powerpoints with fun cartoon graphics and all answers provided, designed to engage and interest your students, at the same time as embedding the learning.
Inspire an interest in reading by telling your students about the fascinating life and work of Michael Morpurgo.
This thirty slide Powerpoint covers his early life, his career, marriage and work. Find out the amazing story about how he discovered the identity of his biological father and how the author’s note at the beginning of War Horse was a little white lie until 2011.
Finally there are four choices of activities for students to complete ranging from researching one of his books to writing an article about him.
Students find real lives interesting, so this is a good way to hook them into reading.
Designed to teach the Seamus Heaney poem “Death of a Naturalist” in the Eduqas Poetry Anthology, this zipped folder contains a powerpoint with starter activity, context, student activities and plenary. There are three student worksheets focussing on Heaney’s use of sensory description; a storyboard of the key events in the poem and an exploration of what Heaney’s original images make students imagine. There is also a colour-coded annotated copy of the poem for teachers’ reference and a relevant answer sheet for one of the student’s worksheets. An added bonus is an example of a comparison to another poem in the anthology. Overall this should take two lessons and explore the poem in great depth and detail, making it memorable for students.
Celebrate the life of the remarkable Edith Cavell with this two-page information sheet, accompanied by comprehension activities and a vocabulary extension worksheet. A Powerpoint with starter and answers to the questions with lots of ideas for further activities is also provided. Designed to commemorate both World War One and the sacrifice of women in that conflict, Edith Cavell is an inspiration to all.
Full scheme of work comprising of lessons on each of the twenty-three chapters of the book. This powerpoint contains approximately two hundred slides. Each lesson features a starter, main and plenary and is designed to encourage students to create their own autobiographical writing, inspired by Roald Dahl’s experiences.
Working on the assumption that people remember things better if like is grouped with like, this booklet contains twenty-one lists of commonly mis-spelled words, all under different categories. Ranging from adjectives to adverbs to animals to birds to body parts to food and sports, the concept is that students will remember the spellings more easily if they can remember patterns and connections between words. This free resources complements the booklet “The Definitive Guide to Spelling” found at Mrs Shaw’s Shop, which is a seventy-four page booklet covering all the major spelling rules with exercises and answers, on sale at just £10. This photocopiable resource is a bargain for anyone wanting to help their students improve their spelling.
Calling all budding journalists. This twenty-three slide Powerpoint helps your students to analyze the key features of headlines and the key language techniques used. They are then prompted to write their own headlines for fictional news stories, culminating in them creating their own intriguing headline to grab the reader’s attention. Worksheet with techniques included. A fun lesson that might inspire your students to become the hacks of the future.
Engage your students in creative writing with this eight lesson student workbook and accompanying powerpoint.
Students imagine that their car has broken down near the haunting and mysterious Howley Hall Hotel. Just like Brad and Janet, they knock on the door, whereupon they encounter a strange old lady. Little do they know that inside a strange presence lurks.
They are guided to write a gothic story at the same time as revising basic skills, such as sentence demarcation; capital letters; homophones - their/they’re/their; your/you’re; punctuation speech; commas in lists; vocabulary enrichment; complex sentences; sentence variety.
Suitable for primary students or secondary students who need to revise basic skills.
This fifty slide powerpoint on Sherlock Holmes could be used as background to the study of a Conan Doyle text; as part of a crime writing scheme of learning; or as a one off lesson to get students to create their own detective character. The folder includes:
A powerpoint with brainstorming activity on different fictional detectives; a ten question quiz on the character traits of Sherlock Holmes; historical background information about how Conan Doyle created Holmes and his popularity.
A worksheet to support students to create their own detective.
Follow-up comprehension questions to consolidated the learning for homework.
Twelve lessons with powerpoints and resources to help students to create their own magazine on a topic of their choice.
Scheme comprises of:
Analyse the title of magazines and decide on your own title.
Analyse mastheads and create your own masthead.
Design your own front cover.
Write a celebrity profile features article.
Write a travel article.
Write a how-to article.
Design a competition.
Write an article on a food of your choice.
Use emotive and sensationalising language.
Create a contents page.
There are extra folders with a GCSE media task comparing two front covers and a WAGOLL analysis of a front cover.
Students love this scheme of work as it allows them to be creative while exploring their own interests.
Do you ever get stuck for what to give students for homework. Well, with this PDF Homework Skills Booklet, there is one homework for each week of the academic year. That’s right. With 35 weeks’ worth of homework, you have every week of the year covered.
All homeworks are designed so that students can self-mark or peer-mark their work in class, saving you your precious time.
If you have a learning platform like TEAMS, you don’t even need to print the booklet off, just post it online.
All skills are incremental in difficulty and challenge.
An added bonus is that it can also be used for cover work.
Once you have finished with this one, check out the Year 8 Skills Homework Booklet, also available on TES!
Do you ever get stuck for what to give students for homework. Well, with this PDF Homework Skills Booklet, there is one homework for each week of the academic year. That’s right. With 35 weeks’ worth of homework, you have every week of the year covered.
All homeworks are designed so that students can self-mark or peer-mark their work in class, saving you your precious time.
If you have a learning platform like TEAMS, you don’t even need to print the booklet off, just post it online.
All skills are incremental in difficulty and challenge.
An added bonus is that it can also be used for cover work.
Buy both Homework Skills Booklets and save £1.
With these two booklets, you will never have to think about homework again for years 7 and 8.
Each booklet contain 35 weeks’ worth of homework, covering each of the academic years.
The skills are incremental in difficulty as the weeks and years progress.
All homeworks are designed to be self-marked or peer-marked by students in class, saving you your precious and valuable time.
This 76 slide Powerpoint contains everything that you need to explore the key themes within the animal rights debate. Students will learn to:
Identify and use persuasive language and images.
Write an article about an endagered species.
Discuss whether zoos are right or wrong.
Write a speech for a debate on an animal rights issue of their choice.
Write a leaflet to rehabilitate the image of a maligned animal.
Present their work to the class.
Reflect on their attitudes to animal rights after the topic.
This scheme of work is designed to support students to be creative for a practical audience and encourages them to carry out their own research. As a Powerpoint it is fully adaptable to suit you and your class’s needs.
Travel writing is one of the best ways to teach students to use language in a sophisticated way. In this project students choose a city or region of the world that they are interested in and create a travel guide on it using the example provided as a style model. The style model is about the Spanish city of Girona and the sections of the travel guide include:
An introduction
3 Days in your chosen destination.
Four of the best things to do there.
Essential information with top tips for visiting.
Final section original to the student.
Students’ attention is drawn to the use of premodifying adjectives and imperatives, which are typical of this style of writing. Students are able to see how travel writers sell destination through interweaving information about history, modernity and cuisine to make their locations sound exciting and attractive. There is also the possibility to turn the travel guide into a speaking and listening activity as students imagine that they work for the tourist board of their destination and wish to promote it.
Twelve lessons that teach students to write to inform and entertain children with a booklet all about pirates. Including four sections, students are taught how to use informative language techniques while studying the rules of piracy; real pirates; fictional pirates and eventually creating their own pirate. Using the opening of the novel “Dead Man’s Chest”, students are taught techniques such as:
1, sensory description to describe settings.
2, en media res
3. characterisation
4. developing action
5. creating atmosphere
6. using sound effects
Your students will learn a wide variety of vocabulary and language techniques, as well as having fun learning about how real pirates and people have inspired stereotypical pirates. All Powerpoints and worksheets included and fully adaptable.
Ten multiple choice questions on famous authors and their work. Answers included. Lesson concludes with students considering their own favourite authors and creating a poster to promote them. Great activity to celebrate World Book Day.