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Shop with Edna Hobbs

Average Rating3.79
(based on 84 reviews)

With all my resources I try to find a balance between clarity and creativity, aiming to stretch and challenge as well as train. Most of all, I want to 'knock on the doors of the mind', introducing students to a wider range of texts, ideas, activities and experiences. Although English is my speciality, I've also got a keen interest in Biology and Geography, which occasionally manifests in resources. Let me know if there is a text not catered for anywhere and I'll see what I can do.

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With all my resources I try to find a balance between clarity and creativity, aiming to stretch and challenge as well as train. Most of all, I want to 'knock on the doors of the mind', introducing students to a wider range of texts, ideas, activities and experiences. Although English is my speciality, I've also got a keen interest in Biology and Geography, which occasionally manifests in resources. Let me know if there is a text not catered for anywhere and I'll see what I can do.
AQA LttA Poetry Revision AS & A-Level- quotes unscramble, all the AOs: active revision
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AQA LttA Poetry Revision AS & A-Level- quotes unscramble, all the AOs: active revision

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Everything you need for a dynamic revision lesson! The lesson plan sets out each step with space for you to fill in your timings. There are 36 quotes to give your students choice and variety - ideal for popping into a ‘hat’ - all with their words in alphabetical order: students have to try to recognise and reconstruct the quote. Poems are identified for those who need help. The next step is to annotate the quote with AOs 2, 3 & 5, then glue it onto A3 for another student to add AO4 texts. Next round, students add AO2, 3 & 5 to those links. Students can photograph the final product on their phones as handy ‘night before’ revision notes - and all this is explained in clear step by step instructions to the students via the Power Point, which has a clear starter, with answers, the main activity explained, a plenary and even a home work task! What’s not to like?!
Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick; Chpts 9-13
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Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick; Chpts 9-13

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This third set of resources covers chapters 9-13 and a note to the teacher outlines how each of the resources can be used. Chapter 9 is a creative writing task that revisits structure: all the words from a description at the start of the chapter have been placed in alphabetical order and students create there own images from these words. Discussion can then move to justifying the choices and from thence to Segdwick’s description as students read the chapter. Information from Chapters 10 & 11 is retrieved and summarised for a police report on Einar’s intended robbery, while chapter 12 leads to a debate on guns, introduced by a PP. Chapter 13’s worksheet returns the focus to imagery, close reading and analysis by looking at a brief description and picking out key words.
Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter 27-30, guided reading and writing
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Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter 27-30, guided reading and writing

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The penultimate cluster of resources for this excellent novel. Activities range from PEA paragraphs, creative and autobiographical writing to report writing. Inference and analysis are the key skills practised and even spelling is covered. Teacher notes outline lesson ideas and in some cases task options to suit different class types. At least 4 lessons worth of material.
Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chpts 6-8
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Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chpts 6-8

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More Revolver resources as requested! I love this book and have read it many times - it balances memorable description, clever structuring and important life-lessons in a toe-sweating thriller. Short chapters - and the topic - make it ideal reading for boy heavy classes from y7-y9. The idea of the series is to make available a range of tasks to suit where you get to - doing every single task may get in the way of reading. We begin with a short self mark test on chapter 6 - ideal as a starter after previous reading. Alternatively, a wanted poster makes a good homework task. Chapter 7 introduces students to allusion with a note handout either to help the teacher or as notes for the exercise book. Chapter 8’s short self mark starter makes students aware of the novel’s structure through linking it’s opening sentence to both the previous chapter and the previous chapter of that story strand.
Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter 22-26 with a mini assessment.
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Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter 22-26 with a mini assessment.

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Assuming you are reading with this brilliant novel with your class in part of the lesson [the chapters are very short] there is something for five lessons, each focusing on both a chapter and a skill. Retrieval and synthesis are practised by writing a police report, while in other tasks sayings, titles, structure and implications are explored through starters, plenaries and PEAL paragraphs. Each task builds on skills visited in previous tasks so that they become familiar and increasingly independent strategies.
Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter18-21, with teacher notes and answers.
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Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter18-21, with teacher notes and answers.

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These resources cover chapters 18 to 21 and take a closer look at characterisation, allusion, structure and inference, making language analysis accessible to younger, less able students, boys with no former interest in literature as well as enthusiastic, more able readers. Answers enable peer and self-assessment. All the tasks are focused and succinct, assuming reading of the text will also be happening in the lesson. Some choice of activitiy is also offered for chapter 21.
Quick SPaG starter
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Quick SPaG starter

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Ideal for KS2 & 3, this quick starter has 3 slides taken from public signs and adverts where language ‘errors’ exist. From this, students can be encouraged to find errors in the signs, adverts and texts they encounter.
Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: the grand finale- chapt.31-author's notes
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Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: the grand finale- chapt.31-author's notes

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A bundle in itself, this resource has 13 units to it. Teachers’ notes on each chapters resources navigate you through the exciting end of this great novel. Homework, starters, main lessons and assessments with answers cover similes, persuasive S&L as well as writing, mystery solving and taking life-lessons from literature. Activities range from debating to poster making via questions, intuitive leaps [signalled] inference and formulating an opinion. In chapter 34, for example, the starter introduces a learning question, answers to which are found during the lesson through reading the chapter and the plenary and homework address formulating an answer as an essay.
Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter14 - 17, with teacher notes outlining lessons
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Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick: chapter14 - 17, with teacher notes outlining lessons

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If you’ve got to this point, you know what an excellent novel this is, ideal for short reading extracts and lots of teaching opportunities. This set of resources offers teacher notes to help with planning and pacing your lessons. Tasks cover characterisation, vocabulary, imagery and structure. While tasks are aimed at younger or weaker readers in the main, the skills taught are aimed at building a profound understanding of crafting and ‘active reading’. Links are made to students’ own writing, improving writing skills from literary devices to SPaG. Throughout the series skills are revisited to inculcate them via different tasks. Answers are provided and most tasks are self-or peer assess.
Choosing apt quotes - a strategy
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Choosing apt quotes - a strategy

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Help students to see how quotes can suit a variety of questions: this enables them to choose apt quotes to memorise, saving time in the exams, or just to find quickly. The poets focused on here are Tennyson and Coleridge, but the idea can be adapted for any texts. Matt Posner: how to use quotations -- good training for college research papers. However, the resource doesn't provide all the information. The teacher will have to do much prep to get the students familiar with the cited poems. All will be on the web, but none are identified in the resource. One = Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
Transition booklet: 1st 3 lessons, workbook with instructions and examples on colour coded PP
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Transition booklet: 1st 3 lessons, workbook with instructions and examples on colour coded PP

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After the first ‘getting to know you’ lesson, you want to get the measure of your students as well as help them get into your routines. This booklet contains 3 lessons that include self and peer assessment, SPaG, Reading and Writing tasks with answers, instructions, explanations and examples on the PP. The sections you need to mark are short, but quickly give you a sense of the student’s abilities, personality and emotional state. So don’t get tripped up by missing registers, not enough books or any of the other things that prevent a crisp start: print a set of booklets for your next y7s before the summer break and ease them into secondary school with bitesized tasks that form the basis of all KS3 tasks, but are KS2 friendly. On the back page of the booklet are handy reminders of the acronyms that students may’ve come across at primary school to help them proofread and correct their work.
Unseen poetry comparison: the full works- AQA Love through the Ages
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Unseen poetry comparison: the full works- AQA Love through the Ages

5 Resources
Here's everything you need for teaching the Unseen Poetry Unit for AQA's 'Love through the Ages' - a sound strategy, poems compared using the strategy, a trial exam paper and a revision support booklet that puts you in touch with the best free support on the Internet for poems from every era covered by the anthology.
SPaG- Bumper pack of Homophones: example notes & self-mark tasks with answers & tests - 3 sets
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SPaG- Bumper pack of Homophones: example notes & self-mark tasks with answers & tests - 3 sets

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There are three sets of homophones here. In each case students first get the handout and learn the homophones as homework. Later they do the relevant exercise and use the answers to mark their own or a partner's work, which can be done as a starter. The exercise tests their knowledge of the homophones, but could also be set as another day's homework - useful if you're under pressure to set homework at a busy time and need something worth doing yet easy to mark [just check peer marking if required]. In addition, because students learn best by re-visiting work, there is also a test for each of the sets of homophones, also with answers. This work is best done drip-fed over a term or two. Use the miscellaneous homophone handout as an extension exercise when needed: students can make up their own 'test' sentences using them as a guide, to test one another.
AQA GCSE Paper2: criteria mat/poster with questions and answers
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AQA GCSE Paper2: criteria mat/poster with questions and answers

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This resource focuses on AQA’s English Paper 2. Help your students ‘cast a spell’ on exams by making sure they know the criteria each question is judged on, the time available to answer questions and have a strategy for approaching each task - all summarised on this mat/poster [A4 or A3 printout]. The PP serves either as a quick class quiz to make sure they’ve taken note of the information - could be a quick starter for every lesson focusing on one question at a time - or as the answers to the question handout, which in turn could be a quick test, plenary or homework. If you’re handing back mock exams, this is a timely reminder of what you were looking for: useful for corrections. Otherwise, revision for the next exam!
AQA GCSE Paper1: criteria mat/poster with questions and answers
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AQA GCSE Paper1: criteria mat/poster with questions and answers

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Help your students ‘cast a spell’ on exams by making sure they know the criteria each question is judged on, the time available to answer questions and have a strategy for approaching each task - all summarised on this mat/poster [A4 or A3 printout]. The PP serves either as a quick class quiz to make sure they’ve taken note of the information - could be a quick starter for every lesson focusing on one question at a time - or as the answers to the question handout, which in turn could be a quick test, plenary or homework. If you’re handing back mock exams, this is a timely reminder of what you were looking for: useful for corrections. Otherwise, revision for the next exam!
Spelling pack: y3-6 in one, for dyslexic learners; 10 weeks of self-mark spelling for all ages.
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Spelling pack: y3-6 in one, for dyslexic learners; 10 weeks of self-mark spelling for all ages.

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Buy the lot at a discount price: 10 weeks' worth of homework or starters to nail spelling. These are the 200 words the DfE claims primary pupils should be able to spell in y3/4 and 5/6 – of course older pupils could do with a bit of revision too. They are divided into groups of five spelling words and after five groups there’s a test, But here’s the difference… Being dyslexic myself, I’ve written the words out in a way that makes learning them easier for others with a similar condition – by looking for patterns and words within words – without being a problem to good spellers. Use as a weekly homework, a fill-in starter while you call the register or an occasional filler for a quick worker. At the end of the list there’s a revision opportunity and words to find in a string of letters along with some unscrambling to do. Work is set out for ease of printing/photocopying and teacher’s answers are on the last pages of each set – print or project as suits. A PP gives end of list answers to the strings and unscrambles. Y5&6 have an additional task – words to fill into a script, similar to SATs tests. If you do these with older students, just do remember to remove the ‘year’ label with each test.
Comparison: getting to grips with the concept
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Comparison: getting to grips with the concept

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The aim of this series of starters is to show students that they do possess the skills required for the course; also, that the skills required for the non-fiction media paper is the same as for the literature paper and visa versa. Emphasizes the basic skill of comparison and contrast.
After reading Other Side of Truth
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After reading Other Side of Truth

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Comparing Sade’s experiences of England with Nigeria after reading The Other Side of Truth by Beverly Naidoo. Students reflecting on the novel once they have read it list good and bad things in Sade’s experience of both countries, exploring whether the author presents a balanced view of both countries.