I have been an English Literature and Language Teacher for about 10 years now. I am now a Leader of Learning in English in my current school.
I have taken several GCSE classes through and had full success.
I have a PGCE in English and MA in Applied Linguistics for Teaching English as a Second Language.
I currently teach at a secondary school as an English Teacher and Leader of Learning in English.
I have been an English Literature and Language Teacher for about 10 years now. I am now a Leader of Learning in English in my current school.
I have taken several GCSE classes through and had full success.
I have a PGCE in English and MA in Applied Linguistics for Teaching English as a Second Language.
I currently teach at a secondary school as an English Teacher and Leader of Learning in English.
Here is an AFOREST lesson that gets students to pick out the persuasive techniques they can see in an advert. It then goes onto analysing leaflets; for this I usually go and grab a handful of leaflets from the Tourist Information or a service station. Then you can use the middle part of the lesson and the work sheets to get students to identify and explain persuasive techniques used. This is a great lesson if your students are creating a leaflet or brochure for their assessment. It has always worked really well with Y7 and 8s.
This is like a mini project as you will probably need three lessons to complete the task and students presentation.
This lesson starts by asking the students questions that they have to think about when watching the news clips about refugees (internet access needed)
The next slide tells the students what their task is and shows them other charities that are available to refugees at the moment.
The final slide gives students a success criteria which they need to follow.
This lesson aims to show students what being a refugee is a like and how we as a country could help.
This lesson prepares students to analyse quotations comparing Coraine's two mothers from the book Coraline by Neil Gaiman. The analysis is done through the analogy of a house, as you look at the outside and explain the ideas generally, and then when you look in more detail inside the house you gain a further understanding of the language used by Neil Gaiman. There is a booklet resource that fits with the lesson to help students follow this ideas, as well as top tips.
Here is a fantastic Gothic Literature Booklet that can be used as a homework booklet or used in your classroom as an activities booklet. You could even just pull out activities you want from the booklet and use them as starters or main activities to teach gothic literature.
In this pack there are 10 tasks to help students research, design, identify gothic motifs from extracts, and write gothic literature themselves.
This is a fab booklet.
Happy Teaching and Homework Setting!
This is a great project booklet which will span over about 5-6 lessons. It is designed for students to work through the initial tasks to help their knowledge about hotels/holidays so they gain an understanding and knowledge of what they should be designing. It also helps them with web design, as they have to annotate and design their own. Once these pages are complete, your groups of five get designing, planning and speech writing, in order to create a 5-10 minute presentation to the class.
I used this as an opportunity to assessment my students on their speaking and listening skills.
This booklet is packed with activities and even a clip link for the students to see some of the top 10 Hotels in 2016. This is a great buy and can be used repeatedly.
Could be used in class or as a homework project. 15 page booklet.
What will it teach my students:
To work in a team
To create a speech/script
To learn about target audiences
To present ideas to the class in a group
To understand and design webpages and a hotel
To keep to a time limit when presenting
What does it include:
Preparation task - positives/negatives of hotel life, investigations into top hotels, persuasive language analysis, target audience, website analysis and annotations, website design.
Main Task - 5 Roles for the students to decide between themselves, with details of what they each need to prepare and design in the role they have chosen.
Time -
1/2 Lessons to prepare
1/2 Lessons to design and practise their presentation
2 Lessons for presentations - class of 30
Happy Teaching!
This lesson will help students to identify AFOREST Techniques using Martin Luther King's speech and prior knowledge matching cards. As you can see above this pack includes a powerpoint lesson, MLK speech for the students to use, MLK speech annotated for the teacher, and AFOREST matching cards for the starter activity.
This lesson has worked really well with my Y8s and 9s. It could also be used for Y7.
This is a great lesson on the contextual and cultural links to the book Refugee Boy.
It has a great little booklet that goes with the presentation that the students can work on throughout. It also includes selected pieces of information that can be stuck around the class for the students to pick the contexts that links and put it on the outlined hand.
It worked really well with my Y8 class as it got them up and about finding out the relevant information and then moving onto using language techniques from Alem's point of view from the book.
This Shakespeare Research Booklet is a fantastic resource for introducing students into the world of Shakespeare.
Every teacher struggles with how to teach the all important context section of the Shakespeare topic, and how to make it actually interesting. Well, here is the way to do it, and all you will need for one to two lessons is either a computer room or a Shakespeare book box from your school library.
This booklet will teach the context for you, as it has key questions for the students to research, fun activities to complete, key quotations to understand, and a glossary the students can fill out.
In this collection of resources there are two powerpoint presentations that focus on speech writing. There is also a model speech that you can use as an example of good speech writing and structure. When teaching students how to write a speech, I found that it was important that they knew what I wanted, so created this speech on Queen Elizabeth I, as seen attached. This speech goes with Analysing a Speech as it tells students what to look for and then gets them to pick apart their own speeches, identifying what is good in their own. Writing a Speech could be used as a follow up lesson or a preparation lesson before they analyse, as it helps students build a speech.
Extra details below:
Writing a Speech About Your Contributions to the World is a lesson that helps students prepare a speech in which they take on the role of a famous person from history, and then defend their position in an overburdened hot air balloon.
A speech, 'written by Queen Elisabeth I' is attached, that the teacher can use as an example of one of these speeches.
Analysing A Speech is a lesson that helps the student first analyse Queen Elisabeth's speech, and then each other's speeches.
This power point is great for preparing your class to write an essay on The Tempest. The question that I have focused on is 'How does Shakespeare present Prospero and his relationship with one other character in the first act of ‘The Tempest’? Included are PEE questions, success criteria based on the new 9-1 scale, and a model paragraph on Prospero and Caliban. There are about three lessons in this one power point in order to prepare your students. This lesson goes really well with The Tempest Planning sheet (which can be used to plan their assessment after these lessons).
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Here are a few slides that will help students to understand the structure of a PEE paragraph and give them an example.
Included: Model PEE paragraph, PEE sentence starter, and PEE questions.
This lesson introduces the poem Valentine to the students. It explores the main ideas of love and has a model answer to support the students in their PEE paragraph. This pack also includes a PEE grid, sentence starters, and a lesson plan of the whole lesson.
This film review lesson is a great way to catch the attention of your class when it comes to writing persuasively. It has a colourful display and engaging music at the beginning as well as activities to suit the build up to writing persuasively. Not only do you get a power point that goes through how to write persuasively and then gives the students an extensive writing task, this presentation also comes with a four page booklet to guide each student through the lesson. It has a film review example as well as sentence starters to help them create the perfect film review.
This revision booklet goes through how to answer an exam question on Blood Brothers. It includes paragraph formats, A and C grade model answers, as well as context pages. It also has space for students to do their own character summaries, and select key quotations in preparation for the exam.
This booklet is a great resource to give to the students when they are going on study leave as it really guides them through the stages.
With only two sample questions from the new spec for Edexcel literature exam on 'An Inspector Calls', I thought I would create a step-by-step guide of how to answer one of these questions.
Most of my students find it hard to add context in, and now with a question focused on context the students were finding this difficult. This power point is great at showing the students where to start and how to plan for the question. All the answers come up in sections. There is even a hand written mind map to show the students how they could link all the ideas together.
My class found this very useful and have now started to understand how to link theme, context and quotations all together for this question.
This poetry lesson introduces poetry through the use of music. Students will have the opportunity to listen to each song and then discuss the lyrics. They will then analyse using the questions on the slide show. Included are the lyrics to all three songs, selected quotations for the teacher to hand around the class for the students to analyse, and an extra resource focusing on the song 'Skyscraper'.
(internet connection required for the music)
Here is a KS3 lesson that includes a lot of differentiation for those mixed ability classes. The lesson looks at an extract from Great Expectations and then the tasks are based around analysing quotations from the extract.