Around 6 lessons in total, this series of resources covers Victorian education, crime, punishment and the law, as well as looking at three of Dickens’ most memorable characters in the context of the time. Range of activites from quizzes to cloze exercises, education clips, wanted poster, diary of a hulk ship prisoner, drama amongst other tasks.
This resource is 3 ppt slides which demonstrate key ideas to bear in mind when planning a response to Q5, the narrative / descriptive question of English Language Paper 1 (AQA).
It contains some key advice from a recent AQA Language training session I attended, involving getting students to consider the ‘bigger ideas’ when presented with an image for stimulus.
A complete lesson looking at Gothic conventions, with particular focus on conventions of setting. Pupils identify techniques used in a range of example gothic setting descriptive sentences linked to a given gothic setting image. Using lesson knowledge so far, pupils create their own description of a gothic setting using a choice or combination of given gothic setting images.
Part One of a 17 lesson unit based on an anthology of extracts (included). Staff CPD handbook also included, plus knowledge organiser which links to quizzing in certain lessons. Contains a lesson on the origins of storytelling, an introductory unit lesson plus 7 further one hour lessons based on the following extracts:
The Serpent’s Deception - Old Testament
Humankind - Ovid, Chaos
Frankenstein - Shelley
Dracula - Stoker
The Divine Comedy - Dante
PART TWO is also available.
The intention of this unit is to provide students with some knowledge of how stories originated, came to be written down and how some of those same stories have been retold and developed over time, such as Horowitz’s re-telling of a popular Greek myth, in our unit. Students should understand that there does not have to be one single version of a ‘story.’ Some may have originally been made up to explain mysteries about the world and to enable humans to understand their place within it. Stories are constantly evolving and shaped by their social and historical influences. We can see, for example, that the concept of the Underworld has been around for centuries. Students will study the Underworld described in the Renaissance period by Dante, as a way of teaching his readers to live purer lives on Earth, but we can also enjoy its imaginative appearance in Rick Riordan’s modern ‘Percy Jackson’ tales. We can introduce the concept that, historically, the female figure has been presented as temptress and the cause of human suffering, an idea developed in ‘the Serpent’s Deception’ and Homer’s ‘Odyssey’, or later subverted in Le Morte d’Arthur, where the female is weak and in need of a chivalrous male to save her. We can see stories as a reaction to the beliefs and fears of society at the time. Shelley’s Frankenstein can be interpreted as a reaction to society’s distrust of the advancement of scientific experimentation. Running through all these stories is a series of symbols that capture a society’s values, beliefs and fears. Through the identification of symbolism in these stories, such as the snake in Serpent’s Deception, Daphne & Phoebus and Le Morte d’Arthur, it is hoped that our Y7s can learn to become confident in spotting symbols in future stories they read and have the confidence to critically evaluate the significance of them, in relation to their own contextual experience and a knowledge of literature throughout the ages.
USING THE BFG BY ROALD DAHL AS INSPIRATION, STUDENTS WILL CONSIDER WHAT MAKES AN INTERESTING CHARACTER FOR A READER. THEY WILL ANALYSE DAHL'S DESCRIPTION OF FLESHLUMPEATER, WITH STEP BY STEP ANALYSIS, HELP AND SUPPORT & STRETCH AND CHALLENGE. NARRATIVE WRITING THEN FOLLOWS WITH THE OPPORTUNITY TO CREATE THEIR OWN GIANT AND PEER ASSESS USING GIVEN CRITERIA. A CREATIVE AND SKILLS BASED LESSON SUITABLE FOR BOTH KS3 & 4.
This lesson looks at how to approach English Language Paper 1 Q4, step by step, using an extract from the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (where Lucy discovers Narnia for the first time). Students examine the wording of the question, work to find evidence to use in their response and discuss why the writer has used particular methods. Final task is to have a go at responding to the extract. Perfect for revision activities.
Three lessons aimed at informing students about life in Victorian England, working children, the workhouse and the differences between rich and poor. Includes a range of engaging activities.
INCLUDES:
THE GORGON’S HEAD
STOLEN HAMMER OF THOR
JUDGEMENT OF PARIS
GLAUCUS AND SCYLLA
THE SEVEN POMEGRANATE SEEDS
PROVIDES ROUGHLY 10 - 12 LESSONS
USES ANTHONY HOROWITZ’S RE-TELLINGS. NOT INCLUDED.
This is intended for KS3 English lessons looking at Victorian context in preparation for English Literature at GCSE. This resource is a minimum of 2 lessons. Includes extracts from Lowood school (Jane Eyre) followed by a kahoot quiz, an extract from Dickens’ Nicholas Nickleby with a cloze exercise to describe the dilapidated school room, followed by an inference exercise on the boys of Dotheboys Hall. Drama task to finish capturing Mr Brocklehurts’s reaction to a curly haired, red-headed pupil at his school.
This resource contains lessons on The Storm, Piroska, Pitch, The Boy in the Boat, Nature, Mud and Monkey from Chris Priestley’s Tales of Terror from the Black Ship. Some focus on identifying and writing skills such as simile, onomatopoeia, alliteration, metaphor and inference. Aimed at Y7 & 8.
These are a selection of activities to compliment the reading of this wonderful book by Mark Lowry. I did this with my LA Y8s and they really loved it. I would say that Y7 and 8 would be most suited to this book and these activities. Mark Lowry cleverly works in poetry to this story so it is ideal to dip into poetry alongside enjoying this story of two brothers. Included are activities on Haiku and Limericks, plus some non-fiction relating to dolphins and persuasive writing.
FOUR LESSON MINI UNIT. Lessons assume pupils have cold read The Speckled Band first. Copy of story included in resources.
Starter asks pupils to watch brief clip on using speech marks in writing and then apply them in the correct places to an example of Holmes’ speech from The Speckled Band. Re-read the extract where Holmes is visited by Helen Stoner. The next tasks asks students to find the clues by finding evidence that matches the given inferences, from the extract. Then, students use a set of clues about an invented character in order to form a set of inferences. They can then describe this visitor, using conversation to include accurate direct speech punctuation (writing frame on slide 7).
This lesson focuses on the villainous character of Dr Roylott. Students given short extract and asked to list and explain the connotations of his description. Example given. Then students explode a quotation describing this character, using given prompts, followed by two individually exploded quotations. Then, students to stick a further extract in their books and match the given connotations to the evidence. Read the article on Victorian Women and, using slide 10 and the information from the article, students should explain Dr Roylott’s motive for wanting both step daughters out of the way. Plenary asks students to decide how far Roylott matches up to given set of villainous character traits.
Starter asks students to describe Holmes’ living room using a variety of sentence forms (examples given). Introduced to concept of foreshadowing and asked to identify methods in given extract which foreshadows later violence in the story. Followed by a further more detailed extract (could be printed on A3) which students annotate using a series of prompts to think about the signifcance of setting. Plenary asks students to draw the section of Stoke Moran described in the final slide.
This lesson focuses on the relevance of symbolism in creating atmosphere - of the gypsies, animals and India. Information posters provided for teachers to put up around the room so that students can collect facts and then interpret them to understand how the symbolism helps create an atmospheric setting in Stoke Moran. Final task is to write a description of the grounds of Stoke Moran, using ideas learned in lesson.
Please note: an error on the MWTL resources has been noted. Now rectified.
This mini unit introduces Victorian crime, Jack the Ripper and the rise of detective fiction. Lessons on The Man with the Twisted Lip focus on applying context to the author’s choice of setting / creation of atmosphere. There is also a focus on detective conventions, Freytag’s pyramid and using inference and deduction to map out a crime scene.
Lessons on The Speckled Band include skills of inference & deduction, connotations and foreshadowing. Focus on setting, symbolism and the character of the villain.
This bundle price works out at £1 per lesson, rather than the £1.50 you would pay to buy separately.
2 x complete lessons analysing the character of Duncan in L1, followed by the character of Macbeth in L2. Both lessons look at whether each man can be considered a good king or not. A range of tasks are included such as note-taking, Kahoot quiz (you will need to log in), mind map, discussion, comprehension questions and challenges along the way. Resources at the end of the ppt to print off.
This resource contains pictures of animal footprints to be put around the classroom. Students are required to match up the footprint with the animal they think it belongs to. Includes footprints to stick up, teacher answers PPT and student quiz sheet.
This is a poster for a collective memory activity, where pupils in small groups take it in turns to have a minute to memorise the images and quotes on the poster. The aim is to reproduce the poster as exactly as possible. This facilitates discussion about what the play might be about.