This is a minimum of 2 whole lessons (of one hour), beginning with Sir Robert Peel. Students are given two slides of information about the first police force then quizzed. This is followed by a look at the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, with some deduction tasks and a literacy correction exercise. Then on to hulk ships and writing a diary entry of someone on board serving a prison sentence for stealing onions. Links to clips re-enacting children sentenced to transportation for pickpocketing. Then, complete the outline using description of Magwitch’s character (escaped convict in Great Expectations), and some language analysis using an extract from this story. The final task uses information given in an extract from Oliver Twist to create a wanted poster for Artful Doder.
Three lessons focusing on Stave 5 - The End of It. Includes step by step guide through an extract question, looking at Scrooge's change of heart in the final stave. Extract included as part of the power point.
This lessons allows students to examine a couple of example city guides, written by students, to understand the type of information used in writing one and also to look at the persuasive techniques used. Using given information about the city of Sheffield, students can work individually or in pairs to produce their own city guide.
Approximately 8 lessons using well known novel extracts, along with contextual information, to study characters, marriage, social class, education and crime & punishment in the setting of the victorian period. Authors include Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, Jane Austen & Arthur Conan-Doyle.
In this lesson, aimed at middle to high ability Y9 or KS4, the stanzas of the poem are divided up with prompts to be given out to pairs or groups of students. Once students have thought about their individual stanza, they can feed back to the class and everyone can complete the A3 copy of the poem (with spaces for notes) to provide themselves with revision notes. The accompanying ppt provides a structure for the teacher to use when facilitating feedback.
This resource contains 3 x mini question 2 worksheets featuring two short extracts on linked topics. The topics are: UKs coasts and seas, Natural Disaster relief based on the 2013 Oaklahoma tornado and the Puerto Rico hurricane & the Indian Ocean. Easily adaptable, printable, email(able!)
This bundle provides 6 mini Q2 style tasks, all themed around places. Each task provides two sources on the following topics: Australia, UK holidaying, UK coasts and seas, the Indian Ocean, living in New York and natural disasters in America. Pupils can use the writing frame provided to help them get started. Easy to set as independent tasks and easily adaptable.
This resource contains reading and writing activities based on three extracts from Narnia and one from Jamaica Inn. The final activity is not extract based but requires students to imagine what the firey world of Muspelheim (Norse Mythology) might have looked like before considering how they might describe it. I have included differentiated versions too which include edited and shorter versions of the extract and slightly easier task requirements. Easy to adapt and print off.
Two lessons that can be delivered remotely, or face to face. Looks at Brooke’s life and how his lack of battle experience influenced his perception of the war, a focus on Brooke’s use of natural imagery by matching up images to quotations in ‘The Soldier.’ Student investigation into whether the poem is a sonnet, using a set of given criteria. Lesson 2 provides a range of questions for students, with answers for teachers, that look at a range of methods used and their effects. Final task asks students to find a piece of music that matches the tone of the poem.
THREE LESSONS TO HELP PUPILS UNDERSTAND THE POEM ‘THE DEAD’ AND THE RELEVANCE OF ASSOCIATED CONTEXT. LESSON 3 ALSO ALLUDES TO ‘PEACE’ ANOTHER OF BROOKE’S POEMS. FOCUS IS ON PATRIOTISM, IMAGERY, SONNET FORM AND GENERALLY HOW LANGUAGE CAN BE A POWERFUL TOOL. LEARNING CULMINATES IN A FINAL TASK TO WRITE A LETTER HOME FROM BROOKE TO HIS MOTHER THAT SHOWS HIS IDYLLIC VIEW OF THE WAR AND THE IDEA OF DYING DURING BATTLE. THESE LESSONS HAVE BEEN REMOTELY DELIVERED WITH Y8 BUT COULD WORK EQUALLY WELL FACE TO FACE. HOPE THEY SAVE YOU SOME WORK!
Two lessons:
Q2: ‘How does the writer use language here to descibe Nature?’ Focus on Du Maurier’s choices of personification, adjectives and simile for this question. Plus a focus on subordinate clauses followed by students identifying these in the extract with a view to including an idea in their practise response.
Q3: ‘How does the writer structure the text to interest the reader?’ Reminder of structural features, useable examiner tips on what to include / not to include in a Q3 response. Slides provide points of note-taking and discussion, leading up to students having a go responding to the question themselves.
Two lessons
Lesson 1 - Unseen lesson on ‘The Road Not Taken’ by Robert Frost- includes a copy of the poem, questions for pupils to answer / facilitate discussion with suggested answers. Consideration of structure / form (see ppt slide notes) and ending with a question asking what the poet’s thoughts are about life. Set of ‘clear’ criteria given from AQA markscheme for pupils to follow in their response. Really nice poem and links nicely to the Paper 1 Q5 practice.
Lesson 2 - idea of using a scene as a way in to description e.g. thinking about bigger ideas such as Autumn being a metaphor for change or an ending. Includes example of planning, skills focus and an example paragraph to use for discussion before pupils write their own. Perfect for current Y10.
Lots of resources here - mix of booklets and ppt activities for either KS3 or lower ability KS4.
Useful for homework booklets, cover or in-lesson skills practise.
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All three lessons use TEAL (technique, evidence, analysis & link) as a framework but this could easily be edited out / changed. All lessons aimed at middle to higher ability students.
In the Can by Rosie Jackson is a one stanza poem that tries to convey life in prison. Tasks start with a collective memory exercise (see slide notes) then moves to reading poem followed by group work on allocated extracts. Eventually, after student feedback, they will write their own TEAL paragraph using example provided.
The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost - students read poem and answer a series of questions (with suggested answers provided). Leads to writing a TEAL paragraph with a set of given prompts.
Booklet of example war poems - pupils can choose which one to write a response on but can first look at how to annotate in detail at the examples given from ‘Dulce et Decorum Est.’ Example response provided.
A range of poems introducing students to poetic techniques and form.
In this selection of poems, nature is used to convey a range of ideas such as happiness, change and loss.
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Copy of poem Remains is provided. First ppt begins with students reading the poem and completing a short quiz. Slides 7 and 8 provide visual or written prompts to enable students to write a detailed summary of the poem, depending on what type of learner they are. Next, students consider how the poem fits into the two themes of ‘power’ and ‘conflict’. Name the technique from the poem quiz followed by step by step writing of analytical paragraphs. Final task is to write one on their own.
Second ppt introduces the idea of CLAPS (context, language, atmosphere, poetic devices an structure). Example paragraphs given for each aspect of CLAPS and students encouraged to link the examples back to the question, to ensure the answer is clear. Teacher can then choose another poem from the anthology for students to look at, using CLAPS to analyse it.
Ten slides containing carefully selected evidence from the play that students can learn and apply to a variety of potential exam questions. Each slide puts the quotation into context and contains a brief analysis with relevant methods and terminology in bold. Easily editable to remove explanations for just the quotation and image for display.
The same resource is available for An Inspector Calls, Blood Brothers and A Christmas Carol in my shop.
Wondering which quotations your students should learn for the exam? This display resource contains 10 key quotes that track the play, carefully chosen to provide students with potential evidence to use in a range of essay questions. Each key quotation is accompanied by an explanation, a colourful image to aid recall and a list of suggested essay themes to go with it. I have also made the same resource for A Christmas Carol, Macbeth and Blood Brothers, all available in my shop.
AIMED AT HA KS3, STUDENTS LOOK AT 2 X SNOW THEMED POEMS, MAKE A SNOWFLAKE AND ANALYSIS LANGUAGE AND TECHNIQUE. COMPLETE LESSON INCLUDING COPIES OF BOTH POEMS.