This resource can be used for assembly or tutor time to educate students about the contributions of Caribbean migrants to British society. The PowerPoint focuses on the history of the Windrush Generation and gives students a deeper understanding of the challenges and triumphs faced by this generation as they settled in the UK.
Activities looking at current issues around racial injustice. Using Banksy’s work, students discuss what the artist is trying to convey about systemic racism. This is then followed by a language analysis task and an opportunity for students to write letters to their local MP.
Also includes a PowerPoint focusing on language analysis.
Activity exploring Langston Hughes’ poem Theme of English B. Students are given questions to help them analyse the poem. There are also discussion questions and an exam question too.
Lesson looking at The Red Room. Students focus on the use of first-person narration in the story.
The lesson includes:
-multiple choice comprehension questions
-Activities focusing on evaluating the advantages and disadvantages of using first-person narration in the text.
-Differentiated writing activities
Takeaway menu for KS3 detective fiction. 15 differentiated tasks that can be used for homework or extensions. Good resource for home learning.
Inspired by podmc002 takeway menus.
A distance learning lesson teaching students how to compare poetry. I use songs from my favourite rappers, J Cole and Tupac, to show rap is poetry too!
Lesson includes:
-Youtube video looking at how to approach and compare unseen poems
-Extracts from both songs with key questions to help analyse methods used
-Comparison essay question (sentence starters provided and comparison flashcard)
Lesson focusing on Chapter Two of the novel. Students learn how to make comparisons between the setting (Justice Strauss and Count Olaf’s house). The lesson includes:a
literacy task looking at discourse markers.
comprehension questions for the chapter
differentiated questions to help students make comparisons between the two settings
comparison task
homework task
A lesson introducing the novel A Series of Unfortunate Events. Students will learn how to identify explicit and implicit information in a text, whilst also making predictions about the text.
Lesson focusing on the presentation of fairies (Puck) in the play. Students will explore the fairies at the beginning of Act 2, Scene 1. They will analyse the language used to present Puck, with the opportunity to write their own PEED paragraphs (sentence starters included). There is a creative task allowing students to become ‘film directors’ and create their own version of Puck (worksheet also provided for this).
A lesson for Black History Month. Students will look at the origins of BHM and create posters on important (and less well known figures) in black history.
There is also opportunities for classroom discussion on whether BHM should be celebrated at all and different ways schools can do more to teach the history of other cultures.
I hope to inspire creativity and conversation about black history in your classroom. Love to know how it goes with your students, so please leave a review :o)
Lesson designed for KS3 (preferably Y7 or Y8) exploring the poem ‘Presents from My Aunts in Pakistan’. Students look at how to analyse language at word level and attempt to write their own PEE paragraph.
Lesson looking at how Priestley introduces the Inspector to the play. Students will unpick key quotations and analyse the methods Priestley uses to present Inspector Goole. Questions are given to help students ‘Explode the Quote’ and an exam style question is provided.
An AQA Q5 writing task starter has also been included for revision.
A writing starter for AQA English Language Q5. Students are given a success criteria of techniques to help make their writing more creative and ensure they are including devices that will impress the examiner.
Three writing starters for AQA English Language Q5. Students are given a success criteria of language and structural techniques to help make their writing more creative and ensure they are including devices that will impress the examiner.
Updated (January 2024)
Lesson exploring Mr. Fezziwig.
Lesson includes:
1.Do Now retrieval activity
2. Questions to help students analyse Dickens’ characterisation of Mr Fezziwig
3. Non-fiction article ('3 Reasons Fezziwig is the Best Boss at Christmas and Always’) and discussion questions
4. Comparison activity (Scrooge and Fezziwig)
Lesson teaching students how to write a successful introduction/opening paragraph. Lesson includes:
-example essay question
-activity to help with planning for the essay
-assessment Objective flashcard
-example introduction/opening paragraph