Introduction to the topic of dystopia for KS3Quick View
hannahglickstein

Introduction to the topic of dystopia for KS3

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Using Lord of the Flies and Fahrenheit 451 as examples, I ask students to define the genre and think of examples. They then watch trailers or clips of the dystopian films and use these to come up with ideas of what the worst possible world they could imagine would be like. This builds up to a creative task - writing your own dystopia.
Halloween Poetry lessonQuick View
hannahglickstein

Halloween Poetry lesson

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Three poems accompanied by quick directed activities relating to the text. The second sheet includes an extension task that encourages students to write their own scary poem. Popular with most year eights and nines!
A Level Macbeth: Act One, scenes 1 - 2. With reference to special effects.Quick View
hannahglickstein

A Level Macbeth: Act One, scenes 1 - 2. With reference to special effects.

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<p>This lesson is a lively introduction to the play for able students. It offers a glimpse of original performance methods as well as beginning to focus students on language and rhythm. There is a general look at the witches, followed by more detailed questions to answer independently on their meeting with Macbeth and Banquo. These questions should produce robust notes for students on the play’s opening that begin to focus their minds on detailed textual analysis with reference to context.</p>
Adverbs Game:  fun for Key Stage Three, mixed ability.Quick View
hannahglickstein

Adverbs Game: fun for Key Stage Three, mixed ability.

(0)
The sheet introduces adverbs and asks students to identify them in a sentence, then change them for effect. This builds the foundation for playing a game in which students act out adverbs that others have to guess from their performance, like adverb charades. This broadens vocabulary and reinforces the definition of adverbs.