A lesson and resources to revise the key imagery and context of the poem ‘Storm on the Island’ by Seamus Heaney, in preparation for AQA Lit Paper 2, Section B - Power and Conflict anthology.
Ppt is designed for LA and post-study of the poem.
A lesson exploring and comparing the characterisation of Mrs Johnstone and Mrs Lyons in Act 1 to Act 2 (Mrs Lyons confronts Mrs Johnstone), focussing in on the power balance shift between the two women.
Introduction lesson for AQA GCSE English Language Paper 2: Writer’s Viewpoints and Perspectives.
A whole lesson & resources which focus on pupils exploring how to distinguish between ‘viewpoint’ and ‘perspective’.
8 week’s worth of homework on Macbeth to support the study and revision of the play.
Tasks focus on supporting vocabulary of pupils, linking vocabulary to our study of the play, as well as tasks on context, SPaG and a ‘Elizabethan pronoun’ challenge.
All tasks have been designed so they can easily be marked in class either as self/peer assessment (to reduce teacher marking!) but also designed to be purposeful to student’s learning.
Pupils will need to know the plot / summary of the play in order to complete these tasks (i.e. I always begin teaching Macbeth with context and summary / main plot, before studying in more detail).
This KS3 lesson looks at they key differences between plays and other text types, including exploring format and layout differences, in addition to the terminology needed when analysing a play i.e. audience, dialogue, stage directions etc.
A lesson on the prologue in Blood Brothers, including the role of a prologue (generally), the specific role of this prologue (with reference to the play’s cyclical structure) and what we learn. Suitable for first time study of the play.
A 5 lesson walkthrough of AQA Language Paper 2, section A on the topic of ‘Hunting’ (the Q paper itself is not my resource, and can be found for free, but the lessons are my own).
Can be used for first time teaching of the paper as the lessons indicate how pupils should approach the paper, highlighting how each question builds onto the next, and ‘photos’ of teacher’s copy to model how to annotate their own extracts and prepare to answer.
All questions come with model answers for pupils to mark against skill descriptors, with lessons culminating in pupils given the opportunity to ‘magpie’ ideas and improve their own responses.
If you like these resources, please do leave a review, so other teachers can find my resources too - much appreciated :)
A lesson introducing the device of ‘pathos’, with suitable tasks scaffolded for pupils to go from ‘understand’ -> ‘identify’ -> ‘apply’.
This lesson has been personally used for KS3, and lower ability KS4.
A homework activity to build pupil’s vocabulary when discussing characters and themes in An Inspector Calls.
Task asks pupils to look up definitions for key vocab and then apply and find the links to characters in the play.
This can then feed into lessons.
A set of 3 (potentially 4) lessons you could easily set as cover (as I have done so!) if a teacher is likely to be absent for a few days.
Lesson 1: Implying information based on the image of a door.
Lesson 2: Describing approaching the door (rising action / building tension)
Lesson 3: The other side of the door (climax)
Lesson 4 (optional): Neat write up of their 3 part description of the door ‘for display’
The lessons indicate that the writing should IMPLY, not state (i.e. my take on ‘show, don’t tell’), whereby certain rules are included such as 'you cannot use the word ‘door’.
Lessons include examples / models; scaffolding and success criteria; peer assessment tasks.
A task to get pupils to explore the time period that the play was written and set, to clearly understand where the play ‘fits’ in relation to key historial, social and technological moments.
Pupils should be given the ‘blank’ timeline, with only the years on, and have to work in pairs to write where they think each ‘event’ occurred. The answers have also been provided for self/peer assessment and to aid further discussion.
A series of 7 lessons that revise expectations and how to approach the AQA Lang P2 Q5 / Section B writing Q.
Lesson cover:
Purpose, Audience and Form
Letters
Articles
Speeches
Practice exam Qs
Scaffolded tasks and planning sheets
Great for a block of lessons for year 11 prior to exams.
A post-study lesson exploring the idea of censorship.
LO: To reflect on the writer’s intentions and the context of the book’s publication
The lesson explores both how censorship is presented IN Animal Farm as well as issues relating to censorship OF Animal Farm, recognising Orwell’s difficulty in getting the novella published.
A series of four lessons exploring the context, key themes and plot summary of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol for a ‘eyes wide open’ approach to teaching the novella.
A series of lessons looking at a practice Language Paper 2 on the topic of hunting. I cannot take credit for the paper itself, but the accompanying lessons, ppts and model answers are my own.
A powerpoint which encompasses revision of key events of the whole play, mapping a timeline with key quotes, which all lend themselves to the theme of power, which leads on to a practice exam question which students began in lesson and completed for homework.
Originally used as a 2 hour revision lesson prior to their mock exam (where they sat the June 2023 Macbeth Q).