I enjoy designing resources, making students smile, easing the workload and sharing best practice with educators. I’m an English lecturer at a Further Education college in the West Midlands.
If you like my resources, please drop me a review. T.
I enjoy designing resources, making students smile, easing the workload and sharing best practice with educators. I’m an English lecturer at a Further Education college in the West Midlands.
If you like my resources, please drop me a review. T.
This English resource, inspired by Disney’s Beauty and the Beast, supports learners with proofreading skills, dictionary finding skills, vocabulary, and diary writing. There are three extension writing tasks where learners are put into the perspectives of Lumiere, Cogsworth or the Beast, and have to write a leaflet, report or letter, respectively.
I have used this activity with Functional Skills and GCSE English. It can be used as an independent activity for marking or 1:1 sessions.
Enjoy,
T.
Print these language features posters (on A3, A4 or on card) to make an excellent classroom display for English language and/or literature.
The posters include:
a language feature / method
a song lyric with the feature included
a definition of the language feature
an appropriate visual representation of song lyrics / method.
Language features:
Metaphor, simile, hyperbole, semantic field, personification, pathetic fallacy, onomatopoeia, assonance, alliteration, statistics, juxtaposition, oxymoron, anthropomorphism, emotive language, repetition and rhetorical question.
Enjoy,
T.
This resource is for GCSE English Language Paper 2, Question 4. It includes a few visuals / scaffolding activities for learners, so they can deepen their understanding of what they need to do for one of the more difficult questions of the paper (worth 16 marks).
I have also included a supporting ‘Quick wins’ document for the Paper 2 (Elephants past paper Nov 2019). Learners use this to support their responses to the questions for Paper 2. This can be adapted/edited to suit other past papers too.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource is for GCSE English Language and contains various song lyrics where learners spot the language features and respond to various exam-style questions to deepen their knowledge of using subject terminology, making inferences and working out the meaning. There are activities on metaphors and similes and semantic fields (5-min starters?)
Song titles include:
Dark horse
Grenade
I wanna be yours
Paint it, black
Queen for tonight
Poker face
Love is a losing game
BONUS: Follow me on Kahoot! https://create.kahoot.it/profiles/7700c097-19bc-407d-ac39-6d3a8d44a491 (twheeler190) for quizzes on language features in songs.
Enjoy,
T.
This resource is a GCSE English Paper 1 walkthrough for the November 2020 exam (The Silk Factory). Included is a PowerPoint of the walkthrough, using the mark scheme and responses. The question paper, sources and mark scheme is available from AQA.
At the beginning of the PowerPoint there are two activities on language features.
This resource has been adapted from the Chapter 4 of ‘Book 1 AQA GCSE English Language: Developing the Skills for Learning and Assessment’ (Backhouse and Emm, 2015). I have created a PowerPoint lesson out of the extracts and activities within Chapter 4 of the said book.
Learners will be practising their AO1 skillage with the theme of talking cats from Alice in Wonderland and Coraline.
Enjoy!
T.
This GCSE English Language (AQA) resource supports the development of identifying symbolism, introducing semantic field through the use of songs and other unique activities to support the development of identifying language features and making inferences.
The main activity will involve students watching the opening montage of the hit TV series of Dexter. They will analyse the structure and symbolism of the montage (through media/film analysis) and create a storyboard of the main events within the montage. They will then apply this visual learning to Lindsay’s Darkly Dreaming Dexter. Something different.
Enjoy!
T.
This GCSE ENGLISH Language (AQA) resource includes a PowerPoint lesson and two extracts about P T Barnum (a review of Hugh Jackman’s portrayal and an autobiographical account of PT Barnum). I cannot take full credit as the extracts and exam style questions, I believe, came from TES, but it inspired me to create this lesson.
This includes discussions on being an outsider, disability, child exploitation and exploitation for entertainment purposes. The hit “This is Me” is also used as a starter for students to analyse the language features and make inferences.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource is an introductory lesson to the skills needed for GCSE English language Paper 1 using Bram Stoker’s Dracula. It includes: a spelling test script, worksheet with 3 activities and a ppt.
I will be using this lesson as an Assessment Point 1 using the activities: spelling test, information retrieval, words and phrases, and a creative writing activity.
Enjoy!
T.
These bookmarks can be given out at the beginning of the year or during the revision period as a visual aid to support learners with answering exam-style questions. They include the formula MEME that I use with my GCSE English Language (AQA) learners which stands for:
Method (identify the language / structural feature)
Evidence (back up with a small quote)
Meaning (interpretation / inference)
Effect (what it makes you Feel, Imagine, Think)
Enjoy!
T.
For GCSE English Language AQA, the following resources support the content of Paper 2 using the theme of ‘being held against your will’ through a slavery nonfiction text (‘Twelve Years a Slave’) and a hostage nonfiction text (‘An Evil Cradling’). This lesson lasts around 6 hours.
The slavery text is challenging therefore I suggest prior reading and annotation before beginning the lesson which may support the group. The texts work alongside a booklet that guides learners through Paper 2.
I have attached some support activities alongside the booklet to help with differentiation.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource uses Ravenscroft’s ‘You’re a Mean One Mr Grinch’ to support students in identifying language features. This could be used as a fun starter activity, perhaps around Christmas time!
Enjoy!
T.
Using the horror genre, this lesson supports the development of descriptive writing through making imaginative suggestions using three images of a haunted castle (the castle, the hall and music room). The only piece of information you need to give is that Vladimir is a vampire and let the learners do the rest. This promotes class discussion and is great over the Halloween period.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource supports the learning of language analysis and structural analysis for GCSE English Language (AQA) using two extracts from Peter Benchley’s ‘Jaws’. Activities include: information retrieval, identifying explicit and implicit information and making inferences, and analysing extracts.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource supports the development of responses for descriptive writing. Learners will engage in a range of activities to spark imagination, improve vocabulary and re-evaluate their current descriptive writing techniques.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource supports the content of GCSE English Language (AQA) for the Paper 2 exam.
Using the theme of the Titanic, learners will engage in a range of activities tailored to the skills needed for the exam, such as picking out four facts from watching a National Geographic video, identifying language features from Walter Lord’s ‘A Night to Remember’, and research / discussion activities to develop speaking and listening skills, as well as expressing and justifying a point of view.
What’s included: the PowerPoint lesson and accompanying handouts.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource contains an extract from Stephen King’s ‘IT’ to support learners in identifying language techniques used by the writer to create an atmosphere of horror and terror. Tasks on the worksheet include, an information retrieval activity, defining inferences, spotting language features and an exam-style question.
Sensitive content: students have to infer that the character has died through self harm / suicide in a bathtub. This opens up controversial and challenging conversations on mental health and it raises awareness of male suicide (Mental Health Week).
Due to the release of the popular remake of the horror film ‘IT’ (Chapters 1 and 2), it was a hit with my students.
Alongside this resource, I have included a Paper 1, Question 1 starter/recap activity of Mary Shelley’s ‘Frankenstein’ and a student support guide on basic language features.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource supports the learning of onomatopoeia. Learners must identify the English spelling word that sounds like how it sounds per image.
This can be used as a starter or quick AfL activity.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource is a research activity into the compound words J K Rowling uses for the names of the spells in the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.
I have used this resource in the Access to HE: Social Science and Humanities Unit, ‘Language Change’, but this could be used for any language units covering morphology and/or Latin.
Enjoy!
T.
This resource supports the up-skilling of vocabulary for GCSE or Functional Skills (Level 2) English learners or, in fact, any course to embed English in the curriculum and develop vocabulary.
It can be presented as a game where learners have to create sentences with the same letter of each word using the formula: adjective, noun, adverb, verb, adjective, noun. I use this to stretch and challenge, giving letters Q and K to those with a faster pace.
Enjoy!
T.