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I am a teacher of secondary English, providing resources and lesson plans in this domain. My lessons are on the interdisciplinary side and as such can at times also be applied to other subject areas, such as history or drama. I hope you find them useful! Please don't hesitate to provide constructive feedback as I am always keen to improve my resources and ensure that you get the very best value for money.

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I am a teacher of secondary English, providing resources and lesson plans in this domain. My lessons are on the interdisciplinary side and as such can at times also be applied to other subject areas, such as history or drama. I hope you find them useful! Please don't hesitate to provide constructive feedback as I am always keen to improve my resources and ensure that you get the very best value for money.
Descriptive writing PPT based on Curious Incident
AngelilAngelil

Descriptive writing PPT based on Curious Incident

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This resource is a great introduction to descriptive writing for students in Years 8-9. It uses Mark Haddon’s “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time” as a stimulus but you could adapt this to suit any text where the character finds a journey difficult. The PPT should get you through a minimum of 2 lessons depending on your students’ abilities. It goes through the basics of getting students to name the five senses and to talk about journeys they have completed, before progressing to finding textual evidence for why Christopher finds his journey to London difficult and planning/creating their own piece of descriptive writing based on a journey. Opportunities for peer assessment are also included.
'Bright Star' sonnet (John Keats) - comprehension activities
AngelilAngelil

'Bright Star' sonnet (John Keats) - comprehension activities

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These comprehension questions on John Keats’ Bright Star sonnet were designed for (I)GCSE students studying the poem but could also be used for A Level/IB students. The 4-page pack includes a copy of the poem as well as a vocabulary matching activity, space for handwritten definitions of any other unfamiliar vocabulary, note-taking space, comprehension questions, and an optional extension task.
The Great Gatsby 4-week unit plan - NEW AND IMPROVED!
AngelilAngelil

The Great Gatsby 4-week unit plan - NEW AND IMPROVED!

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This unit plan for The Great Gatsby is aimed at students aged 14+. While many ideas will suit abler students more, it is ultimately made accessible to all with differentiation suggestions included. The unit should take around 4 weeks to complete (based on the idea of 4 x 55-minute lessons per week), but this may vary depending on your class' ability. Also included is an extension task regarding the reference to the 'Platonic conception of himself'.
Spoken language (case study: David Attenborough/TV documentary voiceovers) PPT
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Spoken language (case study: David Attenborough/TV documentary voiceovers) PPT

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This PPT presentation/lesson encourages students to consider the differences between the way people speak in normal life vs how they speak on television documentaries. The starting question could be explored in a whole-class discussion or via various Kagan Strategies (e.g. Think-Pair-Share), and the resultant ideas revisited later on. An excerpt from a David Attenborough documentary (about the lyre bird) is transcribed onto the PPT for a student to read aloud in their normal voice. Students then watch the corresponding video clip (linked to in the PPT, or can be found on Youtube/supplied on request if there are problems with this). They should then compare how the student read it with how the text is spoken by Attenborough. They may wish to consider elements such as accent, pace and enunciation. Reference to the initial ideas generated by students is encouraged. The speech features terminology table (or a version of it adapted for your students) can be used optionally to help. I recommend using relevant exercises from the CGP GCSE English workbook as a plenary activity. This lesson was conceived of for students entering KS5 but is also suitable for KS4.
Terminology for analysing comics and graphic novels
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Terminology for analysing comics and graphic novels

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This handout provides students with a glossary and definitions of key terms to help them analyse comics (e.g. political strips in newspapers) and graphic novels (e.g. Maus, Fun Home, Persepolis), and is useful for revision purposes so that students can use the correct terminology accurately in assessment situations.
Analysing stage directions: note-taking grid
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Analysing stage directions: note-taking grid

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This scaffolded note-taking grid encourages students to consider the information provided to them through stage directions in plays, whether implied or explicitly stated. The grid includes space for note-taking on characters’ movements, descriptions of lighting, and descriptions of sounds, as well as space for quotations and explanations of effects on the viewer. This grid can be used to analyse the stage directions in any play, and can be subsequently used for revision and/or essay-writing. Printing on A3 comes recommended as this gives students more space to write.
Bellamira and Pilia-Borza: The Jew of Malta, IIIii and IIIiii
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Bellamira and Pilia-Borza: The Jew of Malta, IIIii and IIIiii

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This Powerpoint represents a full lesson on the characters of Bellamira and Pilia-Borza in Christopher Marlowe’s ‘The Jew of Malta’, and how these can be directed and played to comic or tragic effect. Please note that you need to source the appropriate scenes (IIIii and IIIiii) yourself. The Powerpoint directs students through various activities, including a ‘write 3, share 1’ starter, a class reading task, independent work on the direction of the scenes (which is differentiated via the methods through which students can carry it out: continuous prose, Flipgrid, collage, storyboard), and a plenary consisting of a gallery walk and exit slip for reflection.
Reliability in 'The Handmaid's Tale'
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Reliability in 'The Handmaid's Tale'

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This resource relates to the end of Margaret Atwood’s novel ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ and contains questions encouraging students to assess the reliability of the novel, its narrator, and its ending. This helps to integrate critical thinking into English lessons, and as such is especially helpful for teachers teaching the text as part of the IB Diploma programme, which requires integration of the IB core component of Theory of Knowledge.
Comprehension questions: Presents From My Aunts in Pakistan
AngelilAngelil

Comprehension questions: Presents From My Aunts in Pakistan

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This resource consists of 7 comprehension questions (printed on the page three times for ease of printing/distribution) based on the Moniza Alvi poem ‘Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan’. The questions help students to interpret the use of techniques including juxtaposition, metaphor, and imagery, and to better understand the effects of these on the reader.
Two speeches: comparison/planning grid
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Two speeches: comparison/planning grid

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Students should be assigned a speech topic that they could give to either Grade 9/Year 10 students or staff members/parents/governors. This could be, for example, “school uniforms should be abolished” or “the school day should start one hour later than it does now”. This planning grid enables students to compare what is required in terms of diction, tone, syntax and so on. Students should be made aware of the meanings of the terms in the grid before proceeding. Once they have planned, they could either write a comparative/analytical paragraph, explaining what is the same/different about each speech to each audience, and/or actually choose a speech to write based on the grid.
Personification/anthropomorphism examples PPT
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Personification/anthropomorphism examples PPT

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This Powerpoint introduces the etymology of ‘anthropomorphism’ and explains the differences between personification and anthropomorphism. The PPT then showcases examples of texts which use these, before setting students a task to anthropomorphise a classroom object and write a monologue ‘in character’ (students should be familiar with monologue-writing). There is still scope to add additional imagery/animations to the PPT if desired, as well as film clips (e.g. Fantastic Mr Fox, Toy Story, Cars).
Literary and linguistic techniques: 'Blackberrying'
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Literary and linguistic techniques: 'Blackberrying'

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This resource begins with a simple matching game to reinforce/refresh student knowledge of techniques found in poetry. While this resource was designed with Sylvia Plath’s ‘Blackberrying’ in mind, it could be easily adapted for other poems. There are also sentence starters to help students write an analytical paragraph about the poem, as well as extension tasks for early finishers. Printing on A3 is recommended to give students maximum space for note-taking. Note that a copy of the poem is not included but is easily accessible online.
Character impressions grid: Death and the King's Horseman
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Character impressions grid: Death and the King's Horseman

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This grid serves as an ongoing revision resource that students build up themselves over time. It encourages students to take notes on characters encountered in Wole Soyinka’s play “Death and the King’s Horseman”, including appearance, speech, and attitudes. This grid could then be used to help students plan an essay on any topic relevant to the notes they have taken (e.g. compare/contrast 2 characters’ attitudes towards the British). Printing on A3 is recommended.
When I Have Fears (Keats) comprehension questions
AngelilAngelil

When I Have Fears (Keats) comprehension questions

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These six comprehension questions help to develop student understanding of the Keats poem ‘When I Have Fears That I May Cease To Be’. The questions are laid out with 2 sets on one page for ease of printing, photocopying and distribution. The questions cover understanding of technique (such as metaphor and imagery) as well as ideas. There is scope for the final question to serve as an extension/optional question for early finishers.
British newspapers and their political affiliations
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British newspapers and their political affiliations

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This resource shows visually, on a continuum line, the political leanings/affiliations of most major British print news outlets. This is particularly useful for international students who may have to deal with British media texts in examinations but are not familiar with the cultural aspects surrounding them. The continuum shows whether each paper is a tabloid or broadsheet and whether they lean politically to the right or left, or whether they are more centrist. There is further scope to add extra imagery if desired. Students are also provided with weblinks to four independent analyses of British newspapers’ politics and culture (all links still active as of July 6th, 2021).
Ode to a Nightingale (Keats) comprehension questions
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Ode to a Nightingale (Keats) comprehension questions

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These two pages of comprehension questions are divided by stanza, enabling students to work on these as they progress through the poem and allowing teachers to use them as a carousel or jigsaw activity if preferred. The questions cover comprehension of techniques (e.g. imagery, symbolism, allusion) as well as ideas.
Analysis of speech features: Jamie Oliver/Delia Smith
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Analysis of speech features: Jamie Oliver/Delia Smith

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This resource bundle contains 2 video clips (of Jamie Oliver and Delia Smith making a Victoria sponge), a grid for students to fill in with instances of linguistic features such as hedging and fillers, and an answer grid for the teacher. For extension purposes, the grid contains some blank lines for students to fill in any other features they believe they have spotted. The ‘cosmetic surgery or speech feature?’ game is also included along with the lesson plan.
'Parlez-vous français?' (by Dave Barry) + comprehension questions
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'Parlez-vous français?' (by Dave Barry) + comprehension questions

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This column by Dave Barry can be used by secondary English students to understand cultural context, as well as how humour is created and used in writing. It can also be used by French classes for a tongue-in-cheek insight into French culture. The comprehension questions are as follows: How far does Dave Barry exaggerate? Is some of what he says true? Explain your answer. Give an example of how Dave Barry uses language in a humorous way. EXTENSION: What technique(s) does he use and why? Dave Barry also makes fun of Americans. How?
'France' (by Dave Barry) with comprehension questions
AngelilAngelil

'France' (by Dave Barry) with comprehension questions

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This text can be used by secondary students of all ages to understand how humour is created and used in writing. Comprehension questions are included. This is designed for use by English students, but could also be used in French classes for some tongue-in-cheek insight into French culture.