Hero image

Diving Bell Education

Average Rating3.67
(based on 3 reviews)

Read the blog on www.divingbelleducation.com

261Uploads

75k+Views

2k+Downloads

Read the blog on www.divingbelleducation.com
What Even Is...Textual Integrity?
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

What Even Is...Textual Integrity?

(0)
The What Even Is… series of worksheets explains some of the key concepts in literary analysis, with examples from familiar and popular books and films. There is a single page explanation, with appropriate images and graphics, followed by a question which exercises students’ knowledge and understanding of the concept. Two short texts aimed at different abilities and levels are given for the question. This handout, explaining the concept of textual integrity, asks students to exercise their understanding of the term on a meme about Batman and Ironman, and a soliloquy from Othello.
What Even Is...Representation?
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

What Even Is...Representation?

(0)
The What Even Is… series of worksheets explains some of the key concepts in literary analysis, with examples from familiar and popular books and films. There is a single page explanation, with appropriate images and graphics, followed by a question which exercises students’ knowledge and understanding of the concept. Two short texts aimed at different abilities and levels are given for the question. This handout, explaining the concept of literary representation, asks students to exercise their understanding of the term on an image-sequence from Bridget Jones’s Diary and a Shakespearean sonnet.
What Even Is...Analysis?
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

What Even Is...Analysis?

(0)
The What Even Is… series of worksheets explains some of the key concepts in literary analysis, with examples from familiar and popular books and films. There is a single page explanation, with appropriate images and graphics, followed by a question which exercises students’ knowledge and understanding of the concept. Two short texts aimed at different abilities and levels are given for the question. This handout, explaining the process of analysis, asks students to exercise their understanding of the term on Edvard Munch’s The Scream and Donne’s Holy Sonnet V.
What Even is ... a Text?
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

What Even is ... a Text?

(0)
The What Even Is… series of worksheets explains some of the key concepts in literary analysis, with examples from familiar and popular books and films. There is a single page explanation, with appropriate images and graphics, followed by a question which exercises students’ knowledge and understanding of the concept. Two short texts aimed at different abilities and levels are given for the question. This handout explains the process of analysis and asks students to consider what a text really is, using examples from Rene Magritte’s La Trahison des Images and a speech from The Tempest.
What Even Is...a Discursive?
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

What Even Is...a Discursive?

(0)
The What Even Is… series of worksheets explains some of the key concepts in literary analysis, with examples from familiar and popular books and films. There is a single page explanation, with appropriate images and graphics, followed by a question which exercises students’ knowledge and understanding of the concept. Short texts aimed at different abilities and levels are given for the question. This handout, explaining the discursive mode of writing, describes three different ways to identify and implement discursiveness. The activity uses very brief examples from six discursive works.
John Wyndham's The Chrysalids: Workbook
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

John Wyndham's The Chrysalids: Workbook

(0)
This unit of work brings John Wyndham’s vivid novel to life for students of all abilities, aimed at Year 9-10/Stage 5 students. The program provides clear differentiation for three levels of student: higher ability, lower ability, and Gifted and Talented, and clearly indicates core and differentiated tasks. Activities accompany each chapter, and relevant secondary texts such as Edwin Muir’s ‘The Horses’ are included. There are a selection of news articles on genetic mutation and ‘post-human’ or far-future people which will engage students of different levels and persuasions. Brief and cogent discussions of how societies have treated difference develop students’ general and historical knowledge and sharpen their critical thinking.
The Book of Everything by Guus Kuijer - Stage 3/4 Workbook
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

The Book of Everything by Guus Kuijer - Stage 3/4 Workbook

(0)
This short unit of work for students in the final year of primary or first years of middle school accompanies Guus Kuijer’s short novel ‘The Book of Everything’. Chapter by chapter questions provide activities which will allow students to read, research, and discuss issues such as childhood fear, WWII and its aftermath, religious intolerance, and parental anger. A great modern short novel to accompany works like The Diary of Anne Frank, and with a male protagonist, provides a reading experience which will draw in boys too. The unit of work concludes with a short assessment task and accompanying criteria for easy marking.
Study Guide: The Merchant of Venice
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Study Guide: The Merchant of Venice

(0)
Study guide with questions and activities for every scene in the play, with plenty of room for written responses. The guide contains activities which can be differentiated for strong and weak students and allows teachers to make use of technology through video-diary activities which students can complete using an iPad or mobile phone (this can, of course, be changed to a handwritten diary task). You can also purchase an images-only powerpoint on the representation of Jews in Medieval and Renaissance Europe which can be used to show how the issue of anti-Semitism began and continues today. Suitable for a broad range of students from middle school.
Silas Marner: Chapter by Chapter Study Guide
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Silas Marner: Chapter by Chapter Study Guide

(0)
A thorough study of each chapter in Eliot’s short masterpiece Silas Marner. Each chapter is annotated with a short precis of the chapter’s events, so that students can quickly locate the right section, and a thematic table at the beginning lays out some of the complex philosophical and literary ideas which underpin Eliot’s morality tale. Language and narrative techniques are carefully explained, and each chapter is accompanied by a selection of quotations to strengthen students’ understanding of evidence-based arguments.
Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Tuft of Flowers’
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Tuft of Flowers’

(0)
‘Tuft of Flowers’, by the American poet Robert Frost, is a perennial favourite for senior study. This set of notes gives a full analysis of the poem with a relevant image and a handy grab-box explaining the poetic techniques, and related texts which complement the poem for students who must study it in concert with one other text. Important points are in red. A simple, one-stop analysis of this complex poem which students can work through in class or take home for private study.
Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘After Apple Picking'
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘After Apple Picking'

(0)
'After Apple Picking’, by the American poet Robert Frost, is a perennial favourite for senior study. This set of notes gives a full analysis of the poem with a relevant image and a handy grab-box explaining the poetic techniques, and related texts which complement the poem for students who must study it in concert with one other text. Important points are in red. A simple, one-stop analysis of this complex poem which students can work through in class or take home for private study.
Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Mending Wall'
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Mending Wall'

(0)
'Mending Wall’, by the American poet Robert Frost, is a perennial favourite for senior study. This set of notes gives a full analysis of the poem with a relevant image and a handy grab-box explaining the poetic techniques, and related texts which complement the poem for students who must study it in concert with one other text. Important points are in red. A simple, one-stop analysis of this complex poem which students can work through in class or take home for private study.
Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Stopping by Woods'
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Stopping by Woods'

(0)
‘Stopping by Woods’, by the American poet Robert Frost, is a perennial favourite for senior study. This set of notes gives a full analysis of the poem with a relevant image and a handy grab-box explaining the poetic techniques, and related texts which complement the poem for students who must study it in concert with one other text. Important points are in red. A simple, one-stop analysis of this complex poem which students can work through in class or take home for private study.
Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Fire and Ice’
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Fire and Ice’

(0)
‘Fire and Ice’, by the American poet Robert Frost, has been a perennial favourite for senior study. This set of notes gives a full analysis of the poem with a relevant image and a handy grab-box explaining the poetic techniques, and related texts which complement the poem for students who must study it in concert with one other text. Important points are in red. A simple, one-stop analysis of this complex poem which students can work through in class or take home for private study.
Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Home Burial'
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

Close reading notes – analysis of Robert Frost, ‘Home Burial'

(0)
‘Home Burial’, by the American poet Robert Frost, has been a perennial favourite for senior study. This set of notes gives a full analysis of the poem with a relevant image and a handy grab-box explaining the poetic techniques, and related texts which complement the poem for students who must study it in concert with one other text. Important points are in red. A simple, one-stop analysis of this complex poem which students can work through in class or take home for private study.
HSC Texts and Human Experience Sample Essay & Analysis: Kenneth Slessor 1
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

HSC Texts and Human Experience Sample Essay & Analysis: Kenneth Slessor 1

(0)
This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Common Module Texts and Human Experience. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text, the poetry of Kenneth Slessor, answers a sample question for this module: How has your prescribed text explored the individuality of stories about human experience? There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form.
HSC Adv English Mod A: Sample essay and essay analysis: The Tempest and Hag-Seed HSC Adv English Mo
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

HSC Adv English Mod A: Sample essay and essay analysis: The Tempest and Hag-Seed HSC Adv English Mo

(0)
This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Advanced English Module A: Textual Conversations. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text-pairing The Tempest and Hag-Seed, answers the 2019 HSC question: Everything is being dismantled, reconstructed, recycled. To what end? For what purpose? To what extent is this true of the texts you have studied for this module? There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form.
HSC Texts and Human Experience Sample Essay & Essay Analysis: The Crucible
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

HSC Texts and Human Experience Sample Essay & Essay Analysis: The Crucible

(0)
This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Common Module Texts and Human Experience. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text, Miller’s The Crucible, answers a sample question for this module. There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form. Pair it with The Crucible Study Notes for even more depth.
HSC Standard English Module B Sample Essay & Essay Analysis: Feed
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

HSC Standard English Module B Sample Essay & Essay Analysis: Feed

(0)
This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Standard English Module B: Close Study of a Text. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text, M.T. Anderson’s novel Feed, answers a sample question for this module. There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form.
HSC Texts and Human Experience Sample Essay & Analysis: The Merchant of Venice
DivingBellEducationDivingBellEducation

HSC Texts and Human Experience Sample Essay & Analysis: The Merchant of Venice

(0)
This is a three-part resource for students undertaking the NSW HSC Common Module Texts and Human Experience. A generic essay plan shows students how to compose an essay suitable for Stage 6, progressing them from the simpler PEEL/TEAL models of Stage 4 and 5. A sample essay for the prescribed text, The Merchant of Venice, answers a sample question for this module. There is also a second copy of the essay, marked up to show how it follows the plan, and with five short questions which require students to engage critically with the essay and its form.