As a comprehensive secondary school English teacher, I always aim to make my resources as engaging and accessible for a wide range of students as possible!
I have been teaching secondary English for 8 years. I appreciate all feedback that is left - thank you.
As a comprehensive secondary school English teacher, I always aim to make my resources as engaging and accessible for a wide range of students as possible!
I have been teaching secondary English for 8 years. I appreciate all feedback that is left - thank you.
This PowerPoint presentation provides the necessary information for years 10-11 to plan and complete their speaking and listening assessment. This PowerPoint is aimed at the EDUQAS spec, but could be very easily amended if the criteria were changed for a different specification.
I use this presentation as an introduction to S&L and then let the students complete research on the computer to start creating their presentations. With my classes, I find it is very helpful to print this PowerPoint for them so that they have a reference / guide to help them throughout the planning of their S&L presentation.
This PowerPoint includes:
- an overview of what the students are expected to present
- what the students can use to support them during their presentations
- criteria from the EDUQAS mark scheme
- FAQs
This resource is tailored for the EDUQAS specification. As a current EDUQAS examiner for Language Component 1, I am skilled in creation of accurate paper questions. This singular Microsoft Word resource includes:
an extract from a story (similar in length to those that the examining body EDUQAS use)
5 questions, worth 40 marks, following the same format as EDUQAS use
I have used this resource with my class as a walking talking mock which has been brilliantly effective, especially when using the visualiser. It could also be set as a complete Language Component 1 Part A mock examination.
This resource has been created by myself in an aim to support my students with their home learning of Macbeth - a surreal necessity at the minute!
It’s a Microsoft Word document with enough annotations to ensure a good understanding of this Shakespeare text. This does not include really high level analysis and development but it does make this fantastic resource accessible to all ability levels.
I would suggest that this would prove a good resource to use in any of the following situations:
Remote learning
Accompanying resource for classroom teaching
Homework setting
Booklet creation for students who have missed Macbeth lessons (i.e. students off school with long-term illness)
Please find a link here to the FREE download for the annotations of act one scene two - https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/free-macbeth-act-1-scene-2-annotations-12282841
I created this free resource when re-reading the Dickens novel 'A Christmas Carol' in preparation for teaching it to my year 10s next year.
I wanted to take some really key (quite short) quotes from the novel that would be easy for my students to remember and use for revision. This resource could easily be used in lesson by making it into a test / quiz - the students would need to be confident in answering 'who said' the quote and in what context it was said. Equally, this resource is great to provide students with as part of a larger 'A Christmas Carol' pack.
If this resource is helpful to you, please leave a review.
This resource has been created by myself in an aim to support my students with their home learning of Macbeth - a surreal necessity at the minute!
It’s a Microsoft Word document with enough annotations to ensure a good understanding of this Shakespeare text. This does not include really high level analysis and development but it does make this fantastic resource accessible to all ability levels.
I would suggest that this would prove a good resource to use in any of the following situations:
Remote learning
Accompanying resource for classroom teaching
Homework setting
Booklet creation for students who have missed Macbeth lessons (i.e. students off school with long-term illness)
Please find a link here to the FREE download for the annotations of act one scene two - https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/free-macbeth-act-1-scene-2-annotations-12282841
This free resource has been created by myself in an aim to support my students with their home learning of Macbeth - a surreal necessity during the Coronavirus outbreak!
It’s a Microsoft Word document with enough annotations to ensure a good understanding of this Shakespeare text. This does not include really high level analysis and development but it does make this fantastic resource accessible to all ability levels.
I would suggest that this would be a good resources to use in any of the following situations:
Remote learning
Accompanying resource for classroom teaching
Homework setting
Booklet creation for students who have missed Macbeth lessons (i.e. students off school with long-term illness)
Although this resource is free, it is just a sample of the whole text annotations that I have created. Please find a link here to the download for the annotations for the entirety of Macbeth’s Act One - https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/macbeth-act-1-annotations-12284655
This complete SOL includes:
19 lessons (all on PowerPoint)
5 homework sheets (perfect for use on Microsoft Teams or for printing)
A mid-term plan explaining the overview for the entire scheme
All attached worksheets and resources
This nature SOL has been created this year. I wanted to move away from focusing wholly on ‘the greats’ of nature poetry; instead of finding Keats and Wordsworth littering these lessons, you will find a wealth of contemporary and - dare I say it - more engaging poems for our younger students to sink their teeth into.
All of the lessons are presented on Microsoft PowerPoint and are engaging to the class with a use of images alongside a wide variety of tasks to stimulate all learners. To see one example of the scheme for free, please follow this link: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/esther-s-tomcat-free-yr-7-8-poetry-lesson-12419996
This scheme includes lessons on the following poems:
First Ice by Andrei Voznesensky
A Martian Sends a Postcard Home by Craig Raine
Umbrella by Rhianna
The Silence of The Snow by Ruth Velenski
Esther’s Tomcat by Ted Hughes
A Bird by Emily Dickinson
Blackberry-Picking by Seamus Heaney
Nettles by Vernon Scannell
Digging by Seamus Heaney
Mosquitoes by Aimee Nezuhkamatetil
Trees by Joyce Kilmer
Leisure by W H Davies
Fog by Helen Cadbury
Lizard by Martha Close
The Fish by Elizabeth Bishop
The Shark by E J Pratt
This resource is tailored for the EDUQAS specification. As a current EDUQAS examiner for Language Component 1, I am skilled in creation of accurate paper questions. This singular Microsoft Word resource includes:
an extract from a story (similar in length to those that the examining body EDUQAS use)
5 questions, worth 40 marks, following the same format as EDUQAS use
I have used this resource with my class as a walking talking mock which has been brilliantly effective, especially when using the visualiser. It could also be set as a complete Language Component 1 Part A mock examination.
Another paper in the same styling can be found here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-12676309
I created this resource for use with my year 11 class who are following the EDUQAS specification, although this revision resource would be useful to any exam board where Blood Brothers by Willy Russell is a set text.
The revision lesson is mainly discussion led and then I gave them the print out of the PPT afterwards for them to take home as it contains higher-level points and very detailed notes that we didn’t have time to delve into during an hour long revision session.
This lesson includes:
tasks organising character cards by theme (class/money, nature vs nurture, fate/superstition, coming of age/growing up and violence)
reorganising character cards into order of importance (e.g. which character do you feel the most sympathy for)
a model on how to ‘explode’ quotations and then examples for students to try
two exam-style questions for students to mind-map responses to
All feedback gratefully received,
Enjoy!
This resource has been created by myself in an aim to support my students with their home learning of Macbeth - a surreal necessity at the minute!
It’s a Microsoft Word document with enough annotations to ensure a good understanding of this Shakespeare text. This does not include really high level analysis and development but it does make this fantastic resource accessible to all ability levels.
I would suggest that this would prove a good resource to use in any of the following situations:
Remote learning
Accompanying resource for classroom teaching
Homework setting
Booklet creation for students who have missed Macbeth lessons (i.e. students off school with long-term illness)
Please find a link here to the FREE download for the annotations of act one scene two - https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/free-macbeth-act-1-scene-2-annotations-12282841
This unit of work comprises of 20 lessons with accompanying PowerPoints and resources. I am an examiner for Eduqas Language Paper 1 and have used that knowledge to create this resource.
This SOL includes:
20 lessons using PowerPoint (inc comments in the ‘notes’ section to support teaching).
An accompanying booklet with 17 fiction extracts (all a page in length or less).
4 homeworks integrated into the lesson PowerPoints.
Explicit teaching of the question stems used by EDUQAS in paper 1.
-‘Takeaway Sheets’ with each lesson that can be printed and stuck in absent students’ books as summaries.
A knowledge organiser for student use for the unit.
This is an engaging and easily accessible scheme of work, which was created for use with a set 3 and set 4 ability GCSE class. It follows the new EDUQAS specification, however it would also be an incredibly useful resource for any exam board that has a section on Transactional (non-fiction) writing.
This scheme contains:
- 13 PowerPoints
- Lessons on the full range of writing types as specified by the exam (formal and informal letters, articles, reports, reviews, speeches)
- 9 worksheets (including 1 homework)
- A computer based lesson on revision of layout
- Opportunities for self and peer assessment (worksheets provided)
Please leave comments and reviews, all are gratefully received. Thank you
This resource contains a Powerpoint lesson created to help my students revise the use of STRIVE (subject, tone, rhyme and rhythm, imagery, vocabulary and effect) which aids them in analysing an unseen poem. It also contains a Word document which is a copy of Armitage's poem, 'Clown Punk'.
This lesson is an excellent resource to introduce using STRIVE as well as using it for revision purposes. It is aimed at set 3 and 4 ability, however could easily be adapted to add stretch and challenge. The Powerpoint provides details for students of different levels of analysis that they could comment on in this poem. For example, after asking students about what imagery they could focus on in 'Clown Punk', there is an animated text box which gives some detailed examples of commentary on the poem.
Please comment and rate if this resource has been helpful for you and your classes,
Thank you
This resource is a set of 13 mini-quizzes designed to test students’ understanding of plot and key quotations needed in the studying of Romeo and Juliet.
Each quiz is 4 or 5 questions long and the answers are included on a separate slide.
Research shows that revision in short-bursts supports students with the recall that is necessary for the English Literature GCSE exam. I use this 5-a-day revision resource to support my year 10 and 11 students with their recall of their Shakespeare text.
Any feedback is greatly appreciated.
Enjoy!
This resource is aimed at GCSE English Literature students studying Romeo and Juliet. It is a whole lesson which includes:
a quick test (with answers) on act 1 scenes 2 and 3
annotations, key word definitions and key questions on the scene (act 4 scene 3)
a table worksheet encouraging students to make inferences and match those to key quotations and relevant terminology
students then write their own PETER paragraph and self-assess it
LO: to develop our skills of inference
Feedback gratefully received.
This scheme of work was created after some EDUQAS training I was lucky enough to receive. It is an incredibly useful short scheme of work which sets out to teach a very formulaic response to the main 5 question types used in Language Component 1 - the fiction reading element of the exam.
This scheme contains:
8 complete lessons (PowerPoint)
Typed fiction extracts - ready to use!
Modeled responses and exam answers
Attached homeworks
Please leave comments and reviews, all are gratefully received. Thank you
This collection of 5 worksheets are excellent for using with teaching Macbeth remotely. They could be used with any KS4 groups, but I have recently used them with my set 3 year 10s.
These worksheets have ALL instructions and resources included so students can manage their work at their own speed and without direct instruction from a teacher.
All 5 worksheets are on Microsoft Word and contain a mixture of activities to engage students in their reading of Shakespeare’s Macbeth.
This resource contains 4 images digitally created by me representing four famous authors: Margaret Atwood, Neil Gaiman, Roald Dahl and Harper Lee. These look excellent printed on A3 and used as part of classroom displays, library work or even for decorating for open evenings.
A short baseline unit used with year 7 on Heroes and Villains as an introduction to their Greek Mythology unit. This contains seven lessons as below:
What are heroes and villains?
How are monsters different to villains?
How can I create effective description in my writing?
How can I use ambitious vocabulary to improve my writing?
How can I improve the accuracy of my writing?
Baseline assessment
Assessment feedback
All resources are provided for the unit and all feedback greatly appreciated!
This lesson is focused on answering the ‘List’ question as part of EDUQAS Language Paper 1 - fiction reading. I am an examiner for this paper and have created a full SOL for teaching fiction reading to GCSE: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-12903917
If you find this lesson useful, please check it out!