Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
Humble English Teacher hoping to cut down on teachers' workload by providing high quality resources (from primary to secondary - mostly English but some other subjects too). Please share and review if you like what you see here.
This 43-slide lesson explores the character of Malvolio in Shakespeare’s ‘Twelfth Night’.
With academic scrutiny, the lesson analyses one of Shakespeare’s most famous and complex characters, beginning with an overview of his key lines, attributes, and role in the plot. This then leads to analysis of Malvolio’s name, key vocabulary that we might use to describe him, and how his ‘gulling’ threatens the comic spirit of the play.
Important historical and theatrical context is explored alongside Malvolio’s character, and we look at how Shakespeare uses him to satirise Puritanism. Using Elizabethan debates surrounding acting and its influence, we think about how Malvolio functions as a metatheatrical symbol of anti-theatricality. Interesting viewpoints from a range of critics, directors, and actors are discussed.
Crucially, we also explore how Malvolio’s character relates to the key themes of the play and is central to the comedy of ‘Twelfth Night’. We look at how Malvolio interacts with other characters in the play, the vivid imagery used in his gulling, and how his famous ending might be interpreted from a range of critical lenses. The Carnivalesque atmosphere of the play is analysed in light of Malvolio’s character.
Questions, discussion points, and essay questions are featured throughout. Students are encouraged to consider Malvolio’s character at a high level, so this lesson would be ideal for students aged 16+.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 38-slide lesson explores the character of Olivia in Shakespeare’s ‘Twelfth Night’.
With academic scrutiny, the lesson analyses one of Shakespeare’s most complex female characters, beginning with an overview of her key lines, attributes, and role in the plot. This then leads to analysis of her name, key vocabulary that we might use to describe her, and how there may be more than meets the eye to Olivia’s excessive mourning.
Important historical and theatrical context is explored alongside Olivia’s character, and we consider the debates around how subversive and ‘proto-Feminist’ Shakespeare’s presentation of Olivia really is. Interesting viewpoints from a range of critics, directors, and actors are discussed.
Crucially, we also explore how Olivia’s character relates to the key themes of the play and is central to the comedy of ‘Twelfth Night’. We look at how Olivia interacts with other characters in the play and debate modern interpretations of whether homoeroticism is integral to her character. Her connection to Queen Elizabeth I is considered, and the Carnivalesque atmosphere of the play is analysed in light of Olivia’s character.
Questions, discussion points, and essay questions are featured throughout. Two exemplar paragraphs are included, too. Students are encouraged to consider Olivia’s character at a high level, so this lesson would be ideal for students aged 16+.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 16-slide lesson explores Chapter 4 of John Steinbeck’s ‘Of Mice and Men’.
Students are encouraged to think analytically about how Steinbeck introduces Crooks and racism in the novella. Lennie’s innocent optimism is also considered as students continue to explore Steinbeck’s presentation of the power of the American Dream. This lesson ends with a creative writing task for students inspired by this chapter.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
Ideal for upper-KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 20-slide lesson explores how props and stagecraft are used in Oscar Wilde’s ‘The Importance of Being Earnest’.
Important theatrical context is discussed in order to analyse how Wilde’s play relates to ideas of farce, melodrama, and Naturalism in the late 19th century.
Students are encouraged to reflect upon the various props used in the play and their symbolic significance. Costumes, entrances, exits, asides, off-stage characters, and dramatic irony are also considered.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 43-page workbook is a thorough and comprehensive unit of work analysing poems about animals.
The workbook contains various tasks and questions for a variety of animals, prompting students to consider how the poems interact with cultural stereotypes and how poets have used language and form to great effect.
There are 12 poems included in this workbook. Poets featured include Ted Hughes, Chinua Achebe, Elizabeth Bishop, Carol Ann Duffy and Marianne Moore.
At the end of the booklet is a project for students to complete.
This workbook is easily adaptable and teachers can study each poem at their own discretion and in their own manner. Some poems are more complex than others and so teachers may wish to differentiate accordingly.
Pupils could work on this unit in class or independently at home.
The workbook is designed for use at KS3 but could be easily adapted to specific needs and preferences.
A great lesson activity or homework task designed to test and consolidate students’ understanding of proper nouns and common nouns.
15 questions included. Ideal for KS2 or KS3.
A great double-sided lesson worksheet or homework task designed to consolidate students’ understanding of apostrophes (denoting both contraction and possession).
Ideal for UKS2 as well as KS3.
This crossword on Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth’ provides an enjoyable but academic activity for pupils to test their knowledge of the play.
It always works as a great starter or plenary task.
This crossword on Stevenson’s ‘Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’ provides an enjoyable but academic activity for pupils to test their knowledge of the novella.
It always works as a great starter or plenary task.
This crossword on Ibsen’s ‘A Doll’s House’ provides an enjoyable but academic activity for pupils to test their knowledge of the play.
It always works as a great starter or plenary task.
Quotations and spellings are based on the Michael Meyer translation, eg. ‘Christine’ not ‘Kristine’.
Ideal for KS4 or KS5 students.
This word search is a fun and stimulating activity for those studying ‘Romeo and Juliet’ to help consolidate knowledge of characters, key themes, and their spelling.
This word search is a fun and stimulating activity for those studying ‘An Inspector Calls’ to help consolidate knowledge of characters, key themes, and their spelling.
This three-part workbook on the key themes of ‘Macbeth’ is an ideal revision or consolidation task.
The first page asks students to annotate images representative of key themes in the play. Students could surround each image with words, quotations, analysis, etc.
The second page asks students to retrieve key quotations from the play linked to each theme.
The third page is another series of images, this time linked to key quotations from the play. Students are asked to write down the quotations beside the image.
How does Shakespeare present attitudes to gender in ‘Macbeth’?
Students so often write about gender dynamics in ‘Macbeth’ with clumsy generalisations that examiners can’t abide. This lesson aims to encourage specific and mature contextualised understanding of gender in the 1600s and within the play itself.
This 30-slide PowerPoint explores how Shakespeare exploits and subverts attitudes to gender throughout the play, encouraging students to comment with precision and perception on masculinity and femininity.
Ideal for KS4 students in particular but easily adaptable for other ages.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
Explore William Blake’s ‘The Lamb’ as a critique of organised religion and child exploitation with this comprehensive lesson.
Perfect for those studying Blake’s ‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’ for AQA’s ‘Political and Social Protest Writing’ paper.
This lesson is focused on helping students to analyse literary ‘structure’ using an extract from Suzanne Collins’ ‘The Hunger Games’.
The lesson is focused on Question 3 (‘How has the writer structured the text to interest you as a reader?’) from AQA’s GCSE English Language Paper 1.
Students are presented with methods of tackling this notoriously challenging question. Exemplar paragraphs on ‘The Hunger Games’ are also included.
The resource includes a lesson PowerPoint and the extract from the novel.
This lesson is aimed at GCSE pupils but could be used for KS3.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 23-slide lesson explores Chapter 3 of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
In this comprehensive lesson, students consider the significance of Napoleon’s focus on the education of the young, and the beginnings of the farm’s use of propaganda and indoctrination. Boxer’s stupendous strength is discussed and his role foreshadowed. The allegorical function of the novella is also closely studied, as pupils learn about who/what Squealer represents.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. This lesson builds to an extract-based essay question (included in the resource), with step-by-step instructions for students.
The lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint and Word Doc saved as PDF.
This bundle includes complete resources for Charles Dickens’ timeless classic, ‘A Christmas Carol’.
Detailed lessons are included on each of the novella’s five chapters, plus an introductory lesson on the story’s social and historical context.
The bundle also includes a fun and engaging crossword activity for students based on the novella, as well as a worksheet for students to use to consolidate their understanding of the text’s key themes.
This 20-slide lesson explores Fleur Adcock’s poem, ‘The Telephone Call’.
Starter activities probe students to think about their attitude to the lottery and its anthropological implications. We then learn about the life and work of Fleur Adcock before reading the poem.
Students are prompted to think about the two juxtaposing characters in the poem before delving into Adcock’s use of language, imagery, form, structure and rhyme. The significance of the poem’s 1980s context is also considered.
Key themes and sophisticated vocabulary are listed to enable students to conduct precise analysis. We also ask what the poem’s true message may be, posing a variety of interpretations.
This resource is ideal for those studying the poem as part of Cambridge IGCSE’s ‘Songs of Ourselves’, but is useful for anyone looking at the poem.
Two versions of the lesson are attached: one is a PDF to save the best aesthetics and formatting; the other is a standard PowerPoint where fonts and formatting may be lost but can easily be edited.
This 23-slide lesson explores the character function of Jacob Marley in ‘A Christmas Carol’.
Paying close attention to Dickens’s language, imagery, themes and context, this thorough presentation considers how Marley’s Ghost is used to convey the author’s message and how the character functions as a catalyst for Scrooge’s metaphorphosis.
Questions, tasks, and discussion points are included for pupils. An extended essay question is included at the end.
This lesson is ideal for those studying the text for GCSE, but could be easily adapted to suit KS3 pupils.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.