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 FREE poster uses the classic ‘let’s eat grandma!’ joke to explain the importance of using correct punctuation.
Use it to enhance your learning environment.
This 18-slide lesson explores Tennyson’s classic poem ‘The Kraken’.
Perfect as a stand-alone lesson or part of a larger scheme of work on poetry or creatures, the lesson is neatly contained with its own explanation of Tennyson’s context and accompanying tasks on the poem itself.
Questions, discussion points and tasks are included for students, including extended activities at the end of the lesson. The poem’s mythos, form, and environmental themes are considered.
The poem itself is included.
This lesson is designed for KS3 but could easily be used with KS4 pupils who are studying poetry.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This is a thorough and comprehensive 30-slide lesson on Owen Sheers’ poem ‘Winter Swans’, which is studied as part of AQA’s GCSE Literature anthology on ‘Love & Relationships’.
This PowerPoint unpicks key themes of romantic love, separation and reconciliation with close analysis of language, form and structure.
Also included are questions/tasks for students and a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Winter Swans’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
Also included is a table for students to complete on the poem to help compartmentalise their notes.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This series of four lessons on Roald Dahl’s ‘Lamb to the Slaughter’ breaks the story into four extracts and four distinct but interconnected lessons.
Lesson 1: 16 slides
Lesson 2: 16 slides
Lesson 3: 14 slides
Lesson 4: 16 slides
Each lesson contains key questions and tasks relating to the story. Students are encouraged to think about Dahl’s suspense, characterisation, and use black humour. Key vocabulary is introduced and Dahl’s structure is dissected, with students making predictions and debating what might happen next as the story progresses. The nature of Mary Maloney’s marriage is discussed, as is the significance of her pregnancy, and the symbolic use of the leg of lamb in her infamous crime. At the end of the fourth lesson, we think about how Dahl uses the story symbolically and allegorically to comment on attitudes to gender in the 1950s.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. There are multiple tasks to strengthen analytical writing (with clearly structured model paragraphs included), and more creative tasks are featured, too, including diary entries and newspaper writing.
Copies of all four extracts are included in this resource.
There are at least 4 lessons here, but - depending on the pace of your classes - this could be stretched into more. This series of lessons is ideal for KS3.
PowerPoints and extracts are saved as PDFs.
This resource includes a booklet containing 10 extracts from 10 works of dystopian fiction by 10 different authors.
The booklet contains imaginative and thought-provoking explorations of dystopian worlds - and each is ripe for analysis.
Authors featured include Suzanne Collins, E.M. Forster and George Orwell.
Also included is a PowerPoint with a brief introductory lesson to the dystopian genre. This explains the key features of dystopian literature and introduces the key vocabulary associated with the genre.
This is perfect for a KS3 module or unit of work on dystopian fiction. It works well in conjunction with creative writing tasks.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This is a top-band exemplar essay analysing how marriage is presented in ‘The Farmer’s Bride’ by Charlotte Mew and ‘Singh Song!’ by Daljit Nagra.
These poems are studied as part of AQA’s ‘Love & Relationships’ cluster at GCSE and this question and answer reflects the question style of the exam.
Exam question paper is also included.
This worksheet is great for revising the key themes of AQA’s ‘Love & Relationships’ poetry anthology.
In the right-hand column, students can write all of the poems in the collection which they think match the theme in the left-hand column.
Encourages students to think thematically and comparatively about the poems.
This 28-slide lesson is a thorough and comprehensive exploration of Seamus Heaney’s poem ‘Follower’.
This PowerPoint unpicks key themes of admiration, childhood and identity with close analysis of the poem’s language, form and structure.
Attention is paid to the demands of AQA’s GCSE Literature, through which this poem is studied in the ‘Love & Relationships’ anthology.
Questions and discussion points are included for students, as well as a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Follower’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
Introduce students to the basic geography of Afghanistan with this informative map and fact-sheet.
Understanding Afghanistan’s geographical position is vital to contextualising ‘The Kite Runner’. Students can then be encouraged to complete their own further research into the country.
This resource uses an extract from Salman Rushdie’s ‘Midnight’s Children’ as a practice paper for those studying AQA GCSE English Language.
The resource includes the extract from the novel, an accompanying PowerPoint with three exam-style questions, and a top-band exemplar response to Question 2 of the mock (analysing the writer’s use of language).
Questions are modelled on the first three questions of AQA’s GCSE English Language Paper 1. These questions test reading comprehension, linguistic analysis and structural analysis. This resource is ideal for those studying AQA’s GCSE English Language (particularly HA groups).
This extract from ‘The Bell Jar’ by Sylvia Plath is great practice for those studying AQA’s English Language GCSE.
Included is an extract from the novel as well as 4 mock questions in the style of the AQA paper (Section 1A).
There are plenty of rich linguistic and structural features to unpick here. This extract is particularly aimed at high-attaining pupils.
Please note: The novel contains mature themes.
This resource includes an extract from Madeleine L’Engle’s ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ as well as four exam-style questions based on Paper 1 of AQA’s English Language GCSE.
This extract is an ideal mock or practice paper for those studying the AQA GCSE, or it could be used in class to develop understanding of the requirements of the exam.
Also included is a PowerPoint with ‘top tips’ for answering each of the four questions.
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.
This 29-slide lesson analyses Simon Armitage’s poem ‘Remains’, deconstructing its language, structure, imagery, context, message and more. Critical-thinking questions and tasks are included, as well as the option of two exam-style essay questions at the end of the lesson.
The lesson is ideal for those studying AQA’s ‘Power and Conflict’ poetry cluster in the Literature GCSE (especially high-attaining groups), where the poem is featured.
It could also be taught to GCSE groups as an ‘unseen’ poem or even KS5 groups as a poem of political and social protest.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
Explore Blake’s ‘The Ecchoing Green’ from the ‘Songs of Innocence’ as a poem of social/political protest with this comprehensive lesson aimed at A level students.
For those studying the AQA Political and Social Protest Writing course, this lesson deconstructs Blake’s imagery, language and ideas to consider how ‘The Ecchoing Green’ fits in with his vision for the ‘Songs’ as poems of protest.
This 27-slide lesson on William Blake’s ‘The Garden of Love’ from the ‘Songs of Experience’ deconstructs the poem as a tool of political and social protest.
The lesson explores Blake’s context as a radical Dissenter, his use of the pastoral genre, and considers in detail his use of language and imagery. The poem’s themes of sexual restriction, corrupt authority, and shattered innocence are considered through a variety of questions and tasks for students. At the end of the lesson, an extended essay question is included.
This lesson is ideal for those studying Blake’s ‘Songs’ through AQA’s ‘Political and Social Protest’ paper at A level.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
Explore elements of political and social protest in this extract from Ralph Ellison’s ‘Invisible Man’.
Excellent practice for those studying AQA’s Political and Social Protest Writing A level syllabus.
This extract is particularly effective for studying how writers protest against racism.
This top-band descriptive writing exemplar is a perfect model for those studying AQA GCSE English Language.
Based on Question 1B, where students must complete a 40-mark piece of creative writing, this exemplar on a dark forest and a mysterious man is ideal for teaching structure, narrative, language, vocabulary, punctuation, and much more.