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 20-slide lesson explores Chapter 5 of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
In this comprehensive lesson, students consider how the farm juggles punishing dissenting characters like Mollie as plans develop for the windmill. The most significant event explored here, of course, is Napoleon’s attack on Snowball, revealing his behind-the-scenes quest for leadership and paving the way for his totalitarian dictatorship.
The allegorical function of the novella is also closely studied, as pupils learn about Stalin’s expulsion of Trotsky from the Soviet Union.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. An extract-based question is also included here. An exemplar introduction is featured in the PowerPoint.
The lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 36-slide lesson explores Liz Lochhead’s ‘Poem for my Sister’.
The lesson deconstructs the poem’s central extended metaphor with detailed analysis of shoe metaphors and idiomatic expressions, before delving into in-depth analysis of Lochhead’s language, structure, rhyme and form.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students throughout. The lesson ends with a creative writing task which could be set in class or as a homework activity.
This lesson is ideal for KS3, but could work as a practice poem for KS4 too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 21-slide lesson explores John Keats’ poem, ‘La Belle Dame sans Merci’.
Students begin by exploring popular depictions of Medieval culture, particularly gender dynamics and attitudes towards heroism in storytelling. Stereotypes surrounding knights and damsels are discussed, and we unpick the concept of ‘chivalry’ from both a Medieval and modern context.
We talk about the life of John Keats before reading the poem. The ballad’s language, imagery, rhythm, and structure are discussed. Students are taught ambitious vocabulary to describe each of the characters, and we think about how Keats is subverting stereotypes regarding Medieval attitudes to gender within the poem. The notion of the ‘femme fatale’ is explored, and students are encouraged to conduct close linguistic analysis through a table of key quotations from the poem.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students throughout. The lesson ends with a creative task (which could be set as homework or covered in a following lesson).
A copy of the poem is included in this resource.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 students, but could easily be used for GCSE students exploring poetry too.
PowerPoint and Word Doc saved as PDFs.
This 31-slide lesson explores the context behind Tennessee Williams’ classic play, ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’.
Designed to introduce students to key ideas essential to understanding the play’s historical and literary background, this lesson features discussions around key vocabulary, themes and techniques relevant to Williams’ theatrical vision.
Students think critically about stagecraft and theatrical technique before learning about expressionism and the Deep South of the early 20th century (including an exploration of what is meant by a ‘Southern Belle’).
There are further discussions of tragedy, the American Dream, post-war masculinity, homophobia, and psychiatry of the 1940s.
The play’s key themes are outlined before students are given some examples of sophisticated vocabulary to enable precise analysis of the play.
Questions, images and discussion points are included throughout the lesson. A research task is included at the end.
This lesson is saved both as a PDF (to retain original design) and editable PowerPoint.
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 resource - for teachers/students of AQA GCSE English Language - is a series of questions based upon an extract from Franz Kafka’s iconic story ‘The Metamorphosis’, in which Gregor Samsa wakes up to discover himself transformed into a giant insect.
Questions are based on Paper 1 of the AQA GCSE Language exam.
The questions are included on the PowerPoint, along with tips for how to answer each question.
This is an ideal mock or structured support resource for GCSE students.
This 25-slide lesson is a thorough and comprehensive study of Carol Ann Duffy’s poem, ‘Before You Were Mine’, included in AQA’s GCSE English Literature ‘Love and Relationships’ poetry anthology.
The lesson unpicks key themes of parent-child relationships, admiration, guilt, memory, and sacrifice. A brief introductory biography of Carol Ann Duffy is also provided.
Also included are small questions and tasks for students and a ‘mock’ essay question in which students must compare ‘Before You Were Mine’ to another poem, just like in the real AQA exam.
PowerPoint is saved as PDF.
This 23-slide lesson explores W.H. Auden’s ‘Funeral Blues’.
The lesson begins with questions for students about the poem’s title and information about the poem’s history (including how it’s now so famous from ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’).
Students then read the poem (a glossary of key terms is provided) and discuss their first impressions. The poem is summarised and explained generally before the lesson moves into detailed questions about the poem: its speaker, its tone, its language, its imagery, its ending, and its message. Notes are given about the poem’s key tensions, as well as form, structure and rhyme.
Key themes are listed, and there is a list of sophisticated vocabulary to allow students to conduct precise and high-level analysis. There is an image-based task for students to match pictures to the poem.
There are questions provided throughout, including comprehension and though-provoking questions at the end. An example of an essay question (particularly relevant to the Cambridge IGCSE) is also included.
PowerPoint is attached as a PDF and in its original format. The PDF is recommended if you wish to retain the fonts, layout, and design.
An A4 landscape poster all about similes - perfect for your classroom or corridor display.
Useful for helping students remember key linguistic vocabulary.
A lesson designed to revise the character of Eva Smith in J.B. Priestley’s ‘An Inspector Calls’.
Lesson includes a thorough study of what life would have been like for someone of Eva Smith’s class in the Edwardian era. At the end of the lesson is an essay prompt for analysing ‘class’ within the play.
Perfect for those studying AQA English Literature GCSE, especially high-attaining students.
Lesson is PowerPoint pdf.
Here are 22 mock essay questions on Shakespeare’s ‘Twelfth Night’ for students to practise their exam technique and sharpen their analysis of the text.
These questions are particularly aimed at those studying the play within the comedic genre with AQA at A level, but they are easily applicable to any course offering detailed analysis of the play.
Let your students track how each of the Seven Commandments is broken with this great worksheet.
Understanding when and why (and by whom) each Commandment is broken is paramount to Orwell’s vision of corruption and manipulation on the farm.
Hugely useful for helping students to really know the plot and structure of the novella.
This 15-slide lesson explores Chapter 4 of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
In this comprehensive lesson, students consider how Orwell presents the Battle of the Cowshed and its significance in the animals’ quest for independence. Alongside this, we explore how Snowball and Napoleon exhibit very different styles of leadership. The allegorical function of the novella is also closely studied, as pupils learn about who/what Mr Pilkington and Mr Frederick represent.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
The lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 15-slide lesson explores Chapter 7 of George Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
In this comprehensive lesson, students consider how Napoleon begins to consolidate his totalitarian rule through establishing a reign of terror. As animals begin to show signs of dissent and mild revolt, the pigs’ increasing use of violence shatters any illusion of a utopian society. As ever, Squealer’s propagandistic rhetoric is analysed.
The allegorical function of the novella is also closely studied, as pupils learn about the Great Purge and the Peasants’ Revolt in the Soviet Union.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students.
The lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 14-slide lesson offers students an introduction to the ballad form of poetry.
Students explore the history behind the ballad form, focusing on its sensationalist subject matter and significant use of rhyme and rhythm. We discuss how appreciating the oral nature of performed ballads is vital to understanding the rhythm and sound of the poems, and we think about which subjects commonly recur in popular ballads. A starter activity encourages students to consider rhyme and the aural nature of words.
Students learn how the ballad form developed into the ‘Lyrical Ballads’ of Wordsworth and Coleridge, popularising the form that we now recognise as poetic ballads. The rise of modern ‘power ballads’ in pop music is also noted.
An example of a ballad (by Wordsworth) is given for students to deconstruct its rhythm and rhyme scheme. Students then have a go at writing their own ballad. Another example - this time an original ballad (by yours truly) - is provided to help students with their own ballads.
Questions and discussion points are included for students.
This lesson is ideal for those studying the ballad form or poetry in general in KS3.
PowerPoint is saved as PDF.
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.
This 27-slide lesson explores Ted Hughes’ poem, ‘Hawk Roosting’.
The lesson begins with a comprehensive introduction to hawks, noting their mythological associations, biological behaviour, and linguistic connotations.
Students then learn about Ted Hughes’ unsentimental depiction of nature in his poetry. The poem is explored in detail, considering how Hughes characterises the titular hawk through his language, imagery, and first-person narrative. The violent and natural imagery of the poem is unpicked.
To consolidate students’ knowledge, there is an analytical writing task and a creative writing task. A high-quality model paragraph is included to help students with the analytical/essay writing task, and there is an opportunity for self-assessment.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 or GCSE students.
PowerPoint saved as a PDF.
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 20-slide lesson introduces the key context of George Orwell’s ‘Nineteen Eighty-Four’.
Students learn about Orwell’s works and social commentary before delving into the dystopian genre and its key features. Totalitarianism and the political turmoil of the Cold War are then discussed, inviting students to think critically about society, individuality, surveillance, and propaganda as a tool for oppressive regimes to maintain control. The novel’s key themes are introduced, and students are tasked with looking up and defining sophisticated vocabulary associated with the novel.
At the end of the lesson is a potential class or homework task in which students research historical examples of totalitarianism.
This is an ideal introduction to ‘1984’, and could easily cover more than one lesson if teachers would like to expand upon any ideas or tasks.
The PowerPoint is saved as a pdf to maintain its layout.