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 17-slide lesson explores Seamus Heaney’s famous poem, ‘Mid-Term Break’.
The lesson begins by deconstructing the poem’s title, before thinking sensitively about funereal procedure and atmosphere. Heaney’s life and work is introduced to prepare students for the autobiographical nature of the poem. Key vocabulary is presented for students to produce precise and sophisticated analysis of the poem.
The poem’s key themes, imagery, and symbols are deconstructed, and students are encouraged to think critically about the poem’s language, form, structure, and rhyme. The tone of the poem is considered, and multiple readings of the poem are introduced.
Discussion points and questions are included throughout. A visual task invites students to identify key images associated with the poem, which works nicely as an individual or group activity. An exam-style question is included at the end of the lesson.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 30-slide lesson explores Linda Pastan’s poem, ‘To a Daughter Leaving Home’.
Ideal for Key Stage 3 or GCSE pupils, this lesson deconstructs Pastan’s poem of parental anxiety and letting go, paying close attention to language, imagery, form, structure, and rhyme. Students are encouraged to think about the poem’s metaphorical and allegorical significance, and questions, tasks, and discussion points are included throughout the lesson. Biographical information about Pastan and her poetry is included.
A short analytical task is included, and the lesson ends with a creative writing (poetry) activity (which could be used as a homework task).
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 21-slide lesson explores Maya Angelou’s classic poem, ‘Caged Bird’.
The lesson introduces students to the key themes, ideas, and context behind the poem. Angelou’s life and work is discussed and the poem’s use of extended metaphor is deconstructed. Close analysis is conducted of language, form, structure, and rhyme, and students are encouraged to reflect on multiple readings of the poem. Key vocabulary is introduced to help students produce precise and sophisticated analysis when discussing racism, misogyny, and other forms of prejudice and marginalisation.
Discussion points and questions are included throughout. An essay-style question is featured at the end of the lesson.
This lesson is ideal for students approaching the poem either as part of a learned anthology or to develop their abilities analysing ‘unseen’ or isolated poetry. Owing to the universal nature of the poem, the lesson is suitable for a wide range of secondary-aged students, particularly those aged between 13-16.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 36-slide lesson explores Sujata Bhatt’s poem ‘Search for my Tongue’.
The lesson provides detailed analysis of the poem and includes: biographical information about Bhatt, analysis of the poem’s use of language and poetic techniques, analysis of the poem’s structure, form & rhyme, as well as a range of questions, discussion points, and tasks for students to complete. Students are encouraged to think about the significance of language and its relationship to cultural assimilation and identity.
The final task at the end of the lesson is an extended writing activity.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 pupils, but could be used for GCSE too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 20-slide lesson introduces the key themes and context behind Chinua Achebe’s ‘Things Fall Apart’.
Students are encouraged to think about colonialism and cultural erasure, learning about Nigeria’s history since the 19th Century. Achebe’s life and work is discussed, and students are given an introduction to the Igbo (or ‘Ibo’) people.
Key vocabulary and themes linked to the novel are explained, including the novel’s allegorical status.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are featured for students.
Students are encouraged in this lesson to reflect upon the impacts of Western Colonialism - a practice seemingly more important now than ever in the wake of recent international conversations surrounding race and privilege.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 33-slide lesson explores Sylvia Plath’s poem ‘You’re’.
The lesson provides detailed analysis of the poem and includes: biographical information about Plath, analysis of the poem’s use of language and poetic techniques, analysis of the poem’s structure, form & rhyme, as well as questions, discussion points, and tasks for students to complete.
The final task at the end of the lesson is a piece of creative writing in which students write their own poem.
This lesson is ideal for KS3 pupils, but could be used for GCSE too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
These five animals made from geometric shapes are a fantastic way of teaching EYFS, KS1 or lower KS2 about geometric shapes in the world.
Ask your pupils to create animals from the sheets themselves using only geometric shapes. Differentiation is naturally worked into the lesson as some animals are easier than others to construct.
Pupils always love this lesson! It’s a great way of making mathematics enjoyable and engaging.
Alternatively, these posters can be used in your classroom or corridor displays.
This 27-slide lesson explores Carol Ann Duffy’s poem ‘F for Fox’.
The poem is perfect for KS3 students learning about poetic craft and technique, and is especially useful for teaching alliteration and animal/nature poetry. The lesson unpicks the narrative and key ideas behind Duffy’s poem, peppered with questions and discussion points for students.
The poem is included in the PowerPoint. Brief biographical information is given about Duffy, and a glossary is provided to aid students with the poem’s vocabulary. The lesson ends with a creative writing task in which students write their own poem.
This lesson could easily work with upper KS2 or even GCSE students, too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
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.
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 32-slide lesson explores Vernon Scannell’s poem ‘Nettles’.
The lesson provides detailed study of the poem and includes: biographical information on Scannell, analysis of the poem’s use of language and linguistic/poetic techniques (including extended metaphor), analysis of the poem’s structure, form & rhyme, as well as questions, discussion points, and tasks for students to complete.
The final task at the end of the lesson is a piece of creative writing in which students write their own poem.
This lesson could be used for KS3 or GCSE pupils.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 22-slide lesson analyses Stevenson’s use of the Gothic genre in ‘The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’.
The lesson prompts students to consider Stevenson’s deliberate use of setting, mood and atmosphere to exploit Gothic tropes. Key featues of the genre such as suspense, violence, doubling, and damsels in distress are deconstructed. Extracts from the novella are included for close analysis.
The lesson features discussion points and questions for students, and ends with an extended task (which could be set as a homework activity).
This lesson serves as an ideal supplement to those studying the text at GCSE (especially with AQA), but could be used for KS3 too.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 22-slide lesson explores Simon Armitage’s poem, ‘I Am Very Bothered’.
The lesson encourages students to analyse Armitage’s poem as a subversion of typical love poetry, thinking about its ironic use of the sonnet form and the speaker’s distorted sense of romantic imagery.
The poem’s language, structure, and form is considered. Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. An extended essay question (including an exemplar introduction and analytical paragraph) is featured at the end of the lesson.
A copy of the poem is also included.
This lesson is ideal for Key Stage 3 or GCSE analysis.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 24-slide lesson explores Boey Kim Cheng’s poem, ‘The Planners’.
The lesson introduces the life and work of Boey Kim Cheng before interrogating the philosophical relationship between construction and destruction. We consider the purpose of history and discuss the concept of cultural amnesia. Students are taught about the growth of Singapore since its independence from the British Empire.
Students then read the poem and delve into its language and imagery. Analysis of extended metaphor leads to exploration of form, structure, and rhyme. We think about the tone and key themes of the poem, and Boey Kim Cheng’s message in view of ever-expanding urban environments and global industrialisation. Students are given ambitious vocabulary to help them to produce sophisticated and precise analysis of the poem.
Questions and discussion points are included throughout for students. An exam-style question is also featured at the end of the lesson.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This is a thorough and comprehensive introduction to Harper Lee’s ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, outlining the key context necessary to understanding the novel.
This 25-slide lesson details the novel’s key historical context, exploring the Deep South of the 1930s and the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, as well as Lee’s own life and the novel’s key themes and legacy.
Questions, tasks and discussion points are featured throughout. An extended (potential homework) task is included at the end of the lesson.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 24-slide lesson is the perfect analytical summary of Boxer’s character function in Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
Students are encouraged to consider Boxer’s purpose within the novella and how he links contextually to the allegory of corrupted Communism. Emphasis is placed on his stupendous strength, tragic naivety, and exploitation.
There are discussion points and questions posed for students to answer either individually or collaboratively. At the end of the PowerPoint is an extended essay question for students to answer (either in class or as a homework activity).
This lesson (which could easily be split into multiple lessons) is ideal for GCSE students but could also be used to challenge high-attaining KS3 pupils.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
Explore how Dickens uses Fezziwig in ‘A Christmas Carol’ to convey his message of charity, togetherness and humanity in the 19th century.
This PowerPoint considers Dickens’ characterisation of Scrooge’s former employer, how he functions as the symbolic antithesis of Scrooge, and why the Spirit takes Scrooge back to the convivial Christmas party of his youth.
Includes extract from the novella in which Fezziwig is introduced for students to highlight and annotate.
This 20-slide lesson uses Ernest Hemingway’s classic short story, ‘Cat in the Rain’, to teach students about the ‘Iceberg Theory’ and analytical inference.
Using Hemingway’s story as the model, students are encouraged to think about how the story functions on a symbolic level in spite of its apparent simplicity and minimalism. Marking the difference between comprehension/fact and inference, students use the story to think about ‘reading between the lines’ in this text and in so many others. Using the cat as a symbol, Hemingway’s story is deliciously ambiguous, and students are prompted to think not only about how writers hide details beneath the surface (like an iceberg), but also how they too can create powerful meanings and effects in their own creative writing.
This lesson works well for KS3 and GCSE students.
Questions, discussion points, and tasks are included for students. A copy of Hemingway’s story is also included in this resource.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 23-slide lesson is the perfect analytical summary of Old Major’s character function in Orwell’s ‘Animal Farm’.
Students are encouraged to consider Old Major’s purpose within the novella and how he links contextually to the allegory of corrupted Communism. Emphasis is placed on his rhetorical skill, foreshadowing, and structural significance.
There are many questions posed for students to answer either individually or collaboratively. At the end of the lesson is an extended essay question for students to answer (either in class or as a homework activity).
This lesson (which could easily be split into multiple lessons) is ideal for high-attaining GCSE students but could also be used to challenge KS3 pupils.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.
This 22-slide lesson explores Sujata Bhatt’s poem, ‘Muliebrity’.
The lesson begins by considering western cultural conditioning regarding images of dung and excrement, before delving into Hindu beliefs regarding cows and how this should affect our reading of the poem. Sujata Bhatt’s life and work is introduced, and statements from Bhatt relating to her own childhood are explored in light of the poem.
Close attention is paid to the poem’s language, particularly the use of extended metaphor and olfactory imagery. The poem’s form, structure, and rhyme are explored, and key vocabulary is presented to allow students to write about the poem with precision and sophistication.
The poem’s key themes are discussed, and its tone and message are debated in light of multiple readings. Questions and discussion points are featured throughout the lesson. At the end of the lesson is an exam-style question.
PowerPoint saved as PDF.