Here you will find challenging, but engaging resources for all abilities, that will engage your students and support their progress in English.
Please do note hesitate to leave feedback and/or connect with me via Instagram!
Here you will find challenging, but engaging resources for all abilities, that will engage your students and support their progress in English.
Please do note hesitate to leave feedback and/or connect with me via Instagram!
A comprehensive booklet on the civil rights movement, including enslavement, activism and the black lives matter movement.
Take your students through the fraught and intricate journey of the systemic oppression of African people, whilst empowering them to challenge misconceptions about black culture and its contributions to world history.
Contents:
Lesson 1: 20th August 1619-The Day that Changed the World
Lesson 2: The Middle Passage
Lesson 3: Caged Bird by Maya Angelou
Lesson 4: The Declaration of Independence, the American Revolution and the Silence on Slavery
Lesson 5: Frederick Douglass and the Fourth of July
Lesson 6: Philosophy for Children (P4C) Lesson
Lesson 7: The 13th Amendment
Lesson 8: The Civil Rights Movement
Lesson 9: Tulsa, Oklahoma ‘Black Wall Street’ 31st May 1921
Lesson 10: Black Entrepreneurs
Lesson 11: Philosophy for Children (P4C)
Lesson 12: Advocating for Justice
Lesson 13: Nationalism
Lesson 14: Debate: Defund the Police?
Lesson 15: Police Brutality
Lesson 16: Slave Patrols: An Early Form of American Policing
Lesson 17: Black Lives Matter Movement
Lesson 18: Don’t All Lives Matter?
Lesson 19: Put Out the Fire?
Lesson 20: President Barack Obama
Lesson 21: Dismantling Racism
Suitable for KS3 onwards.
This is a general lesson merging current affairs with transactional writing skills.
Students will pick out language and structural techniques in an article, discuss everyday examples of techniques being used in media and write their own ‘good news story’ in the form of an article.
Good for recapping and lifting the creating variety during home/online learning.
Includes a pre written Kahoot quiz at the end for identifying techniques in different sentences. PIN included.
Suitable for both key stages 3 and 4.
Get your students working!
This is an interactive revision booklet containing 35 pages, for those studying: Romeo and Juliet, Jekyll and Hyde, An Inspector Calls and the Power and Conflict poetry cluster with AQA.
Students will be directed through a range of tasks daily, to consolidate knowledge of the texts and also the specifics of the exams, such as assessment objectives and timings.
Lots of quizzes, web links and check boxes to keep the students on task.
Extended writing opportunities and guided essay plans included.
Encourage independent learning over summer with self reflection and SMART plan pages reviewing lockdown learning routines.
Parent box included to assist with monitoring of learning, making it easier to keep track of students’ progress.
Suitable for all abilities in KS4. Colour coded for ease of differentiating tasks/days.
Can be used for summer learning or as a homework booklet during term time.
Certificate of completion included, to be signed by teacher and Principal.
Who was the first black astronaut? Why do we eat peanuts like we do?
How did laser eye surgery come to be?
Educate your students on some of the integral contributions of Black scientists!
Incorporate SMSC, current affairs and memory retrieval all in one lesson!
This lesson was delivered during Black History Month and explores 5 Black scientists who had a pivotal role in our science and medical industries today.
Students will explore their own experiences and criticisms of plagiarism and explore the groundbreaking inventions of:
Percy Julian
Patricia Bath
Betty Harris
Mae Jemison
George Washington Carter
The lesson includes a linked video which students will use to complete a quiz on the learning (answers and quiz sheet included on the PowerPoint.)
Suitable for ages 10+
This resource is designed to equip students with the knowledge of which poems to compare for the exams.
There are two pairs of summarised revision cards that can be used to memorise for the exam.
Students can then complete the blank revision cards for the remainder of the poems.
The exemplars are colour coded and students can use different coloured pens or highlighters, to mark comparative ideas and quotes on the blank sheets.
Suitable for all abilities. Vocabulary key provided also.
Double-sided, colour-coded, quote bank worksheet to use as a revision tool.
Also includes a brief summary of each chapter, to help students revise the plot of the novella, as well as a vocabulary key.
Can be set as homework to revise quotations or as a resource during mock exams or in class practice questions.
Print double sided on A4/A3 paper.
Suitable for all abilities.
This lesson can be used across key stages to teach creative writing.
The lesson explores mini saga stories and challenges students to write, peer assess and redraft their writing.
This lesson would most benefit those who see writing creatively as daunting or difficult under timed or restrictive conditions-i.e. based on an image.
The task uses the approach of language paper 1 whereby a stimulus is given for students to base their writing on.
Includes guided peer assessment, exemplars, student friendly wording of the assessment criteria, as well as a plenary which relays a useful memory technique.
Differentiation: colour coded instructions, help boxes, stretch, challenge and never finished tasks plus teacher’s notes in the comment boxes under each slide.
Lesson duration: 50 minutes
This resource was created to fill gaps in and consolidate knowledge of key themes in the novella.
Starter: plot sort (worksheet and answer sheet attached).
There are two lessons whereby students will recap contextual factors related to the themes mystery and fear.
The second lesson includes directed group tasks where students will collate evidence and inferences on a theme pertaining to each chapter.
A follow up lesson could include a practice exam question with a focus on how Stevenson creates mystery and/or fear in the novella.
Differentiation: stretch tasks, exemplary paragraphs, varied challenges of group work roles.
Lesson time: 100 minutes.
This resource was created to address gaps in text knowledge and to consolidate analysis skills with a focus on leadership.
There are two lessons whereby a top level exemplar paragraph is included as well as a directed group work tasks.
Some students will have done more revision.research than others, therefore this is a good activity to share and fill gaps in knowledge.
A follow up lesson could include a timed exam question with a focus on a character who exhibits leadership/masculinity.
Differentiation: stretch tasks, exemplary paragraphs, varied challenges of group work roles.
Lesson time: 100 minutes
This lesson was used with top set Y11 classes prior to a recent mock examination.
Students will begin by matching poetic terms via a worksheet-a good settling activity.
Formulaic approaches to the exam questions in Section B follow thereafter.
These lessons were used for non-specialist English teachers and were deemed fun and effective for students.
Suitable for all abilities; KS3-lower abilities KS4.
This lesson takes the form of an interactive quiz which develops students’ writing skills.
The first task especially has been received very well by students. and could in fact be adapted to be used for a whole lesson.
This resource was used effectively with a top set Y11 class.
The lesson begins with the students assessing their own knowledge of the poetry cluster by matching quotes to the correct poem-an effective settling activity.
They then answer a series of questions about the poems whilst using their anthologies to annotate. ANSWERS provided on the PowerPoint presentation.
A 5 minute ‘thesis challenge’ is then set and students will select a range of effective quotes that they’ve already analysed, to support their opening thesis statements.
Optional homework/follow up lesson: write a full response to the comparative question: compare the attitudes towards possessive love in Porphyria’s Lover and The Farmer’s Bride.
Differentiation: work in pairs to complete the starter and main task, exemplar thesis statement provided. Timings provided as well as check points for AFL.
Suitability: All abilities; perhaps remove some of the questions for the main task and lesson the amount of quotes to select for the plenary.