Shakespeare, Creative Writing and TEFL resources.
Created by a qualified secondary school teacher who has taught KS3, KS4 and KS5.
Browse my shop to find a variety of affordable resources, full lessons and worksheets related to the study of Language and Literature across the age ranges.
Shakespeare, Creative Writing and TEFL resources.
Created by a qualified secondary school teacher who has taught KS3, KS4 and KS5.
Browse my shop to find a variety of affordable resources, full lessons and worksheets related to the study of Language and Literature across the age ranges.
A powerpoint and worksheets I created for my TEFL students introducing British food.
Outline:
1-7: Discussion questions about food.
E.g ‘What is your favourite snack?’
8-9: Brief overview of British food and pubs.
10-19: Quiz about British foods with ABC multiple choice options.
E.g ‘What do we pour on a Roast?’ A. Gravy B. Groovy C. Greasy
20-24: Guess the foods Game.
Using the worksheet, students tick the foods that they believe are from the UK.
25-27: Bingo Game
Using the Bingo worksheets provided, students choose 9 British foods and write them in the squares (I have also included 18 pre-filled sheets for convenience). On slide 27, ask students to choose a letter and click the letter tab at the side. It will reveal a food and if students wrote it down they cross out the square on their sheet. The first student to complete all their squares wins.
28-33 Crossword and wordsearches (with answers)
Using the worksheet, students look at the example pub menu. The missing words correspond with the crossword answers.
** 34-43** Role play activity and key phrases
Students design their own three course menu (sheet provided) and then take it in turns to practice the role play situations.
** 44-48** Amendable worksheets
*Save 30% by purchasing four lessons together as a bundle instead of individually. Each lesson is fully-resourced and includes printable worksheets. *
Lesson 1)
Introduction to the Gothic genre
Students write the opening to a Gothic novel using the prompts provided.
Lesson 2)
Symbolism in Gothic Literature
Exploring how reoccuring symbols can represent a deeper meaning.*
Lesson 3)
Figurative Language Devices
Students identify a range of language techniques and comment on the intended effect.
Lesson 4)
Analysis of Dracula and Creative Writing
Students explore how Dracula has been presented in the extract. They then create a piece of descriptive writing about their own monster.**
A fully resourced lesson which focuses on the language used to describe Dracula and gothic monsters.
Students read and highlight the extract, making inferences about the character based on the way his appearance and actions are described.
Using the worksheet, they select three key quotations to unpick in detail.
Homework: Students have to write their own description of a gothic monster in the style of Bram Stoker.
This resource is part of a Gothic/ Creative Writing scheme of work. The other lessons in the series can be found here:
(Lesson 1) Introduction to Gothic Horror :
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-11235636
(Lesson 2) Symbolism in Gothic Literature :
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-12408565
(Lesson 3) Figurative Language Devices :
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/resource-12508638
A whole lesson on figurative language techniques- metaphor, simile, adjectives, personification, pathetic fallacy, onomatopoeia and sensory description.
This resource includes a clear and colourful 30 slide Powerpoint, ready to print worksheets, a quiz and a class game.
After a brief introduction, students are encouraged to identify the techniques used in a short extract and comment on the effect.
There is also a worksheet with an examples/definitions matching activity and students write their own examples using the devices studied in the lesson.
Finally there is an interactive class game, where students work in a pair or a team. After looking at an image prompt, students then take it in turns to craft a description using one of the techniques for a certain amount of points.
Suitable for KS3 creative writing lessons or as an introduction to AQA Paper 1 Q5 descriptive writing for KS4.
Students stick the timeline across a double page in their book.
For each scene, students select one key quotation and write it in the box underneath.
*This was a useful resource for my EFL learners and offered additional support for students who were struggling to remember the order of events in the play.
Students write a response to the question:
‘How does Shakespeare present the theme of guilt in this extract, and elsewhere in the play?’
Using the powerpoint, encourage students to consider key quotations from this scene.
Students then highlight on the worksheet where the model paragraph has met AO1, AO2 and AO3 before continuing the response and writing an additional two paragraphs. Finally, students re-read their work and use the self-assessment checklist.
A whole lesson on the poetic form of a sestina.
Students are introduced to the structure before looking at two examples by Elisabeth Bishop and Anthony Hect.
Finally, there is a planning worksheet so that students can write their own sesitna poem with the correct structure.
Set the worksheet as a homework task for my KS4 class.
Students research the author William Golding and record the information on the worksheet.
Also included: a powerpoint with key contextual information for the novel. I hope it helps!
A fully-resourced lesson with a powerpoint and worksheets included. Suitable for AQA Language Paper 2 practice.
**Main focus: Analysing two non-fiction articles on waste and over-indulgence during the festive period. **
Article 1- Plastic found in Christmas jumpers and the impact of ‘fast fashion’ on the environment.
Article 2- How much money Millenials spend on their pets.
Lesson Outline:
Starter task- students write one sentence arguing whether pets should be bought presents (challenge- use a persuasive feature).
Students read the articles and complete the True/False statements based on what they have read.
Compare the articles and explore the attitudes/viewpoints of the writers.
Q5 practice- A teacher was overheard saying:.‘There is far too much waste at Christmas. Young people should stop buying things they don’t need.’ Write a persuasive speech for your school assembly arguing your point of view regarding this statement.
Five rounds of Christmas related activities.
Used with EFL classes at the end of term.
Round 1- Memory Game
Students have 1 minute to look at the picture and remember as many details as possible. 10 questions.
Round 2- Guess the word
Guess the missing word from the lyrics of famous christmas songs.
10 missing words.
Round 3- British Christmas Food
Guess the name of the food from ABCD multiple choice options.
10 foods.
Round 4- Who is it?
Guess the celebrities whose faces have been covered with Santa beards.
10 celebrities.
Round 5- General Knowledge
10 Christmas Trivia Questions.
A clearly explained and fully resourced lesson which explores similies and metaphors. Could be used as a stand alone lesson or as part of a poetry scheme of work.
Learning Question: Can I understand how similes and metaphors are used in poetry and comment on the effect?
Students are not only encouraged to identify the technique correctly, but also to explore the intended effect and what the poet hoped to achieve/emphasise through the comparison.
This resource includes a powerpoint and five worksheets. I used it during lockdown with a year 7 class studying poetry. It would also be suitable for a cover lesson.
Lesson outline:
After looking at some examples and discussing them, students then analyse Walter De la Mare’s poem ‘The Fly’ and explore how the similes/metaphors used to describe everyday objects successfully convey their size.
For homework (or in class) students then write their own poem from this unique perspective and must incorporate their own similes and metaphors.
Finally, I have also included a reflection task so that students can consider the choices they made and what they hoped to exaggerate or emphasise through their own imagery.
A whole lesson and worksheet (suitable for KS3 and KS4) which encourages students to consider how an author can use symbolism in Gothic Fiction.
Students are first given a definition of symbolism and are asked to consider a variety of symbols and what they represent.
Students read a short extract. Using the sentence starters provided, they then make inferences based on the imagery of a ticking clock, a hospital bed, and a woman’s hand compared to ‘pale marble’ to explore how it could symbolise illness or death.
In pairs students complete the worksheet and consider what certain Gothic features could represent. They then come up with two of their own and share with the rest of the class.
Finally, students are given a choice of two images. They must write a piece of descriptive writing based on the image of their choice and must try to include symbolism.
This could also work as a Halloween themed lesson or as part of a Creative Writing scheme of work. I often taught this lesson together with my Gothic Horror writing lesson available here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/gothic-horror-creative-writing-lesson-11235636
How to Cut a Pomegranate by Imtiaz Dharker
A poem which explores identity and childhood.
This is a fully resourced lesson with a language analysis activity worksheet, guided questions and a creative homework task.
Aims: Students will focus on AO2 and language analysis, considering the effect and connotations of particular word choices and imagery.
Activity 1: In pairs students must complete a DART activity worksheet- circling the word they believe is the correct choice.
Then as a class, dicuss their decisions before comparing what the poet actually wrote.
Students analyse the poem and comment on the imagery- answering questions worth 8 stars.
Homework: students write their own nostalgic poem anout a significant object in the style of Imtiaz Dharker.
Created for KS3 students as a final working from home project after they had finished studying ‘The Merchant of Venice’.
Using the worksheets, students craft their own character and create a thorough backstory for their villain.
Finally, after writing a short script for a key scene, students then craft and perform a soliloquy as their character.
I have included PDF files of the worskeets for ease of printing, in addition to word the document format which allows you to edit and adapt to suit your classes. There is also a brief powerpoint which includes some examples.
Focus: How to craft a vivid setting in creative writing
On the worksheet handout students have an example extract from the opening of the novel ‘Perfume’ which uses sensory description. Students must then answer the questions an explore how imagery which focuses on the sense of smell can be used to create a vivid setting.
Students then complete a creative writing task and write about a modern day setting in the style of Patrick Suskind.
Power and Conflict Poetry
Comparison Worksheet (AQA)
Students read the model example paragraph and highlight the Assessment Objectives. They are then encouraged to continue the essay and compare how power is presented in the poems 'My Last Duches’s and ‘Ozymandias’ using the scaffolded support.
Peer Assessment checklist included.
Includes:
A worksheet with significant quotes from ‘Macbeth’.
(My students stuck this in their books and revised it for homework in preparation for the lesson. It also has a colour-code key, so students can highlight the quotations in relation to each of the key themes of the play.)
A powerpoint quiz with 25 questions
students have to fill in the gaps, write who said the quotation or which Act/Scene it is from.
Suitable for KS3 and KS4 revision.
Students select three key quotations for each poem and use the worksheet to compile information for each of the fifteen poems.
The worksheet could also be highlighted/ colour-coded by students, in order to create a visual representation of the related themes of the poems.
The worksheet can be printed on A3- I have also included it as a powerpoint file and word-doc (so that it can be ammended with ease or modelled on the board with a class.)
A visually-engaging resource which encourages year 11 students to revise key aspects of the characters in Lord of the Flies.
Includes:
Fun starter- a class guessing game with 15 example questions
A3 Characters worksheet
Essay question on how Ralph and Piggy are presented in Chapter 1
Model answer
This was successful with my mixed ability class. My EAL students commented that they found the images helpful.
Please leave a review if you found this helpful :) or browse my online store:
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A poster outlining the steps in the writing process that can be printed as part of a classroom display.
I have included ammendable A3/A4 Word Doc posters as well as PDF files for ease of printing.
Please leave a review if you found this helpful :)
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