With half a million members across both the primary and secondary sectors, Teachit is a thriving community of teachers and home tutors sharing resources and inspiration. What makes us different? All our resources are written and shared by teachers and checked by our teacher-editors so you know they can be trusted to work.
From free PDFs to PowerPoints, worksheets, quizzes, games and CPD webinars and articles from experts, Teachit has something for you at www.teachit.co.uk
With half a million members across both the primary and secondary sectors, Teachit is a thriving community of teachers and home tutors sharing resources and inspiration. What makes us different? All our resources are written and shared by teachers and checked by our teacher-editors so you know they can be trusted to work.
From free PDFs to PowerPoints, worksheets, quizzes, games and CPD webinars and articles from experts, Teachit has something for you at www.teachit.co.uk
A practical toolkit for supporting students with handwriting difficulties at key stage 3 and key stage 4. Dysgraphia toolkit is intended to help young people develop the fine motor skills they may be lacking and offers a full dysgraphia intervention programme targeting specific areas of need.
What’s included?
This 71-page toolkit includes:
information about neurodiversity, the strengths of neurodivergent people and some of the challenges they face
information about dysgraphia and the difficulties in obtaining a dysgraphia diagnosis
a CPD PowerPoint for staff training, parents’ evenings and senior leadership meetings
handwriting assessment tools for you to monitor and record students’ specific difficulties
display resources on writing posture and pen grip
general classroom strategies, including whole-class warm-ups
activity ideas and games for practising visual motor skills and fine motor skills
letter tracing worksheets and cursive writing patterns worksheets
How does it support dysgraphic students?
Dysgraphia toolkit offers time-effective and straightforward ways of diagnosing and supporting dysgraphia in teens. It suggests warm-ups and motor skill activities that are helpful not just for teaching students with dysgraphia but for teaching all young people, and it presents simple ways of supporting dysgraphia in the classroom, without the need for special equipment – although examples of assistive technology are suggested where appropriate.
The intervention programme that it proposes does not need to be followed systematically and can be dipped into by subject teachers and teaching assistants in the mainstream classroom.
The toolkit presents arguments for and against print and joined/cursive writing and recommends that at secondary school students should not be required to adopt one or the other as long as their handwriting is legible and pain-free. It outlines the additional challenges faced by left-handed students and suggests specific support strategies.
Finally, it includes editable handwriting worksheets that can be adapted for any age group and printable handwriting practice sheets for older students.
About the writer
Dysgraphia toolkit was written by Abigail Hawkins, who runs SENDCO Solutions, an SEN consultancy, and SENsible SENCO CIC, a not-for-profit networking support group. She has been a SENDCo for over 25 years and has taught a multitude of subjects across all phases, from two-year-olds to adults. Abigail works with software companies developing supportive software for SEN and safeguarding purposes, has developed and delivers a teaching assistant apprenticeship programme. She has authored several books on SEN and exclusions, and runs a support network for over 10,000 SENDCos.
Abigail has a no-nonsense, practical approach to SEN issues faced by schools, believing that many high-incidence needs can be met in the classroom with basic teaching tweaks.
This GCSE teaching pack consists of 10 PowerPoint files with accompanying photocopiable resources and is designed to improve students’ skills at translating from Spanish to English.
Based on careful analysis of examiner reports and on teacher feedback, the pack focuses on 10 key skills, each linked to a different topic.
The pack includes tasks for Foundation and Higher tiers and exam-style assessments. Weave the activities into your teaching throughout the GCSE course or use as a revision tool in the run-up to the exam.
Mastering GCSE translation – Spanish to English will prepare students for the last question in the Spanish reading exam with AQA, Edexcel or Eduqas.
What’s included?
10 differentiated PowerPoint lessons on GCSE translation skills (into English)
Engaging learning activities across 10 topics
Exam-style assessments for Foundation and Higher, with answers.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 4)
Teaching Notes (pages 5-6)
Lesson 1: Precision (Topic: family and friends) (pages 7-11)
Learning activity: quiz, quiz, trade
Precision assessment and answers
Lesson 2: Time frames (Topic: technology) (pages 12-15)
Learning activity: collaborative translation
Time frames assessment and answers
Lesson 3: Negatives (Topic: free time) (pages 16-20)
Learning activity: verbal dominoes
Negatives assessment and answers
Lesson 4: Articles and adverbs (Topic: customs and festivals) (pages 21-27)
Learning activity: one pen, one dice
Articles and adverbs assessment and answers
Lesson 5: Pronouns and possessive adjectives (Topic: house and town) (pages 28-32)
Learning activity: four in a row game
Pronouns and possessive adjectives assessment and answers
Lesson 6: False friends (Topic: social issues) (pages 33-36)
Learning activity: card sort
False friends assessment and answers
Lesson 7: Connectives (Topic: global issues) (pages 37-41)
Learning activity: running translation
Connectives assessment and answers
Lesson 8: Unknown words (Topic: holidays) (pages 42-46)
Learning activity: card game
Unknown words assessment and answers
Lesson 9: Checking the basics (Topic: school) (pages 47-53)
Learning activity: find it and fix it
Checking the basics assessment and answers
Lesson 10: Common sense (Topic: work and future plans) (pages 54-58)
Learning activity: back to back
Common sense assessments and answers
This six-week teaching pack addresses the 19th century text elements of the English Literature GCSE and provides students with a practical, accessible route-through the text – and plenty of exam practice to boot.
Crammed, as always, with engaging activities and resources – including comprehension, language analysis and creative tasks – plus advice for differentiation and sample exam questions, the pack contains all you need to bring Stevenson’s novel to life.
What’s included?
assessment objective mapping
lesson plans and ideas along with 52 tailor-made resources
exam-style questions for all exam boards.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 3-9)
Route through week 1: Pre-reading and introducing Chapter 1 (pages 10-36)
Reactions to Victorian London
Book cover predictions
Gothic mini saga
Ethical issues
Introducing Mr Utterson
Gothic literature – style and language
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde – research topics
Story of the door
Victorian times
Stretch and challenge
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde – Chapter summary table
Route through week 2: Finishing Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 (pages 37-60)
Nightmares
Design your own villain
Introducing Mr Hyde
Speak to the hand
Questions on chapters one and two
Mr Utterson’s reaction (Chapter 2)
Villain cards
Reputation, reputation, reputation
Practice exam 1
Route through week 3: Chapters 3, 4 and 5 (pages 61-89)
Carew colour coding
An odd relationship
Discussion questions
Analysis of ‘Incident of the letter’ (Chapter 5)
Bingo! (Chapters 1-3)
The detective role?
Silence, secrecy and style – developing themes in the novel
Structuring analytical paragraphs
Evaluating a PEE paragraph
PEE Mobile
Route through week 4: Chapters 6, 7 and 8 (pages 90-104)
Door symbolism
Chapter 7 – focused reading
Dr Lanyon’s change
Questions on chapters 6 and 7
Chapter 8 – true or false
The self and society
Route through week 5: Chapters 9, 10 and summarising (pages 105-123)
Narrative diamond 9
Chapter 9 questions
The duality of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
Chapter 10 match up
Questions that focus on the popularity of the story
Evil
Practice exam 2
Route through week 6: Revision activities (pages 124-129)
The structure of the novel
Who said what?
Exploring structure
The role of Mr Utterson
The significance of place in Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde
RAG rating
World War One inspired the war poets to respond to the horrors and brutalities of war in new ways, writing some of the most vivid, profound and powerful poetry in English Literature. Help your year 7, 8 and 9 students to appreciate their sacrifices with this thoughtful and engaging scheme of learning.
This student-facing pack includes 8 lessons with a range of classroom resources and activities to develop students’ understanding and appreciation of poetic form, structure and style, while building their core reading, writing, comprehension, vocabulary and oracy skills.
What’s included?
Each lesson includes starter activities, followed by 5-6 main activities, and an extension or homework task, with answers for self- or peer marking in class. There are 8 PowerPoint presentations to help you to deliver each lesson, and a summative assessment with an accompanying PowerPoint to review and check students’ progress and learning.
Activities in this scheme of learning include:
scaffolded writing tasks to develop students’ analytical writing skills
comparative tasks looking at two poems and approaches to tackling unseen poems
comprehension questions to check students’ understanding
discussion tasks, reading aloud and performance ideas to build oral skills and reading confidence
word decoding tasks, glossaries and word banks to build students’ vocabulary
formative assessment tasks and low-stakes quizzes.
There are also carefully scaffolded and differentiated poetry analysis tasks to help students understand how to use World War I poetry quotes in their written work.
The pack aims to bring the context of the poems to life, with a range of historic texts including propaganda posters, soldiers’ diaries and letters sent home, as well as facts about the Great War.
There are 13 famous World War I poems to explore, including ‘The Troop Ship’ by Isaac Rosenberg, ‘Futility’ and ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth’ by Wilfred Owen, ‘First Time In’ by Ivor Gurney, John McCrae’s ‘In Flanders Fields’, ‘Owl’ by Edward Thomas and ‘Recruiting’ by E.A Mackintosh, as well as poems by Henry Smalley Sarson. Women’s poetry from World War I is also recognised, including ‘The Gift of India’ by Sarojini Naidu, ‘Who’s for the Game?’ by Jessie Pope, May Wedderburn Cannan’s ‘August 1914’ and Sara Teasdale’s ‘Spring in War-Time’.
Taking a thematic approach to war poetry throughout the lessons, students will consider the start of the war, propaganda, recruitment and the call-up, before exploring life at the front, the horror of war in the trenches and the camaraderie between soldiers who served on the frontlines. There is also a focus on women’s lives on the home front and a lesson on the significant contribution of British Empire soldiers, looking at Caribbean, Indian and black British recruits.
This 78-page teaching pack includes everything you need to explore the context, power and impact of World War I poetry with KS3 English Literature students.
Take a step by step approach to building your students’ confidence in understanding and analysing unseen poems.
‘The way to understand poems, whether unseen or not, is to get under their skin – and that requires active strategies, which this teaching pack and resources provide.’
Trevor Millum, writer and poet
This time-saving teaching pack includes seven pairs of carefully-selected poems for comparison alongside a resource workbook, providing you and your students with all you need to prepare for the unseen poetry element of the GCSE exam.
What’s included?
7 pairs of poems
a resource workbook for students to complete
detailed teaching notes for each poem
a mix of older and contemporary poems
exam-style questions for all exam boards.
What’s inside?
Introduction
Top tips for approaching an unseen poem
Unit 1
‘At the Draper’s’ by Thomas Hardy
‘Remember’ by Christina Rossetti
Comparison resource
Exam questions
Unit 2
‘Late Love’ by Jackie Kay
‘Love and Friendship’ by Emily Brontë
Comparison resource
Exam questions
Unit 3
‘Finding the Keys’ by Robin Robertson
‘October’ by Robert Frost
Comparison resource
Exam questions
Unit 4
‘Calling Card’ by Tracey Herd
‘For Meg’ by Fleur Adcock
Comparison resource
Exam questions
Unit 5
‘A London Thoroughfare. 2am.’ by Amy Lowell
‘Frost Fair’ by Rowyda Amin
Comparison resource
Exam questions
Unit 6
‘Long Life’ by Elaine Feinstein
‘Fish oil, exercise and no wild parties’ by Beatrice Garland
Comparison resource
Exam questions
Designed for the GCSE Spanish specifications for AQA, Edexcel and WJEC Eduqas, this pack will help students to prepare for their speaking exam.
The pack includes activities for the role-play, photo card and general conversation elements of the exam, along with revision materials.
Covering all three themes for GCSE Spanish speaking, the pack also provides differentiated material for Foundation and Higher tiers, teaching notes and answers.
What’s included?
worksheets and vocabulary support
pair work speaking activities and games
help with how to revise for Spanish speaking GCSE
model answers to use and adapt
exam-style tasks.
What’s inside?
Section one: Role-plays (pages 4-34)
Teaching notes
Las redes sociales y la tecnología
La música
El deporte
Donde vivo
En el restaurante
La salud
Las vacaciones
Los estudios y el trabajo
Answers
Section two: Photo cards (pages 35-75)
Teaching notes
Los amigos y la familia
El matrimonio y la vida en pareja
Las redes sociales y la tecnología
Las tradiciones y las celebraciones
Las obras caritativas y el voluntariado
Los problemas medioambientales
La pobreza y los sin techo
El trabajo y elegir profesión
Answers
Section three: General conversation (pages 76-101)
Teaching notes
Asking questions
Key ingredients
Practice questions
Answers
Section four: Revision (pages 102-112)
Teaching notes
Mind-map template
Word sort
Inference grids
Pass the parcel speaking
Answers
Designed for AQA’s Spanish GCSE but also suited to support specifications from Edexcel and Eduqas, this pack will equip students with the language and skills they need to tackle their writing exam.
Success at writing offers targeted and differentiated revision for all attainment levels, from grades 9-1. Students can pick and choose the question type they most need to work on and make real progress in a short space of time.
The pack includes activities for each of the question types in the writing exam for Foundation and Higher tiers and features top tips to help students maximise their marks.
What’s included
activities for each of the question types for Foundation and Higher tiers, including describing a photo, the 40, 90 and 150 word tasks and translation
revision of key language, pair work and peer assessment as well as exam practice
top tips to ensure success.
What’s inside?
Foundation tier
Describing a photo (Foundation question 1) (pages 7-24)
Getting started
Tackling the question
Exam practice
Reflect and review
Answers
40 word task (Foundation question 2) (pages 25-44)
Getting started
Tackling the question
Exam practice
Reflect and review
Answers
Translation sentences (Foundation question 3) (pages 45-61)
Getting started
Tackling the question
Exam practice
Reflect and review
Answers
Foundation and Higher tiers
90 word task (Foundation question 4 and Higher question 1) (pages 62-82)
Getting started
Tackling the question
Exam practice
Reflect and review
Answers
Higher tier
150 word task (Higher question 2) (pages 83-105)
Getting started
Tackling the question
Exam practice
Reflect and review
Answers
Translation passage (Higher question 3) (pages 106-117)
Getting started
Tackling the question
Exam practice
Reflect and review
Answers
Bring this popular and thought-provoking play to life with our comprehensive six-week teaching pack for GCSE.
‘An Inspector Calls is such a popular play at GCSE that I wanted to bring together a mix of teaching approaches and ideas to appeal to a wide range of teaching styles. I had used many of these successfully in my classes, building in activities such as freeze frames and peg puppets, as well as feeding in some of the latest pedagogical trends, like the learning grids. There’s plenty of choice of engaging and active teaching and a close text focus throughout, leaving students with a lasting enjoyment of the play.’
Helen Stacey, writer
Choose from socratic discussions, venn diagrams, game templates, visual learning grids and sequencing activities – tasks to engage even the most reluctant readers!
What’s included?
lesson plans and ideas along with tailor-made resources
practical, student-facing activities.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 1-2)
Route through – week one (pages 2-3)
de Bono’s detective skills
Word wall
Play production template
Pre-teaching (intro)
Quiz on BBC’s Text in Context series
Tension graph
Historical context
Jigsaw pieces
Route through – week two (pages 4-5)
Role on the wall
Analysing stage directions
Pyramid
Tricky situations
Act One: Who said …?
Act One learning grid
Point, evidence, explanation technique
Route through – week three (pages 6-7)
Wordplay in Act Two
Gerald’s affair
Chat show: who is to blame?
Describing character
Write Eva Smith’s diary
Bullseye
Whose bag is it?
Route through – week four (pages 8-9)
Theme definitions
An Inspector called
Speaking and listening: The committee meeting
Socialism and capitalism
Links in a chain
Route through – week five (pages 10-11)
Pictures strip exercise
Bingo!
Socratic discussion
Moral message team game
Politics and persuasion in the final speech
Snakes and ladders
Treasure hunt
Route through – week six (pages 12-13)
Engdoku
Taboo revision game
Tension graph
Word analysis quadrant
Revision game
Mind palace revision
Decorate a chair!
Revision calendar
Engage your students in this classic text and develop their critical reading skills with our teaching pack, A Christmas Carol.
The pack takes your students through the five staves of the text, providing social and historical context, discussion points, structured lesson ideas and supporting resources. Tasks include close-text analysis, comprehension, drama and exam-style questions – perfect for preparing your students for their GCSE.
What’s included?
twenty-five lessons
exam style questions for the relevant exam boards.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 3)
Specification summaries (pages 4-6)
AQA GCSE English Literature
Edexcel GCSE English Literature
WJEC Eduqas GCSE English Literature
Stave One (pages 7-46)
Lesson one – Understanding Dickens and Victorian London
Lesson two – The writer’s craft
Lesson three – Scrooge as an outsider
Lesson four – Contrasting characters and family feuds
Lesson five – Introducing the supernatural
Stave Two (pages 47-69)
Lesson one – Creating atmosphere
Lesson two – Ghostly visions
Lesson three – Memories and regrets
Lesson four – Mirth and merriment
Lesson five – Victorian family ideals
Stave Three (pages 70-95)
Lesson one – A sumptuous celebration
Lesson two – Larger than life
Lesson three – Community: the Christmas spirit
Lesson four – Family affairs
Stave Four (pages 96-123)
Lesson one – Gothic and ghostly
Lesson two – Life in the slums
Lesson three – Reactions to Scrooge’s Death
Lesson four – Intense emotions
Stave Five (pages 117-144)
Lesson one – A second chance
Lesson two – Changing relationships
Lesson three – Themes and characters: revision summaries
Lesson four – Exam skills and final practice
Make sure your students are well prepared for AQA’s GCSE English Language Paper 1: Explorations in creative reading and writing.
‘This student-facing pack is designed to be both accessible and challenging. With top tips, AO breakdowns, detailed activities, exam-style questions and suggested answers, it forms a comprehensive student pack which is ideal for developing skills, pushing students, and providing structured, useful revision. It covers a range of stimulating texts and will help to build students’ confidence when dealing with unseen texts and prepare them for the rigour of the GCSE exam.’
Lyndsey Chand, writer
Our exam skills pack is divided into sections for reading and writing and features four fiction extracts for analysis along with exam questions for each extract.
The pack focuses on key skills and assessment objectives and includes pre-reading activities, matching activities, true/false activities, planning grids, vocabulary tasks, sequencing tasks, creative extension tasks, correction activities and more.
Perfect for revision and preparation for the exam.
Featured texts:
Jamrach’s Menagerie – Carol Birch
‘The Singing Lesson’ – Katherine Mansfield
The Lodger – Marie Belloc Lowndes
The Hampdenshire Wonder – J.D. Beresford
What’s included?
four fiction text extracts
reading and writing sections
exam practice questions.
What’s inside?
Teacher introduction (pages 3-4)
Section A: Reading (pages 5-6)
Practise the exam skills: AO1 (first bullet point) (pages 7-25)
Source 1: Jamrach’s Menagerie by Carol Birch
Practise the exam skills: AO2 (language) (pages 25-53)
Source 2: ‘The Singing Lesson’ by Katherine Mansfield
Practise the exam skills: AO2 (structure) (pages 54-78)
Source 3: The Lodger by Marie Belloc Lowndes
Practise the exam skills: AO4 (pages 79-102)
Source 4: The Hampdenshire Wonder by J.D. Beresford
Section B: Writing (pages 103-104)
Practise the exam skills: AO5 (pages 105-120)
Practise the exam skills: AO6 (pages 121-142)
Recent research shows that one in seven children will begin secondary school as a struggling reader (Martell, 2018). This downloadable teaching pack aims to support upper KS2 children to practise and consolidate their reading skills in preparation for SATs and the transition to KS3.
Based on practical, evidence-based reading comprehension strategies, Raising reading skills will develop children’s reading fluency, building their confidence in - and enjoyment of - reading.
The Raising reading skills teacher handbook - for experienced teachers, non-subject specialists and TAs - will take you through the 12-week programme step-by-step, with detailed lesson plans and practical CPD guidance on how and why these reading comprehension strategies work.
The Raising reading skills workbook provides children with everything they need, including a range of engaging texts, classroom activities and worksheets. Lessons are devised for 1:1, small group and whole group booster sessions or as a complementary resource for English lessons.
(Please note that Raising reading skills is based upon the KS3 English intervention pack, Fix it reading, and contains some of the same content.)
What’s included?
The teacher’s handbook includes 12 detailed lesson plans, starter and plenary ideas, homework tasks and evidence-based teaching notes and CPD guidance.
The accompanying workbook includes carefully selected texts to engage developing readers, as well as worksheets and activities.
Includes fiction and non-fiction texts on a range of engaging themes, with extracts from accessible young adult novels like Home Ground and I, Coriander as well as graphic novels, news articles, websites, and fact sheets.
What’s inside?
Teacher’s Handbook
An introduction to Raising reading skill (page 3)
About the author and how to use the teacher handbook (page 4)
Understanding a child’s reading level (page 5)
What difficulties do struggling readers face at secondary school? (page 6)
The learning experience for developing readers: advice for teachers (page 6)
What does a confident reader look like? (page 7)
Selecting appropriate texts to read (pages 7-8)
Section 1: Practical reading comprehension strategies (pages 9-41)
Section 2: Group reading strategies (pages 42-52)
Teacher observations: Reading confidence and progress (page 53)
Parental tips for supporting reading (page 55)
Student Handbook
Introduction (page 3)
Reading survey (pages 3-5)
Reading strategies (page 6)
Skimming and scanning (pages 7-11)
Predictions and questions (pages 12-16)
Questions and signposts (pages 17-24)
Inference (pages 25-29)
Inference (pages 30-33)
Summarising and note-taking (pages 34-38)
Summarising and note-taking (pages 39-43)
Word detectives (part 1) (pages 44-48)
Word detectives (part 2) (Pages 49-53)
Reciprocal reading (part 1) (pages 54-57)
Reciprocal reading (part 2) (pages 58-63)
Reciprocal reading (part 3) (pages 64-66)
Unseen fiction is a step-by-step introduction to the unseen element of the GCSE English Language exam, developing students’ analytical skills and confidence.
The perfect foundation for KS4 students, this pack addresses AO1, AO2 and AO4 and will help your students develop their skills and confidence in approaching unseen fiction.
With eight detailed lesson plans for each text, the pack includes starter activities, main lesson activities, plenary ideas and extension activities, as well as worksheets and classroom resources.
Featured text extracts:
Kerfol by Edith Wharton
The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells
My Ántonia by Willa Cather
‘The Christmas Present’ by Richmal Crompton
Mort by Terry Pratchett
‘Printer’s Devil Court’ by Susan Hill
‘Down to a Sunless Sea’ by Neil Gaiman
A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
What’s included?
Eight text extracts
Exam-style questions
Exam-style practice papers with suggested ‘answers’ for the final extract for AQA, Edexcel and WJEC Eduqas.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 3)
Specification summaries (pages 4-6)
Top tips (pages 7-8)
Text 1: Kerfol (pages 9-17)
Resource 1 - finding information
Resource 2 - the black greyhound
Text 2: The War of the Worlds (pages 18-28)
Resource 3 - the storm
Text 3: My Ántonia (pages 29-37)
Resource 4 - guess what is being described
Resource 5 - character descriptions
Resource 6 - author’s use of language
Text 4: ‘The Christmas Present’ (pages 38-50)
Resource 7 - structural terminology
Resource 8 - the beginning
Resource 9 - developing the story
Text 5: Mort (pages 51-59)
Resource 10 - venn diagram
Resource 11 - close analysis of Mort
Text 6: ‘Printer’s Devil Court’ (pages 60-68)
Resource 12 - evaluating writing
Resource 13 - exam-style questions
Text 7: ‘Down to a Sunless Sea’ (pages 69-84)
Resource 14 - narrative voice in the story
Resource 15 - imagery
Resource 16 - planning grid
Text 8: A Thousand Splendid Suns (pages 85-107)
Resource 17 - exam style questions
Our comprehensive GCSE teaching pack has been created to support students taking GCSE English Literature for AQA, Edexcel and WJEC Eduqas. Page numbers and extracts relate to the Methuen Drama Modern Classics edition (2001).
‘Blood Brothers is a … favourite with both teachers and students. This pack contains a wide range of activities to encourage exploration of the play’s context, themes, language, structure and characters. Tasks range from starter games to comparisons with Greek tragedy and Romeo and Juliet. It also includes revision grids and practice examination-style questions suitable for detailed and thorough examination preparation.’
Annie Fox, writer
These 23 lessons and wide range of resources are all you need for an in-depth analysis of this tragic story.
What’s included?
23 lessons
49 bespoke resources
Exam-style questions for GCSE English Literature.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 4)
Specification summaries (pages 5-7)
Lesson 1 (pages 8-17)
Pre-reading: how to read a play and identify drama genres
Lesson 2 (pages 18-25)
Pre-reading: using the context and writing an original script
Lesson 3 (pages 26-31)
The role of the narrator
Lesson 4 (pages 32-42)
Characterisation: Mrs Lyons and Mrs Johnstone
Lesson 5 (pages 43-50)
Themes: superstition and motherhood
Lesson 6 (pages 51-55)
Theme: childhood
Lesson 7 (pages 56-58)
Conflict
Lesson 8 (pages 59-61)
Characterisation: Linda and theme: social class
Lesson 9 (pages 62-65)
Theme: friendship and symbolism
Lesson 10 (pages 66-76)
Revision of Act 1: plot, genre, style and structure
Lesson 11 (pages 77-81)
Characterisation: Sammy, Mickey and Edward
Lesson 12 (pages 82-86)
Themes: education and social class
Lesson 13 (pages 87-91)
Theme: love
Lesson 14 (pages 92-97)
Characterisation: Mrs Lyons and theme: mental illness
Lesson 15 (pages 98-107)
Handling of time
Lesson 16 (pages 104-107)
Characterisation: Mr Lyons and theme: unemployment
Lesson 17 (pages 108-109)
Creation of tension
Lesson 18 (pages 110-112)
Subtext and conflict
Lesson 19 (pages 113-114)
Resolution
Lesson 20 (pages 115-119)
Writing about comedy and tragedy
Lesson 21 (pages 120-126)
Writing about characters
Lesson 22 (pages 127-133)
Writing about themes
Lesson 23 (pages 134-142)
Revision
The activities and ideas in this pack will help students develop a close understanding of the text, explore its social, cultural and historical contexts, consider Steinbeck’s ideas and perspectives, and analyse his use of language and structure.
‘There’s a strong focus on the themes, characters and life in 1930s America in this pack, with plenty of support for students developing their own critical interpretation. There are some great contextual images of the Dust Bowl and documentary-style videos too. It’s a short but powerful novel so the approaches are suitable for KS3 students as well as IGCSE, and there’s something for all abilities.’
Helen Stacey, writer
All the practical and creative ideas you need to teach this popular text in one place.
What’s included?
An assessment objective map
Lesson plans and ideas alongside tailor-made resources.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 2-3)
Section 1 (pages 4-20)
Resource - judge a book by its cover
Resource - a comprehensive pack
Resource - Lennie in quotes
Resource - historical context
Resource - wanted poster
Resource - section 1 learning grid
Resource - match the contextual information
Resource - evaluating a PEE paragraph
Section 2 (pages 21-37)
Resource - chapter 2 – introducing more characters
Resource - picture research
Resource - chapter 2 question loop
Resource - role on the wall
Resource - chapters 1 and 2 – picture game
Section 3 (pages 38-58)
Resource - word definitions task
Resource - Steinbeck’s writing style
Resource - foreshadowing
Resource - from Character presentations
Resource - tension graph
Resource - A-Z quiz of George and Lennie’s Dream
Resource - Chapter 3 – Do you know the question? Quiz
Section 4 (pages 59-72)
Resource - bullseye
Resource - Chapter 4 – Getting to know Crooks
Resource - Crooks and Curley’s wife
Resource - critics’ viewpoints
Resource - De Bono’s six thinking hats
Resource - top ten statements
Section 5 (pages 73-100)
Resource - power and authority diamond nine
Resource - the characters’ innermost feelings
Resource - Lennie on trial
Resource - an unusual form
Resource - extract study
Resource - Curley’s wife: Miss Dynamite or lonely victim?
Resource - Curley’s wife: do we sympathise with her?
Section 6 (pages 101-133)
Resource - Chapter 6 – Beat the clock
Resource - storyboard
Resource - characters – key quotations revision guide
Resource - Bloom’s taxonomy discussion questions
Resource - society under scrutiny
Resource - put the PEE structures back together
Resource - themes in the novel – essay planning
Exam style questions (pages 134-135)
Your go-to pack for writing non-fiction at years 3 and 4! Equip your children with the skills to write newspaper reports, non-chronological reports and texts to persuade, explain, instruct and discuss.
What’s included?
44 quality resources, including answer sheets where relevant
PowerPoint presentations to accompany each non-fiction type
Opportunities to introduce, practise and consolidate key grammar elements
Includes starters, main activities, plenaries, assessment opportunities, Extension ideas and home learning tasks
Links to the curriculum.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 3)
Instructional writing (pages 4-27)
Recounts – newspapers (pages 28-58)
Explanatory writing (pages 59-84)
Persuasive writing (pages 85-109)
Non-chronological writing (pages 110-125)
Mastering grammar: verbs and tenses (German) is designed to teach and review the key verb forms and tenses required by the GCSE curriculum at both Foundation tier and Higher tier. It is suitable for use with key stage 3 and key stage 4 students across a wide range of abilities and is not specific to a particular exam board.
The aim of the pack is to make the grammar appear logical and accessible by drawing students’ attention to patterns through fun, communicative activities that are informed by aspects of Gianfranco Conti’s EPI approach, including ‘mind reader’, ‘find someone who’ and ‘pyramid translation’.
What’s included?
The pack consists of nine units, one on each of the following tenses / verb forms:
present tense
perfect tense
imperfect tense
future tense
conditional tense and imperfect subjunctive
modal verbs
word order, including negatives and questions
reflexive verbs
the imperative and man
plus a review unit at the end.
The units are not intended as schemes of work but rather as a bank of ideas from which you can pick one activity or a series of activities at a level appropriate for your class. The examples used cover a variety of topics so that the activities can be integrated into your teaching at any point in the course. The vocabulary has deliberately been kept very simple, enabling students to concentrate on understanding and practising the grammar. There is particular focus on negatives and questions as examiners’ reports indicate that candidates often struggle with these.
Each unit includes:
an explanatory PowerPoint
awareness-raising activities (‘recognising the tense’)
practice activities (ranging from receptive knowledge through structured production to freer practice)
assessment tasks (receptive and productive knowledge)
answers (for activities with ‘right/wrong’ answers).
The PowerPoint teaches the grammar point explicitly, starting with a comparison of the English tense / verb form with the German one. If you have weaker students, you could show them the explanatory PowerPoint after the activities, or not at all. If you have more able students or prefer a more traditional approach, you could show them the PowerPoint explanation before starting the activities.
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 4–9)
Habits and routines: present tense (pages 10–22)
Past actions and events: perfect tense (pages 23–35)
Writing in the past: imperfect tense (pages 36–43)
Future actions, events and situations: present and future tenses (pages 44–59)
Imagined situations: conditional tense and imperfect subjunctive (pages 60–70)
Rules and possibilities: modal verbs (pages 71–79)
Word order: including negatives and questions (pages 80–96)
Reflexive verbs: present and perfect tenses (pages 97–103)
Orders and processes: the imperative and man (pages 104–107)
Verbs and tenses review (pages 108–116)
Understanding algebra at year 7 will help your students develop their understanding of algebraic vocabulary and notation and improve their reasoning skills.
Featuring a range of mix-and-match starters, main activities, and plenaries alongside research and discussion tasks, home learning opportunities and an assessment, this pack is the perfect way to introduce algebra at KS3.
What’s included?
Starters, main activities, plenaries, group and independent learning tasks
Suggestions to support and challenge
End-of-unit assessment
Answers
What’s inside?
Introduction (pages 3-4)
Section one: Short tasks
Teaching notes (pages 5-7)
Activities (pages 8-12)
Using symbols
Writing formulae
Collecting like terms
Brackets
Factors
Answers (pages 11-12)
Section two: Developing concepts
Teaching notes (pages 13-16)
Activities (pages 17-21)
Substitution
Creating formulae
Collecting like terms
Expanding brackets
Factorising
Answers (pages 22-24)
Section three: Developing fluency
Teaching notes (pages 25-30)
Activities (pages 31-41)
Bubble substitutions
Coding
Walls of expressions
Magic squares
Error no error
Class activities
Dominoes challenge
Brackets challenges
Answers (pages 42-52)
Section four: Homework tasks
Teaching notes (pages 53-54)
Activities (pages 56-58)
Algebra key words homework
Substitution homework
Formulae research homework
Using formulae homework
Factors homework
Answers (pages 59-60)
Section five: Assessment
Assessment (pages 61-62)
Mark scheme (page 63)
The aims of this pack are to utilise year 7 students’ knowledge from primary school to build solid foundations for their understanding of algebra throughout KS3 and 4.
Revise unseen fiction is an exam-focused, student-friendly workbook filled with activities designed to consolidate your students’ skills and prepare them for their GCSE English Language exam.
Practice exam questions for AQA, Edexcel and WJEC Eduqas are included.
Featured text extracts:
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
Do Not Say We Have Nothing by Madeleine Thien
‘The Adventure of the Speckled Band’ by Arthur Conan Doyle
Tess of the d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng
Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
What’s included?
Eight text extracts
Teacher notes and answers
Exam-style practice papers for every extract for AQA, Edexcel and WJEC Eduqas
Exam-style practice paper with exemplar responses and suggested answers.
What’s inside?
Introduction (page 4)
Do Not Say We Have Nothing (pages 5-28)
Extract of Do Not Say We Have Nothing by Madeleine Thien
Do Not Say We Have Nothing Student workbook
Do Not Say We Have Nothing Teacher Notes and suggested answers
Do Not Say We Have Nothing Exam style questions
Tess of the d’Urbervilles (pages 29-58)
Extract of Tess of the d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
Tess of the d’Urbervilles Student workbook
Tess of the d’Urbervilles Teacher Notes and suggested answers
Tess of the d’Urbervilles Exam style questions
All the Light We Cannot See (pages 59-95)
Extract of All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
All The Light We Cannot See Student workbook
All The Light We Cannot See Teacher Notes and suggested answers
All The Light We Cannot See Exam style questions
Rebecca (pages 96-133)
Extract of Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
Rebecca Student workbook
Rebecca Teacher Notes and suggested answers
Rebecca Exam style questions
‘The Adventure of the Speckled Band’ (pages 134-160)
Extract of ‘The Adventure of the Speckled Band’ by Arthur Conan Doyle
‘The Adventure of the Speckled Band’ Student workbook
‘The Adventure of the Speckled Band’ Teacher Notes and suggested answers
‘The Adventure of the Speckled Band’ Exam style questions
The Book Thief (pages 161-196)
Extract of The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
The Book Thief Student workbook
The Book Thief Teacher Notes and suggested answers
The Book Thief Exam style questions
Everything I Never Told You (pages 197-224)
Extract of Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng
Everything I Never Told You Student workbook
Everything I Never Told You Teacher Notes and suggested answers
Everything I Never Told You Exam style questions
The Handmaid’s Tale (pages 225-268)
Extract of The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood
The Handmaid’s Tale Student workbook
The Handmaid’s Tale Teacher Notes and suggested answers
The Handmaid’s Tale Exam style questions
Top tips (pages 269-270)
Writing for different genres is a downloadable key stage 2 English pack featuring seven original comic strips as prompts to engage and inspire reluctant writers.
The pack includes lesson plans, scaffolded writing templates and worksheets to support children in writing for different text types: a fictional diary, a formal letter, a playscript, a fictional recount, a list, a poem and their own comic strip. It also includes additional teaching ideas to develop children’s own writing skills, including an activity to develop their understanding of metaphor and simile.
The pack comes with a PowerPoint which features a starter activity for each session and useful checklists of the language features and structure of each writing genre.
What’s included?
Includes lesson plans and scaffolded writing templates for each writing genre
Features seven original comic strips as writing prompts
Includes a PowerPoint with starter activities and checklists for the language features and structures of each text type
The sessions can be taught in any order and adapted for different year groups. Perfect for your key stage 2 English lessons to develop children’s skills in writing for a range of purposes.
What’s inside?
‘A Week’s Excuses’ – writing a diary (pages 4-11)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
Diary writing template
Sentence starters
Using direct speech
‘Something Odd Out There’ – writing a formal letter (pages 12-19)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
Letter template with prompts
Letter template without prompts
Blank-bubbled version of ‘Something Odd Out There’
‘Alien Arrival’ – writing a playscript (pages 20-14)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
Playscript template
Blank-bubbled version of ‘Alien Arrival’
‘Jennifer Jones’ – writing a recount (pages 25-28)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
Match report planning template
‘Jennifer Jones’ – all of a muddle
‘Sad I Ams’ – writing a bulleted list (pages 29-32)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
‘Happy I Ams’ – metaphors
‘Happy I Ams’ – list template
‘StereoHead’ – writing poetry (pages 33-36)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
A sense poem planning template
A sense poem writing template
‘The Dark Avenger’ – writing a comic strip (pages 37-42)
Teaching notes
Comic strip
Blank comic strip template and checklist
Blank-bubbled version of ‘The Dark Avenger’