Outstanding teaching and learning resources from a Lead Teacher in English specialising in:
* Transactional Writing, * Creative Prose,
* Using creative modalities for Reading,
* Most Able,
* Well Being through English,
* Whole School Advocacy Days for Poetry, Reading, Writing, Literacy and WEllbeing
* Numeracy in English
Outstanding teaching and learning resources from a Lead Teacher in English specialising in:
* Transactional Writing, * Creative Prose,
* Using creative modalities for Reading,
* Most Able,
* Well Being through English,
* Whole School Advocacy Days for Poetry, Reading, Writing, Literacy and WEllbeing
* Numeracy in English
The resource preview is presented as a series of samples of permutations of how this self-reflective tool can be used. Full resource on purchase has the mastersheet within it.
The ‘Head, Heart …’ tool has been uniquely developed by me as part of my educational practice over the last ten years as a creative consultant and outstanding classroom educator and training deliverer.
A generic tool to use during or after any learning sequence for junior students right through the secondary years and any CPD that you deliver or mentoring that you do.
It aims to help you and your students understand what they are learning, how they are feeling about their learning, what they would like to change about the learning and what they think will help them in their next or future learning experiences.
Based on the whole learner experience, not just who they are in their heads today, the tool helps the teacher get a deeper understanding of who their learners are, how they are responding to learning and the teaching and how they are shaping their learning futures.
Enables teachers or trainers to open discussions on emotional well-being, cognition and learning to learn as well as build resilience and manage expectations.
Simple for students to engage with and quick to administer either as mini-plenaries or as end of lesson or end of learning sequence plenaries.
Potential for building vocabulary to name and separate thinking from feelings and emotions and learn to assert and voice their experience to build increasingly positive experiences in the future.
Ways to use the ‘Head, Heart …’ Self-Reflective Tool:
• As a basis for ‘voxpops’
• Self-reflective tool
• Quick tests of the ‘temperature’ of your teaching for your self-refection
• Student voice
• Building future learning/career aspirations
• Advocacy for the skills used in English and English Literature
• Plenaries and mini plenaries
• Imagining the experiences of others (empathy work and understanding characters
Who and what the tool is suited to:
• Suits teachers and learners at KS2, KS3, KS4 and KS5
• Suits evaluation of CPD delivery
• Suits anyone in a mentoring role
Once they’ve done the first draft, it’s the (dreaded?) editing to second draft stage. Take the pain away with this resource. Stop your learners from reducing the skill of editing to mere proof-reading by using this writing editing prompt sheet. It works as a learning mat in its entirity or you can cut and paste sections to focus on one editing detail e.g The Cut or The Add. Wide range of prompts given in each section so plenty of choice for low threshold, high ceiling differentiation.
Suitable for the older primary literacy classroom or for use at KS3 or KS4 in English.
A full lesson on PPT for use in KS2 Years 5 or 6 and KS3. Helps students focus on how writers use sounds to entertain the reader. Enhances knowledge of sound techniques in writing. Some numeracy activities for cross curricular links included.
Great for inclusion in a unit on poetry or as part of whole school literacy during tutor time or as a discrete literacy lesson. Includes focus on alliteration, onomatopoeia, rhythm, rhyme, sound patterning and plosive sounds.
Developed in creative writing workshops from my professional creative writing life and transferred to outstanding classroom practice, this learning sequence helps students deal with the tricky middle parts of descriptive writing when things can get a bit flat and students run out of steam. The learning sequence broadens descriptive writing skills beyond the use of ‘regular’ linguistic and structural devices to lift their achievement through the GCSE grades. Plenty of quick delivery and small practice to build a piece of descriptive writing of exam length. All techniques are easily memorable and fully transferable across any piece of descriptive writing. Learning mat embedded into the powerpoint. Hugely methodical in delivery. Students will have a developed piece of writing with opportunities to consolidate learning through a practice task that can be done in class or at home for independent consolidation. Really suits the AQA English Language paper but also sufficiently generic for improving all descriptive writing.
Available as a bundle alongside writing great descriptive openings and endings.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/descriptive-writing-move-to-higher-grades-creative-writing-11848472
A no-frills ppt that can be used with students just before the transactional writing examination or as a straight forward revision tool for them, especially those you suspect might do very little wlthout you! Covers quick ideas on how to plan, how to introduce the forms, developed and detailed paragraphs, conclusions.
Three homeworks or classroom activities that help lower grading students 1-4 revise or establish straightforward ways to regard Carla Carter in the beginning, middle and end of the story. Contains key quotes and key informed personal responses. Also a sheet on Dunmore’s writing style. Low price reflects the ‘no frills’ worksheets which are clearly presented by have no graphics to anchor learning.
Get them to write the stories you will need them to create for GCSE right now! This PPT sequence of learning has everything you need for a 4 week unit (it would dovetail beautifully to reading short stories alongside or a class novel).
Lay the foundations of creative prose for the remainder of the secondary years. Designed following extensive visits to KS2 classrooms to absorb the rigour and with the aim of avoiding the wasteland years of Years 7 and 8.
Unit has had a full run through by my department and has differentiation for lower ability and challenge built in to the tasks for higher ability.
Covers:
Plotting
Character
Setting
Dialogue
Action-Description-Emotion triangle
Narrative order and Story Order
Builds to a 300-500 creative prose assessment. Includes the Improving Creative Writing Grid for writing and a Learning Mat for self-editing which can be used throughout all years and are really classroom tools that are essential beyond this unit.
Neatly avoiding the ubiquitous ‘autobiography unit’ - believe me, they have already been there and done that at KS2, this PPT sequence of learning has everything you need for the first 3-4 weeks of Year 7, helping them aim for a Grade 3+ story and lay the foundations of creative prose for the remainder of the secondary years. Designed following extensive visits to KS2 classrooms to absorb the rigour and with the aim of avoiding the ‘national dip’ in Year 7. Unit has had a full run through by my department and is pitched at Grade 3 but with support for lower ability and challenge built in to the tasks for higher ability. Covers: Plotting, Character and Setting, Dialogue, Action, Description, Emotion writing, Narrative order and Story Order.
Builds to a 300-500 creative prose assessment. Includes the Improving Creative Writing Grid for writing and a Learning Mat for self-editing.
Suited to KS2 Years 5 and 6 or early Year 7 as transition work, this unit of work takes students through the heritage of children’s books and leads up to leaflet/webpage writing. Skills included: evaluation, numeracy, plan, edit, draft, publish skills. Dips into Aesop, The Bible, Shakespeare, Gulliver’s Travels and more modern children’s fiction characters to show the timeline of literature read by children. Great for post SATs pre-transition for light-hearted fun linked to NC.
Ease the pain of comparing poetry. Developed using my skills as a professional poet and Lead Teacher in English with an emphasis on calming the nerves of students in Component 2 Section B AQA Literature exam. An A3 sheet that includes a framework built around a mnemonic comprehensively covering reading poetry skills. Differentiated so that the first parts of the mnemonic support lower grades to comment or allow higher grades to give a rapid overview. Moves through to the skills that help Grade 5 achieve - by exploring language closely - and ends by helping extend the achievement of grade 5+ by exploring poetry as a form that is highly structured, employs aural sensibility and enables exploration of how ideas develop over the course of the poem. Rich in terminology to help focus on AO2 in poetry. Methodical to use in class for practice and easy to remember in the examination as a framework.
An ‘everything you need to know’ 14 page A4 booklet very suited to all exam boards on writing informal letters that includes:
• A good modelled example
• An outstanding modelled example
• Guidance on how to plan
• Guidance on how to structure detailed, developed paragraphs
• Guidance for content suitable to form
• Sophisticated ‘tricks and flicks’
• Five practice tasks
A part response for improvement by students following three clear suggestions of ways to improve essay style. Suits middle grades 3-6 in particular. Questions asks about the way characters communicate and there is a response that goes some way to tackling Steve’s communication style and self-expression. Students work into the essay to improve it following instructions. Chance to complete the essay and revise given content.
A lesson aimed at getting borderline students up to Grade 5 from the get go of the novella by exploring how the Preface to the novella primes the reader for writer’s purpose and gives the modern reader an opportunity to explore Victorian class contexts.
A full fiction reading exam practice paper with Eduqas style English Language Paper 1 Section A questions.
Extract from ‘The Great Gatsby’. Fully line referenced.
Follows question pattern:
list five
impressions
how does the writer (craft language) …?
how does the writer (mood and atmosphere) …?
build argument/evaluate
Indicative content included to support marking.
Full teaching sequence aimed at Grades 5-9 for Charles Causley's Eden Rock from the AQA Love and Relationships anthology.
Supported for Grade 5 and differentiated for stretch and challenge up to Grade 9.
Wide range of activities to suit learner modalities.
Easy to follow PPTs for teachers and their learners.
Bargain bundle of over 3 hours teaching.
A five page workbook for students that helps students targeted Grade 5+ take an initial exploration of the poem.
Differentiated with vocabulary work, research and additional hints and questions to aid the less confident learner, students can complete this independently in class or as an extended homework.
Helps to initiate discussion on the poem and to raise awareness of its literary and biographical contexts as well as the theme of long-distance ambiguous relationships. Makes links with the other romantic love poems.
Suitable for KS2, KS3 and lower ability KS4
VERSATILE—SUITS ANY FICTION
Encourages evaluative thinking
Encourages knowledge of character development
Encourages evidence finding skills
Encourages comparison of character across or within texts
Encourages knowledge of character beliefs, qualities, world views and values
Includes:
Worksheet template
Partial worked example of a KS3 novel to exemplify how the activity can be used
Certificate for students to award once they’ve evaluated the character developments
Follow up activity to encourage AO1 informed personal response and evidence and AO4 quality of expression.
The ‘BEFAFTAS’ Awards Activities for Charting Character Development
A light-hearted but fully effective set of activities that take some of the ‘grind’ out of tracing character development.
This activity is like an award for an aspect of a character that changed the most dramatically from the before (the start of the story) to the after (the end of the story) the ‘BEFAFTA’ Award. Or, you could compare which character out of all the characters in a novel or fiction changed the most over the course of a story to ascertain who wins the ‘BEFAFTA’ Story-Lifetime Achievement Award!
Designed on PPT with any print offs on the slides, this resource takes students through a professional creative writer’s workshop to find a range of characters and potential problems to give them. Small activities so that it is pacy and none of the tasks ever seem too ‘taxing’ for students. This works as a discrete lesson from which they could go on to create a narrative.
The extended version of this sequence that takes students through the full version of plot planning is availabe for purchase here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/planning-effective-short-stories-and-narratives-11846098
An A4 sheet to stick into exercise books (front or back covers are ideal for this) that becomes a homework and independent reading log for a half term. Parents find it easy to track independent reading - they have to sign to say they've heard it, seen it or discussed it - and any further homework that is set for the week. Template is great for KS3 when a one reading homework, one other homework model is used. Minimal input from teachers - you can just record that the homework was great and you gave a reward or you can note late, partially or not completed homework. Clear communication with parents and helps to organise students and get a sense of satisfaction as all the boxes are filled. I use a final reward in the half term if everything is complete for the half term. Save your sanity with this aspect of work that can easily get out of control otherwise.
A starter activity of a mid-grade task response introduction on 'Follower' that uses the 'journey' of the poem to briefly address structure and ideas delivered in the poem.
Students are asked to then suggest five ideas for the introduction that they will later cover in the response.