After achieving an A* in 2017, I am sharing my quality revision notes, essays, templates and tactics to help ambitious students reach their goals. These resources have proven a hit across the globe with students and teachers alike - download yourself to see why!
Chat with me on twitter @astarlevels or just drop me an email... happy revising!
After achieving an A* in 2017, I am sharing my quality revision notes, essays, templates and tactics to help ambitious students reach their goals. These resources have proven a hit across the globe with students and teachers alike - download yourself to see why!
Chat with me on twitter @astarlevels or just drop me an email... happy revising!
Paper 2 mock for AQA A Level English Language. Includes Text A and Text B.
Top band model answer for question 3 on this paper!
You may be interested in more mocks for this paper. Follow my Twitter @astarlevels to be notified as they come out.
“Mind your slanguage” mock paper
American words mock paper
Top band, student written model answer for A Level English Language.
This essay demonstrates how to convey understanding of linguistic ideas by evaluating and challenging the views presented in the question and by other linguists. Students of all abilities will benefit from an example of effective essay writing which they can emulate in their own work. There is also a marking activity at the end & opportunity for students to plan their own answer to the question.
Why it works:
Shows how to select, arrange & argue the most important ideas in essays
Produced by a student who achieved an A* in 2017
Can be reworked as a template for your future (brilliant!) essays
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Check out my shop for more essays and revision resources: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/astarlevels
Everything I think that I did, that others might not have, that helped me achieve an A* in 2017. Techniques and advice, student to student, to make revision effective, efficient and relevant to the exam. I truly believe that anyone can do well with the right approach. So here we go!
My article links you to other free resources i have, like mock exams, templates and essays, which can be downloaded with a TES account.
I have written five pages that explain my unique approach to:
saying something useful about studies/ theories
analysing data/ grammar
getting AO3 marks
planning essays and using these to hack the exam <-- game changer!
reducing workload
memorising theory
Follow my twitter @astarlevels and check out the linked resources at the end that will no doubt help you revise.
Good luck you can do it!!! :-)
Paper 2 mock for AQA A Level English Language. Includes Text A and Text B. This time covering the topics of gender, new words, change and slang!
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Young people’s language mock
American words mock paper
Top band model opinion article
I have a model answer for every single question - check them out!
Paper 2 mock for AQA A Level English Language. Includes Text A and Text B. This time on American English.
Please leave a review & follow my Twitter @astarlevels.
“Mind your slanguage” mock paper
Young people’s language mock paper
I have a model answer for every single question on my shop, please take a look!
Checklist to guide revision for A Level English Language. Guides students to revise & plan an essay question for every topic & question.
Please see my shop for all my resources to help revise and practice for A Level English Language!
This blew up on twitter! Download the simple but incredibly useful template today. Tried and tested by an A* student.
Over 100 resources now uploaded to help you revise A Level English Language, check it out: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/astarlevels
This resource: “blank canvas” revision - a wacky font on a blank canvas for every topic. Encourage students to try out different ways of filling each poster. Experimenting with a variety of techniques will keep them interested and starting to think about the topics in different ways.
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Used in relation to AQA A Level English Language to get discussions going on the way different occupational groups may use language. Would make a good starter…
A little freebie to say ‘thank you’ to everyone that has supported the shop!
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A fun lesson starter for A Level students introducing some 'new words' that they will definitely want to remember as examples in their essays and articles. Great way to show the basic idea that the language is not static (in an entertaining way).
This template is designed to guide students through close language analysis. I found this kind of approach the fastest and most effective way to label language features for AO1 and then to score really good AO3 with in depth analysis and links to wider ideas and meaning. Slide one is a blank template and the second slide is an example of how the template can help analyse a quote.
Hi! If you came from Twitter, thanks for all the retweets, this blew up! If you want to try out the technique yourself, download this resource for free :-) Download to get an editable copy of the BLANK template!
Made for A Level but can be adapted for any level really. Even year 7s or GCSE will benefit from this technique.
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Activity based on jargon where students decide what occupation uses that language. Get students talking about jargon!
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Enjoy!
“It is a widely held belief that women have larger colour vocabularies than do men. For example, Robin Lakoff (1975) states this as a fact and suggests as an explanation the observation that in this society women spend much more of their time on colour-related activities such as choosing clothes than men do”
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Put this statement to the test with your class! Fun little activity where students try and name as many as the colours as they can, then check them off and see if on average boys or girls have larger colour vocabularies.
Links to Lakoffs findings
Opportunity to counter argue with the diversity approach
Potential NEA investigation
Poster giving an explanation and examples of jargon. Could be used as a starter or as part of a display alongside students own posters.
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A Level English Language activities to help students become more confident with using theories and studies for the first year exam especially.
Task 1: card sort activity with 11 theorists and their theories. Great revision activity, and, once complete, little glossary of AO2 for students to refer back to.
Task 2: Jargon activities, main task being to read an article from the guardian (useful overview) and use it as data to write an essay/ or to write an opinion article on the use of jargon.
Task 3: a transcript of a doctor/ patient conversation where students should apply the theories to what is being said. Great way to consolidate theories and to think about how occupational language is used and how it affects people outside the group. There is also an essay opportunity.
The poster included complements the activities pack. It is a straightforward resource giving a bedrock of theories, can be used for reference, revision or to support class/ home work.
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Complete Revision Bundle
Examples of the stages of children’s writing.
Starter idea: ask students to note:
progression in the writing
any mistakes they notice
can they apply nay theories
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What is on each A Level English Language exam and when are they?
Answer these FAQs with this handy poster. Used as an informative (or taunting!) countdown to the exam.
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Worksheet offering five loaded & varied opinions on accent and dialect for discussion. Extension asks students to link theories to the different parts of each opinion.
L00K: “Evaluate the idea that some accents and dialects are viewed more favourably than others” A* model student answer with examiner commentary: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/accent-and-dialect-a-example-essay-aqa-english-language-a-level-11682959
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Fill in the gaps - language and gender.
simple way to cement theory into memory
learn how to structure an essay on the topic
fast highly effective revision
includes answer sheet
A great starter, or, once complete, model answer packed with AO2!