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Frank's Shop

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(based on 2 reviews)

I taught English for 35 years; ran three English departments;am an A level and GCSE examiner; wrote the teacher and student support materials for OCR English Literature A level and have had books published by OUP and CUP.

I taught English for 35 years; ran three English departments;am an A level and GCSE examiner; wrote the teacher and student support materials for OCR English Literature A level and have had books published by OUP and CUP.
THE FLEA line by line analysis + qs
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THE FLEA line by line analysis + qs

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Line by line explanation/close analysis of THE FLEA by John Donne. For lower to high grade A level candidates. Includes questions and historical background. Successfully used with students, who found it very useful.
Why does Shakespeare use poetry in "Romeo and Juliet"?
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Why does Shakespeare use poetry in "Romeo and Juliet"?

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This resource answers students’ question, “Why does Shakespeare write in poetry? It’s not realistic.” It enables students to understand verse, prose, iambic pentameter, rhyming couplets within and at the ends of scenes. Excellent material for “How does Shakespeare write?”, context questions and historical context.
Romeo and Juliet's first meeting - help with context and language
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Romeo and Juliet's first meeting - help with context and language

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The lovers’ first meeting is packed with difficult Christian concepts and witty language. R&J’s lines are carefully broken down for students and explained. There is also a bonus exercise in the style of the WJEC context question. A very helpful resource for students who struggle with Shakespeare’s language and the Christian context of the play. Different ways of playing the scene are also explained.
A level notes on NOTES ON A SCANDAL
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A level notes on NOTES ON A SCANDAL

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1500 words of A level notes on Heller’s great novel, by a senior A level examiner and a former Head of English. Themes, viewpoint, dramatic irony, unreliable narrator, reader’s experience, characterisation all covered. This resource can be given straight to students or used to teach from.
LITERARY TERMS and how to use them
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LITERARY TERMS and how to use them

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An easy-to-remember guide to LITERARY TERMS for GCSE and A level. Features a 3 word mnemonic which allows students to remember the terms and use them properly. Successfully used by my students for over twenty years for A level and GCSE English Literature and GCSE English Language. Helps students gain marks for the correct use of technical terms.
How to get TOP MARKS in AQA Eng Lit GCSE
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How to get TOP MARKS in AQA Eng Lit GCSE

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Top tips for students from an AQA GCSE Eng Lit examiner and a former Head of English with 36 years of teaching experience: how to maximise your marks in the Eng Lit AQA GCSE. A guide for students and a series of lessons. How to: plan; stick to the timings; use quotations; write about context; write a paragraph; satisfy the AOs; detailed breakdowns of how to answer each question - prose, poetry, unseen poetry, plays; how to write about style (“How is it written?”); how to punctuate quotations. This is both a set of notes for your students and a set of lesson plans: take your students through these notes to create a series of lessons; excellent for revision! Used by over 1000 students in different schools. 27 pages, 8000 words.
Complete revision package for AN INSPECTOR CALLS
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Complete revision package for AN INSPECTOR CALLS

5 Resources
Everything your students need to know about “An Inspector Calls”! Detailed notes on: CONTEXT; how to revise; the characters of Eric, Gerald, Mr Birling, the Inspector… Use for self-supported study or as a teaching package.
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Translated into Clear, Modern English - full text
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Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Translated into Clear, Modern English - full text

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The whole text of Dr J&H, translated into clear, modern English for GCSE English Literature. Acclaimed by NATE review and applauded by students. Keeps all the excitement of Stevenson’s original. With detailed notes on context and theme and language for GCSE English Literature. By Frank Danes, published author of Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press and GCSE English Literature examiner.
REVISE Dr Jekyll for more able GCSE students: context, themes, extension
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REVISE Dr Jekyll for more able GCSE students: context, themes, extension

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8 pages, 2447 words. Everything your students need to revise “Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde”: CONTEXT - novels, short stories and novellas defined; shilling shockers and penny dreadfuls; gothic fiction; character of Mr Utterson; Soho; appearance and reality; Science, Darwin, evolution and devolution; recommendation of translation of the text into modern English, available from this author.
ESOL Going to the Dentist
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ESOL Going to the Dentist

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For beginner/intermediate ESOL learners: real life situation. Funny and lively lesson with dialogue and vocab learning. Used very successfully in class.
DOCTOR WHO an introduction-media studies
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DOCTOR WHO an introduction-media studies

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Media/film/ English: DOCTOR WHO - adaptable SOW for different ages. Compare two episodes from 1963 and 2005; history of show and British tv; why is DOCTOR WHO important as a media phenomenon? History of British television and how the programme slots into it (BBC 100 this year); case study 1 - “Rose”, episode one of revised show 2005 compare with original episode 1 from 1963, “An Unearthly Child”. Students analyse each episode and prepare and give presentations on each episode AND a comparison between them. 17 pages / 5000 words of material for your students. VERY ADAPTABLE for KS3 and TEFL students. Successfully used with TEFL and year seven students!
Revise MACBETH for more able GCSE students: context, themes, extension
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Revise MACBETH for more able GCSE students: context, themes, extension

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Lesson plans and student notes on: exam technique; themes - regicide, the natural order, witches/the supernatural; tragedy, tragic hero, free will, fate, Fortune. This is both a set of notes for your students and a series of lesson plans: take them through the notes, use them as a basis for discussion. Excellent for context and extension work for higher ability students. 17 pages, 5926 words. Used by over 300 students.
ESOL Ukrainian refugees and others - beginners/elementary pack
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ESOL Ukrainian refugees and others - beginners/elementary pack

6 Resources
Useful resources to get beginners in English started! Used successfully with Ukrainian refugees and others in 2022-23. Pack includes: describe yourself (dialogue practice); in the cafe; in the pub; going to the dentist; supermarket vocab; history of the English language and comprehension.
ESOL pre-intermediate+ fun dialogues and essential vocab.
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ESOL pre-intermediate+ fun dialogues and essential vocab.

8 Resources
Excellent and entertaining ESOL dialogues at beginner to intermediate level; essential vocab for groups or individuals, adults or children. Real situations: in the pub; at the dentist’s; in the cafe. Introduce British life with “Dialogue: state of private school” and History of the English Language. Learn 80 informal English and slang words and phrases with English slang/informal English dialogue. As used with more than 50 adult ESOL adult learners.
HANDMAID'S TALE demythologised dystopia
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HANDMAID'S TALE demythologised dystopia

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This new reading of “The Handmaid’s Tale” puts the novel into the context of feminism in the 1980s and the dystopian novel. This article is ideal for the Dystopia option of OCR English Literature A level. The article considers"The Handmaid’s Tale"'s reputation as a cult novel, as a satire of male power and Christianity and the debt it owes to Orwell’s “1984”. Attwood’s prose and structure are analysed. The author argues that “The Handmaid’s Tale” is not the greatest novel of the twentieth century or the greatest dystopian novel: it is a fine novel, written in excellent prose, but it has flaws. This article will help to engage your A level students and to give them something to argue with or against. It will thus encourage them, as the A level specifications require, to engage with critical views rather than simply to read them passively. It is written by Frank Danes, who wrote many of the materials to support OCR English Literature A level on the OCR website; Danes taught English for 30 years in English secondary schools and was Head of English in three schools.