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Grade 9 Bayonet Charge Lesson (With Comparison to Remains)
This lesson covers key content for the poem, four carefuly chosen quotes with steps that students can use to easily analyse them, extensive analysis and exploration of context, example comparative points to another poem from the anthology, as well as a writing frame to support all students and make the comparison paragraphs easy work.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as are opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work through target codes.
Quotes include:
“his bloody life in my bloody hands.”
“hearing bullets smacking the belly out of the air”
“he’s there on the ground, sort of inside out, pain itself, the image of agony”
“He lugged a rifle numb as a smashed arm”
Works towards:
Compare the ways in which poets present ideas about war in Bayonet Charge and Remains.
Made for Poetry and COnflict Anthology, AQA GCSE curriculum.
Grade 9 Dracula Gothic Context Notes with Key Quotes
A collection of six university-level Gothic critics, with their detailed interpretations. Key quotes are included from the critics’ books, as well as relevant quotes from Dracula.
The Bloody Chamber and Frankenstein Comparative Essay
An A* 1000 word essay on Monstrosity, in The Bloody Chamber and Frankenstein.
Key Gothic themes, symbols, and motifs are fully explored, and grounded in degree-level context.
Grade 9 Macbeth Paranoia and Confusion Act 2 Scene 1 Lesson
This lesson covers key Jacobean context, an audience and reader’s expectations, extensive analysis and questioning of the scene and possible extracts, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, critical theorists and relevant quotes surrounding gender, thoughtful extensive analysis on gender expectations and context, as well as a writing frame to support all students. Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as is an option for debate, a second writing question template, and opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work.
“Starting with the extract, how does Shakespeare use language to present Macbeth’s paranoia and confusion?”
Grade 9 Macbeth Act 1 Scene 3 and 7 Ambition Lesson
This lesson covers key Jacobean context, an audience’s expectations, extensive analysis and questioning of the scene and possible extracts, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, critical theorists and relevant quotes surrounding gender, thoughtful extensive analysis on gender expectations and context, as well as a writing frame to support all students.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as is an option for debate, a second writing question template, and targets provided for students to mark and improve their own work.
Full quote analysis is provided for:
Stay, you imperfect speakers
Cannot be ill, cannot be good
his virtues will plead like angels
I have no spur To prick the sides of my intent, but only Vaulting ambition
Grade 9 Natural Order in Macbeth Essay (Act 4 Scene 3, and whole play)
A top band, Grade 9 essay on the question of: “Starting with this extract (Act 4 scene 3), examine how Shakespeare presents the natural order”.
Full mark model to be used for revision, notes, or lesson examples.
AQA and Edexcel suited, and written specifically for the AQA GCSE English Literature mark scheme. Key quotes, thesis statement, top tier context, and multiple supporting quotes are included.
Exemplar Dracula & The Bloody Chamber Essay
An A* 1000 word essay on setting in Gothic texts - specifically Dracula and The Bloody Chamber.
Dracula Contexts & Interpretations
Notes on the key contextual events of Dracula’s setting, and time of writing. Also includes key critical opinions and quotes.
Macbeth The Natural Order Lesson
This lesson covers key Jacobean context, an audience and reader’s expectations, extensive analysis and questioning of the scene and possible extracts, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, critical theorists and relevant quotes, as well as a writing question to prepare students for essay responses.
Quotes included:
“dark night strangles the travelling lamp”
“A falcon tow’ring in her pride of place, was a mousing owl hawk’d at and kill’d”
“darkness does the face of Earth entomb”
“‘Tis unnatural, Even like the deed that’s done.”
Working towards:
Starting with this extract, examine how Shakespeare presents the natural order
Feminism in The Bloody Chamber Analysis Lesson
Planned for an A Level lesson, appropriate for students who have read the text before. fully differentiated, with explanations provided for all critical theories.
Multiple critics are considered, with links to Angela Carter and the text. The examiners report is analysed for advice to students for top answers.
Context is woven in throughout, and a slide for essay writing practice is included.
Tes paid licence
Grade 9 Psychoanalysing Lady Macbeth Critical Theories Lesson
This lesson covers key Jacobean context, an audience and reader’s expectations, extensive analysis and questioning of the scene and possible extracts, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, critical theorists and relevant quotes surrounding gender, thoughtful extensive analysis on gender expectations and context, as well as a writing frame to support all students. Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as is an option for debate, a second writing question template, and opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work.
The lesson builds to the question,
“Starting with this extract, how does Shakespeare present deteriorating characters?”.
The main focus is on critical theories of madness, to do with Lady Macbeth.
Grade 9 Mr Hyde Lesson - Monstrosity, Appearances, Chapter Two
This lesson covers key context, an audience and reader’s expectations and reactions, what makes a good vs grade 9 point, extensive analysis and questioning of key ideas, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, as well as a writing frame to support all students.
A key extract, key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as is a model answer paragraph. Targets are included so students can mark and improve their own work.
Two starters are included, so you can split the slides into two different lessons.
Designed for Jekyll and Hyde as a GCSE text, and the slides include the AQA mark scheme for the relevant question, but this can be changed for different exam boards.
AQA GCSE English Essay Plan Template
The sheet allows students to fill in their own = key quotes, analysis notes, contextual facts, secondary supporting quotes, and grade 9 thoughtful, critical ideas.
This could be used for revision, or filled in as a class to identify gaps.
Made to fulfill all the requirements of the AQA mark scheme, but can of course be used for other exam boards.
Storm on the Island Lesson AQA GCSE (With Comparison to The Prelude) Power and Conflict AQA
This lesson covers key content for the poem, highlighted key quotes as well as prepared notes, extensive analysis and exploration of context, example comparative points to another poem from the anthology, as well as a writing frame to support all students and make the comparison paragraphs easy work.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as are opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work through target codes.
Quotes include:
“This wizened earth has never troubled us”
“leaves and branches
Can raise a tragic chorus”
“You might think that the sea is company,
Exploding comfortably”
"“spits like a tame cat
Turned savage.”
Works towards:
How is nature presented in ‘Storm on the Island’?
and then
Compare how nature is presented in 'The Prelude’ and one other poem.
Grade 9 The Emigree Lesson (With Comparison to Kamikaze) Power and Conflict AQA
This lesson covers key content for the poem, three carefuly chosen quotes with steps that students can use to easily analyse them as well as prepared notes, extensive analysis and exploration of context, example comparative points to another poem from the anthology, as well as a writing frame to support all students and make the comparison paragraphs easy work.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as are opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work through target codes. A summary of the exam paper is included, so students can prepare to see the real thing.
Quotes include:
There once was a country… I left it as a child
But my memory of it is sunlight-clear
for it seems I never saw it in that November
The city “may be at war, it may be sick with tyrants” but “the worst news I receive of it cannot break my original view” which is “the bright, filled paperweight”
Works towards:
Compare how identity is presented in 'The Emigree’ and one other poem.
Macbeth Act 1 Scene 4 Analysis Lesson (Macbeth's fears and uncertainty)
Fully differentiated with essay practice included. This lesson covers key context, an audience and reader’s expectations and reactions, writing a thesis statement, analysis and questioning of key ideas, key quotes that can be analysed individually or as a class, as well as a writing frame to support all students.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as is an option for class conversations, and opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work.
Works towards:
Starting with this extract, how does Shakespeare present appearances?
Grade 9 The Prelude Lesson (With Comparison to Storm on the Island) Power and Conflict AQA
This lesson covers key content for the poem, highlighted key quotes with guided notes that students can use to easily analyse them as well as prepared ideas, extensive analysis and exploration of context, example comparative points to another poem from the anthology, as well as a writing frame to support all students and make the comparison paragraphs easy work.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as are opportunities for students to mark and improve their own work through target codes.
Quotes include:
““a huge peak, black and huge, / As if with voluntary power instinct, / Upreared its head.”
“growing still in stature the grim shape / Towered up between me and the stars” "like a living thing, / Strode after me.”
“Small circles glittering idly in the moon, / Until they melted all into one track / Of sparkling light.”
Works towards:
How is nature presented in 'The Prelude’?
or
Compare how nature is presented in 'The Prelude’ and one other poem.
Grade 9 Lady Macduff Lesson
This lesson covers key extracts, sumamry of the character, comparisons to Lady Macbeth, extensive analysis and questioning of the scene and possible extracts, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, critical theorists, as well as a mock question for a writing task. A possible plan is included with three clear points and quotes
Quotes include:
“the poor wren, The most diminutive of birds, will fight, Her young ones in her nest, against the owl.”
‘Poor birds”
“why then, alas, Do I put up that womanly defence, To say I have done no harm?”
Works towards:
Starting with this extract, explain how Shakespeare presents Lady Macduff
Grade 9 Jekyll and Hyde Gothic London Laboratory Settings Lesson
This lesson covers key Gothic Victorian settings and context for Jekyll and Hyde, an audience’s expectations, extensive analysis and questioning of various scenes and possible extracts, key quotes with grade 9 analysis notes, as well as a writing frame to support all students.
Key vocabulary, terminology, and paragraph structuring is included, as is an easy way to link all context fluidly into writing, and targets for students to use to mark and improve their own work.
QUOTE ANALYSIS PROVIDED FOR:
"a fog rolled over the city in the small hours”
“black winter morning”
"like rows of smiling saleswomen”
Key research is provided for:
The Gothic
The Uncanny
Gothic Monsters
Setting in Jekyll and Hyde
Suitable for many questions, including:
How is the setting of London presented in the novella?
How do the descriptions of the street and door create an unsettling atmosphere?
How does Stevenson use setting to build tension?
Macbeth Grade 9 Notes: Scene by Scene
Thoughtful, critical, grade 9 analysis of quotes to assist in teaching and revision of Macbeth. This set of notes considers context, word level analysis, and nuanced interpretations of key characters.