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Frances Jones' Shop

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I am a Head of English at an independent school in central London, managing the department from EYFS to GCSE. Prior to this post, I taught at a secondary school in Kent, from Year 7 to A Level. This shop is home to my resources for literature and language throughout all the years!

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I am a Head of English at an independent school in central London, managing the department from EYFS to GCSE. Prior to this post, I taught at a secondary school in Kent, from Year 7 to A Level. This shop is home to my resources for literature and language throughout all the years!
Macbeth: Act 2, responses to the murder
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Macbeth: Act 2, responses to the murder

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A lesson looking at Act 2 Scenes 1 and 2 of Macbeth, with a focus on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s differing attitudes towards Duncan’s murder. This lesson takes a look at Macbeth’s hallucination, and later asks pupils to search for quotations summing up Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s varying responses to the murder of King Duncan, which are recorded on hands! I’ve always found pupils are really engaged in this lesson as it’s a bit different to the usual quotation-hunting.
Brave New World: Context
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Brave New World: Context

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Two lecture-style lessons for A Level on the context of Brave New World, with the first looking at life at the time, and the second moving onto life since. Across these two lessons, designed for when pupils have already read the book, a range of ideas about historical context are considered. The first looks at what was going on at the time when Huxley was writing, considering mass production, eugenics, and conditioning, whereas the second moves into considering how we have started to move towards that world in the 90 years since Huxley wrote the novel: changes in technology and what it means to be human. Knowledge of context (both when the text was written and has been received) is imperative at A Level and I’ve found both of these lessons have really helped my pupils to get a good grounding in what they need to know.
A Christmas Carol - Context
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A Christmas Carol - Context

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A series of three lessons which work well as an opening on A Christmas Carol, exploring what life was like in Victorian Britain, and Dicken’s writing style. The first two lessons here focus on Victorian lifestyles, with one lesson offering pupils the chance to carry out their own research (guidance is given in the form of suggested websites for each topic, looking at Victorian childhood, fashions and etiquette, Charles Dickens, and the Industrial Revolution); the second lesson takes more of a lecture style, with images on the slides matching the images on the pupil sheet to help practise concise note-taking. The third lesson in this pack uses extracts from other Dickens novels to start to explore what his views of poor people and society were. While these texts are quite challenging, the comprehension questions on the bottom help pupils to develop their understanding, and groups can be arranged to support those who will find this more challenging. Personally I teach A Christmas Carol at KS3, but these would make a good introduction to the GCSE course too.
Of Mice and Men - FULL GCSE SOW BUNDLE
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Of Mice and Men - FULL GCSE SOW BUNDLE

7 Resources
A full series of lessons with powerpoints and resources for a GCSE or KS3 scheme of work on Of Mice and Men. Lessons are adaptable for different abilities. Huge range of activities, including essay-writing, creative writing, quotation hunts, persuasive speeches, and much more. All lessons are complete with all the material you need for success, including model answers for paragraphs, allowing pupils the opportunity to see how a strong answer is put together. I’ve had proven success with this scheme of work with various classes, so I’m pleased to be able to share it.
Twelve Angry Men: Scheme of Work
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Twelve Angry Men: Scheme of Work

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A full scheme of work for KS3 on Reginal Rose’s play Twelve Angry Men. This scheme focuses on the characters, and builds up analytical writing skills. This fourteen-lesson SOW gradually builds up writing skills, helping pupils to structure analytical paragraphs and pick out high-value quotations about the characters. One activity to help this is ‘paragraph speed-dating’, in which pupils are given either a point or a quotation, and they need to find their partner: I’ve found this really helps with classes who pluck quotations from the text at random without considering whether they actually evidence the point they’ve made. I’d suggest creating a ‘guilty/not guilty’ scale somewhere in the classroom, and then you can write each juror number on a post-it note and move them around as they change their minds about the boy on trial. This scheme of work builds up to writing two complete essays: one comparing jurors 3 and 8, and another considering whether juror 8 can be considered a hero.