I'm Leader of KS4 English at a large school in Yorkshire! I teach lower ability KS3 English all the way up to A Level Literature (with everything in between). I hope you enjoy my resources!
I'm Leader of KS4 English at a large school in Yorkshire! I teach lower ability KS3 English all the way up to A Level Literature (with everything in between). I hope you enjoy my resources!
This is the first lesson in my unit for GCSE AQA Power and Conflict poetry on war poems. This lesson looks at the themes of power and conflict using stream of consciousness writing and images as prompts.
A simple meet and greet and course review lesson looking at the structure of the AQA English Literature course, the exam, assessment objectives, and marking descriptors. Link to exam paper used in lesson should be hyperlinked.
This is my third lesson on William Blake's Songs of Innocence and Experience for AQA A Level English Literature. This lesson focuses on applying key aspects of the 'Songs' to the poem. Specifically, students look at the representation of spring, the village green, and the importance of play in the poem. They also reflect on the presentation of authority and are prompted to compare to poems I already taught (Introduction and The Shepherd).
You can never have too many practice papers. This looks at an extract taken from The Great Gatsby describing the valley of ashes.
The additional resource is the start of a model response for Q2 and a full model response for Q3 aimed at higher ability students.
Home distance learning slides for Year 9 class studying Poppies for the first time. Just upload the slides to your location of choice & make sure students are registered on Seneca Learning (free and easy!).
3 x 50 minute lessons for 1 week of learning.
Trying to keep things simple and open ended for students given the challenge this is to students and parents.
Uses Mr. Bruff’s video, Genius website for annotations, and Seneca Learning.
Lesson 9 of my unit on AQA GCSE Power and Conflict Poetry (war poems). This lesson looks at how to approach an exam style question and has the students complete a formative assessment with the help of their notes from previous lessons. Handouts with model response are attached. This was originally created for a lower ability set (targets 3-5).
These three lessons were created for a very low ability SEN Year 8 class. They focus on comprehension and building working memory skills through over-teaching. Resources have been differentiated for some students who struggle to write words and sentences but the extension is there for those who are ready to make some independent inferences.
This resource includes two full lessons introducing strategies for approaching a descriptive writing task for AQA GCSE English Language Question 5 that encourages students to ‘snapshot’ aspects of the image and track through these snapshots to create an interesting descriptive sequence.
Teaching instructions are in the ‘notes’ section below the slides.
Any printouts are included in the slides themselves.
This lesson was awarded an ‘Outstanding’ a few years back during a half-lesson drop-in observation.
Suitable for Years 9-11 depending on ability. Orginally used with a middle ability Year 10 class. My department uses these lessons as a base lesson to begin our Year 10 writing unit: ‘Places and People.’
A lesson covering basic terms of the tragedy genre including the five characteristics of the tragic hero as outlined in Aristotle’s Poetics. This lesson is to prepare students to begin reading Othello. Resources to print are included in the slides.
This is a double lesson if you include reading and annotation. This lesson opens considering a key quote from the assigned reading and literary criticism from Lesson 4. It then builds on students knowledge of Iago and introduces the ‘Vice’ character in morality plays. After a class reading of Act I Scene III, students are then asked to reflect on other ‘dramatic’ methods in Act I that suggest evil (e.g. the night time setting and Iago speaking in the shadows) and Aristotle’s Three Unities. In preparation for a mock exam, this lesson also includes a practice exam question and a review of how to structure a response.
This includes five lessons in my unit for AQA GCSE Power and Conflict unit on war poetry (lessons 18-22) to help students revise for an exam or assessment. Lessons include: themes revision, looking at a model response, how to reach your target grade & practice questions. It is originally created for a lower ability group (targets 3-5). Some linked videos from this unit are from GCSE Pod (paid service). I suggest Mr. Bruff on YouTube as a substitute. All handouts are included.
This is 2-3 full lessons (depending on your lesson length) to support development of describing places for AQA GCSE Paper 1 Question 5. I usually follow these lessons on from my Lesson 1 and 2 of the series. In lesson 3, students complete a carousel to develop their skills in quick planning of a descriptive writing piece, descriptive writing itself under a set time in small groups, and reflecting through peer feedback and editing. In lesson 4, students complete their first formative assessment from a choice of two tasks with a focus on AO5, pausing to check progress, and annotating their success when finished.
This was originally created for a middle ability year 10 class, but is suitable for years 9-11 depending on ability. I (and other members of my department) have used it with many groups over the last few years quite successfully. This lesson also tends to highlight student weaknesses quite well due to the time pressures to help inform teaching going forward if you choose to skip the assessment task at the end.
The carousel lesson was awarded an ‘Outstanding’ a few years back during a departmental drop-in observation with the original group of year 10s.
This is quite a showy lesson. You will need:
felt tips
sugar paper
Post-It notes
print outs of the images that are provided on the slides I’ve included
These lessons focus on having students create a specific effect, tone, or dominant impression of a place in their writing by looking at careful use of vocabulary, synonyms and then antonyms. They go through a series of short writing tasks where they practice using vocabulary to create different impressions on the reader and then apply this to an extended writing task where they write two opposing descriptions of the same place. This lesson begins to review and build on the skills in the other lessons in this unit (Lessons 1 to 4) but can be used independently of this as well.
Instructions are in the notes section under the slides.
This resource was originally created for a middle ability year 10 class but is suitable for years 9-11 and I have successfully used it with a range of abilities with some changes to timing and tweaks in differentiation.
I always find this lesson really brings on students’ descriptive writing if they’ve been struggling with creating a specific effect and teaching this use of vocabulary can then be further applied to narrative writing and creating shifts in tone to indicate conflict.
This usually takes me two lessons but can be turned into 3 if you want to look in more detail at the written model provided.
This includes two lessons in my unit for AQA GCSE Power and Conflict unit on war poetry (lessons 10 and 11) on Remains. It is originally created for a lower ability group (targets 3-5) but this lesson is also suitable for students moving towards a grade 6 as it introduces students to alternative interpretations. Some linked videos from this unit are from GCSE Pod (paid service). I suggest Mr. Bruff on YouTube as a substitute. One of the linked videos (documentary) does have the original words of the poem (a swear!)
This includes two lessons in my unit for AQA GCSE Power and Conflict unit on war poetry (lessons 14 & 15) on War Photographer. It is originally created for a lower ability group (targets 3-5). This particular set of lessons was developing students' ability to engage with context and writer's purpose. Some linked videos from this unit are from GCSE Pod (paid service). I suggest Mr. Bruff on YouTube as a substitute.
This includes two lessons in my unit for AQA GCSE Power and Conflict unit on war poetry (lessons 16 & 17) on Kamikaze. It is originally created for a lower ability group (targets 3-5). These lessons focus closely on context and figurative language (similes and metaphors). Some linked videos from this unit are from GCSE Pod (paid service). I suggest Mr. Bruff on YouTube as a substitute.
This lesson opens with a reflection on the role of Iago in Act I Scene I and builds on understanding his role in the text with a reading of Act I Scene II. The lesson also introduces students to literary criticism (Leavis and Coleridge) and model its application in a model paragraph. The homework is pre-reading for I.III.
A glossary of language terms with definitions. Students can complete the last column ongoing in class or as a homework task. This was made for a higher ability group and should be cut down for lower ability groups by removing rows.
This includes two lessons in my unit for AQA GCSE Power and Conflict unit on war poetry (lessons 12 & 13) on Poppies. These lessons look at imagery, metaphor, and symbolism in the poem. It is originally created for a lower ability group (targets 3-5). Some linked videos from this unit are from GCSE Pod (paid service). I suggest Mr. Bruff on YouTube as a substitute.