This is a 14-question multiple-choice quiz (answers provided) on John Clare’s lovely sonnet about the spring. Could be used as a starter activity prior to a deeper analysis of the poem. Could work as a homework activity. The questions could be used to stucture a guided reading activity.
I made this as a cover activity for a year 10 class with targets of 3 and 4. Could be used as a recall/revision activity, set as homework or used for cover. There are 10 questions which could also be used as a starting point for a guided reading activity.
This is a worksheet using Emily Dickinson’s poem, “Fame is a Bee” (in the public domain). There are ten questions and then a task for the pupils. This could be used to structure a guided reading or literacy lesson. Alternatively, it could be set for cover or used as a homework to support a unit on poetry or metaphor.
This is a straightforward comprehension activity that could be used for homework or cover. Alternatively, it could be used as a pre-reading activity to identify any gaps in knowledge or understanding before the characters of Oliver or Mrs Sowerberry are explored in greater detail. There’s a vocabulary task and then seven comprehension questions. The Word document is editable so if you wish to add challenge you can remove the glossary at the end of the passage.
This is a straightforward comprehension activity that uses only one paragraph from “The Canterville Ghost” in which the Otis family approach Canterville Chase and there is a discernible change of mood. There are 14 questions that could be used for homework, as a cover activity or to structure a guided reading session. Works for remote learning. Suggested answers are provided although some questions will elicit a range of responses, of course.
Here, you will find 18 exam-style questions using the format and wording of the AQA English Literature GCSE exam, paper 1. The extracts used are shorter than the students will meet in the exam - slightly shorter in some cases and much shorter in others.
Created for revision sessions but useful for homework, classwork or remote learning.
This is a straightforward comprehension activity using an abridged text from Dickens’ story “The Haunted Man and the Ghost’s Bargain”. There are 8 questions. This could be set for homework or used as cover. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading session.
This powerpoint was made for a year 11 class to help them to improve their responses to AQA English Language Paper 1, question 2 and to Paper 2, question 3, both of which ask students to explain the effect of a writer’s language choices. The extract is from a short story by G.K.Chesterton which is in the public domain. Slide 1 is for recall/diagnosis of gaps. Slide 2 is an opportunity for a class model. Slide 3 offers a teacher-prepared model and slide 4 asks the students to work independently to write a second paragraph of the response.
Could be useful for home learning, revision or as a cover activity.
This is a multiple-choice quiz with 26 questions on “The Farmer’s Bride” by Charlotte Mew. Could be used for homework or revision. Alternatively, this could be used to check students’ understanding of the poem prior to teaching so that the subsequent lesson can be more precisely focused on gaps. Answers are provided.
This is a grid of activities for students who are studying Shelagh Delaney’s “A Taste of Honey”. Originally planned as a cover activity, it could also be used as half a term’s homework or for revision if the students are studying the play for GCSE.
This powerpoint uses 7 poems, all in the public domain. The intention is that students can work independently to develop the habit of becoming questioning readers, interrogating the text to deepen their understanding. Questions are provided to encourage this.
Alternatively, the powerpoint could be used to structure a guided reading session on unseen poetry. It could also be used in class to support the teaching of analysis of unseen poetry. The questions will help to identify gaps in students’ understanding so that subsequent discussion can be more sharply focused.
This is a straightforward, short powerpoint focused on the reading skills of inference, analysis and viewpoint, at quite a basic level. Useful for a quick assessment of students’ reading skills or for practise in polishing those skills. Could be used to structure a guided reading session with less confident learners. Could be used as a starter, for revision or for a homework.
This is a simple and straightforward comprehension activity using a brief excerpt from “Carmilla” by Sheridan le Fanu. Questions test basic comprehension and developing analysis. Suggested answers are provided.
This would sit well within a unit on gothic horror. It could be used as a homework activity or set for cover. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a session of guided reading.
This is an excerpt from a speech given by Dickens on 5th November 1857. There are ten questions with suggested answers provided.
This could be used in class, for cover or as homework. Alternatively, the questions could be used to structure a guided reading session.
Competing this activity will give students a sound understanding of Dickens’ viewpoint and so this activity could usefully be used alongside the Ghost of Christmas Past and the description of Scrooge’s schooldays.
This quiz was created as a revision resource for less confident readers in year 11. However, it could also be used at KS3 or with a GCSE resit class.
The quiz could be used for homework or independent revision. Alternatively, the questions could form the basis for a guided reading session or the quiz could be used in a flipped learning context to identify gaps in knowledge and understanding so that subsequent teaching can be more precisely focused.
Answers are provided.
A simple and straightforward powerpoint, animated as it was used in a revision session.
The powerpoint has a recap slide with suggested answers. (These may not match your students, in which case they’ll need editing).
There are 4 suggested tasks. 3 are very straightforward; the final one is more challenging and closer to the task that students will encounter in the exam. The weather task asks students what is wrong with the sample paragraph. The answer is that it doesn’t express a clear viewpoint.
This powerpoint was planned for a mixed-ability year 7 class as part of a unit of work on “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. The focus is on the meaning of Puck’s final speech and the ideas that Shakespeare is expressing through that speech.
A suggested (short) response to the writing prompt is provided on the final slide.
The homework is a multiple-choice quiz on the extract, to be used after the lesson, intended to embed the pupils’ knowledge and understanding of the speech. Answers to the quiz are provided.
A simple powerpoint that can be used for first teaching of the poem but which would also work as cover or as a homework activity. Easily adaptable to set more or fewer tasks from the grid. Could also be extended to explore what aspects of Dunbar’s life and experience could have inspired the poem.
This is a simple and straightforward multiple-choice quiz using a charming poem (public domain) with a focus on onomatopoeia as well as some questions to test inference, comprehension and recognition of personification. Answers are provided. Useful as a homework or as a starter.
This is a straightforward comprehension activity using an excerpt from the story of “Bluebeard” by Charles Perrault. Useful for cover or for guided reading. Could be an addition to a unit on fairy tales.