English teacher with a bunch of resources to share - I will keep adding to the resources until everything I have made is uploaded in neat little sets, but bear with me until then.
English teacher with a bunch of resources to share - I will keep adding to the resources until everything I have made is uploaded in neat little sets, but bear with me until then.
10 double-sided worksheets (in one PowerPoint form) designed to help low-level pupils build confidence in using PETAL paragraphs. Each worksheet includes a short extract, a focus question (usually character related), a PETAL paragraph cloze to help pupils quickly create a first paragraph and a challenge question.
10 double-sided worksheets (in one PowerPoint form) designed to help low-level pupils build confidence in using PETAL paragraphs. Each worksheet includes a short extract, a focus question (usually character related), a PETAL paragraph cloze to help pupils quickly create a first paragraph and a challenge question.
Aimed at KS3 as an introduction to the detective genre, this lesson aims to get them up and moving about the classroom to find clues in order to discover who murdered one of the Minecraft characters.
This pack includes:
explanatory PowerPoint
Minecraft Detective booklet
several clues to print out and leave around the room for pupils to discover
(One clue suggesting wool was found at the crime scene - points to Nana Swol; one clue showing Banjo working on a community farm project with witnesses when the autoposy says the murder was committed - clear alibi; one clue which is the autopsy, suggesting Steve was killed by sharp implements - points to Nana Swol’ one clue which is a letter of apology from Bob - clears his motive)
Once pupils have decided who commited the murder, there is then an extra creative writing task for them to attempt. There is a scaffoled and unscaffolded version of hthis task for them to work on.
Could be adapted into a display, with the clues, booklets and final creative writing pieces used.
A short SOW focusing on the ballad form. Aimed at Year 7 pupils but can be adapted for older years.
Ballads covered include:
The Sad Story of Lefty and Ned
The Ballad of Hillsborough
The Lady of Shalott
The Ballad of Charlotte Dymond
Rabbit in Mixer Survives (extra lesson included on this - optional)
2 page knowledge organisers for:
Romeo and Juliet
Macbeth
Merchant of Venice
Julius Caesar
Twelfth Night
Much Ado About Nothing
A Midsummer Night’s Dream
The Tempest
Each KO has one page with a simplified plot summary (key scenes on a timeline), a character list and dual coding key theme images. There is also a blank page for key quotations for pupils to fill in themselves as the play is studied - this page can be printed as often as needed depending on how many key quotations you feel pupils need.
Images of each of the main characters from Romeo and Juliet, perfect for either display work or using as prompts for practice essays (i.e. giving a very general question - how does Shakespeare use this character to portray the theme of love and then each student receives their card with their character and some helpful quotations).
Based on Christopher Booker’s idea that there are 7 main plots, this is a simple display designed to provide quick recall of the different plots, as well as fun visual examples of each.
Resource 1: Resource booklet with the events of the play (Capulets and Montagues colour-coded) and space for pupils to add notes or draw the events, important themes and some choice quotations.
Series of PowerPoints and resources about Rupert Brooke's poem, The Soldier.
The numbers in brackets are the recommended order to go through the lessons, but you can easily change them around if you like.
The Prologue written in emoji form, used as a puzzle for pupils to tease out the meaning. Intended as a fun starter or plenary, by the time pupils get to the last line it can prompt some interesting responses. Leads in to the 'Shakespeare isn't English' debate as some feel the same about emojis but kids use them happily.
There is an accompaning PowerPoint with a sort the prologue activity too, to get them thinking about thyme schemes and what happens in the play too.
All together could make a complete first lesson on Romeo and Juliet.