Thank you for visiting my shop. My aim is to provide high quality teaching resources that reduce the
need for hours of planning and help learners to achieve their potential in English and English Literature.
Please feel free to email me at sdenglish18@gmail.com with any queries, requests or comments.
Thank you for visiting my shop. My aim is to provide high quality teaching resources that reduce the
need for hours of planning and help learners to achieve their potential in English and English Literature.
Please feel free to email me at sdenglish18@gmail.com with any queries, requests or comments.
A lesson on Ted Hughes’ ‘Bayonet Charge’ for lower ability learners, It includes:
Starter - a short explanation of what a bayonet is and how they were used in WW1. Learners then answer ‘Why do you think the bayonet was considered to be a suitable weapon for infantry attacks?’
Feedback slide
Basic contextual information about the poet.
A link to a relevant YouTube video
Learners then read the poem and use choose quotations to caption six images on a storyboard depicting the main events of the poem.
This is followed by a worksheet in which learners are asked to make three basic comparisons with ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’ (this will have to have been covered beforehand). The table is partly filled in.
Review
A full lesson on GCSE discursive essay writing for lower ability learners. The PowerPoint covers:
The purpose of a discursive essay, with a sample question that learners are encouraged to ‘break down’. This includes an extension question.
Planning a response + extension question
Structuring a discursive essay
PEA paragraphs in a discursive essay
Counterargument
A sample response for annotation + extension activity
An opportunity for learners to produce their own responses
A peer assessment activity
Self-reflection
The lesson was produced with AQA 8700/2 in mind but could apply to other exam boards.
These files were last saved in Office 2016.
This is a straightforward lesson that follows on from prior teaching of broadsheet article writing. The question is styled in the form of AQA but could be adapted for other boards.
After a true or false Do Now task, the question is introduced and discussed.
This is followed by brief coverage of a suggested article structure (heading, introduction, main body and conclusion).
Students then work through a series of questions in response to a sample answer/WAGOLL. This sheet could be printed on A3.
Staff then take feedback from students.
Students write their own responses.
The lesson concludes with a learning review composed of five key questions.
A PPT that enables an exploration of ‘London’ by William Blake. The lesson includes:
A true or false entry task that provides some hints about the context of the poem.
A handout on the context of the poem with an accompanying worksheet.
A guidance sheet to prompt annotation of the poem.
3 differentiated extended response questions.
The lesson is aimed at upper-ability learners and should last 1.5-2 hours approximately.
This is a lesson on ‘Ozymandias’ in the Power and Conflict Anthology. It is aimed at lower ability learners and includes:
Do Now Task: Learners look at a photo of an Egyptian pharaoh and respond to three questions
Feedback slide
Learners read a sheet detailing the poem’s contextual background and use it to complete a mind map
Suggested annotations for lower ability learners
An essay on how the poem reflects Shelley’s feelings about power
Comparison with ‘The Prelude’ table to complete
Review
Estimated completion time: 1.5 hours
A straightforward introduction to speech writing for lower-middle ability KS3. It covers:
Starter task (see cover image)
What is a speech and who makes a speech?
AFOREST features used in a WAGOLL. Learners label the features used in the WAGOLL. There are two provided, one for lower ability and another providing some reading challenge.
Learners then write their own persuasive statements based on the AFOREST features.
Review.
This lesson is likely to take around an hour.
This is the full text of Stave Three, annotated as a PDF file. The annotations are not always as dense as you see in the cover image but I’ve aimed for a higher level of detail. This may benefit anyone with a top set group or a learner who may need to read the text independently of the rest of the class.
If you purchase this resource, ensure that you open it in a PDF reader. Opening it in a browser tends to distort the appearance. I also find that a magnification of over 150% makes viewing the comment boxes easier.
I’d like to think there are no typos in the file but should you find one, please contact me using my shop’s email found on the store front. If you do come across a genuine error you can select another resource under the value of £5 for free.
These files may be updated periodically, so please check the resource listing to ensure that you have the most up-to-date file.
This assessment tracker uses the 2024 grade boundaries for AQA Paper 1 and 2 for Language and Literature (8700 + 8702)
It will generate a grade for individual sections, each paper and each individual course.
Please email me using the address on my store front if you would like any adjustments made to your tracker, e.g. additional columns.
Please do not send any pupil data when requesting adjustments.
This is a ‘crash course’ in Act 4 for lower ability learners. It comprises of three storyboards and scene summaries for Act Four of ‘Macbeth’.
The aim is for learners to use the scene summaries to describe what is happening in each scene, based on the images and quotations.
This could be used for revision of Act Four or to promote understanding. It was designed with time pressure in mind.
A PowerPoint that demonstrates the structure of GCSE Language Paper 2, Section A (AQA 8700/2) and the skills that examiners are looking for.
Source A is an extract from Nellie Bly's 'Ten Days in a Madhouse' (19th Century Non-Fiction)
Source B is a blog entry available on the Mind website: In Crisis, My Experience. (Link provided on slide)
This PowerPoint covers Section A only but there are sample answers included for each question, 1-4.
If you can obtain a copy of the 8700/2 mark scheme, you may wish to encourage learners to mark the sample responses.
Appropriate for middle-upper ability learners.
A 110-slide PowerPoint that explores Act Three of ‘An Inspector Calls’. The PPT covers:
Revision of Act Two
Put quotations in order + identify quotes in relation to three different themes: a) Parents and children b) Responsibility
c) Capitalism versus socialism.
A range of differentiated sample paragraphs in response to the above tasks. Students identify the missing words.
Worksheets for the characters of Arthur, Sheila, Gerald and Sybil in terms of their attitude towards responsibility.
Quotations: ‘Who Said What?’ task + sample answers
Exploration task on how Act Two ends (differentiated).
Act Three:
Focus on Eric: Quotation Hunt followed by comparison task in relation to Eric and Eva’s relationship and Gerald and Daisy’s relationship.
Illegal Versus Immoral Behaviour task.
A 15-point quiz (essentially how capitalist/socialist are you?)
Group-work task on the contextual background of the Inspector’s speech: capitalism v socalism, communism, the rise of the USSR, communism in the USSR, the reasons for Priestley’s socialist views, British capitalists’ antipathy towards socalism, rising public interest in socialism, Conservative anti-socialist propaganda task (diff’d) + the Labour win of 1945 + its effects.
Analysis of the Inspector’s final speech task.
Drama activity.
Sample extended analysis of the Inspector’s final speech.
Exploring the aftermath of the Inspector’s departure + extended response task on theme of responsibility.
The significance of the end of the play in terms of the generational divide + time theories in ‘An Inspector Calls’, extended response
Act 3: 20 questions
A whole-play revision section.
This resource is suited to middle-upper-ability learners.
A PPT that enables an exploration of Shelley’s ‘Ozymandias’. As with many of my other Power and Conflict lessons, the emphasis is on independent learning, so you might wish to ask learners to work in pairs or groups for the activities. The content is aimed at upper ability groups. This lesson comes with a detailed context sheet and a modern translation of the poem.
A PowerPoint that can be used to teach or revise AQA 8700 Language Paper 1, Question 2 - the 8 mark language question.
The main question is based on an extract from Paula Hawkins’ ‘The Girl on the Train’. If you purchase this resource, please be aware that you will need to source the extract for yourself. It is the opening chapter of the novel, from ‘There is a pile of clothing…’ down to ‘…not a drop left’.
The entry task is based on an extract from an 1888 article about Jack the Ripper. Learners examine the extract and think about how the writer has portrayed the subject of the article. This extract is then presented on slides 3-4 so it can be annotated.
Two short excerpt from sample responses are then provided for comparison. Learners should identify which response would be likely to score more highly and suggest reasons why.
The lesson then moves onto the main extract, which is accompanied by a sample exam question. Learners read and highlight the extract in relation to the question and then feedback. There are some key point on the language question to go through followed by a sample answer/WAGOLL.
Learners then taken ten minutes to write their own responses and peer assess.
If you are planning to introduce your learners to the context of ‘An Inspector Calls’, these documents may be of use to you. This pack contains:
A mock Twitter feed for Eric Biring (also contains some hints about the plot)
Two front covers of an imagined ‘Dandy’ magazine (N.B. the article headlines are the same)
A mock flyer for the Titanic
A mock receipt from Milwards for Arthur Birling
A mock notice from Birling to his workers about a planned wage reduction
A mock letter from Eva Smith to a female friend/relative about the planned wage reduction
A mock anti suffrage poster (not shown on front cover).
These documents could be used to introduce learners to the context of AIC or to revise the context as you approach the end of the play.
There is a recording sheet for learners to make a note of their inferences as they move through the texts and a PPT slide that presents a suggested question.
Some of the files are available as both PowerPoint slides and JPEG files.
These files were last saved using Office 2016.
This lesson looks at the requirements of AQA Paper 2, Question 5 with a particular focus on leaflet-writing and the use of language to instruct and advise.
It draws from my original PPT:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/leaflet-writing-for-gcse-11757705
and could be used as a follow on from the free Section A questions provided here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/aqa-8700-paper-2-railway-accidents-11992280
However, this can act as a stand-alone lesson. It covers:
Key points about AQA English Language, Paper 2, Question 5
The structure of a leaflet
The different purposes of a leaflet (with task)
A note on planning and identifying the purpose, audience and format (with quick task).
The features of writing to instruct and advise (with handout)
A WAGOLL for the given task
After learners have written their own, they then use success criteria to peer assess and then rate their learning.
The PPT is aimed at middle-upper ability learners and is likely to take about 2 hours, including independent writing time (45mins).
This crossword is based on the extract from novel that begins, ‘It was a dreary night of November’ down to ‘…black and comfortless sky’. Suitable for middle-ability KS3.
This worksheet can be used at either KS3 or KS4 to enable students to plan a short story according to Freytag’s Pyramid.
NB. I have used the term ‘initial situation’ instead of exposition.
An alternative, older version of this worksheet should be available here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/short-story-planning-flow-chart-11747165
The fourth in the creative writing series for lower ability KS3. It includes:
Identify the personification, simile and metaphors in a passage of fiction (links to previous lesson)
Feedback from starter slide
What are adverbs and adjectives?
Identifying adverbs and adjectives in a range of sentences, with extension task.
Re-writing sentences using more ambitious adverb and adjective choices (list provided)
Review