Jekyll & Hyde Settings & Atmosphere Ch 8 Extract Essay Question Walk-through | GCSE English Literature | AQA Nov/Jun 2021 Paper 1N Q1
This is a really useful 5-slide resource containing a detailed break-down of an approach to brainstorming, analysing and planning an answer to the following extract essay question:
Starting with this extract, explore how Stevenson uses settings to create a disturbing and threatening atmosphere.
EXTRACT from Chapter 8 beginning ‘It was a wild, cold, seasonable night of March’, ending with ‘“They’re all afraid,” said Poole.’ [AQA Nov/Jun 2021 Paper 1N Q1]
Brainstorm mind-map developed step-by-step
Annotated line-by-line analysis of the extract
Notes on the essay question from the rest of the novel
Sample essay structure and sample sentences for intro/conclusion
How to use this resource:
-Students: for revision & as an example of how to approach an extract essay question step-by-step. Suitable for all exam boards.
-Teachers & Tutors: in a lesson, creating your own mind map with students, and following the steps for building an essay structure, with the slides available for ideas or an example to students.
LEARNING POINT for STUDENTS:
For your set texts for GCSE English Literature it is a tried and tested approach (by me!!) to produce DETAILED essay plans for all past paper questions, key themes and characters. This resource provides a perfect example of the BACKGROUND WORK that goes into producing an excellent essay with original thinking, and is something you should aim to replicate yourself.
So please download to aid your revision of Jekyll & Hyde, and apply this method to create your own essay plans for your set texts.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!
Jekyll & Hyde Good and Evil Ch 10 Extract Essay Question Walk-through | GCSE English Literature | AQA Jun 2020 Paper 1 Q7
This is a really useful 6-slide resource containing a detailed break-down of an approach to brainstorming, analysing and planning an answer to the following extract essay question:
Starting with this extract, explore how Stevenson presents ideas about good and evil in The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
EXTRACT from Chapter 10 beginning ‘I knew myself, at the first breath’, ending with ‘and Edward Hyde, alone in the ranks of mankind, was pure evil’ [AQA Jun 2020 Paper 1 Q7]
Brainstorm mind-map and step-by-step method for essay planning
Annotated line-by-line analysis of the extract including analysis of techniques
Sample essay structure, key words and exam technique!
How to use this resource:
-Students: for revision & as an example of how to approach an extract essay question step-by-step. Suitable for all exam boards.
-Teachers & Tutors: in a lesson, creating your own mind map with students, and following the steps for building an essay structure, with the slides available for ideas or an example to students.
LEARNING POINT for STUDENTS: For your set texts for GCSE English Literature it is a tried and tested approach (by me!!) to produce DETAILED essay plans for all past paper questions, key themes and characters. This resource provides a perfect example of the BACKGROUND WORK that goes into producing an excellent essay with original thinking, and is something you should aim to replicate yourself.
So please download to aid your revision of Jekyll & Hyde, and apply this method to create your own essay plans for your set texts.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!
Jekyll & Hyde Science Ch 9 Extract Essay Question Walk-through | GCSE English Literature AQA
This is a really useful 4-slide resource containing a detailed break-down of an approach to brainstorming, analysing and planning an answer to the following extract essay question:
Starting with this extract, explore how Stevenson presents ideas about science in The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
EXTRACT from Chapter 9 beginning ‘Here I proceeded to examine its contents’, ending with ‘I loaded an old revolver, that I might be found in some posture of self-defence’.
Brainstorm mind-map and step-by-step method for essay planning
Annotated section-by-section and line-by-line analysis of the extract including key quotes
Notes on the essay question from the rest of the novel and bullet point structure for building an argument in answer to the question
How to use this resource:
-Students: for revision & as an example of how to approach an extract essay question step-by-step. Suitable for all exam boards.
-Teachers & Tutors: in a lesson, creating your own mind map with students, and following the steps for building an essay structure, with the slides available for ideas or an example to students.
LEARNING POINT for STUDENTS: For your set texts for GCSE English Literature it is a tried and tested approach (by me!!) to produce DETAILED essay plans for all past paper questions, key themes and characters. This resource provides a perfect example of the BACKGROUND WORK that goes into producing an excellent essay with original thinking, and is something you should aim to replicate yourself.
So please download to aid your revision of Jekyll & Hyde, and apply this method to create your own essay plans for your set texts.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!
3 detailed walk-throughs of an approach to brainstorming, analysing and planning answers to the extract essay questions below.
brainstorm mind-map
annotated line-by-line analysis of the extract
analysis of points and quotes on the essay question from the rest of the novel
sample essay structure and essay writing exam technique
4-6 slides each
Extract Essay Questions:
Starting with this extract, explore how Stevenson uses settings to create a disturbing and threatening atmosphere.
EXTRACT from Chapter 8 beginning ‘It was a wild, cold, seasonable night of March’, ending with ‘“They’re all afraid,” said Poole.’
[AQA Nov/Jun 2021 Paper 1N Q1]
Starting with this extract, explore how Stevenson presents ideas about good and evil in The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
EXTRACT from Chapter 10 beginning ‘I knew myself, at the first breath’, ending with ‘and Edward Hyde, alone in the ranks of mankind, was pure evil’ [AQA Jun 2020 Paper 1 Q7]
Starting with this extract, explore how Stevenson presents ideas about science in The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
EXTRACT from Chapter 9 beginning ‘Here I proceeded to examine its contents’, ending with ‘I loaded an old revolver, that I might be found in some posture of self-defence’.
How to use this resource:
-Students: for revision & as an example of how to approach an extract essay question step-by-step. Suitable for all exam boards.
-Teachers & Tutors: in a lesson, creating your own mind map with students, and following the steps for building an essay structure, with the slides available for ideas or an example to students.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Plot Summary & Key Analysis of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing
This is a really useful A3 revision poster summarising:
-Key events in the play
-Act and Scene references to help you find evidence and quotes more easily
-Key points for analysis that you NEED to know for GCSE (suitable also for KS3)
-And emojis for fun!
How to use this resource:
-Students: for revision & as an example of how to summarise key analysis from a whole text. Suitable for all exam boards.
-Teachers & Tutors: in a lesson, using the analysis bubbles as discussion prompts to revise key analysis across the play.
LEARNING POINT for STUDENTS: For your set texts for GCSE English Literature it is SUCH a useful exercise to write your own plot summary of the key events in the text AND the key points for analysis (relating to the key themes, characters, techniques & context). Use your notes to help you and you can use online resources to help you remember events, but you must WRITE IN YOUR OWN WORDS.Your own ideas and unique analysis will get you into the top bands!
So please download to aid your revision of Much Ado About Nothing, and apply this method to create your own summary of events & key analysis for your set texts.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!
Maisie’s Cat | Short Fiction Comprehension | Suitable for KS1 & KS2 | Retrieval, Inference, Prediction, Analysis of Techniques and Creative Writing
Short passage comprehension describing Maisie’s cat. 10 questions - a mixture of multiple choice and short written answer questions and a creative writing task.
Questions are clearly labelled by skill e.g. retrieval, inference etc. to aid students in becoming familiar with recognising SATs style questions.
Ideal for Year 2 & Year 3, but can be used as an independent or starter activity for KS2, or a parent/teacher can read and work through this with younger year students for KS1.
Space to write inside the booklet and printable.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Resource pack accompanying Youtube video lesson on Analysing Unseen Poetry.
In this video I go through how to analyse and annotate an unseen poem from a past paper, and some model paragraphs to show you how to put your analysis into writing.
POEM: Watching a Dancer by James Berry
PAST PAPER: GCSE English Literature | Eduqas Paper 2 | Section C Unseen Poetry | Q31
Suitable for GCSE and KS3 students, across exam boards, as I am going through analysing one single poem on its own.
Contents:
Contents page and Links
Exam paper question
Mark Scheme page 1
Mark scheme page 2
Blank copy of the poem
My annotations of the poem
Model paragraphs
Please leave a review: If you download this resource and watch the video, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!
Mind Map Template to use when brainstorming for a writing task. Suitable for KS2, KS3 & GCSE. Can be used for fiction and non-fiction tasks.
Also posted with an example: I first used this structure for a descriptive writing task for Year 6 students about ‘My Dream House’. The left of the mind map allows for ideas and content, with a focus on WHAT students may want to write about. The right of the mind map encourages students to also brainstorm and plan HOW they will write, including what techniques they will use and examples.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!
3 multi-step trigonometry questions explained with complete steps and working out.
Suitable for KS3 & GCSE.
Please leave a review: If you download this resource, I would appreciate if you could take the time to leave a review and any comments!
Follow @zahrastuition on Instagram for an insight into my lessons, extra questions and resources!