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KS3, "The Adventure of the Speckled Band", Lesson 6, Defining tension, Evaluating tension
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KS3, "The Adventure of the Speckled Band", Lesson 6, Defining tension, Evaluating tension

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Planned for a year 8 class, this explores Holmes’ and Watson’s vigil towards the end of “The Adventure of the Speckled Band”. Pupils are guided through an understanding of the meaning of tension. There is a text marking activity after which a grid is used to clarify their thinking. The lesson concludes with a piece of evaluative/comparative writing in which pupils are asked which of their identified methods is most successful in creating tension; which is least successful. Depending on the amount of modelling/scaffolding needed and the length at which you want your pupils to write, this lesson could be extended over two hours - although it was planned to occupy one hour.
KS4 Eng Lang Analysis Revision Model
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KS4 Eng Lang Analysis Revision Model

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A revision powerpoint on language analysis useful for English Language GCSE preparation. The powerpoint uses a short extract from a public domain text and this is provided - together with the question - on the final two slides so that you can print it out. The powerpoint asks students to consider their choice of evidence and then goes through how to use that evidence in an answer that clearly explains how the evidence shows what it does.
"A Taste of Honey" - GCSE Eng Lit - Revision of 5 key methods.
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"A Taste of Honey" - GCSE Eng Lit - Revision of 5 key methods.

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This is a straightforward powerpoint intended for revision which reminds students of five of Delaney’s key methods in the play. These are: the symbolism of the flower bulbs, the symbolism of the light bulb, the proximity of the church clock, the proximity of the gasworks and the Boy’s quotations from “Othello” (contrasted with Jo’s reading of fairy tales). Each of the methods has a few questions to encourage recall and then suggested answers and ideas are provided on the next slide.
KS3 Charles Dickens, characterisation through setting, "Great Expectations", Miss Havisham, analysis
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KS3 Charles Dickens, characterisation through setting, "Great Expectations", Miss Havisham, analysis

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Planned for a year 8 class as part of a unit of work on Charles Dickens, this lesson focuses on Dickens’s use of setting for characterisation. The extract used (a short one; printable is on slide 11); prior to that, the pupils are asked to look at the description of the Chocolate Room from ‘Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’, explaining how Dahl’s use of colour suggests the character of Willy Wonka. There is then a focus on concrete nouns and pupils are asked what these suggest about Willy Wonka - what aspect of his personality they might reflect. Having built confidence in this skill, the focus then shifts to the more challenging text - from ‘Great Expectations’. Having gone through some text marking, pupils are then asked to share what they think the setting suggests about Miss Havisham - then pick one aspect of that setting and write up an analytical paragraph. For homework, pupils are asked to describe a room that gives the reader clues as to their own character - describing the room’s colour, temperature, listing at least 3 concrete nouns and mentioning the view from the window.
KS3, KS4, "Dracula", chap 23, crr, comprehension, gothic horror, cover, hw, description of Dracula
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KS3, KS4, "Dracula", chap 23, crr, comprehension, gothic horror, cover, hw, description of Dracula

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This uses an excerpt from “Dracula” in which the vampire hunters have lain in wait for Dracula who confronts, taunts and escapes them. There are 11 questions focusing on the writer’s methods and their effects with a couple on vocabulary and inference. Useful for homework or for setting as a cover activity. A useful addition to any study of the gothic horror genre. Alternatively, the question could be used for structuring a guided reading activity.
Poetry "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" (excerpt) Oscar Wilde Close Reading Analysis Unseen Questioning
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Poetry "The Ballad of Reading Gaol" (excerpt) Oscar Wilde Close Reading Analysis Unseen Questioning

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This lesson uses four stanzas from Oscar Wilde’s “The Ballad of Reading Gaol”. In these stanzas, there is a very clear, critical viewpoint about the prison system and its impact. The stanzas contain a wealth of language methods which should enable less confident pupils to find something to explore and give more confident pupils the opportunity to link ideas. Planned for a year 9 class to build and hone the skills of analysis of previously unseen poetry, this lesson uses close questioning and modelling to support the pupils in a response to a question requiring analysis of the writer’s methods. The wording of the question echoes the question to be found on AQA’s English Literature GCSE Paper 2. Slide 3 of the ppt can be used as a printable.
Unseen Poetry Exam Practice Christina Rossetti "A Birthday" Pre 20 Century
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Unseen Poetry Exam Practice Christina Rossetti "A Birthday" Pre 20 Century

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This is a short and straightforward activity giving students an opportunity to practise and develop the skills of writing an analytical essay about an unseen poem. The poem is “A Birthday” by Christina Rossetti so no issues with copyright. The first slide of the ppt has a copy of the poem and the essay question. The second slide gives students a suggested pattern for tackling the task, the idea being that they should go through each of the steps in every paragraph of their response. The third slide can be used for self/peer assessment and developing the response further.
KS3 Gothic Horror Characters Dracula Frankenstein
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KS3 Gothic Horror Characters Dracula Frankenstein

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This lesson was planned as part of a unit on gothic horror for y8 but could work for any class at KS3. The powerpoint includes both reading and writing activities. The lesson forms part of a SOW focusing on writing in the gothic genre. The initial focus is on the characterisation of Dracula and the creation of a foil. The focus then moves to the idea of characterisation through setting and introduces the idea of “Frankenstein”.
GCSE English Literature "A Taste of Honey" 20 revision questions with answers
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GCSE English Literature "A Taste of Honey" 20 revision questions with answers

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A simple and straightforward revision activity. 20 questions (suggested answers provided on a separate sheet). Could be used in class as a springboard for more developed answers through discussion. Useful for homework or cover. Created as a revision activity to enable students to identify gaps in their knowledge so that they can focus their next steps.
KS2, KS3 "The Call of the Wild" fiction extract, crr, comprehension, cover activity, hw, reading
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KS2, KS3 "The Call of the Wild" fiction extract, crr, comprehension, cover activity, hw, reading

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Created for a year 7 class as a homework to go alongside our class reader of 'Love That Dog', this is a comprehension (close reading and response) activity based on the segment from "The Call of the Wild" in which Buck fights Spitz to become top dog. There are 14 questions in total, focusing on vocabulary, inference and the effects of language. This would be a good cover activity or the questions could be used to structure a guided reading session.