This GCSE, English Literature (AQA), Worlds and Lives poetry anthology resource focuses on Wordsworth, “Lines Written in Early Spring” and Bronte, “Shall Earth no more Inspire Thee”. It provides a comprehension and a writing frame to write a comparative essay.
The first booklet includes both poems and graded comprehensions leading from a literal understanding to inference and exploration. There is also a list of key phrases that can be used to analyse the themes of the poems.
The second booklet includes a writing frame to write a comparative essay. This is useful for students who have difficulty structuring their ideas.
The poetry resource is an effective way to teach both these poems from Worlds and Lives!
These GCSE, English Language Courses target the elements need to succeed at GCSE level. It is suitable for SEN and ESL students who are able but lack the language skills needed to progress.
The Reading course includes exercises on the use of topic sentences and other sentence types needed to write a coherent reading response paragraph/essay. It incorporates explanations of the stages and features of a well written paragraph.
The Vocabulary Course is based on the Academic word list which outlines key words used in the kind of texts students will need to read at GCSE level. It will also improve their writing by allowing them to develop the use of academic words. Included are visual prompts and speaking and listening activities to help understand the words.
Designed to develop sentence structure, the Grammar in Context Course outlines sentence types required in narrative, persuasive and argumentative writing.There are speaking and listening activities, visual prompts and opportunities to practice writing in the unit.
Finally, I have included a SATs vocabulary course which you will receive for free. This can be used with SEN and ESL students, or as a useful course for Year 7 students.
The courses are an effective way of helping under achieving students progress. They can delivered as part of lessons, or as interventions.
This An Inspector Calls, GCSE, English Literature unit contains key extracts, an essay scaffold prompt, a model essay and glossary of key terms related to the role of Eva Smith. It is designed to support students who find difficulty structuring their ideas in an essay.
Short extracts involving Eva Smith, with brief explanations, are provided. After reading these extracts students consider an essay title about the importance of Eva Smith in the play.
A scaffold is included which contains paragraph and sentence openers to support students with writing their essay. The scaffold is particularly useful for SEN and EAL students.
When the students have written their essay on the role of Eva Smith, they can read the model essay and reflect on the features of a successful response.
Finally, there is an additional, glossary resource which explains the meaning and usage of key words in the model essay.
This unit is invaluable in helping students understand how to write an essay about key themes and characters in the play!
This booklet is aimed to improve descriptive writing. In many 11 plus exams, there is a choice of creative writing tasks - one of these is a response to a picture.
A picture of a train station is provided, along with a model response. Students are then guided through a number of exercises to help them read and comprehend the description.
A list of words associated with trains is provided. Students have to write the syllables in different colours to aid memory. Dyslexic students struggle to read due to difficulty processing sounds. Often they have visual strengths which can be used to aid memory. This booklet utilises this strength by using a colour method to learn to spell and read words.
To further enhance reading fluency, a list of phrases from the model text is provided and a timed activity in which students record the time taken to read the text, along with errors made.
Prior to reading, students learn the different sentence openers that are used to write an engaging descriptive piece.
Finally, students complete their own independent, writing task about another train station picture. This is a useful assessment to see how many successful features are used in their own writing.
A further planning booklet and rubric for marking descriptive writing is provided.
Together, these GCSE, English Literature booklets offer a complete package for teachers looking to support students with both thematic and language analysis in their study of the significance of love in Romeo and Juliet.
The Key Quotations booklet complements focuses on a collection of key quotations from Romeo and Juliet, designed for activities that develop students’ skills in analyzing language and structure. This resource provides a range of exercises aimed at improving students’ ability to write analytical responses based on textual evidence.
Activities include a quotation match, inserting missing letters and a speed read task. It also involves identifying the significance of specific quotations, explaining their meaning in context, and linking them back to central themes like love, fate, and conflict. Teachers can use these activities to help students build stronger analytical skills, providing them with a foundation for writing structured and insightful essays on Shakespeare’s language.
The second booklet focuses on the exploration of love within Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. It provides a comprehensive analysis of how love is portrayed in various forms: romantic, familial, and platonic. Through a detailed PEEL paragraph, students are guided on how to explore key moments in the play where love transcends boundaries and defies societal expectations. The booklet includes key quotations, context, and clear explanations that help students understand the complex nature of love in the play. Teachers can use this resource to encourage critical thinking and facilitate in-depth discussions about the different dimensions of love, as well as how it leads to both the characters’ ultimate joy and tragic end.
This GCSE, Eduqas, English Literature poetry resource provides a writing scaffold and model essay to compare Mametz Wood and Dulce Et Decorum Est.
A writing scaffold is presented in the form of structured questions. These answers can be used to write an essay. Key quotations are included along with answers.
A model essay is also provided so that students can discuss the features of a successful essay.
The unit has shown to be effective in helping students learn how to structure their response.
This comprehensive guide is designed to help GCSE students excel in both the reading and descriptive writing sections of AQA, English Language Paper 1. It provides clear, practical strategies for approaching each type of question, with step-by-step advice and model responses tailored to exam requirements.
Reading Section:
Extract and Practice Questions: The extract is taken from a psychological narrative set in the 1990s. Typical, AQA questions are provided to assess comprehension.
In-Depth Question Guidance: Detailed advice on how to respond to each question type, from basic information retrieval to deeper analysis and evaluation.
Model Answers: Example responses to show students how to structure answers, use subject-specific vocabulary, and apply evaluative language.
Exam Skills: Strategies to help students identify key information, understand how to interpret language and structure, and analyze the writer’s techniques effectively.
Descriptive Writing Section:
Practice questions: A picture prompt and story writing task is provided.
Exam-Specific Tips: Tailored advice for AQA, Paper 1.
Model Descriptive Paragraphs: High-quality example texts that demonstrate effective use of descriptive techniques and language choices.
An additional resource which contains a template on how to deepen analysis for the reading paper has been provided.
Perfect For:
Teachers seeking comprehensive resources for teaching both reading and descriptive writing skills
Students aiming to improve their understanding of reading comprehension and creative writing techniques
Tutors looking to support students with exam preparation for AQA English Language Paper 1
This guide will help students build confidence in their reading and writing skills, offering structured guidance and practical tools for exam success.
This comprehensive teaching resource focuses on Stave One of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. It includes various engaging activities designed to deepen students’ understanding of character analysis, themes, and narrative elements in the novella. It is suitable for students who struggle with comprehension.
The unit contains -
Summary Activity: Students fill in the gaps in a summary of Stave One, reinforcing key plot points and character introductions. This exercise encourages comprehension and retention of the text.
Character Descriptions: A list of adjectives allows students to identify and select characteristics that apply to Ebenezer Scrooge at the beginning of the story. An extension task requires students to create sentences using these adjectives, promoting vocabulary development and critical thinking.
Letter Writing: In a creative writing exercise, students imagine they are Scrooge and write a letter to their doctor after witnessing the ghostly door knocker. This task enhances empathy and perspective-taking.
Character Reflections: A thought-expressing activity allows students to explore the mind of a charity worker after encountering Scrooge, fostering understanding of social themes in the text.
Diary Entry: Students take on the role of Bob Cratchit and write a diary entry reflecting on his day, providing insights into his character and family dynamics while practicing narrative writing skills.
True/False Comprehension: A set of comprehension questions based on the end of Stave One tests students’ understanding of key events and themes, reinforcing critical reading skills.
Topic Sentences: Students create topic sentences that highlight different portrayals of Scrooge, strengthening their ability to write cohesive paragraphs.
Character Matching: This matching exercise identifies character actions and traits, ensuring students can recognize and articulate key characteristics of Fred, Scrooge, Marley, and Bob Cratchit.
Quotation, Memory Aid: A colour code system to remember key quotations.
This resource is perfect for educators looking to enhance their lessons on A Christmas Carol, providing a variety of activities that cater to different learning styles and promote a deeper understanding of the text.
Unlocking the Mind: Mastering Sensory Detail in Psychological Narratives pairs with the Narrative Writing Skills Workbook to create a comprehensive resource for teaching descriptive and narrative writing for GCSE, English Language. Together, these booklets provide step-by-step guidance, practical exercises, and annotated examples to enhance students’ skills while meeting exam board requirements.
The Narrative Writing Skills Workbook
The first booklet focuses on building foundational skills in narrative writing:
Engaging Sentence Openers: Teach students to vary their sentence structures with strategies such as using participles, prepositions, and “show, don’t tell” techniques.
Sensory Detail Practice: Includes specific prompts for applying sight, sound, smell, touch, and taste to develop vivid scenes.
Model Sentences: Offers concrete examples to inspire students and guide them in writing effective, sensory-rich sentences.
Independent Practice: Contains graphic organizers and storyboarding exercises to help students plan and write their own narratives.
Unlocking the Mind: Mastering Sensory Detail in Psychological Narratives
The second booklet builds on these foundational skills, specifically focusing on the use of sensory detail to create emotionally resonant psychological narratives:
Deep Dive into Sensory Techniques: Explores how to evoke character emotions such as anxiety, joy, or nostalgia through sensory experiences.
Emotion Through Contrast: Guides students in creating tension by contrasting setting and internal states.
Practice Tasks: Includes exercises like describing a crowded market using all five senses or showing an emotion without naming it.
Model Stories and Annotations: Features examples such as A Stressful Day, where sensory details and sentence openers are analyzed for effectiveness.
This two-part resource is designed to:
Help students master the descriptive and narrative writing requirements of the GCSE English Language syllabus.
Support students of all abilities, including those with additional learning needs, through scaffolding and differentiated tasks.
Inspire students to write engaging and sophisticated narratives by showing how to combine sensory detail with emotional depth.
This pack contains two separate booklets for GCSE, AQA English Language teachers, designed to support effective exam preparation and student success. These resources are tailored to help educators teach and assess students working towards their GCSE English Language Paper One.
Booklet 1: Practice Paper
This booklet provides a complete, original practice paper for AQA GCSE English Language Paper 1. It includes a carefully crafted fictional extract titled ‘Whispers in the Mill’ with a range of questions mirroring the official, AQA exam format. The questions assess key skills such as understanding setting, language analysis, structural analysis, and critical interpretation. This resource is ideal for mock exams, in-class assessments, or independent student practice.
An indicative content section is included for the reading paper and model answers for the writing section.
Booklet 2: Question 4 Guidance
The second booklet offers in-depth guidance on answering Question 4, the critical evaluation task from AQA, GCSE, English Language Paper One. It provides:
A breakdown of the question format and expectations.
Model responses at different levels.
Mark scheme insights for clear assessment.
Strategies for teaching evaluative writing and textual interpretation.
Key Features of Both Booklets:
Designed to align with mark schemes and assessment objectives for Paper One.
Clear, accessible explanations suitable for both teachers and students.
Flexible for classroom teaching, homework tasks, and revision workshops.
This unit contains a GCSE, English Literature (Eduqas), unseen poetry, practice question and indicative content in a tabular format.
Two poems about an experience with the sea are included, followed by typical exam questions. The second boklet contains detailed indicative content which can be used to mark the essays, provide feedback, or as a teaching aid.
The indicative content includes the subject specific terms needed to analyse the poems, along with analysis and effect.
This is a useful resource to prepare for the Unseen Poetry section.
This Paper 2 (AQA), English Language resource provides everything you need to support students in navigating the Paper 2 examination.
With extensive practice papers, students are supported in understanding the structure of this exam. Furthermore, model answer/indicative content accompanies every paper, along with additional guidance.
The quality extracts are based on a range of topics such as farming, gardening, cycling and many more.
The writing section contains questions linked to the subject of the extracts and a model answer is given for each question.
With every practice paper, a booklet on numerous topics is provided. These give additional support on the reading or writing elements of the paper.
This resource will provide support throughout an entire school year and has proved successful in supporting students of all abilities!
The unit contains resources and lesson plans to teach descriptive writing in a structured and successful way.
It contains picture prompts, a model answer, a five senses analysis sheet, a planning sheet and independent task.
Using the model and analysis sheets, the unit shows students how to be successful writers in the descriptive genre. It has proved highly successful in improving the writing of GCSE students!
Using visual cues such as colour backgrounds and visual spelling/reading methods, the booklet is ideal for students who struggle to read due to an additional need such as dyslexia.
The booklet is divided into Chracter, Plot, Themes and Key Scene Sections, with opportunity to practice the reading and spelling of key vocabulary using colour codes.
At the end of the booklet there is an assessment section that includes a key word spelling activity.
You will receive a copy of the PDF in peach, orange and yellow so that you can choose whichever booklet background is suited to the student’s preference.
The booklet is also suitable for ESL learners.
This short unit is invaluable to teach how to write a GCSE, reading response essay. It provides an extract, model essay, lesson plan, marking rubric and numerous language rich activities to aid understanding.
Presented in a concise and interesting format, the student worksheet starts with the extract and two comprehension activities before they read the model GCSE essay.
Next, there is a model essay with a spelling of key words activity and a reading fluency exercise to help familiarise students with the essay.
Finally, students can write independently about another part of the play and use a rubric to peers assess.
The unit provides an engaging framework in which to teach the extract question for GCSE English Literature. It would also save invaluable time for a lesson observation.
This short unit is invaluable to teach how to write a GCSE, reading response essay. It provides an extract, model essay, lesson plan, marking rubric and numerous language rich activities to aid understanding.
Presented in a concise and interesting format, the student worksheet starts with the extract and two comprehension activities before they read the model GCSE essay.
Next, there is a model essay with a spelling of key words activity and a reading fluency exercise to help familiarise students with the essay.
Finally, students can write independently about another part of the play and use a rubric to peers assess.
The unit provides an engaging framework in which to teach the extract question for GCSE English Literature. It would also save invaluable time for a lesson observation.
Metaphors in Shakespeare’s texts can be difficult for students to understand. This unit explains some of the key metaphors used in Macbeth and prepares students for their GCSE, English Literature exam.
The unit includes a booklet to explain the key metaphors in depth and provides context to the quotations. To help students with additional needs, vocabulary lists are provided. The student can use these to identify meaning, and learn how to read/spell them.
There is a key quotation list provided separately. Students can use this to learn them by rote.
Finally, there is an assessment section using a short extract that includes one of the metaphors. This is accompanied with a marking rubric and sample answer.
Ideal for GCSE, English Literature, the pack contains resources to support students with additional needs access A Christmas Carol for AQA examination. It contains a drama version of the text, a study guide, key vocabulary and numerous language based activities.
The drama unit contains a play version of key moments from each Stave and allows students who learn best using ‘hands on on learning’ study the novella.
The study guide contains information on key themes, characters, key quotations and vocabulary. It is accompanied by a more in depth quotation booklet.
There is also an additional vocabulary pack with key, colour coded words which help students discuss and write about each character,
The pack provides a host of resources to support students who struggle to understand this key, AQA, examination text!
This dyslexia friendly, functional skills writing workbook includes a structured approach to improve writing by using model answers, questionnaires, plans and colour-coded spelling of key words. The questions are focused on improving a park and reviewing a visit to an amusement park.
Each section begins with typical writing questions on the Functional Skills (AQA) Paper.
To engage students, questionnaires and discussion questions are provided to help students develop their ideas. This will also support the speaking and listening element of the exam.
There are colour coded words to aid the spelling and reading of key words related to the questions. This is aimed to support students with additional needs and has proved an effective way to support dyslexics due to the visual elements involved.
There are two model answers - one aimed at Level One and another at Level Two. This is provided to differentiate for those who show progress in their writing.
A scheme accompanies this unit and provides additional ideas to support teaching.
This is an invaluable resource to deliver the writing element of the Functional Skills exam.
This comprehensive GCSE, English Literature pack is designed to support students of middle to low ability in mastering Charles Dickens’ classic novella, ensuring success in their exams. Whether you are looking for in-depth analysis, revision materials, or creative exercises, this bundle has it all. It is perfect for both classroom use and independent study, offering a structured, engaging approach to the text.
The first pack focuses on unlocking a deeper understanding of A Christmas Carol through model answers, writing frames, and key vocabulary. It is especially beneficial for students with additional needs, providing a structured approach to essay writing and exam preparation. Students will be able to explore critical themes like death, isolation, and poverty while sharpening their skills in literary analysis, textual evidence, and essay structuring. This resource ensures that learners build the confidence needed to tackle exam questions with ease.
The second pack offers a detailed breakdown of each stave in the novella, with fifteen carefully selected extracts accompanied by comprehension questions, language analysis, and critical thinking prompts. These activities are designed to help students of all levels understand Dickens’ use of language and narrative perspective. The resource is ideal for revision, self-study, or boosting classroom discussions, providing an interactive and thought-provoking approach to the novella’s major themes and characters.
The third pack is perfect for students who learn best through hands-on activities, as it includes a drama version of key moments from each stave. This play version helps bring A Christmas Carol to life, allowing students to engage with the text in a dynamic and memorable way. Alongside this, the study guide and vocabulary pack offer a detailed examination of key themes, characters, and quotations, ensuring that even the most complex aspects of the novella are accessible to all learners.
Overall, this bundle is an essential toolkit for GCSE English Literature students studying A Christmas Carol. It provides a structured, supportive, and creative way to explore the novella, helping students to unlock their potential and achieve top marks in their exams.