Aim - link charactersâ names to the playâs themes.
Powerpoint encouraging the students to explore the significance of the names Eva Smith and Daisy Renton and including a focus on the name of Inspector Goole.
Prior to using this lesson, my class had watched the BBC adaptation of âAn Inspector Callsâ so already had knowledge of the plot and a basic understanding of the roles of the characters in terms of Priestleyâs intentions. Watching the adaptation first worked really well in my 4/5 target group. This is a short lesson (only 8 slides on the ppt) together with a multiple-choice quiz focusing the students on Priestleyâs use of stage directions in âAn Inspector Callsâ. The aim of the lesson is to draw inferences from Priestleyâs stage directions. For more able classes, the multiple-choice quiz could be used prior to the lesson to identify gaps in the studentsâ understanding so that subsequent teaching can be very precisely focused. With my own class (targets 4 and 5), I used the powerpoint first and then set the quiz as homework for consolidation and a little extension of knowledge.
If you find either aspect of this resource useful, I would very much appreciate you taking the time to leave a review.
Made for my class as part of their revision, this extract is longer than theyâll have in the exam - to give them more scope for choosing evidence - and is Romeoâs long speech as he enters the Capulet tomb. The question, divided into two bullets as in the exam, asks the students to focus on Shakespeareâs presentation of the effects of love.
Created for a key stage 3 class (year 8) as part of a unit on gothic horror, this is a straightforward task grid from which (if you use an adaptive approach) children can choose the tasks they find accessible. Alternatively, it could be used as homework or for cover.
A short and bog-standard revision powerpoint on âWhen We Two Partedâ, from the AQA GCSE English Literature Love and Relationships poetry cluster. There is a slide offering some brief information about context and then one slide per verse, each slide offering five notes.
Created for my year 11 class to support their revision.
If you find this useful, it would be great if you could take the time to leave a review.
I made this for my year 11 class at their request, to revise âOzymandiasâ prior to their February mock exam in English Lit. Please feel free to use/amend for your own classes. The intention is that the ppt slides provide prompts for probing questioning and whole-class discussion of the poem. Just to be clear - this wasnât used for first teaching of the poem - my students had a (in many cases, very hazy) knowledge and understanding before they went through this lesson. I hope very much that you will find this resource useful and will be really grateful if youâll take a minute to leave a review. Thank you.
Aim: to comment on the effect of some of Owenâs specific language in âAnthem for Doomed Youthâ.
Lesson plan originally created for year 9 to develop their skills of writing a P.E.E structured answer, exploring the effect of Owen's language choices in the poem. Includes an opportunity for a whole-class model answer which then forms the basis for some independent responses.
This is an exam practice task created for âRomeo and Julietâ. It differs from the âreal thingâ in that the extract used is longer than students are likely to find in their exam - and there are prompts for the 3 assessment objectives down the right hand side of the paper, though these could be very easily deleted.
This is Bellocâs cautionary tale of Jim who was eaten by a lion and there are 16 multiple-choice questions focusing on vocabulary with some basic comprehension. Originally set for h/w but could be used as a pre-reading activity to identify and address any misconceptions prior to some more work on the poem.
This ppt is a single slide with a copy of the poem (public domain) and with questions alongside intended to prompt thinking and annotation. This could be used prior to an unseen poetry response or to support independent approaches to reading and considering an unseen poem.
This is a very basic powerpoint display - one ppt is a list of language methods; one is a list of structural methods. Useful on the classroom wall for students to remind themselves which is which so they donât analyse language when asked to explore structure - or vice versa. Could be made more detailed with examples of each method or could be jazzed up with colour or images.
Powerpoint presentation looking at emotive language and linking the use of emotive language to Priestleyâs intentions. Students are asked to write using emotive language with picture prompts that echo Priestley's attitudes. Students are then asked to explore Priestley's use of emotive language, linking it to his message in the play.
This lesson uses Margaret Postgate Coleâs âThe Falling Leavesâ. The lesson was originally planned as cover. There is a short powerpoint (only 9 slides and one of those slides is a printable) accompanied by a worksheet which has a copy of the poem together with six questions, two of which are on the poemâs structure and its effect; the others focus on Coleâs use of simile and its effect. The main focus of the lesson is on the use of simile. Once the analysis of the poem is done, the pupils are then asked to create their own similes to go alongside an image of a WW1 soldier in a trench. Having done this, they are asked to use their similes along with four of Coleâs words to produce a piece of creative writing, either in poetry or in prose.
This is an old-school comprehension activity focusing on the excerpt from âGreat Expectationsâ in which Mrs Joe is introduced. Created for a year 8 class who needed a cover lesson in the middle of a Dickens SOW, this has 17 questions and could be used as intended - for cover - but also for homework or even to structure a guided reading activity. If you find this useful then I would be very grateful if you could take the time to leave a review.
This is a very bog-standard powerpoint using some questioning to support studentsâ recall of Hardyâs âNeutral Tonesâ and âSingh Songâ, âLoveâs Philosophyâ and Sonnet 29 - prior to asking them to tackle a question about the presentation of feelings about romantic relationships.
Might come in useful as a starting point for revision. If you find this of use, I would very much appreciate you taking the time to leave a review.
A short and simple multiple-choice quiz based on a brief description of the graveyard that Scrooge visits alongside the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come in stave 4.
A multiple-choice quiz on Stave 3 of âA Christmas Carolâ inviting students to consider Dickensâ message about family and how that message is communicated. 23 questions in total. Answers provided.
Useful to structure a guided reading activity, to set as homework or to use as cover, this is a comprehension activity based on a single paragraph from Dickensâs âThe Uncommercial Travellerâ in which he recounts the appeal of a churchyard he nicknames St Ghastly Grim and describes an evening that he visited it in a thunderstorm. There are ten comprehension questions.