Hero image

One Stop English and Humanities Shop

Average Rating3.64
(based on 40 reviews)

Unique resources created by an experienced Secondary English and History teacher. These are academically rigorous resources that target children between 13 and 18 years of age.

528Uploads

171k+Views

24k+Downloads

Unique resources created by an experienced Secondary English and History teacher. These are academically rigorous resources that target children between 13 and 18 years of age.
Introduction to politics in Australia and the Labor Party
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Introduction to politics in Australia and the Labor Party

(0)
This lesson defines politics, looks at what is needed to be classified as politically literate, lists various forms of political participation, explains how the party system works and defines opposition/minor/independent parties. It also looks at the Labor party key players, the ideals of the party, the main platforms for the election, the 100 positive policies (their advertisement and the chaser’s response), it then lists all 100 positive policies and looks at some of the most interesting ones (social issues including refugees etc.) PLEASE NOTE: The material in this lesson was created in 2016 so would be good at providing context for where we are now
Trivia Questions
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Trivia Questions

(0)
A document with over 300 trivia questions (and answers) useful for class competitions, homeroom, school fundraisers etc. Questions include those about Australia, other nations, celebrities, popular culture texts, inventors and scientific discoveries, historical events, true or false etc
Teacher and Student reflection tools
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Teacher and Student reflection tools

(0)
The first resource is a template I use for student reflections at the end of each term. It includes sections for feedback about the assessment, the learning opportunities and about me as a teacher. The second resource is a template I use for completing my own reflections after teaching a unit. It can be great for beginning teachers or for staff to complete together at the end of term.
Social and Community Studies - Arts & Community - Unit introduction
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Social and Community Studies - Arts & Community - Unit introduction

(0)
The first lesson to introduce students to the ‘Art and Community’ unit. It introduces students to some key terms they need to know for the unit. I use underlining to indicate to students what notes they need to copy from slides. There is information about some types of art (mosaic, sculpture, recycled art, collage, street art and wheat pasting). There is a viewing activity (a news story about street artworks made early on during the COVID 19 Pandemic). This is followed by some information about the upcoming assessment task and dates so students know where they are heading. Students also learn about the purpose of art which they will have to write about in the front section of their inquiry booklet. The lesson ends with an interesting viewing activity of the 100 most creative street artworks. There is also information about bottle cap art as our school decided to do a fun end of term activity where the students made one collective street art for display at the school.
Social and Community Studies - Arts & Community - Unit Plan and Learning Intentions
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Social and Community Studies - Arts & Community - Unit Plan and Learning Intentions

(0)
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. A Unit plan designed for term 4 (a shorter term.) It includes syllabus objectives, a description of the unit, assessment task details and a list of recommended resources.A Scope and Sequence suggesting topics to be covered throughout the term is provided. A Learning Intention and Success Criteria handout for students to glue into the front of their work books A template for recording differentiations made to accommodate NCCD students. (The NCCD is an annual collection of information about Australian school students with disability. The NCCD enables schools, education authorities and governments to better understand the needs of students with disability and how they can be best supported at school.)
Australian politics - contentious issues
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Australian politics - contentious issues

(0)
Looking at marriage equality and what has been said about it on Q&A (with some clips to watch). Another Q&A clip about Independent Candidate Bob Katter (in an episode about mental health) where he gets challenged by Josh Thomas about his homophobia and his denial that there are any gay people in his electorate. This lesson also looks at immigration (particularly illegal immigrants) and looks at the language used to label them. It also looks at newspaper articles and political cartoons about a drowned three year old Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, whose lifeless body was washed ashore in Turkey. It includes scaffolding to write an analysis of some of these political cartoons. PLEASE NOTE: this resource was made in 2016 before marriage equality was achieved in Australia. The discussion of refugee issues is still pertinent but much has happened since then thus have marked down the price
Mentoring new staff - types of assessment, drafting and how to give feedback
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Mentoring new staff - types of assessment, drafting and how to give feedback

(0)
This PPT was designed for an English staff meeting but could be modified for use in other departments. It is especially useful when mentoring beginning teachers. It explains the three types of assessment: Assessment of learning (summative). Assessment for learning (formative). Assessment as Learning (learning from reflections after completing the task). It looks at why all three forms are important and how to make each type meaningful. It includes example scaffolding for an assessment task (including how to explain the criteria to your students). It includes an example template for students to write their assignment into (that teacher’s can then model their own templates off of). It includes an example of a draft checklist which can speed up a teacher’s draft time. It explains the importance of providing timely feedback on final assessment and includes example feedback and an explanation of the sandwich model.
War Poetry Unit - Unit Introduction
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

War Poetry Unit - Unit Introduction

(0)
1) A PowerPoint for an introductory lesson to a year 12 Authority English unit in Australia. Overview of school rules, my rules and expectations for Authority English. A term overview, a list of spelling words, goal setting prompts, an introduction to poetry and why it matters, & a brief writing activity. 2) A handout with the questions for the student self-reflection.
Report on Technology
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Report on Technology

(0)
3 Resources: 1) Report Writing PowerPoint explaining the assessment task: (They had to create a written informative report that analyses how language, communication and technology influence our personal lives and has changed society.) The PowerPoint explains what a report is, goes through planning steps, how to search more effectively using a BOOLEAN search and a structure for the report. 2) A word doc template for students to fill their report into. 3) An example PowerPoint looking at the evolution of the Radio
11 Modern History - Vietnam Independence Movement - Research lesson – continuity and change
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

11 Modern History - Vietnam Independence Movement - Research lesson – continuity and change

(0)
This lesson utilises an Inquiry Based Learning approach. From earlier terms, the year 11 MHS students are aware of the historical concept of continuity and change. They are aware that, as historians, we need to study what things have changed or continued over time and try to explain the reasons for these. In this lesson, the students receive a handout that poses a key question that they need to investigate and respond to. As a class, we then broke down the key question into sub questions which students could research independently. (I find the use of think aloud activities – talking through my process – helps students to learn historical skill. This lesson gives them the opportunity to practice doing these things which they will do again when they develop their own key question and begin their assessment). Also included on the handout are a list of places where students can begin their research before branching out to their own searches. There is also a retrieval chart which provides a structured way for students to record their research. If you want to save on paper they can draw these in their books or complete them on One Note. Alternatively, a handout with several tables is provided as a separate word document. The final activity (Complete a T.A.D.P.O.L.E. of one of the sources you have chosen to assess its reliability) can be completed in class for fast finishers or for homework. NB: Resources designed for the new senior Modern History syllabus (implemented in QLD in 2019). The content would also be useful more broadly for students in other states and countries with an interest in the Vietnamese Independence Movement (1945-1975). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. The end of term assessment for this unit was an essay.
11 Modern History - Vietnam Independence Movement – How to write a key inquiry question
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

11 Modern History - Vietnam Independence Movement – How to write a key inquiry question

(0)
This lesson (PowerPoint) was designed to have a short explicit teaching episode at the start followed by for students to develop key inquiry question. This lesson was a review of the key skills required for writing a question for their research essay. It begins with a summary of the assessment task. This is followed by looking at an example key question from QCAA for a different topic (The Cold War). Beneath this is some annotations from QCAA explaining how this addresses the ‘Devising and Conducting’ portion of the criteria. There is some advice about writing a key inquiry question and a graphic organiser showing how you could dot point ideas before narrowing this into a question (examples about the American Civil Rights Movement). There are also example questions written to demonstrate / centre on each of the 7 historical concepts. This is followed by an example key question for our topic (Vietnamese Independence Movement). Students must identify whether it is an open or closed question. They are provided with some information about each question type to help them make this decision. Three more questions (of varying degrees of suitability) are provided for students to evaluate against the criteria. Afterwards students have time to write their first draft of their key question (due the following week for feedback). If time permits, there is feedback about the Tet offensive and the famous photograph entitled ‘Saigon Execution’ which they were to research for their homework task. ** NB: Resources designed for the new senior Modern History syllabus (implemented in QLD in 2019). The content would also be useful more broadly for students in other states and countries with an interest in the Vietnamese Independence Movement (1945-1975). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. The end of term assessment for this unit was an essay.**
German Nationalism: Documentary Viewing lesson ‘Hitler’s World: The Post War Plan – Nazification
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

German Nationalism: Documentary Viewing lesson ‘Hitler’s World: The Post War Plan – Nazification

(0)
A graphic organiser (worksheet) for students to fill in while watching the documentary ‘HITLER’S WORLD: THE POST WAR PLAN: NAZIFICATION’ (2017) available on ClickView at https://online.clickview.com.au/libraries/series/9204332/hitler-s-world-the-post-war-plan The documentary originally aired on SBS and funs for 45 minutes. I utilise the broadcast strategy approach (Barry & King, 1998) previewing the graphic organiser prior to playing the documentary so that students know what to listen out for. I then facilitate a class discussion to go through the answers once we have finished watching the documentary. I have also included notes taken by a student as a sample response.
Worksheet for viewing Bend it like Beckham (2002)
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Worksheet for viewing Bend it like Beckham (2002)

(0)
A lesson designed for a senior English class to practice identifying representations (messages about sport) and identifying various character’s values, attitudes, beliefs and cultural assumptions. It includes a breif synopsis of the film, pictures of the main characters, a graphic organiser for studdents to record the VABs of the various characters and some post viewing questions.
Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Inquiry Booklet Section 3
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Social and Community Studies - Into Relationships unit - Inquiry Booklet Section 3

(1)
Part of a set of resources created for a senior Social & Community studies class in Australia (QCAA syllabus). The other resources are also available in my store - lrigb4. Designed for use in a 70 minute lesson. The PPT begins with a reflection - recapping what students know about conflict. Students have the second opportunity to view the conflict scenario clip from Everybody Loves Raymond which will be used for the teacher example. I then model how to complete the table about the two people in the conflict (Marie and Frank). I show them where further information about the characters can be found (e.g. fan pages, Wikipedia, IMDB). Afterwards, students need to complete the Person A and B tables in their inquiry booklet (for the conflict scenario they have chosen). In subsequent lessons students will use this information to write paragraphs about each person for the findings section of their report.
Australian Stereotypes - Crocodile Dundee
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Australian Stereotypes - Crocodile Dundee

(1)
Two PowerPoints for a 9 English Unit. The first PowerPoint includes a synopsis of the film and the film trailer is embedded. This is followed by a range of clips and viewing questions. It also includes information about how Indigenous Australians are portrayed in the film. Additionally, there is a section on exploring key quotes. Students have to pick out the slang and the beliefs of the protagonist which are indicated in the quote. The second PowerPoint is a paragraph writing lesson. It takes students through the various stereotypes in the film and includes some pre-writing (planning) steps. It reviews the PEEEL paragraph structure. It includes some scaffolding (suggested sentence starters) along with an example paragraph (which is colour coded to indicate which section it addresses). After this activity, there is information about modality and some examples of high and low modality words. There is also some information about linking words.
Frontier Wars - 11 Modern History - Viewing First Australians Episode 4 - There is no other law
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Frontier Wars - 11 Modern History - Viewing First Australians Episode 4 - There is no other law

(1)
This is a worksheet to utilise with the SBS series First Australians Episode 4: There is no other law. This resource was made for use in an 11 Modern History classroom in Queensland, Australia. I have also included a scanned copy of my teacher answer sheet. According to SBS, “First Australians chronicles the birth of contemporary Australia as never told before, from the perspective of its first people. First Australians explores what unfolds when the oldest living culture in the world is overrun by the world’s greatest empire.” Episode 4 focuses on Central Australia 1878-1897. This episode of First Australians gives an excellent academic account of the first 50 years of contact between the Arrernte people of central Australia and the European missionaries, pastoralists and police. Throughout the history of white settlement, individual white men, good and bad, have significantly affected the first Australians. Supported by pastoralists keen to make their fortune, the homicidal police officer Constable Willshire, brings mayhem to the Arrernte nation in Central Australia. With the authorities turning a blind eye, the telegraph operator Frank Gillen stops him. Gillen’s other legacy is keeping comprehensive records of the Arrernte people’s way of life.
Protest Poetry - Analysing poems using the STEP UP acronym
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Protest Poetry - Analysing poems using the STEP UP acronym

(0)
4 resources designed for a year 8 poetry unit. The first is a PowerPoint which takes students through the STEP UP acronym which they will use to analyse poems in their upcoming assessment: subject matter, theme, emotions, poetic devices, your interpretation, purpose… It includes prompting questions that students should ask themselves to help guide their response for each category. It then includes a poem about a refugee and slides which work through the STEP UP process. The second is a worksheet for modified students which has most of the notes written so that they only have to write a few. The third is a handout which explains STEP UP which could be used as a poster. The fourth is a typed version of the analysis of the refugee poem (in a Word Doc)
Hospitality Studies – making recommendations about tourist destinations
Aussie_resourcesAussie_resources

Hospitality Studies – making recommendations about tourist destinations

(0)
A lesson designed to help students to practice the skills ‘decide’ and ‘justify.’ There is a worksheet where they are given a scenario for a client they need to make recommendations for. Students were in a computer lab so that they could research the destination. They had to recommend: a. An Accommodation option b. A Travel and Tourism option c. A Food and Beverage option d. A Recreation option A sheet of options for the destination ‘Mount Isa’ have been provided to assist teachers. There is also a homework activity for the ‘Gold Coast.’ Resources designed for use in an 11 Hospitality Practices class in Australia (2019 curriculum). Unit 1: Introduction to Hospitality, Topic 1: Beverage operations and services. My school has 70-minute lessons. The assessment at the end of this unit was an examination (short response).