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English resources for KS3, 4 & 5
VICTORIAN CONTEXT FOR KS3 ENGLISH LITERATURE RANGE OF ACTIVITIES
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VICTORIAN CONTEXT FOR KS3 ENGLISH LITERATURE RANGE OF ACTIVITIES

3 Resources
Around 6 lessons in total, this series of resources covers Victorian education, crime, punishment and the law, as well as looking at three of Dickens’ most memorable characters in the context of the time. Range of activites from quizzes to cloze exercises, education clips, wanted poster, diary of a hulk ship prisoner, drama amongst other tasks.
KS3 ENGLISH LANGUAGE NARRATIVE STORY WRITING LESSONS, HOMEWORK AND ASSESSMENT
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KS3 ENGLISH LANGUAGE NARRATIVE STORY WRITING LESSONS, HOMEWORK AND ASSESSMENT

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LESSON 1 LOOKS AT TWO EXAMPLE STORIES AND ASKS PUPILS TO IDENTIFY WHAT IS EFFECTIVE AND WHAT REQUIRES IMPROVEMENT. INCLUDES A SIMPLIFIED MARK SCHEME TO ALLOW PUPILS TO ASSESS. TIPS ON PLANNING AND AN OPPORTUNITY TO PLAN IS BUILT IN. A TSUNAMI HOMEWORK IS PROVIDED AS HOMEWORK FOLLOWING THIS LESSON, PROVIDING A WRITING FRAME FOR PUPILS TO CREATE THEIR OWN STORY USING A GIVEN PICTURE. NARRATIVE WRITING LESSON 2 FOLLOWS UP ON THIS HOMEWORK, WITH A FURTHER EXAMPLE STORY TO LOOK AT. A NARRATIVE WRITING ASSESSMENT IS INCLUDED, FOR PUPILS TO APPLY SKILLS LEARNED. THIS COULD BE TEACHER OR PUPIL ASSESSED.
KS3 VICTORIAN CONTEXT ENGLISH USING NOVEL EXTRACTS
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KS3 VICTORIAN CONTEXT ENGLISH USING NOVEL EXTRACTS

4 Resources
Approximately 8 lessons using well known novel extracts, along with contextual information, to study characters, marriage, social class, education and crime & punishment in the setting of the victorian period. Authors include Charlotte Bronte, Charles Dickens, Jane Austen & Arthur Conan-Doyle.
POWER AND CONFLICT POETRY WRITING A RESPONSE ON REMAINS AND WAR PHOTOGRAPHER FOR KS3 & KS4
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POWER AND CONFLICT POETRY WRITING A RESPONSE ON REMAINS AND WAR PHOTOGRAPHER FOR KS3 & KS4

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This resource contains a lesson on using CLAPS (content, language, atmosphere, poetic devices, structure) as either a way of ordering an exam response or using it as a checklist. There is an example response on Remains to read and then several slides asking students to add a linking sentence to the example in order to answer the given essay title. Then groups can work on aspects of CLAPS to produce a response to a question on War Photographer to practice both the concept of CLAPS as a way of responding to a poem and the importance of linking ideas back to the question. An assessment on War Photographer (on conflict) is included, along with a Key Stage 3 marking and feedback sheet which could be used if desired. This feedback sheet contains prompts to help students to DIRT their answers.
KS3 VICTORIAN SCHOOLING (CONTEXT) - JANE EYRE, NICHOLAS NICKLEBY, BRONTE, DICKENS, ENGLISH
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KS3 VICTORIAN SCHOOLING (CONTEXT) - JANE EYRE, NICHOLAS NICKLEBY, BRONTE, DICKENS, ENGLISH

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This is intended for KS3 English lessons looking at Victorian context in preparation for English Literature at GCSE. This resource is a minimum of 2 lessons. Includes extracts from Lowood school (Jane Eyre) followed by a kahoot quiz, an extract from Dickens’ Nicholas Nickleby with a cloze exercise to describe the dilapidated school room, followed by an inference exercise on the boys of Dotheboys Hall. Drama task to finish capturing Mr Brocklehurts’s reaction to a curly haired, red-headed pupil at his school.
AN INSPECTOR CALLS REVISION TASKS / LESSON - KS4 ENGLISH LITERATURE PAPER 2 AQA GCSE
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AN INSPECTOR CALLS REVISION TASKS / LESSON - KS4 ENGLISH LITERATURE PAPER 2 AQA GCSE

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This is a set of revision tasks which takes students through all three acts of the play, looking at characters, the theme of responsibility, younger versus older generation and Priestley’s message. Activities include match up the quotations to the characters, multiple choice answer quiz on Act One, order the plot for ‘Gerald’s bit’ in Act 2, analyse Mrs Birling’s refusal to accept responsibility for her actions and write on her metaphorical wall, highlight an extract for evidence of the difference between the younger and older generation and match up the statements with the evidence to confirm Priestley’s message. Copy of An Inspector Calls needed for the Mrs Birling wall task.
WW1 POETRY FOR KS3 - POSITIVE VIEWS OF THE WAR - BROKEN SOLDIER & THE SEED MERCHANT'S SON - ENGLISH
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WW1 POETRY FOR KS3 - POSITIVE VIEWS OF THE WAR - BROKEN SOLDIER & THE SEED MERCHANT'S SON - ENGLISH

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A positive view on the consequences of war, through Kathryn Tynan’s poem ‘The Broken Soldier’ and Agnes Herbertson’s 'The Seed Merchant’s son. Aimed at middle to high ability, there is some focus on structure and rhyme, along with general poetic techniques to build towards some analysis. Example TEAL paragraph given (Technique, Evidence, Analysis & Link to question) before students asked to write their own analytical paragraph. This could be adapted to fit a different structure. Plenary asks students to compare the two views of war presented in both poems.
TRAVEL WRITING MINI ENGLISH LANGUAGE PAPER 2 Q 2 SUMMARY KS3 & 4 INDEPENDENT TASKS
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TRAVEL WRITING MINI ENGLISH LANGUAGE PAPER 2 Q 2 SUMMARY KS3 & 4 INDEPENDENT TASKS

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There are 3 Q2 style summary questions (English Language Paper 2) that ask pupils to read two short sources linked by a theme and then answer the summary question that follows. The themes are: New York, Australia and UK holidaying and each source for all topics uses perspectives from different centuries. Suitable for upper KS3 and KS4. Please see other mini tasks available.
PART ONE: LITERATURE THROUGH THE AGES KS3 ENGLISH INTRODUCTORY UNIT
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PART ONE: LITERATURE THROUGH THE AGES KS3 ENGLISH INTRODUCTORY UNIT

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Part One of a 17 lesson unit based on an anthology of extracts (included). Staff CPD handbook also included, plus knowledge organiser which links to quizzing in certain lessons. Contains a lesson on the origins of storytelling, an introductory unit lesson plus 7 further one hour lessons based on the following extracts: The Serpent’s Deception - Old Testament Humankind - Ovid, Chaos Frankenstein - Shelley Dracula - Stoker The Divine Comedy - Dante PART TWO is also available. The intention of this unit is to provide students with some knowledge of how stories originated, came to be written down and how some of those same stories have been retold and developed over time, such as Horowitz’s re-telling of a popular Greek myth, in our unit. Students should understand that there does not have to be one single version of a ‘story.’ Some may have originally been made up to explain mysteries about the world and to enable humans to understand their place within it. Stories are constantly evolving and shaped by their social and historical influences. We can see, for example, that the concept of the Underworld has been around for centuries. Students will study the Underworld described in the Renaissance period by Dante, as a way of teaching his readers to live purer lives on Earth, but we can also enjoy its imaginative appearance in Rick Riordan’s modern ‘Percy Jackson’ tales. We can introduce the concept that, historically, the female figure has been presented as temptress and the cause of human suffering, an idea developed in ‘the Serpent’s Deception’ and Homer’s ‘Odyssey’, or later subverted in Le Morte d’Arthur, where the female is weak and in need of a chivalrous male to save her. We can see stories as a reaction to the beliefs and fears of society at the time. Shelley’s Frankenstein can be interpreted as a reaction to society’s distrust of the advancement of scientific experimentation. Running through all these stories is a series of symbols that capture a society’s values, beliefs and fears. Through the identification of symbolism in these stories, such as the snake in Serpent’s Deception, Daphne & Phoebus and Le Morte d’Arthur, it is hoped that our Y7s can learn to become confident in spotting symbols in future stories they read and have the confidence to critically evaluate the significance of them, in relation to their own contextual experience and a knowledge of literature throughout the ages.
KS3 LESSON ON MALALA YOUSAFZAI'S SPEECH TO YOUTH ASSEMBLY, NEW YORK, 2013
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KS3 LESSON ON MALALA YOUSAFZAI'S SPEECH TO YOUTH ASSEMBLY, NEW YORK, 2013

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This is one complete lesson, analysing Malala’s speech to a group of young people at the United Nations Youth Assembly. She is advocating the importance of the right to education. This lesson looks at her background, to put the speech into context, Aristotles 3 modes of persuasion and how Malala uses it, other rhetorical devices used, a BBC article written a year after and then asks students for their own opinion of Malala. Copy of speech included.
VICTORIAN CRIME & THE RISE OF THE DETECTIVE - IDEAL AS INTRO TO SHERLOCK HOLMES KS3
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VICTORIAN CRIME & THE RISE OF THE DETECTIVE - IDEAL AS INTRO TO SHERLOCK HOLMES KS3

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2 X LESSONS Students will look at Victorian society and the rise in crime rates that triggered the rise of the police force. They are then introduced to Jack the Ripper and encouraged to think how the context of the time actually enabled Jack the Ripper to commit his crimes so successfully / why the police were unable to catch him. Plenary tasks asks why detective fiction may have been popular at this time. Students look at the history of detective fiction, beginning with Poe / Murders at the Rue de Morgue. A focus on the character of the detective and detective conventions, testing knowledge by applying knowledge of conventions to extracts from The Sherlock Holmes Tale ‘The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire.’ Then, students look at images of Holmes study (Sherlock Holmes museum) and deduce ideas about his character. Lesson ends with fun observational skills competition where students spot the hidden animals in the pictures.
DESCRIPTIVE WRITING & READING SKILLS FOR KS3 & 4
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DESCRIPTIVE WRITING & READING SKILLS FOR KS3 & 4

5 Resources
Lots of resources here - mix of booklets and ppt activities for either KS3 or lower ability KS4. Useful for homework booklets, cover or in-lesson skills practise. Save £2.50 by buying as a bundle.
MACBETH REVISION ESSAY PRACTICE BUNDLE AQA ENGLISH LIT PAPER 1
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MACBETH REVISION ESSAY PRACTICE BUNDLE AQA ENGLISH LIT PAPER 1

3 Resources
Bundle of three lessons for low to middle ability Macbeth Bravery and Courage - focuses on extract for low to middle ability. Lady Macbeth lesson - focuses mainly on extract but gives suggestions for student independent task looking at whole extract at end. Macbeth extract to whole gives example question with model response, followed by a second question for independent work.
UNSEEN POETRY - KS4 AQA LITERATURE THREE LESSONS
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UNSEEN POETRY - KS4 AQA LITERATURE THREE LESSONS

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All three lessons use TEAL (technique, evidence, analysis & link) as a framework but this could easily be edited out / changed. All lessons aimed at middle to higher ability students. In the Can by Rosie Jackson is a one stanza poem that tries to convey life in prison. Tasks start with a collective memory exercise (see slide notes) then moves to reading poem followed by group work on allocated extracts. Eventually, after student feedback, they will write their own TEAL paragraph using example provided. The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost - students read poem and answer a series of questions (with suggested answers provided). Leads to writing a TEAL paragraph with a set of given prompts. Booklet of example war poems - pupils can choose which one to write a response on but can first look at how to annotate in detail at the examples given from ‘Dulce et Decorum Est.’ Example response provided.
Gothic Conventions mini unit for KS3 English Literature 6 to 7 hours of tasks
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Gothic Conventions mini unit for KS3 English Literature 6 to 7 hours of tasks

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This is a mini unit on Gothic conventions, based on extracts from Frankenstein, Dracula and Jane Eyre. Overall, there are between 6 and 7 hours worth of tasks to introduce students to the concept of Gothic Literature and the conventions within it. Includes Gothic bingo, introduction to conventions (including setting), short extracts for identifying conventions and later symbolism, independent tasks such as planning a Gothic description and identifying author’s word choices. Some creative tasks include drawing their own Gothic castle and their version of the Red Room in Jane Eyre. Link to vampire video with match-up activities and comprehension questions included too. This unit has been resourced from a combination of my Introduction to Literature Through the Ages scheme of work (also available) and additional tasks created separately. Fully resourced - slides at the end conveniently together for ease of printing.
THEME OF KINGSHIP IN MACBETH SHAKESPEARE KS3 KS4
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THEME OF KINGSHIP IN MACBETH SHAKESPEARE KS3 KS4

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2 x complete lessons analysing the character of Duncan in L1, followed by the character of Macbeth in L2. Both lessons look at whether each man can be considered a good king or not. A range of tasks are included such as note-taking, Kahoot quiz (you will need to log in), mind map, discussion, comprehension questions and challenges along the way. Resources at the end of the ppt to print off.
AQA ENGLISH LANGUAGE PAPER 1 Q 2, 3 AND 4 SECTION A REVISION TASKS
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AQA ENGLISH LANGUAGE PAPER 1 Q 2, 3 AND 4 SECTION A REVISION TASKS

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3 x Q2, 2 x Q3 & 3 x Q4 resources. Each task could probably be one lesson worth of revision or you could combine tasks. Each one is a step by step approach to answering the question, with focus on what the question is asking, identifying the best evidence, mind mapping selected quotations and practising a response. Some tasks match against Level 3 of the mark scheme to ensure clarity and so that students can assess their own standard of work. This is exactly what I would need at this point in the year. . All lessons contain the section referred to in the tasks but, should you need anything further, they are readily available on the internet and AQA website.