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English Consultant across KS2 - KS4.

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English Consultant across KS2 - KS4.
KS2 - KS4 Individual Student Tracker - English Language
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KS2 - KS4 Individual Student Tracker - English Language

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This tracker lists all the skills that need to be taught in English Language throughout KS3 and KS4 on a handy tracker for either whole class or individual student use. The list of skills that need to be taught are linked to the GCSE spec, and has also designed to build on skills at KS2 (the writing grid incorporates the 'I Can' statements at KS2). Simply by covering the skills on this tracker, you can be sure that your students are receiving an adequate diet of English Language skills right from year 7 that builds upon their prior knowledge.
SPaG Competition covering semi-colons, colons, synonyms, antonyms and spellings
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SPaG Competition covering semi-colons, colons, synonyms, antonyms and spellings

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Inspire your students by having them compete against each other in teams for house points or prizes. This Powerpoint requires students to work in teams and work together to answer each question. They should have one whiteboard and pen per team - the team captain should present their answer when asked. This is easily enough for a one hour lesson, but most probably enough for two hours.
Teaching Sentences Course - A Revision Unit to Aid Sentence Control
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Teaching Sentences Course - A Revision Unit to Aid Sentence Control

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A range of lessons that cover simple, compound and complex sentences and lists in order to help under-attaining students grasp sentence control. The unit takes students through the different types of sentences, explaining how they are constructed and securing knowledge through a range of application tasks. Suitable for 7 - 16 years, but especially useful for students working below their levels due to poor sentence control. I used these with Years 7-9 to good effect. The lessons are suitable for whole class or small group work with a TA (laptop or screen must be available to view the slides.)
A3 AQA Relationships Poetry Revision Tiddlywinks and Macbeth Revision Tiddlewinks
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A3 AQA Relationships Poetry Revision Tiddlywinks and Macbeth Revision Tiddlewinks

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Game instructions: Use counters as Tiddlywinks. When you land on a space, you must say explain: Which poem it is from, a meaning or idea that is inferred by the quote, a device used in the quote and its effect. For a bonus point, compare it to another quote on the game board (poetry) or explain the context (Macbeth). Bronze – 1 point Silver – 2 points Gold – 3 points If you pass, the person on your left or your opponent may attempt your turn an d claim the points. Anyone in the team may attempt the bonus comparison point after the turn has been played. This resource needs to be printed on A3 paper.
Literacy Slides for registration
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Literacy Slides for registration

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These slides have been designed to be used once a week in registration as part of our whole school Literacy drive. They are whole class activities. Some need modifying to suit your school.
Medium Term Planning Template and Tracking Grid
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Medium Term Planning Template and Tracking Grid

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With the ever-increasing need for personalised learning, the scheme of work that is written by the Head of Department and shared across the department in a dying breed. Instead, teachers must plan their own medium-term and short-term plans to meet the needs of the students in their classes, which, considering extensive national changes over the past year or so, can be a daunting task for teachers of all levels of experience. This medium-term tracking grid supports teachers in their planning by: •listing all the Assessment Objectives for Language and Literature on the first page to prompt coverage and also to provide a list for teachers to cut and paste from. •beginning the planning with the completion of a progression matrix, effectively highlighting areas of under-performance and opportunities for support and challenge •Space for bullet point ideas of each week’s lessons, with a corresponding column for assessment objectives covered •Space for teachers to identify milestone or assessment tasks. The planning grid also works well when combined with the tracking grids for reading and writing, allowing teachers to assess students’ abilities against each assessment objective or skill and plan accordingly.
Persuasive Writing Mat and Planning Sheet with lesson
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Persuasive Writing Mat and Planning Sheet with lesson

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This writing mat, which should be printed on A3 couble sided and laminated for future use, has all the methods listed in DAFOREST around the edge of the page with examples. These devices are coloured coded (bronze for easy, silver for more difficult and gold for higher ability.) Use them as a guide to encourage students to include persuasive devices in their own writing, or use to support the annotation of texts by other writers. There is a space in the middle of the mat for students to place paper or they could practice writing phrases on the mats with whiteboard pens if the sheets are laminated. A handy planning grid is also provided, along with a writing to persuade lesson, ready made for you to trial your new resources.
Key Quotes from Macbeth for Discussion or Display
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Key Quotes from Macbeth for Discussion or Display

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This PowerPoint contains 87 key quotes from Macbeth for display around the classroom or school, for sorting into order or simply for displaying and discussing. There are far more quotes than you need, allowing you to choose the quotes that are important for your class.
Writing Creatively using DADWAVERS (A Monster Calls)
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Writing Creatively using DADWAVERS (A Monster Calls)

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This is another lesson that helps students create an effective piece of writing using the DADWAVERS structure, but also incorporating different elements of sentence structures such as embedded clauses and fronted adverbials. The lesson includes a timer on the spinning wheel slides, encouraging students wo work quickly. Suitable for writing portfolio lessons at KS2 and all the way to exam preparation at GCSE level.
GCSE English Language - Reading Intervention/Revision Pack
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GCSE English Language - Reading Intervention/Revision Pack

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A series of lessons covering all the reading questions on both AQA Language papers, with writing frames, good examples and texts. I have explained what we are looking for as examiners and what we award marks for. I used this as an intervention unit, but could also be used as revision or for Years 7-10 when preparing for a GCSE style reading test.
Unseen Poetry Session AQA
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Unseen Poetry Session AQA

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This session explains what is required of students in the final section of AQA Literature Paper 2. It incorporates an activity advised at the AQA Hub Meeting, where students work in groups to produce a poster based on a poem displayed on the wall - however, only one student is allowed to visit the poem at a time. The student should then bring back key words, images, methods, etc., to add to the poster. The posters are then presented to the class, or if in a bigger group, to another group of students. This effectively conveys the message that all responses are appropriate and that everyone can access a poem in some way. This could be run in a Hall with multiple students, in a classroom or as small group intervention. Th second part of the lesson covers the comparison question, making sure that students understand to only write about methods. It includes a writing frame and modelled examples using the AQA endorsed structure of ‘both, both, however’. This lesson could easily be repeated again and again with different poems.
AQA English Language Paper 1 and Paper 2 Diagnostic Mark Scheme
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AQA English Language Paper 1 and Paper 2 Diagnostic Mark Scheme

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I have used this resource to develop my own understanding of the mark scheme (even though I have been an examiner for over ten years), support my colleagues in understanding the mark scheme, and also to diagnose weaknesses within classes, enabling targeted intervention, differentiation within the classroom and targeted support. Once completed, it gives the teacher a full and clear understanding of what needs to be done to succeed in the exam. Essentially, it is an audit of skills within a class, looking at either a whole mock paper, or full practice questions in books. Assess the work for each of elements for each question, writing the student initial in each box. This is a little clunky to begin with, but gets much easier after the first few pieces and is very valuable in both focusing your understanding of what is required for each question and knowing where students need attention. The statements have been taken from the mark scheme and also developed from the on-screen software used by examiners. Your end result will clearly show where the average class strengths and weaknesses lie, which students need more help and in which areas and how you should direct your teachers. This would result in outstanding differentiation. I have completed a sample of three students (whereas usually it would be for a whole class), which shows that this very small group struggle with methods on Q4. Whole cohorts could be analysed via cutting and pasting several sheets onto one, allowing HODs to oversee weaknesses across the department. These audits could also be used as a basis for conversations in progress meetings and as a monitoring tool.
The Subjunctive Form (English)
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The Subjunctive Form (English)

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Here is a lesson I created to explain the subjunctive form. The lesson requires students to make a poster at the end of the lesson, or you could have them creating a short drama using the subjunctive sentence starters displayed on the Powerpoint.
GGCSE Structure - the most effective way to teach the structure question.
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GGCSE Structure - the most effective way to teach the structure question.

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This lesson is the most efficient way I’ve ever found to teach students how to answer the structure question. It teaches students exactly how to explain the effects of structure, useful subject terminology and what the examiner is looking for. It is delivered through experiential learning, where the class write a class text following my prompts and then analyse this piece of work for structural choices. It is a very easy but effective way to deliver the key messages. You will need a big sheet of paper to display the class story, another whiteboard or you could use another Powerpoint or word slide and flip between the two (not the best option, but could be done). It naturally leads on to students writing their own stories that have conscious structural choices, which they can then analyse. I have also included two texts that could be analysed are free extracts of stories on lovereading.com Please leave me some feedback to let me know how you got on with it. Lindsey
AQA Language GCSE Paper 2 Non-Fiction Collection (5 Papers)
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AQA Language GCSE Paper 2 Non-Fiction Collection (5 Papers)

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This collection includes: five full Paper 2s in both PDF and Word format, allowing you to tailor questions or format to your taste (including two additional papers that are listed as free on this page - ‘Teaching’ and ‘Refuse Collectors’) a front sheet for use with the papers, featuring the relevant boundaries from summer 2017 and 2018 (allowing students to see how close they were to the next band). an easy examiner mark sheet for each question, based on my experience of the drag and drop screen when marking as an examiner. Simply use a highlighter to indicate where skills have been met and staple or glue to students’ papers. These are useful feedback sheets for day-to-day exam practice. If you have found these resources useful, please leave feedback.
An Inspector Calls Quotes for Display and Revision
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An Inspector Calls Quotes for Display and Revision

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Useful posters with key quotes for each character in An Inspector Calls. Display around the classroom or school, print off pairs of copies and use as a memory matching game with all the quotes of one character face down - students can turn over two cards per turn, or just display on the Powerpoint and discuss or debate. It's always useful to have a set of key quotes.
Creative Writing by Numbers for GCSE exams
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Creative Writing by Numbers for GCSE exams

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This is a resource I developed which aims to guide students through the production of a piece of work that contains most elements required in the English Language GCSE exam (Paper 1 for AQA). Let me know if you give it a go and what the results are. If you find it successful, we could even produce a webpage showcasing the results.
A Christmas Carol Complete Unit
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A Christmas Carol Complete Unit

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Unit including: full text by slide with full glossary questions for discussion ranging from low to high- ability on each slide longer tasks based on Literature and Language skills Word of the Day linked to the text and recall questions Language Paper 2 on the representation of Father Christmas over the years. I made this unit for a KS4 class who are familiar with the story, but have not yet looked at the text in any great detail. It is designed to prepare them for the GCSE Literature examination (AQA). They struggle with the vocabulary and so I have created a glossary for every single part of the text (which took absolutely ages!). The whole text is shown on these slides, enabling a teacher to use the slides as a standalone with groups, set the reading of it as for homework as a download, print off extracts from the Gutenberg copy of the text to annotate in class, or follow with their own copy. You could also use an audio version of the text to read it for you, as it is completely unabridged. Each slide comes with questions for that particular section of the text, ranging from very easy (bronze), language and structure focused (amber) and social and historical focused (yellow). I have designed these questions to develop the skills required for their Literature GCSE and also the skills required for their Language GCSE (Recall, Language, Structure, Response to Statements). These questions could be used for class discussion or you could actually get students to write the answers to the questions on some slides as class work or complete for homework. For each unit of the text, there is a task. You may want to interchange these with exam questions that have either been published by the exam boards or which have been produced by other TES authors. There are some excellent questions available for use on the TES resources pages. I have added some writing to describe and argue tasks, as well as a Paper2 Language Style paper on Santa Clause throughout the years. Best wishes, Lindsey