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Hi! Engaging, challenging and representative resources. I hope these save you a lot of time and your kids enjoy them as much as mine do. I' was an English teacher for twelve years and worked in a variety of schools including a chain of outstanding academies which I made resources for. I taught KS 3 - 5 until 2018 and have taught for the AQA, WJEC and CIE exam boards. I have taught SEN students, mixed ability classes, set groups and G&T.

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Hi! Engaging, challenging and representative resources. I hope these save you a lot of time and your kids enjoy them as much as mine do. I' was an English teacher for twelve years and worked in a variety of schools including a chain of outstanding academies which I made resources for. I taught KS 3 - 5 until 2018 and have taught for the AQA, WJEC and CIE exam boards. I have taught SEN students, mixed ability classes, set groups and G&T.
No Longer at Ease chapter 16
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No Longer at Ease chapter 16

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This lesson asks students to reflect on their knowledge of the book so far through a quick game of Blockbusters in the starter, then by returning to their chapter charts (a printable version is included here) to reflect on the points in the novel where they felt sympathy for Obi and some other parts where they lost sympathy. Students will need some understanding of abortion laws in Nigeria, so I’ve included a link to wikipedia. Obviously this is a sensitive subject and you may want to spend more time on the feelings behind this decision and the students’ sympathies . Students are asked to recall the parts of a literature paragraph to prepare themselves for the end of lesson assessment. The guided reading for chapter 16 comes next with the usual questions. Before students start writing their paragraphs, they can read the example paragraph based on chapter 16 and give it a PIT stop. There is a mark scheme and colour-coding self-reflection plenary at the end. Enjoy!
No Longer at Ease Chapter 17
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No Longer at Ease Chapter 17

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This is the 20th lesson in the scheme of work, focusing on a guided reading of chapter 17. The starter is a paired activity on colonialisation and the effects of it. The questions following guide students towards an end of lesson assessment on rising tension across the novel. There is a mark scheme and a whole-class self-assessment plenary.
No Longer at Ease chapter 15
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No Longer at Ease chapter 15

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This lesson focuses on Achebe’s purpose and viewpoints. There are recommended worksheets of different abilities linked to the second slide. There are the usual guided reading questions on chapter 15 and then a speed dating round before a court-style speaking and listening activity for pupils to prepare for. No printing required unless you decide to print some starter worksheets. Enjoy!
No Longer at Ease chapter 19
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No Longer at Ease chapter 19

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This is the last guided reading lesson for the novel No Longer at Ease by Chinua Achebe. There are guided reading questions, a plot summary, questions regarding the cyclical structure of the novel and a silent debate on who is to blame for the crimes committed as the final activity. Plenary and learning objectives, dates, etc are all included as usual. There is also a starter which asks students to design a new book cover, but this could become a homework task. Look out for the revision resources to support students’ reflection on the novel.
No Longer at Ease chapter 18
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No Longer at Ease chapter 18

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This lesson begins with a team quotation quiz to recap on chapters 9 - 17. (1 - 8 were on lesson 14). Answers are included, of course. The lesson has a focus on analysing language in quotations. After the guided reading of chapter 18 with questions which guide students towards the end of lesson assessment. The assessment is on the presentation of death and bereavement in No Longer at Ease. As always, there are mark schemes and peer assessment opportunities in the plenary. There is also a sentence analysis activity for students to work on in groups, pairs or individually. Enjoy!
No Longer at Ease Revision Bundle
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No Longer at Ease Revision Bundle

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3 lessons worth of revision activities which are fun, engaging, practical and helpful. Students revise key quotations, organising them into different piles for different essay topics, there is a “pub quiz” with three rounds and a QQT (quiz, quiz, trade) activity. These make excellent additions to my complete SOW on Achebe’s novel plus they can easily be adapted for different texts. Enjoy!
Spies - Michael Frayn Revision Resources
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Spies - Michael Frayn Revision Resources

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Several lessons which help students recap on the characters and plot of Spies by Michael Frayn and then some engaging activities to help students think more deeply about the text. There are slides to help with paragraph structure to ensure students are getting the level of detail required for an A grade and to help them self- or peer-assess their essay writing. As well as this there are some quizzes on spying and on memory to link in with another essay topic (available online). Best of luck to all the iGCSE students out there and to those tackling Spies for A level! Well done to all the teachers too! I hope this saves you some time and energy!
The Road KS3 or KS4 Prose Reading and Writing Assessment Lessons
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The Road KS3 or KS4 Prose Reading and Writing Assessment Lessons

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A mini-scheme of work, taking three or four lessons, focused on The Road by Cormac McCarthy. Students develop their skills for GCSE by finding quotations, developing their ability to comment on the environment, characters, relationships and then tackle questions in timed conditions. Each lesson has a starter and self- or peer-assessment plenary. My students loved the plenary for the environment question where they had to make a mask (outline provided) which would protect them from the dystopian world The Road is set in. Their creativity and ingenuity, putting their learning into practice was wonderful to behold. Please don't miss out on it. I found that this lesson was highly accessible for middle ability students and wonderful for high achievers or G&T learners, giving them the range of language and intrigue to explore possibilities and methods. My less able students (predicted 2 or below) achieved expected results and understood what was happening. With them we watched the trailer for the movie first before we read the first chapter together (popcorn!) and then slowly tackled the straightforward questions. I have included answers to the quotation finding exercises and an extra lesson on writing stories associated with dystopian or apocalypse fiction . This was the end of term assessment for reading and writing dystopian fiction. If you want to see more, check out my huge Dystopian Futures SOW at my shop.
Songs of Ourselves CIE Revision Resource Pack
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Songs of Ourselves CIE Revision Resource Pack

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Tonnes of activities, games, quizzes, a worksheet on themes, a Poem in a Box revision resource making activity and flashcards to be completed by students, a PowerPoint on structuring essay responses and closely analysing language, essay sentences to scaffold responses, vocabulary for playing games like Go Fish or Give Me A Clue or Pictionary. This should keep exam revision interesting and help students stay engaged and focused in these last few weeks.
Little Boy Crying - Mervyn Morris
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Little Boy Crying - Mervyn Morris

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A complete set of resources for teaching Morris’ poem “Little Boy Crying”. This is on the Songs of Ourselves iGCSE poetry exam for CIE, but is a great poem to explore this controversial topic. I have read online that it is based on a childhood memory of Morris being hit by his father and then returning to this as an adult disciplining his son. This seems totally likely, but I haven’t found confirmation from a trustworthy source. There is a descriptive writing PPT included which will allow students to explore how they create imagery in description before going on to look at Morris’ use of descriptive techniques and imagery in his poem. There is also a separate PPT with key vocabulary to explore in a physical and engaging way which I thought would be useful for weaker readers or EAL students. I have included everything in the main presentation that you would need to teach this poem for the first time,for revision, or to even ask students to pre-teach from. The lesson objectives (on each slide) and end of lesson exam-style essay question ask students to explore how the language, structure and form present the themes of discipline and parent-child relationships. (For a higher ability class, you could split these two.) and the starter activities, biographical information and the guided questions (with answers provided on the next slide) help students meet that outcome. There is support provided for students’ essay answers in the form of sentence starters,simplified assessment objectives and mark schemes, sentence starters, paragraph structures, and a peer/self-marking slide. A really interesting lesson to explore students relationships with their parents. Enjoy!
Dystopian Futures Scheme of Work
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Dystopian Futures Scheme of Work

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A variety of whole lessons reading lesser-known dystopian literature and tying these in with students' creative writing of a dystopian narrative. There is also a practice reading comprehension and a final reading comprehension assessment. This scheme of work is designed for middle to top set students at GCSE level. I found all the students really engaged with the topic and already knew loads of dystopian works of literature, films and computer games, so had to stretch them to read lesser known works. I've tried as far as possible to make this relevant to their interests and to be representative of a range of backgrounds instead of just the classic "dead, white males". My students really enjoyed this unit of work and I hope yours do too! Contains: Structuring narratives in interesting ways (very useful for getting A*s) Analysing and writing speech in ways that show originality and flair (as well as accuracy of punctuation) Creating original dystopian worlds Creating original dystopian characters Close analysis of individual words and basic PEE reading answers Improving and extending vocabulary Recognising satire and comedy in film and literature (Idiocracy and Harrison Vonnegut) because, frankly, all this dystopian stuff could get a bit depressing otherwise! A detailed and thorough comprehension of a (student-friendly version) of Stephen King's The End of the Whole Mess with optional scaffolding which should build towards GCSE style detailed essays covering plot summaries, close analysis, evaluation of word choice, structure, messages, themes, conventions, language features and more.
Rising Five - Norman Nicholson
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Rising Five - Norman Nicholson

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A complete set of resources for teaching Nicholson’ poem “Rising Five”. This is on the Songs of Ourselves iGCSE poetry exam for CIE and explores themes of childhood and time. There is a descriptive writing PPT included which will allow students to explore how they create imagery in description before going on to look at Nicholson’ use of descriptive techniques and imagery in his poem. There is also a separate PPT with key vocabulary to explore in a physical and engaging way which I thought would be useful for weaker readers or EAL students. I have included everything in the main presentation that you would need to teach this poem for the first time, for revision, or to even ask students to pre-teach from. The lesson objectives (on each slide) and end of lesson exam-style essay question ask students to explore how the language, structure and form present the theme of time. The starter activities, biographical information and the guided questions (with answers provided on the next slide) help students meet that outcome. There is support provided for students’ essay answers in the form of sentence starters, simplified assessment objectives and mark schemes, sentence starters, paragraph structures, and a peer/self-marking slide. An interesting lesson to explore students’ memories of childhood and experience of aging. Enjoy!
KS3/4 Prose: Roll of Thunder Pt 3
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KS3/4 Prose: Roll of Thunder Pt 3

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Hi! By popular demand! This bundle of resources covers chapters 7 and 8 of Mildred D. Taylor’s semi-biographihcal novel ‘Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry’.in detail. The thorough whole-lesson PowerPoints cover imagery frequently used, offer up advice, paragraph structures, write-along line-by-line exemplars and extended reading such as the first chapter of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. I have included everything you need for these three lessons (it may run longer if getting through the reading takes too long.) I have provided more than enough starters and plenaries for you to pick and choose or create a whole new lesson. Enjoy!
Welcome to Night Vale -- Podcast Listening Quiz, Writing Scripts, Speaking and Listening
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Welcome to Night Vale -- Podcast Listening Quiz, Writing Scripts, Speaking and Listening

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Welcome. This PPT has a range of guided listening activities to help students engage with the script and ideas before writing their own satirical podcast scripts on their home towns. WTNV is a highly celebrated podcast for its representative cast and amusing events. This particular PPT is based around episode 28: The Summer Reading Programme where children are captured by the evil librarians and eventually escape after beheading them. This exciting event is broken up with a range of government approved messages and advertisement parodies. My students really enjoyed creating their own podcasts and we put them up on the school website for everyone to listen to. They really threw themselves into it far more successfully than any previous work on script writing. This could also make a nice G&T after-school project.
iGCSE Songs of Ourselves Poetry Revision Guide KS4 Literature Exam
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iGCSE Songs of Ourselves Poetry Revision Guide KS4 Literature Exam

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It’s the hardest time of the year for your iGCSE students. For less than 25p per student, they can have this complete pack of 2018 CIE Songs of Ourselves poetry analysis and revision. Every single poem is analysed with notes on language, structure, form and a separate page of context about the author, the time they lived and anything else significant to the poem. Perfect for students who have missed a lesson or lessons: just print the notes for that page. Or you could give a copy to each student to read and work on over the holidays. I have also provided a range of previous exam questions, a checklist for achieving high grades, essay planning advice and top tips for getting your students the best grades they can. Save yourself time and energy. Good luck!
KS3 Fantasy Story Writing and Reading SOW Part 1 of 2
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KS3 Fantasy Story Writing and Reading SOW Part 1 of 2

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15 full 90 minute lessons with all resources for a huge Fantasy SOW! There are resources for creating fantasy world, creating characters, designing a quest and writing stories with each part clearly explained for all abilities with fool-proof explanations. There is also a large focus on active reading and comprehension tests for all abilities so the students see modeled examples of well-known and less well-know authors. I have also included resources for use before, during and after watching The Never Ending Story (which worked well with my low ability group and high ability group) to demonstrate story structures. This is part 1 of 2
Of Mice and Men KS3 Drama
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Of Mice and Men KS3 Drama

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This sequence of lessons spanned about 10 weeks but these were the powerpoints I used to structure the first 6 lessons. After this, rehearsal took on a larger role. These 6 PowerPoints include starters relevant to the dramatic skills the students should practice, introductions and with clear objectives and activities to develop students’ abilities and play with the text. There are also plenaries beyond just comparing themselves to the objectives. I performed this version of the script (the pdf is included for your ease here. It is not my work but is freely available) with year 7 and it has more than enough drama with none of the swearing or racism. The lessons themselves have activities for a range of abilities and ages and would be easily adapted to any other text. They work on voice, showing status through body language, symbolism, memorizing lines, teamwork and characterization, among other topics. This play is for 14 students, so we had understudies for each part and they teamed up to work on characterisation (though some decided to perform in contrasting ways) . The narrators took on a character each, other itinerant travelers in our case, but we discussed making them cats or dogs, birds or even angels. Break a leg!!
No Longer at Ease Intro, Context and Chapter 1 Resource Pack
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No Longer at Ease Intro, Context and Chapter 1 Resource Pack

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Hi! I know how much hard work it is teaching a novel. I’m here to do it all for you. Just download this and teach. Everything you need is provided. It has been sdesigned to support GCSE students, though it could easily be adapted for A level. Three complete lessons with foolproof PowerPoints for lesson including titles, dates, objectives, starters, mark scheme analysis, paragraph structure support, character analysis, language analsysis sheets, comprehension and analysis questions for every paragraph of the story which is displayed alongside the questions. Where answers are provided, they aim to stretch and challenge the answers given by students. Two or more plenaries are provided for each lesson. Links to useful online videos, articles, historical background and more are linked within the lessons for students, but I have also provided you with a “cheat sheet” of all the useful links in one document. This could also become a webquest for students or a revision document. I have also provided revision documents in the form of quotations for the first chapter’s themes. If you like this resource, please save some cash and buy the bundle! There’ll be a lot of resources for all 19 chapters!
No Longer at Ease iGCSE Chapters 4 and 5
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No Longer at Ease iGCSE Chapters 4 and 5

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The fourth part of the complete SOW for No Longer at Ease by Chinua Achebe. These are the resources for at least two complete lessons including homework/revision, starters, context, a major focus on vocabulary with several fun and engaging activities to let students practice using them, sentence level analysis games and activities, every word of the novel with questions and answers for each paragraph, a focus on Obi as a tragic hero, essay writing scaffolding which breaks down how to analyse the question, plan a response and structure a paragraph with sentence starters and a student-friendly mark scheme. Nothing YOU have to do except print the worksheets to support weaker students if applicable, and then project the presentations. Next lesson is an assessment essay on Obi!
No Longer at Ease iGCSE Chapters 2 and 3
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No Longer at Ease iGCSE Chapters 2 and 3

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The third installment of the complete SOW for No Longer at Ease by Chinua Achebe. These are the resources for at least two complete lessons including homework/revision, starters, context, summarising skills, a diary writing activity, every word of the novel with questions and answers for each paragraph as well, essay writing scaffolding which breaks down how to analyse the question, plan a response and structure a paragraph with sentence starters and a student-friendly mark scheme. Nothing YOU have to do except print the diary outline to support weaker students if applicable, and then project the presentations.** I believe you could walk in and teach the book without having ever read it or checking these slides once. ** Prove me wrong!