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Shop with Edna Hobbs

Average Rating3.79
(based on 83 reviews)

With all my resources I try to find a balance between clarity and creativity, aiming to stretch and challenge as well as train. Most of all, I want to 'knock on the doors of the mind', introducing students to a wider range of texts, ideas, activities and experiences. Although English is my speciality, I've also got a keen interest in Biology and Geography, which occasionally manifests in resources. Let me know if there is a text not catered for anywhere and I'll see what I can do.

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With all my resources I try to find a balance between clarity and creativity, aiming to stretch and challenge as well as train. Most of all, I want to 'knock on the doors of the mind', introducing students to a wider range of texts, ideas, activities and experiences. Although English is my speciality, I've also got a keen interest in Biology and Geography, which occasionally manifests in resources. Let me know if there is a text not catered for anywhere and I'll see what I can do.
Quick SPaG starter
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Quick SPaG starter

(1)
Ideal for KS2 & 3, this quick starter has 3 slides taken from public signs and adverts where language ‘errors’ exist. From this, students can be encouraged to find errors in the signs, adverts and texts they encounter.
GCSE: Eduqas Component two English paper: Reading preparation, Overview and Question A1
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GCSE: Eduqas Component two English paper: Reading preparation, Overview and Question A1

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This series is a question by question guide to the non-fiction paper, starting with reading. Each question begins with a ‘quick-fire starter’ when the technique required by the question is practised in its simplest form, usually a very visual text. This gives students confidence. It also keeps the time pressure on so that working quickly becomes a habit. Then the question requirements are explored through the exam board’s directives and again quick and easy examples with answers build up to more demanding practise through the series. Visual texts and Extracts of both 19th century and 21st century texts are used in the series to ensure students are undaunted by older texts. In all cases answers and a simplified mark scheme are provided. Although this series is preparing students for the Eduqas Component two English paper, it can easily be adapted to suit the question style of other exam boards: all have retrieval questions, inference questions etc. The focus of this resource is A1, so time has been taken to explain how the whole CP2 paper works. The starter introduces retrieval type questions, the main lesson looks at the overview of the exam, then moves on to a closer focus on retrieval, before the text becomes more demanding as students work independently. A hwk sheet is introduced and then assessed via a third PP. Because work has been simplified to ensure a firm foundation, this task is also suitable for y9s beginning their GCSE work early.
KS3 & KS4 - The Essential Writing Bundle:
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KS3 & KS4 - The Essential Writing Bundle:

10 Resources
£10 saving! 12 Premium resources to cover creative, descriptive writing for Ks3 & 4. This bundle would normally cost £ 28, but as a bundle you get a whole host of essential writing resources for just £18! 1/3 off. The bundle covers all aspects of writing, from spelling to proofreading, from vocabulary to imagery, punctuation and opening lines. There's plenty to extend and challenge the more able and also to help and support less able students. SPaG and Creativity are covered in starters, plenaries and a variety of lesson styles.
Creative writing tasks: 1 imagery
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Creative writing tasks: 1 imagery

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The new AQA English Spec. for teaching from 2015 includes a whole reading and writing paper [Paper 1 in the specimen material] given over to both reading and writing creative material. These exercises can be 'drip-fed' to KS3 and KS4 to help them hone the skills for this task. This set of tasks focuses on descriptive vocabulary and figures of speech. I've marked them A-C in order of how I use them, but they stand alone; the extract handout goes with PPT C. All photographs by Graham Hobbs.
Ks3 Creative writing: Description - Monsters, close focus.
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Ks3 Creative writing: Description - Monsters, close focus.

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Use Halloween as an excuse to focus on close-up description to cut out the waffle, create atmosphere and promote concise writing. This resource offers a lesson on how to make monsters seem scary using extracts from 19th century novels, on PP with the text extracts available as a handout. The cre-ATE PP hyperlinks you via pictures to vocabulary that can help get the description started - great for letting students refer to when they're stuck. The 'you try' worksheet suggests a step-by-step structure illustrated with quotes from 'Game of Thrones' that can be used as a model.
Vital verbs! Improving creative writing through choosing apt vocabulary.
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Vital verbs! Improving creative writing through choosing apt vocabulary.

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In this lesson, explore the power of choosing the right verb. The Power Point provides the lesson from start to finish and the word doc. provides a fill-in opening for weaker students, to get them started. The Lesson provides a definition, an 'odd-one-out' task, some quick physical activity [select someone to demonstrate if the class would be unsettled by a bit of movement], an extract from 'The Recruit' and some writing suggested by photographs. At the heart of it all is 'show don't tell' to move writing up a gear.
Media: Montage Project- preparation for GCSE Media
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Media: Montage Project- preparation for GCSE Media

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Here is everything you need for a fun media project - get your students making a montage. This is aimed at yr9s who will be doing a Media GCSE, so gives them a flavour of projects to come and is ideal for the end of the year. Although most will want to film, it is possible to deliver a montage on Power Point, so all skill and interest levels are accommodated. There are 6 lessons with instruction slides, links to lots of clips showing montages as well as tutorials for use at home. The note to the teacher guides you through the scheme and the montage outline gives students their instructions and due dates [you fill those in]. As well as a project review sheet to flag up problems, there is a self- and peer- assessment sheet for when the montages are done.
Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick; Chpts 9-13
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Revolver by Marcus Sedgwick; Chpts 9-13

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This third set of resources covers chapters 9-13 and a note to the teacher outlines how each of the resources can be used. Chapter 9 is a creative writing task that revisits structure: all the words from a description at the start of the chapter have been placed in alphabetical order and students create there own images from these words. Discussion can then move to justifying the choices and from thence to Segdwick’s description as students read the chapter. Information from Chapters 10 & 11 is retrieved and summarised for a police report on Einar’s intended robbery, while chapter 12 leads to a debate on guns, introduced by a PP. Chapter 13’s worksheet returns the focus to imagery, close reading and analysis by looking at a brief description and picking out key words.
Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chpts 6-8
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Revolver, by Marcus Sedgwick: chpts 6-8

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More Revolver resources as requested! I love this book and have read it many times - it balances memorable description, clever structuring and important life-lessons in a toe-sweating thriller. Short chapters - and the topic - make it ideal reading for boy heavy classes from y7-y9. The idea of the series is to make available a range of tasks to suit where you get to - doing every single task may get in the way of reading. We begin with a short self mark test on chapter 6 - ideal as a starter after previous reading. Alternatively, a wanted poster makes a good homework task. Chapter 7 introduces students to allusion with a note handout either to help the teacher or as notes for the exercise book. Chapter 8’s short self mark starter makes students aware of the novel’s structure through linking it’s opening sentence to both the previous chapter and the previous chapter of that story strand.
SPaG - 'The Boy who swam with Prianhas' chapter 7 - spelling
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SPaG - 'The Boy who swam with Prianhas' chapter 7 - spelling

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This worksheet makes a quick plenary or homework for KS2 or KS3 reluctant readers or less able spellers. Although it can be used without reading the novel, the context does give it more appeal. The story is written by David Almond and published by Warner books, 2012. Using the PP, students check their work or peer assess if that is easier than projecting the answer page, then move on to a short homophone task. If the spelling was done as homework, this makes an ideal starter for the 'hwk due' lesson.
'Trial' AQA English Paper 1 Section B, Creative writing: 2
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'Trial' AQA English Paper 1 Section B, Creative writing: 2

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With no past papers, it is useful to have a 'trial' exam paper {based on the AQA specimen paper for the 2015 Spec to be examined in 2017} to use as revision. The tasks are different, but the style is similar, so KS3s could familiarise themselves with the type of task, or it can be used as revision with KS4 in the future. The PP runs a strategy for thinking about the tasks, with some questions and examples to stimulate ideas. The last slide offers a quick correction task; with an extra click, the answers will be revealed.
SPaG 'The Boy who Swam with Piranhas' advert Chapter 23
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SPaG 'The Boy who Swam with Piranhas' advert Chapter 23

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The thing for teachers to emphasise in preparing students for this task is that alliteration works by sound, not letter - so 'cough' and 'kill' have the same sound. The advert draws on specific descriptions in David Almond's novel and chapter and page numbers are given for the 2012 Walker Books edition. Some students like to get on and read the book in one go after the initial chapters, so let them do the more creative tasks when they've completed the story. Best pieces can be displayed - encourage students to be creative as well as to use slogans, alliteration, rule of three etc.
SPaG 'The Boy who Swam with Piranhas' paragraphs - Chapt.46
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SPaG 'The Boy who Swam with Piranhas' paragraphs - Chapt.46

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One of the unusual things about this novel is that author David Almond not only speaks to the reader in various places, but also invites them to mention how the strands of the story end. Here students are invited to imagine - and then write in 3 -5 paragraphs - what happens to Clarence P. Clapp. Before they do, they create success criteria for themselves [pitch to class ability - 'Begin every sentence with a capital letter' to 'Use a wide range of punctuation for effect': you know what your class needs to work on] and collect useful words and imagery from the text - the foundations of 'close reading'! As an additional challenge or homework, students can find more information on websites given and a PP slide allows the teacher to project the information. This also makes it easier to go to the sites as a class if preferred.
SPaG 'The Boy who swam with Piranhas'  Chap 1-4 vocab.
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SPaG 'The Boy who swam with Piranhas' Chap 1-4 vocab.

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This fun, illustrated novel by David Almond is ideal for KS2 & weaker KS3 readers, especially those who don't like reading much. This first task is a word recognition exercise that helps improve spelling by getting students to notice words within words. This also makes a good homework task. To facilitate peer or self-assessment, the answers on p2 can be projected. You can extend the task by setting a spelling test on the words. The PP takes the challenge further: students are shown how to memorise the spelling of words and then asked to find 3-5 of their own errors to learn to spell correctly using the technique. Tip: let them use colours to show the words within words.
Unseen poetry: Love through the ages - Hardy & Keats- poems, question, peer assessment& instructions
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Unseen poetry: Love through the ages - Hardy & Keats- poems, question, peer assessment& instructions

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Prepare your A-level students for AQA’s Section B unseen poetry question with this trial assessment, including an instruction PP with a link to an outstanding reading of the Keats; student friendly band descriptors; possible content with AOs and, of course, the question, based on both the 2017 and 2018 formulations. Ideal for use in a mock exam or test along with the feedback discussion of how to improve afterwards.
AQA Love through the Ages unseen poetry trial/mock exam: Sidney & Rossetti sonnets
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AQA Love through the Ages unseen poetry trial/mock exam: Sidney & Rossetti sonnets

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The best way to revise unseen poetry is by doing trial exam papers, so here is one in which students compare a sonnet by Sir Philip Sidney with a sonnet by Christina Rossetti. A pp enables you to display instructions while handing out the papers and while doing the peer assessment. Indicative content is given to this end as is a student friendly summary of the bands. Two lessons worth of work here, or a homework and a lesson, plus lots of discussion and revision opportunities.
'The Undoor' wordsearch - synonyms
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'The Undoor' wordsearch - synonyms

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A wordsearch with a difference - find the synonyms in the text, write them down and find both clue and answer in the wordsearch. 'The Undoor' is a short story in Chris Priestley's 'Uncle Montague's Tales of Terror. This task promotes literacy and could be a homework activity. The answers are on p2 and can be projected or handed out. A useful starter activity could be a quick re-cap of synonyms and antonyms, using some of the words from the wordsearch [don't tell them thhe words are coming up, but do link them to the story; that way the alert students feel rewarded when they notice some work has already been done for them] Apart from the activity given on slide 2, students could make a note of the definitions on slide 1 for future reference.
SPaG 'The Boy who Swam with Piranhas' chapter10 - feelings
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SPaG 'The Boy who Swam with Piranhas' chapter10 - feelings

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The focus of this exercise is the contrast in feeling between Ernie and Stan. Some of the words appear in the chapter, some are inferred. This task could be done as a plenary after reading the chapter or as a simple homework. Page 2 gives the answers and sets an extra challenge as extension work. This novel by David Almond is published by Walker Books and is suitable for KS2 & KS3 reluctant readers. The starter, which could be be done as a way of introducing the homework or as a starter when the homework/ plenary is being marked. Suitable for using individual white-boards as well as for exercise books.