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Short Stories
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Short Stories

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Some stories are from AQA’s Sunlight on the Grass and some are general short stories. Most aimed mid-ability whilst some (The Landlady and Anil) are pitched at supporting lower ability.
GCSE English Literature Placemat
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GCSE English Literature Placemat

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GCSE English Literature Paper 1 & 2 Placemats. Designed to be printed in colour and completed by the students - back to back - then laminated for repeated use and to familiarise and remind students of the exam’s requirements, content and timing. Designed on P1: R&J, ACC. P2: DNA, Relationship Poetry, Unseen (but can be easily edited with a few clicks).
Elements of Crime Revision Resources
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Elements of Crime Revision Resources

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Four documents designed to help students revise all sections of the Elements of Crime Fiction Unit for A-Level Literature Spec B. It focuses on the last few year’s exam questions and examines potential future topics. There is a mini extract for the unseen Section A in an interactive revision booklet. Additionally, some suggested sentence starters for a response, categorised by AOs. These resources are based on ‘Good News…’ by Atkinson, Dickens Oliver Twist and Coleridge’s Mariner, but are easily adaptable with a few clicks.
'When Will There be Good News?' Independent Revision Booklet
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'When Will There be Good News?' Independent Revision Booklet

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An independent revision booklet, designed for Atkinson’s novel, tailored to meet the various Assessment Objectives specifically. The idea is they work their way up the ‘ladder of skills’ (with A01’s technical tasks being, in theory, the easiest), however students enjoy choosing their own tasks, targeting their own personalised weaknesses, as identified by teacher feedback. There is a task tracker table at the end, which is useful from a teacher’s perspective to monitor the quality and quantity of independent revision being completed by the student.
Unseen Crime Fiction: To Kill a Mockingbird
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Unseen Crime Fiction: To Kill a Mockingbird

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Three lessons to support teaching of English Literature Spec B unseen crime fiction. It focuses on identifying and analysing elements of crime fiction; refining writing introdcutions to the exam questions; A02 and A03 paragraphs.
'When Will There be Good News?' interactive flashcards
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'When Will There be Good News?' interactive flashcards

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A range of themes and character quotations designed to support students to know the text, rather than the time consuming task of flicking through the novel. The ppts are designed for students to print out and cut up for use as flashcards. There are gaps for students to complete to encourage active revision and answer ppts also. Themes covered include: feminism, pathos, violence and the motif of dogs for protection. Characters covered include: criminals (in general in the novel), Decker, Louise and Reggie.
'When Will There be Good News?' Exam Question: planning and intro' focus
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'When Will There be Good News?' Exam Question: planning and intro' focus

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A session, which could run over a couple of lessons, designed to support students responding to a possible AQA exam question: ‘To what extent is Jackson Brodie introduced as an unlikely detective hero?’ The session focuses on identifying and meeting the ‘trigger phrases’ in the question, which are key for demonstrating a sharp focus on the question, planning the content of their essay (via statements to cut up, sort and plot on a continuum line) finding specific examples and evaluating them, examining a top model introduction and writing one of their own.
Comparing Love and Relationships poems
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Comparing Love and Relationships poems

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Five lessons comparing poems which share a different theme from the AQA ‘Love and Relationship’ cluster of poems. Four are focused on a different romantic or family theme and the last lesson is based around revising poems from the whole collection, thematically.