A Defining Tale
Joining a Year 11 English lesson this week I found myself immersed in the world of Scrooge. Our GCSE English gains students two GCSEs: one in English Language and the other in...
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Joining a Year 11 English lesson this week I found myself immersed in the world of Scrooge. Our GCSE English gains students two GCSEs: one in English Language and the other in...
Posted by Claire Till
Posted by Danielle Bowe
It was a real privilege to spend time with Miss Denmark’s Year 7 English group on Wednesday of this week and see their imagination and creative ideas come to the fore within the...
Posted by Jeremy Turner
Posted by Danielle Bowe
Despite the trials of homeschooling coinciding with the launch of this year’s Carnegie Shadowing Scheme, our students did themselves proud, reading around 40 titles between them...
Posted by Teresa Turton
Posted by Danielle Bowe
Our LRC has a slightly new look and feel this year with new COVID measures in place. As in classrooms, students sanitise their hands and clean their workspaces before use. When...
Posted by Teresa Turton
Ensuring our high profile focus on the importance of inculcating excellence habits of reading in all our students continued this week with our first DEAR (Drop Everything and...
Posted by Jeremy Turner
Posted by Danielle Bowe
Posted by Danielle Bowe
Joining a Year 11 English lesson this week I found myself immersed in the world of Scrooge. Our GCSE English gains students two GCSEs: one in English Language and the other in English Literature. Throughout the two years students analyse novels, poetry, drama and creative writing. Dickens A Christmas Carol being one of the set texts. Famous for his catchphrase ‘Bah! Humbug!’ Scrooge has become a familiar character in most families over recent years. Described early on in the novel by Dickens as a shrewd, shrivelled and cold natured being he is gradually transformed towards the end of the novella into a more amenable man.
Not only were these Year 11 students developing their reading skills the lesson was focused around refining their verbal communication skills alongside that of examination technique.
The class added depth to the novel’s content through encouraging students to write in both expressive and formal ways, through learning how to analyse Dickens’ use of language in his presentation of the character of Scrooge. As I watched the lesson, student confidence grew and the sophistication of their discussion increased as the challenge of the questions posed by the teacher scaffolded their understanding of A Christmas Carol to a higher level. A central aim within our English department is to help our students to become confident communicators in today’s competitive society and this was evident in the lesson I joined.
Year 7 students are currently studying Shakespeare’s comedy, Much Ado About Nothing. Taking place in Messina, Italy, our year 7 scholars have discovered a diverse range of...
It has been a delight for me, during these strange times, to receive students’ Reading Award work and see what they’ve been reading – I have certainly added a few books to...