Wednesday 30 January 2013

Welcome to our new blog

Hi Everyone
Welcome to our new blog designed to support you during your final weeks of English; we are going to be focusing on unseen poetry and ensuring you get the best grades possible. The posts that follow are there for you to access at school and at home to aid your revision.

This is a bit mad but again another approach

http://youtu.be/8_86bTL6lsg

another teacher with a different approach to unseen poetry

http://youtu.be/Q0R9App30Yo

Here a link to the audiobook of Of Mice and Men

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=atzRqKpyjJE&feature=share&list=PLC206EA96C5CEC91C

Tackling Unseen Poetry

This is a great video which offers a different way of approaching unseen poetry through song lyrics


 http://youtu.be/Ebd-0bjUjZk


Takeaway Teacher

Writing at A*
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2Lc6kdoWsA&feature=share&list=PLD7EDBCA65C4AA9FD

General English Revision

Memory Strategies for Revision
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZwAK131fnZk&feature=share&list=PLD7EDBCA65C4AA9FD



Purpose of this blog

Over the next few weeks we are going to be revising skills to enable us to engage with and to intepret unseen poetry. This revision does not stop when the lesson ends; it is just beginning- bookmark this website as over the next few weeks it will become your tool to use to revise. Dip in and out of the different tasks and visit some of the links. Hopefully it will be the key to increasing your confidence when tackling the poetry questions. Enjoy...

STRIVE

strive

/strīv/

Verb
  1. Make great efforts to achieve or obtain something.
  2. Struggle or fight vigorously: "scholars must strive against bias".
Synonyms
endeavour - endeavor - struggle - try - fight - aspire

When we critique a poem we use STRIVE; it means
Subject
Theme
Rhythm
Image
Versification
Effect

Sheer Poetry

“Sheer Poetry!”

Resources on poetry by the poets themselves.

Sheerpoetry.co.uk is an innovative and constantly changing new UK poetry site.
Sheer Poetry has sections for primary teachers and students, secondary teachers and students, and for university level and the general poetry reader. Here you will find poems, articles, workshops, interviews and essays, question sessions and more, about and by Carol Ann Duffy, Gillian Clarke, Seamus Heaney, Simon Armitage, and others.
http://www.sheerpoetry.co.uk/gcse

This link above is to the Sheer Poetry website where you will find lots of interesting stuff on poetry. I love it and I hope that you will too


Revising for the question on unseen poetry

The link below takes you BBC GCSE Bitesize where you can revise how to write about poetry


 http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/english_literature/writingcomparingpoetry/writingabpoetryrev1.shtml

This lesson we will


Listen to the poem ‘The Highwayman’

Match examples of poetic techniques from ‘The Highwayman’.

Learn about syllables and rhyme schemes.

The Highwayman by Alfred Noyes


The poem tells the story of a nameless highwayman who is in love with a landlord's daughter named Bess. Tim, the insanely jealous ostler (stableman), betrays him to the authorities: an action which leads to brutal death for both the lovers.



Rhyme Scheme


 "I'm Late For School"

I got up late for school today,  A 

And nearly missed the bus!  B

I hurried down the stairs,  C

Wolfed my toast, and caused a fuss!  B

I quickly threw books in my bag,  D

My pens, my lunch and shorts.  E

Grabbed my coat from out the cupboard,  F
Took my bat and ball for sports.  E

Syllables


—A unit of sound in a word.
All words have at least one syllable.
Syllables can be just one letter or a group of letters - it's the sound that matters. 

 

  walk, go, home
These words have 1 syllable
happy, birthday, because
These words have 2 syllables

September, underneath, Internet
These words have 3 syllables

Figurative Language


 
 
Alliteration 
The repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighbouring words or syllables .
The wild and woolly walrus waits and wonders when we'll walk by.
Assonance 
A resemblance of sound in words or syllables.
Holy & stony 
and
Ffeet feet sweep by sleeping geese.
Cliche 
A word or phrase that has become overly familiar or commonplace.
No pain, no gain.
Opposites attract.
Break a leg.
Hyperbole 
Big exaggeration, usually with humour. 
Mile-high ice-cream cones.
I am so hungry I could eat a horse.
Metaphor 
Comparing two things by using one kind of object or using in place of another to suggest the likeness between them.
Her hair was silk.
He was a bull in a china shop.
Onomatopoeia 
Naming a thing or an action by imitating the sound associated with it.
Buzz, hiss, roar, woof.
Personification 
Giving something human qualities.
The stuffed bear smiled as the little boy hugged him close.
The moon crept across the sky.
Simile 
A figure of speech comparing two unlike things that is often introduced by like or as.
The sun is like a yellow ball of fire in the sky.