English

Students are guided to consider how writers use a range of literary and structural devices to create layers of meaning and explore how intricate contextual factors deepen their understanding of poetry, prose and plays that they analyse. Our curriculum explicitly builds cross-curricular links with the humanities, edifying the cultural capital over students, ensuring equality amongst their contemporaries and demonstrates how influential archaic texts continue to inspire the creation of literature throughout the ages.

Our curriculum is designed through the concepts we have identified as underpinning the discipline of English. These concepts with the exception of critical theory are introduced in Year 7 and students understanding of them develop as they progress through the curriculum. Critical theory is introduced at KS4 once they have developed their own knowledge of the literary texts. For example, in English Literature the concept of social and historical context and its impact on authorial intent is introduce in Year 7. By the end of Key stage 3, students can confidently discuss the impact of social and historical content not only on authorial intent but also reader response in a nuanced way. At KS4, students begin to connect social and historical content to very specific examples in the texts and can evaluate the likelihood of different interpretations of the text given the context in which they were written and received. In English Language, students are able to comment simply on the writer's choice of language devices/techniques in Year 7. By the end of Year 9 they are able to analyse the impact of those choices on reader response, and by the end of Year 11 they can evaluate how successfully the writer has communicated their message.

We have selected texts at KS3 to cover the requirements of the National Curriculum (two Shakespeare plays - one tragedy, one comedy; seminal world literature; and two pre-1914 texts) and give students a broad and rich experience of texts. The texts we have selected allow us to introduce concepts and context (such as the genres of tragedy and the Gothic) that will be built on in KS4.

Reading and writing skills are interleaved at KS3 to enable students to transfer new content to their long-term memory by connecting it to prior learning. Our KS4 curriculum allows all content to be covered in Year 10, meaning that Year 11 allows students to develop a deeper critical understanding of the texts and the time to develop the skills of academic essay writing. Lessons make explicit links between previous content and skills and current learning, allowing students to understand their learning journey. We explicitly teach Direct Vocabulary that arises organically from the texts we are interrogating. We also subscribe to Lexia to improve students' reading ages. Each learning sequence builds to an extended piece of writing that consolidates knowledge and allows students to articulate independent thought.

Exam Board

AQA

Course Title and Syllabus

English Language

English Literature

Details of Papers

English Language:

Paper 1: Exploration in Creative Reading and Writing (1 hour and 45 minutes long)

  • Source A: Fiction Text
  • Section A: Q1, 2, 3 and 4
  • Section B: Q5 - Writing to describe

Paper 2: Writers' Viewpoints and Perspectives (1 hour and 45 minutes long)

  • Source A and B: 19th (autobiographical essay) and 21st Century Non-fiction texts
  • Section A: Q1, 2, 3 and 4
  • Section B: Q5 - writing to argue

English Literature:

Paper 1: Shakespeare and the 19th Century Novel (1 hour and 45 minutes long)

  • Section A: Macbeth
  • Section B: Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Power

Paper 2: Modern text and Poetry (2 hours and 15 minutes long)

  • Section A: An Inspector Calls
  • Section B: Power and Conflict Poetry
  • Section C: Unseen Poetry

Overview

Year Term Topic(s)
Year 7 Autumn

Introduction to Poetry

Anthology of 19th Century Texts

Spring

A Midsummer Night's Dream

Summer

The Village by the Sea - Anita Desai

Year 8 Autumn

A Christmas Carol

Spring

Rhetoric Writing and Animal Farm

Summer

Banned and Controversial Texts

Love and Relationships Poetry

Year 9 Autumn

Romeo and Juliet

Spring

Power and Conflict poetry Autobiographical Writing

Summer

Frankenstein

Year 10 Autumn

Power and Conflict Poetry

Spring

Language Paper One

An Inspector Calls

Summer

Macbeth

Introduction to Speaking and Listening Assessment

Year 11 Autumn

Speaking and Listening Assessment

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

Revision for Autumn Mocks

Spring

Language Paper Two

Language Paper One and Two Consolidation

Revision for Spring Mocks

Summer

Revision for GCSE Exams