New
New
- Year 10
- Edexcel
'Belonging'
Full unit on the way!
31/32 lessons available
These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.
Switch to our new teaching resources now - designed by teachers and leading subject experts, and tested in classrooms.
These resources were created for remote use during the pandemic and are not designed for classroom teaching.
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
- 1 Slide deck
- 1 Worksheet
- 2 Quizzes
- 1 Video
I can conceptualise and explore the ideas of belonging within the Edexcel Belonging anthology.
I can explain how Clare presents the experience of spending time in nature in ‘Sunday Dip’.
I can explain how Clare uses language, form and structure to present nature as idyllic in ‘Sunday Dip’.
I can explain how Brontë creates tone in ‘Mild the Mist Upon the Hill’.
I can explain how Brontë uses language and structure to express ideas of nostalgia and melancholia in ‘Mild the Mist Upon the Hill’.
I can compare how Clare and Brontë present ideas of childhood in ‘Sunday Dip’ and ‘Mild the Mist Upon the Hill’.
I can explain how Wordsworth presents nature.
I can explain how Wordsworth uses language and structure to present an idyllic view of nature and arguably suggest that mankind belongs in nature in ‘To My Sister’.
I can explain how Landon presents ideas of childhood and the relationship with her brother.
I can explain how Landon uses language and structure to express ideas of childhood in ‘Captain Cook (To My Brother)’.
I can explain how Bridges presents nature and humanity's connection to nature.
I can explain how Bridges uses language and structure to express his viewpoint.
I can explain how Hood presents his past and his present in 'I Remember, I Remember'.
I can explain how Hood uses personification, symbolism and punctuation to express ideas of past and present in ‘I Remember, I Remember’.
I can compare how poets present their nostalgic memories of childhood.
I can explain how Blakemore presents multiculturalism in Peckham in ‘Peckham Rye Lane’.
I can explain how Blakemore uses language, form and structure to express ideas of multiculturalism.
I can explain how Nichols presents the memories of home in ‘Island Man’.
I can explain how Nichols uses language, form and structure to express ideas of place and belonging in ‘Island Man’.
I can explain how Antrobus presents dual heritage in ‘Jamaican British’.
Can't find what you need?
Create a tailor-made lesson plan and resources on any topic with Aila, our free AI-powered lesson assistant. Entirely adaptable to your class and context.
slide decks, worksheet PDFs, quizzes and lesson overviews. You can select individual lessons from: 'Belonging' unit and download the resources you need, or download the entire unit now. See every unit listed in our secondary English curriculum and discover more of our teaching resources for KS4.