
English • Year gcse • 90 • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England
Qualification Framework: Qualifications and Credit Framework (QCF)
Key Skill Standard: Speaking, Listening and Communication (SOS) Standards
Class Level: GCSE (Entry/Level 1 borderline learners)
Lesson Duration: 90 minutes
Number of Students: 15
Class Age Group: 14–16 years
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
| Learning Objective | Skill Code | Description |
|---|---|---|
| LO1 | 1.1 (SOS13) | Use a dictionary to find the meaning of words in straightforward texts. |
| LO2 | 2.1 (SOS16) | Identify how vocabulary is used for different text purposes (formal, informal, instructional, persuasive). |
| LO3 | 3.1 & 3.2 (SOS9) | Identify and understand the main points and key details in straightforward texts. |
How does the choice of words change depending on who the text is for and what it wants to achieve?
| Time | Activity | Purpose | Resources |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–10 mins | Starter - Vocab Relay | Activates prior knowledge | Mini whiteboards, marker pens |
| 10–30 mins | Group Task - Dictionary Detective | Builds dictionary skills (LO1) | Sets of texts, dictionaries |
| 30–55 mins | Carousel Activity - Text Zones | Analyses vocabulary based on purpose (LO2) | Text posters, highlighters |
| 55–75 mins | Paired Task - Point It Out! | Deepens understanding of main ideas and details (LO3) | Short passages, Q&A sheets |
| 75–85 mins | Plenary - Hot Seat Challenge | Assesses retention, develops peer support | N/A |
| 85–90 mins | Exit Ticket & Feedback | Checks individual progress | Post-it notes |
Setup:
Twist: After writing, they must justify their answers – peers can challenge!
Purpose:
Instructions:
Examples of texts:
Differentiation:
Peer Check:
Room setup:
Four station posters around the classroom. Each station represents a different text type:
| Station Name | Text Type | Example Tasks |
|---|---|---|
| ‘Mayor’s Message’ | Formal | Highlight 5 formal words/phrases and rewrite informally |
| ‘WhatsApp Rant’ | Informal | Identify slang, contractions – how would it look formally? |
| ‘How To Bake a Cake’ | Instructional | Sequence the verbs; circle imperative mood words |
| ‘Charity Appeal’ | Persuasive | Spot emotive language, rhetorical questions, repetition |
How it works:
Materials:
Task:
Scaffolded prompt cards available:
Rules:
Bonus:
Correct responses earn their teams a reward (stickers, leaderboard points, etc.)
Task:
On a post-it note, students answer:
Stick to the Word Wall as they leave.
Students are given three short text snippets and asked to:
Challenge: Find a real-world example of a persuasive or instructional text at home (e.g. delivery flyer, recipe box).
✔️ Observation during group/pair work
✔️ Exit tickets
✔️ Hot Seat responses
✔️ Quality of vocabulary substitutions and justifications
Try tracking which learners contribute vocabulary definitions and hot seat answers. Encourage those who rarely speak to lead one carousel station — this rotates authority and builds confidence in using new vocabulary functionally.
Consider using student-created glossaries as part of a class resource wall reused across units.
| Code | Outcome |
|---|---|
| 1.1 (SOS13) | Learners used dictionaries to decode and understand words in complex short texts. |
| 2.1 (SOS16) | Identified specific lexical features of different text types (formality, purpose). |
| 3.1 & 3.2 (SOS9) | Identified central ideas and substantiating details across real-world and constructed texts. |
Let's inspire learners to be text detectives — not just readers.
— End of Lesson Plan —
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