Author Anthony Horowitz introduces English Literature and Language clips from the BBC archive featuring famous faces including Stephen Fry, Kate Humble and Griff Rhys Jones. Creativity is everywhere.
Musician Labrinth explores different ways to use your voice in everyday life. Suitable for teaching English Language at KS3, National 4 and National 5.
These resources are designed to support a KS3 lesson on diet, nutrition and disease in the historical context of the transatlantic slave trade. Teachers can use these resources as a complete unit of ...
Based on the August Wilson play about the complex weight of Black lineage, Malcolm Washington's feature-length directorial debut, The Piano Lesson, fittingly breaks a family curse. It's the third ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission. Set in the mid-1930s ...
Try these discussions to improve your speaking and listening. There are 20 questions in each activity - 10 for Student A and 10 for Student B. You can print out the worksheet. You can listen to the ...
The way in which education is being delivered in England is faltering. A study by the National Foundation for Education Research found that 44 per cent more teachers stated their intention ...
At the graduate level, MFA degrees in creative writing are offered through the New Writers Project and the Michener Center for Writers. A number of scholarly journals are edited and published by ...
These print-budget-friendly GCSE Maths revision worksheets are excellent resources for teachers supporting Foundation-level students. Each worksheet focuses on key skills within the GCSE Foundation ...
Do you have a favorite musical? How many show-tune lyrics do you know? Do you love Broadway? By Shannon Doyne How do you feel about automated vehicles? What effects do you think they will have ...
But The Piano Lesson looks and sounds like a filmed play – artificial and heavy-handed – and it loses its head entirely with a silly, supernatural denouement. Pity.