IMAGES

  1. KS3 The Gothic Creative Writing

    gothic creative writing ks3

  2. Gothic Creative Writing KS3 Resource Pack

    gothic creative writing ks3

  3. KS3 The Gothic Creative Writing (4 lessons)

    gothic creative writing ks3

  4. Gothic Creative Writing KS3 Resource Pack by streetno9

    gothic creative writing ks3

  5. Gothic Creative Writing KS3 Resource Pack

    gothic creative writing ks3

  6. Gothic Creative Writing KS3 Resource Pack

    gothic creative writing ks3

VIDEO

  1. CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP #15 FOR KS3 & 4: DESERT ISLAND DESCRIPTIONS

  2. CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOP #16 FOR KS3 & 4: UNEARTHING THE SECRET TREASURE

  3. Pink Gothic Journal

  4. How to do CURSIVE with a REGULAR pen!

  5. Ingredients of Gothic Horror

  6. Plamen Sjarov

COMMENTS

  1. Gothic literature guide for KS3 English students - BBC Bitesize

    Learn about the contexts, conventions and key examples of Gothic literature in this guide for KS3 English students aged 11-14 from BBC Bitesize.

  2. KS3 The Gothic Creative Writing | Teaching Resources

    Four full KS3 lessons designed to support students in practising creative writing skills. The lessons include guidance on how to write both descriptively and narratively and focus on a range of skills, including the use of adverbs and the importance of vocabulary choices.

  3. A monster within: reading and writing Gothic fiction

    I can explore important contextual ideas that impact Gothic literature, focusing on the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution and Charles Darwin’s ‘On the Origin of Species’. 1 Slide deck. 1 Worksheet.

  4. Gothic literature resources | Tes

    Gothic literature. Resources for KS3 and KS4. Evoke your students interest in Gothic literature through novelists such as Poe, Shelley, Stoker and Hill and watch their imaginations come to life with their own Gothic literature pieces.

  5. Unit: Gothic Literature | KS3 English - Oak National Academy

    In this lesson, we will learn about typical Gothic themes such as madness, the body, death, fear, physical danger and the haunting past. We will then start studying a famous Gothic story, 'The Tell-Tale Heart' by Edgar Allan Poe.

  6. Planning a Gothic description inspired by 'A monster within'

    Key learning points. Your Gothic writing should not simply be a horror story - you can create fear through atmosphere and mood. Gothic literature is characterised by a sense of threat, but this does not have to be violent threat. Semantic fields, pathetic fallacy and figurative language are methods that Gothic writers can use to create ...