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Page 1
Mastery Writing
Student Self-study
Workbook 2
Page 2
Mastery Writing Self-Study Unit 2: Parent and Student Guide
This booklet is for KS3 students to practise writing on their own or with the help of a parent, guardian or carer.
What will I do and learn?
• You will learn to write well-structured action stories and fantasy quests featuring an opening,
problem, solution and happy ending.
• You will learn about key grammatical rules that will make your writing more accurate and precise.
How do I use the booklet?
• Set aside 1 hour to complete each lesson (20 minutes on grammar tasks and 40 minutes on the writing task).
• Read the grammar rules and explanations carefully before completing the tasks.
• For the grammar tasks, you can find the answers in the answer booklet.
How do the lessons work?
Each lesson is divided into four parts:
1. Do Now reviewing previously studied grammar: 5 minutes
2. New grammar instruction and exercise one: 5 minutes
3. Revision exercises two and three: 10 minutes
4. Error correction. 5 minutes
5. Explanation of how to structure your story: 10 minutes
6. Planning and writing your story: 20 minutes
7. Reading and checking your story: 5 minutes
How can I check the quality of my writing?
• After finishing your writing, re-read and check through it. Circle the key vocabulary. Underline and label the Mastery Checks.
• Use the online Cambridge Learner’s Dictionary to check any key vocabulary you do not know.
• If you have not used all the Mastery Checks or key vocabulary, edit your work to include them.
Can parents, carers and siblings help?
Yes, of course! Family members can help in the following ways:
• Help you check your work using the answer booklet we provide.
• Help you with the planning of the story and check your writing after you have completed it using the Mastery Checks.
• Write a story at the same time as you. You could then compare your stories and check each
other’s writing.
What else can I do if I love writing and I want more of a challenge?
• Keep writing stories using your own ideas.
• Use the structure you learn in this unit to write other types of stories, such as fantasy quests and mysteries
Page 3
bring buy do lay sew
When trying to punctuate a subordinate clause and list:
• First, find the independent clause in the sentence. • Next, punctuate the subordinate clause. • Finally, punctuate the list.
Lesson 11
Do Now
Task: Add in the correct past simple tense verb below.
1. Jen a new hat.
2. Zara and Mia their homework.
3. The Prime Minister a wreath at the Cenotaph.
4. Gavin a button onto his shirt.
5. Shu-Wei some crisps to the party.
Exercise 1
Here is some grammar explanation to help you with Exercise 1.
Task: Punctuate these sentences correctly
1. As Kevin fell off his horse rolled down the hill and landed in a puddle he
saw his life f lash before his eyes.
2. The l ibrary is open on Friday Saturday and Sunday.
3. Every Saturday evening they watched films whilst they ate popcorn
chocolate and crisps.
4. Whilst the pigs made evil plans drank beer in the farmhouse and wore Mr
Jones’s clothes Boxer was completely unaware of what was going on.
5. As the storm was wrecking the ship Ariel appeared as fire a demon and
even the sea god Neptune.
6. As he thought about the journey Jason gathered up his keys wallet
phone and watch.
Page 4
7. Ever since Bernie Joanna and Archie arrived it’s been chaos!
8. Whenever Felicia played the harp read her book or painted a picture her
mother exclaimed “Look how talented my daughter is!”
Exercise 2
Page 5
Task: Punctuate the sentences correctly.
1. George Orwell wrote books in a café at his house and on the streets
of Paris.
2. He lived in India England France and Spain.
3. In the barn in the field and at the water trough all the animals were
working hard.
4. The workhouse Animal Farm and Caliban’s is land are all places
where people worked for little or no pay.
5. Puck put the love potion on Lysander Demetrius and Titania.
6. Dickens Orwell and Conan Doyle wrote stories that wer e published
in England.
Exercise 3
DEFINITION: Temporal clauses are a type of subordinate clause. They tell us when
the event in the independent clause happened. Prepositional phrases tell us where
it happened.
Page 6
TASK: Decide whether the examples use prepositional phrases, temporal clauses or
are fragments?
Sentence
Correct/
Fragment?
If correct, does it have a
temporal
clause/prepositional
phrase?
1. I call my aunt at 3 o’clock, 5
o’clock and 7 o’clock.
2. Unless this behaviour stops
soon.
3. I keep pet spiders in my house,
on top of my locker and in my
garden
4. Although the bottle was
smooth and green.
5. Because of the terrible rain,
violent storms and loud
thunder.
6. It landed in the bin.
7. The teenagers raced to the
back of the bus.
Page 7
Error Correction
Correct the errors in this passage (There are 10 errors)
When he was younger Henry was a very athletic young man. He enjoyed
sport and often played dangerous games. When he went
jousting hunting and horse riding he was energetic and happy. The best times of his
life were spent in the forest.
Back at the palace he had an accident when he was jousting in a
competition. He wounded his leg and fell off his horse. Many people
thought he was going to die, but he survived.
During February March and April he was forced to stay in bed. He applied a
mixture of mashed worms the bone marrow of a pig and the hair from a black cat
to the wound every day. He was very bad
tempered, whilst he was ill.
Eventually Henry got slightly better. His bruises and broken bones healed.
On his leg the wound still festered. Years later, he had still not recovered.
Page 8
Writing
You are going to write an action story. It builds on the problem-solution story structure.
It’s important to remember that the hero escapes danger through skill and not magic.
We will learn about magical stories and fantasy quests later.
Let’s look at the structure for an action story.
Before you write your action story, plan the story in the boxes on the next page. Use
the slide below to help you.
Page 9
Bill
Story Writing:
• You should make sure you have planned your story by writing your ideas for each
story part in the boxes on the next page.
• Look at the vocabulary below the image on the next page. You will need to use
each of these words in your writing to help you write your action story. Tick off the
words as and when you use them in your story.
• You will also need to make sure you have included all of the mastery checks in
your writing. You have 30 minutes to complete your writing
Part one: Opening Part two: Problem
Part three: Solution Part four: Happy ending
Vocabulary
desert golden hieroglyphics artefact
priceless statue rubble perilous
Mastery Checks
Mastery Check 1 Mastery Check 2 Mastery Check 3
I have not used any
fragments.
I have included a
prepositional phrase with a
list in it and punctuated it
correctly.
I have included a temporal
clause with a list in it and
punctuated it correctly.
Crafting check: I have written a problem solved action story with an opening, a
problem, a solution and a happy ending.
Page 10
Lesson 12
Do Now:
TASK: Add temporal clauses to the independent clauses given below. Make sure to
punctuate them correctly.
1. Damien played rugby.
2. Simone won the gymnastics competition.
3. Matthew dove into the sparkling blue pool.
Exercise 1
TASK: Punctuate these sentences correctly.
1. As I ate my sandwich with ham lettuce tomatoes and pickles I noticed
that the chef had left out the chicken.
2. Nearby three l lamas four goats and an emu waited to be fed.
3. Whenever Dillan Bernard or Tristan stumbled a buzzer would sound.
4. Within the grounds gardens or car par, it is forbidden to exercise dogs.
5. If you leave the house car or garage, remember to lock the doors.
Page 11
Exercise 2
Page 12
TASK: Punctuate these sentences correctly.
1. Although James loved basketball he represented his school in
badminton.
2. You may go outside if you have finished your work.
3. Unless Dad made the phone call Jane would not be allowed on the
school trip.
4. Even though Andrea loved playing Angry Birds she stopped playing
to do her homework.
5. Max started to improve his performance because Sandeep had
joined the team.
Exercise 3
TASK: Below are subordinate clauses. Make up your own independent clause to
complete the sentence. These can be either before or after the subordinate clause.
1 Rather than eating the entire cheesecake
2
even though the phone was ringing
3 Despite eating all the melon
4
because you can swim
5 Whether Jodie buys the dress or not
Page 13
Error Correction
Correct the errors in this passage. There are 7 errors.
King Henry’s final wife was called Catherine Parr. She was about
the same age as him. She was very kind and spent a lot of time looking after the
sick old king.
Catherine Parr was incredibly intelligent. She spoke French Latin and
Italian. Because she was interested in religion. She wrote a book about how to
be a good Christian. It was called ‘ Lamentations of a
Sinner’.
When King Henry was away fighting battles she ruled in his place.
When someone ruled a country for a monarch, they was called a regent. Queen
Catherine was a regent for nearly a year. I f Henry had been killed she would have
ruled until his children were old enough to do so. Until
the king returned she was in complete control of the country.
King Henry died in 1547. In order to let the new King Edward rule
from London without her. Catherine decided to live in the countryside.
Page 14
Writing
In this lesson, we will focus on the openings of action stories in more detail.
The information below will help you plan your story in more detail in the boxes.
Story Writing:
• You should make sure you have planned your story by writing your ideas for each
story part in the boxes on the next page.
• Look at the vocabulary below the image below. You will need to use each of
these words in your writing to help you write your action story. Tick off the words as
and when you use them in your story.
• You will also need to make sure you have included all of the mastery checks in
your writing. You have 30 minutes to complete your writing
Page 15
Part one: Opening Part two: Problem
Part three: Solution Part four: Happy ending
Vocabulary
undergrowth backpack endangered predator
machete compass terror basecamp
Mastery Checks
Mastery Check 1 Mastery Check 2 Mastery Check 3
I have not used any
fragments.
I have included a temporal
clause with a list in it and
punctuated it correctly.
I have included a
subordinate clause that is
not a temporal clause or
prepositional phrase.
Crafting check: I have written a problem solved action story with an opening, a
problem, a solution and a happy ending.
Alex
Page 16
Poetry and Metaphor Booklet 2
Name:
Page 17
Poetry Self-Study Unit: A Guide for Students and Parents
This booklet is for KS3 students to practise writing on their own, or with the help of a parent or
carer.
What will I do and learn?
• Enjoy reading a range of poems and write your own.
• Talk and write about each poem’s meaning and the way it is written.
• Develop a deep understanding of one of the most important poetry concepts: metaphor.
How do I use the booklet?
• Set aside about an hour to complete each lesson.
• Complete all the activities in each lesson in the order they appear.
• When completing written tasks, such as answering questions or writing paragraphs, you
should use full sentences and take care to use capital letters and full-stops correctly. • You will need an exercise book or lined paper to complete some of the exercises.
How do the lessons work?
Each lesson includes one new poem. The lesson is divided into four parts:
• Do Now Activities: These tasks help you remember things that will help you do the later tasks.
• Read: Read the poem out loud at least twice.
• Understanding: These questions help you to understand what the poem is about.
• Think Harder: In this section, you will be asked to write more about your thoughts, feelings
and reflections on the poem.
Can parents, carers and siblings help?
Yes of course! Other family members can help in the following ways:
• Read the poems out loud to you or listen to you reading them aloud.
• Talk with you about the questions before you start to write.
• Suggest ways to start your sentences or paragraphs.
• Check your writing, especially full-stops and capital letters.
• You could challenge them to write their own poem and share it with you.
What else can I do if I love poetry and I want more of a challenge?
• Choose one of the poems to learn by heart and perform it to family members.
• Read some poems with a younger sibling and ask them what they like about them.
• Create and illustrate your own book of poems by copying out the poems you’ve written,
your favourites from the booklet and others you’ve found online.
I’m a parent, what do I need to know to help with this booklet?
The most important and challenging learning in this booklet is:
• What is literal and non-literal language? What is metaphor?
• How do tenor, vehicle and ground help us to understand metaphor?
You will find explanations of these concepts and the key metaphors in each poem in the
knowledge organiser at the back of the Booklet 1.
Page 18
Information
You are going to read a poem called ‘For Forest’ by
Grace Nichols. She was born in Guyana in 1950. Guyana
is in South America. She moved to England in 1977. Her
poetry is influenced by Guyanese culture, landscape and
language.
Lesson 11: ‘For Forest’
Do Now Activity
Why are forests an interesting setting for writers?
Read: ‘For Forest’
Read the poem below at least twice. Forest could keep secrets
Forest could keep secrets
Forest tune in every day
to watersound and birdsound
Forest letting her hair down
to the teeming creeping of her forest-ground
But Forest don't broadcast her business
no Forest cover her business down
from sky and fast-eye sun
and when night come
and darkness wrap her like a gown
Forest is a bad dream woman
Forest dreaming about mountain
and when earth was young
Forest dreaming of the caress of gold
Forest roosting with mysterious eldorado
and when howler monkey
wake her up with howl
Forest just stretch and stir
to a new day of sound
but coming back to secrets
Forest could keep secrets
Forest could keep secrets
And we must keep Forest
teeming - full or crowded
roosting - animals sleeping
Eldorado – a mythical city
of gold in South America
Page 19
‘Forest letting her hair down
to the teeming creeping of her forest-ground’
Understanding: ‘For Forest’
If you have access to the internet, watch a short video
(https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p00x1xqw) which features Grace
Nichols explaining how the sights and sounds of the rainforest were the
inspiration for her poem.
Write down your answers to the questions below.
1. Why do you think that Grace Nichols decided to write a poem about a
Guyanan forest?
2. What is the forest being compared to?
3. Look back at the poem. Underline three examples of where the forest is
being compared to a woman.
Information
Here are some examples of where Grace Nichols uses metaphor to compare
the forest to a woman:
• ‘Forest letting her hair down’
• ‘Forest doesn’t broadcast her business’
• ‘Forest is a bad dream woman’
Grace Nichols is saying that the forest is a woman. She is giving the forest
human characteristics. This is a special type of metaphor called personification.
Personification is a type of metaphor used by writers to make something seem
like it is alive, with a human personality.
The forest/woman’s hair is wild and long, hanging towards the ground. When a
woman lets her hair down, she can be showing she is at ease and in control of
herself. This is similar to the forest. It is comfortable with what it is. It is happy to be
wild and free.
Thinking Harder: ‘For Forest’
Read the poem again and answer the questions below in full sentences.
1. Why is the forest female in the poem?
2. What is the forest like as a character?
3. What type of person is she?
Page 20
Information: Tenor, Vehicle and Ground/s
A metaphor has three parts.
1. Tenor
The thing you want to try and describe to your audience.
2. Vehicle
The imaginative idea you compare it with to help your audience
understand it. This is the ‘made up’ bit.
3. Ground/s
The things the tenor and the vehicle have in common.
Lesson 12: ‘Hope is the thing with the feathers’
Do Now Activities
Activity 1: Think of a time that you have hoped for something.
1. Write down the situation.
2. What did it feel like?
Information: Tenor, Vehicle and Ground/s
Here is an example of a metaphor in the poem ‘Frogs’ by Norman
MacCaig:
I love frogs that sit like Buddha
1. Tenor Frogs
2. Vehicle Buddha
3. Ground/s • They sit calmly without moving for a long time.
• They are both focused. • They have a large belly.
Page 21
Information: The extended metaphor
Today we are going to look at a special type of metaphor called the
extended metaphor.
In an extended metaphor, each tenor remains the same and so does the
vehicle. Both the tenor and the vehicle extend throughout the poem. There
are many different grounds to identify.
This allows the writer to explore the comparison between the tenor and
vehicle in depth.
Activity 2: Find the tenor, vehicle and grounds
Here are two more examples of metaphor from the poem ‘Frogs’. Write down
three examples of the ground for both of these metaphors.
The parts of a metaphor 1. In mid-leap they are
parachutists falling in a
free fall
2. [They] make stylish
triangles with their
ballet dancer's legs
Tenor
The thing you want to
try and describe to your
audience
Vehicle
The imaginative idea
you compare it with to
help your audience
understand it. This is the ‘made up’ bit.
Ground/s
The things the tenor
and the vehicle have in
common.
Activity 3: Introducing the poem
The title of the poem we are looking at in this lesson is called ‘Hope is the
thing with feathers.’
Look at the title, what do you think the main tenor and
vehicle of the poem might be?
Page 22
Read: ‘‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers’ by Emily Dickinson
Read the poem below (twice) and then answer the questions below it in full
sentences.
‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)
Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune-without the words,
And never stops at all,
And sweetest in the gale is heard;
And sore must be the storm
That could abash the little bird
That kept so many warm.
I’ve heard it in the chilliest land,
And on the strangest sea;
Yet, never, in extremity, It asked a crumb of me.
gale -a very strong wind
abash – stop/damage
extremity – at its worst/farthest
point
Understanding: ‘’Hope’ is the thing with feathers’ by Emily
Dickinson
Write down your answers to the questions below.
1. What is the main tenor and vehicle in this poem?
2. On the poem, underline the actions that the bird takes, e.g. perches in the
soul.
3. Next, choose two of these vehicles and identify the ground. How is the
behaviour of the bird similar to hope?
Page 23
Information
In this poem the tenor is the emotion of hope. Hope is being compared to a
little bird. This is the vehicle.
Dickinson’s poem is an extended metaphor because it uses the same tenor
and vehicle all the way through.
The vehicles in the poem are the things that describe what the bird does:
• It ‘perches in the soul’.
• It ‘sings the tune - without the words, and never stops at all’.
• It ‘kept so many warm’.
• It never ‘asked a crumb of me’.
Here are some ideas for the ground.
It ‘perches in the soul’.
• When a bird is perching, it is ready to take flight at any moment.
• Hope is always within you ready to be called upon.
It ‘sings the tune - without the words, and never stops at all’.
• A bird singing is like the constant reassurance of hope that keeps you company.
• Birdsong lifts your mood.
It ‘kept so many warm’.
• Birds shelter their own young to keep them warm and alive. Hope can be seen as an
emotion that makes you feel ‘warm’ and sheltered inside.
• Hope is ready to comfort you.
• Hope keeps your spirits up.
It never ‘asked a crumb of me’.
• The bird is not taking anything from the speaker just like hope does not take anything away from you.
Page 24
Additional activities for Lesson 12, ‘Hope’
Read through some facts about Emily Dickinson’s life.
• Emily Dickinson was an American poet.
• She was born in 1830 and died in 1886.
• She wrote many poems in secret throughout her life.
• More than 1,700 unpublished poems were discovered after her
death.
• Many of her poems were about death or immortality.
• She wrote many letters to her close friends.
• Some of her closest friends died young.
• She was unmarried.
• She was known to be reclusive (she spent a lot of time by herself in
her bedroom).
Answer the question: Why do you think Emily Dickinson wrote about hope?
Thinking Harder: How does Emily Dickinson show that hope is
important to people’s lives?
Use the points from the previous answer to write a paragraph answering
the question, ‘How does Emily Dickinson show that hope is important to
people’s lives?’
You should refer to the poem, as well as including your own thoughts.
Give yourself 15 minutes to complete this task. When you have finished,
use the checks below to edit your writing.
Check 1: Are there any run-on sentences?
Check 2: Does each proper noun begin with a capital?
Check 3: Have you used pronouns clearly and
accurately? Check 4: Have you checked your spellings?
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