No new pupils until September

Please note that I won’t be taking on any new pupils until the new term in September.

I will only have a few vacancies, so if you are interested please contact me towards the end of August.

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Some great definitions of linguistic devices

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May 27, 2019 · 10:04 am

All children are unique

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May 16, 2019 · 6:00 pm

For Latin fans (warning slightly rude)


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January 26, 2019 · 12:44 pm

A Happy New Year!

new year

 

 

A very happy 2019 to all my pupils and their families!

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Happy Christmas to all my pupils!

Merry-Christmas1

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December 22, 2018 · 11:08 am

Punctuation is important!

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November 18, 2018 · 12:54 pm

More Exam Techniques

The following advice applies not only to English exams but also to history, RE, Geography or any exam with several written questions to tackle.

So which question to answer first? Don’t forget there’s absolutely no rule that says you have to start with question 1.

If there are 4 questions to answer, first of all decide which ones you are going to choose. Then rate those questions in terms of how confident you feel about answering them. Let’s imagine you’ve decided on questions 1, 3, 5, and 7. You are very confident about answering 7, fairly confident about 3, less so about 1, and not at all confident about 5.

Start with 3. The reasoning behind this is that your first answer will get you into the swing of writing, warm you up, as it were. You still want a question that you feel pretty good about, however, to build your confidence.

Next do 7 – your favourite. You should be fully warmed up and writing well by now.

Then do 1 and last of all 5. The chances are that you will have less time for your last answer and that doesn’t matter if it’s one that you know less about and for which you potentially will earn less marks.

Following on from this you can see that timings for each question are important. Most teachers advise taking off, say, 10 minutes for checking and then dividing the remaining time by the number of questions – assuming they are all worth equal marks. (Naturally if some questions are worth more marks you will need to adjust your timings accordingly.) However I would urge you to be slightly flexible on your timings. It is worth allowing an extra 5 or even 10 minutes on a question that you feel you can answer well and therefore gain good marks and deducting that 5 or 10 minutes from a question that you are struggling with. The aim is, of course, to maximise your marks.

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Exam Techniques

Got exams coming up? No matter what the subject matter is, exam technique is all important. Here are our 5 top tips for successful exam technique:

1. Read the whole paper through from start to end before starting to answer any questions

2. Work out your timings – make sure you know when you need to move from section to section

3. Work out in what order you will answer the questions – you don’t have to start at section 1!

4. Plan each answer in quick note form before you start.

5. Be careful with timings. If you have 5 questions each worth 20 marks – it’s no good writing an almost perfect answer to question 1 (which might get you 17 marks) and have no time to start on question 5 (zero marks). Do a little less on question one (15 marks) and spend time on question 5 (10 marks) … and do the maths. You’ll get 25 marks instead of just 17.

Good luck – and remember to breathe

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Good Luck!

 

Good luck to all my pupils who are taking exams at the moment. Read my tips on exams and above all read the questions CAREFULLY.

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