Skip to content
Cart 
Register Sign in
A/AS Level English Literature A for AQA Digital Student Book (1 Year) School Site Licence
Add to wishlist Find sales consultant
× This is a Sterling guide price. You will be invoiced in the appropriate currency for your country.
  • ISBN:9781107467958
  • Format:eBooks
  • Subject(s):English Literature
  • Qualification:AQA
  • Author(s):Russell Carey, Anne Fairhall, Tom Rank, Marcello Giovanelli
  • Available from: November 2015
  • Notes: Not available for credit card purchase. Please contact Customer Services.

A new series of bespoke, full-coverage resources developed for the 2015 A Level English qualifications.

Add to wishlist Find sales consultant
× This is a Sterling guide price. You will be invoiced in the appropriate currency for your country.

Send a Query

formRow
×
  • DESCRIPTION

    Written for the AQA A/AS Level English Literature A specifications for first teaching from 2015, this enhanced digital resource is suitable for all abilities. Helping bridge the gap between GCSE and A Level, the unique three-part structure provides essential knowledge and allows students to develop their skills through a deeper study of key topics whilst encouraging independent learning. Digital Editions include rich digital content such as video tutorials and extensive annotation tools. Available online and on tablet devices through the Cambridge Reader app.

  • Contents
  • FEATURES
    • A single one-year site licence for an unlimited number of teachers and students.

    • The Digital Student Books are fully customisable and interactive, with extensive annotation and bookmarking tools making texts more accessible for students.

    • The Digital Student Books feature rich digital content, including video tutorials covering key specification topics and interviews with writers and academics.

    • The Digital Student Books allow teacher–student messaging, helping you connect with your class in a timely and practical way.

    • Available online and on tablet devices through the Cambridge Reader app.

    • Suitable for all abilities, incorporating differentiated support and providing opportunities to stretch the more able and support those who need it.

    • Unique three-part structure will help bridge the gap between GCSE and A Level, support students in developing their knowledge and skills, and prepare them for assessment, studies and life beyond A Level.

    • Specifically addressing the revised specification, these resources focus on texts within a particular time period and support students in developing skills to interpret texts and reflect on learning.

    • Supports both AS and A Level teaching of the new linear specification with AS content signposted throughout.

    • Free Digital Teacher’s Resources with each Digital Student Book allows for easy linking and cross reference, and provide comprehensive planning support with additional opportunities for differentiation and extension.

  • Author(s)
  • CONTENTS
    • Introduction
    • BEGINNING: 1. Overview
    • 2. Responding to literature
    • 3. Texts, contexts and time
    • 4. Wider reading, research and writing skills
    • 5. Poetry
    • 6. Prose
    • 7. Drama
    • DEVELOPING: 8. Love Through the Ages: Introduction
    • 8.1 What is love?
    • 8.2 Connecting love through the ages: Poetry
    • 8.3 Connecting love through the ages: Prose
    • 9. Love Through the Ages: Shakespeare
    • 9.1 The Elizabethan era
    • 9.2 Shakespeare's plays
    • 9.3 Othello
    • 9.4 The Taming of the Shrew
    • 9.5 Measure for Measure
    • 9.6 The Winter's Tale
    • 10. Love Through the Ages: Poetry
    • 10.1 Ideal, romantic love
    • 10.2 Love, sex and inconstancy
    • 10.3 Marriage and mature love
    • 10.4 Love, loss and taboos
    • 10.5 Bringing it all together
    • 11. Love Through the Ages: Prose
    • 11.1 Romantic love
    • 11.2 Marriage and commitment
    • 11.3 Love and death
    • 11.4 Social conventions and taboos
    • 11.5 Jealousy, guilt and remembrance 11.6 Bringing it all together
    • 12. World War I and its Aftermath: Introduction
    • 12.1 The Great War
    • 12.2 The historical and social context
    • 12.3 Memory and mourning
    • 12.4 The pre-war cultural context
    • 12.5 The aftermath
    • 13. World War I and its Aftermath: Drama
    • 13.1 The theatre of war and war in the theatre
    • 13.2 R.C. Sherriff: Journey's End
    • 13.3 Joan Littlewood and Theatre Workshop: Oh! What a Lovely War
    • 13.4 Peter Whelan: The Accrington Pals
    • 13.5 Richard Curtis and Ben Elton: Blackadder Goes Forth
    • 13.6 David Haig: My Boy Jack
    • 14. World War I and its Aftermath: Poetry
    • 14.1 Poetry and remembrance
    • 14.2 The age of chivalry
    • 14.3 Which England?
    • 14.4 Only connect: Finding the themes
    • 15. World War I and its Aftermath: Prose
    • 15.1 The novel before the First World War
    • 15.2 Understanding the set texts
    • 15.3 Rebecca West: The Return of the Soldier
    • 15.4 Erich Maria Remarque: All Quiet on the Western Front
    • 15.5 Ernest Hemingway: A Farewell to Arms
    • 15.6 Susan Hill: Strange Meeting
    • 15.7 Pat Barker: Regeneration
    • 15.8 Sebastian Faulks: Birdsong
    • 15.9 Sebastian Barry: A Long Long Way
    • 15.10 Ben Elton: The First Casualty
    • 15.11 Pat Barker: Life Class
    • 15.12 Bringing it all together
    • 16. Modern Times: Literature from 1945 to the Present Day: Introduction
    • 16.1 Introduction
    • 16.2 Education, education, education
    • 16.3 Education and social mobility
    • 16.4 Representation of class and gender in post-1945 literature
    • 16.5 Representations of gender
    • 16.6 The enduring influence of stereotypes
    • 16.7 Exploring how Sylvia Plath portrays attitudes towards women in 'The Applicant'
    • 17. Modern Times: Literature from 1945 to the Present Day: Drama
    • 17.1 Introduction
    • 17.2 The beginning of Miller's All My Sons
    • 17.3 The moral implications of plays
    • 17.4 Tennessee Williams: A Streetcar Named Desire
    • 17.5 Tennessee Williams: Cat on a Hot Tin Roof
    • 17.6 Making connections across genres
    • 18. Modern Times: Literature from 1945 to the Present Day: Poetry
    • 18.1 Poetry today
    • 18.2 The poems in this unit
    • 18.3 Poems about family relationships
    • 18.4 Poems about relationships, their tensions and endings
    • 18.5 Two poets exploring one day from different perspectives
    • 18.6 Poetry about loss and grief
    • 18.7 Bringing it all together
    • 19. Modern Times: Literature from 1945 to the Present Day: Prose
    • 19.1 The texts in this unit
    • 19.2 Exploring Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit
    • 19.3 Exploring The Handmaid's Tale
    • 19.4 Exploring The Color Purple
    • 19.5 Structure of novels
    • 19.6 Prose questions in the examination paper
    • 19.7 Bringing it all together
    • 20. Texts Across Time
    • 20.1 Why do a non-examined assessment?
    • 20.2 The key requirements of the non-examined assessment
    • 20.3 Choosing your texts
    • 20.4 Selecting a theme for your comparison
    • 20.5 Preparing for the assignment
    • 20.6 Writing the first draft
    • 20.7 The final draft
    • 20.8 Unit summary
    • ENRICHING: 21. Love Through the Ages
    • 22. World War I and its Aftermath
    • 23. Modern Times: Literature from 1945 to the Present Day
    • 24. Texts Across Time
    • Index
    • Acknowledgements
  • AUTHOR(S)

    Russell Carey

    Russell has been a teacher for many years and for the last few years he has worked as an independent consultant, seeking to improve teaching and learning within English departments. He is a highly experienced teacher-trainer for the Cambridge IGCSE who delivers training courses on the syllabuses in the UK and internationally. He also wrote for the Cambridge University Press IGCSE English Literature course book and teacher DVD .

    Anne Fairhall

    Anne Fairhall has many years' experience teaching A Level English and publishing for secondary English. She has worked as a visiting tutor at higher education level and has authored resources for teachers and students.

    Marcello Giovanelli

    Marcello is a Lecturer in English in Education at the University of Nottingham. He previously worked in secondary schools as a Head of English, an Assistant Headteacher, a Deputy Headteacher, and a Lecturer in English Language and Linguistics in higher education (at the University of Nottingham, and Middlesex University). He is a consultant teacher for NATE and sits on their post 16/higher education committee. Marcello is the co-author of two A Level English Language textbooks, and has written a number of articles for professional journals as well as having significant research publications in stylistics and applied linguistics.

    Tom Rank

    Tom Rank is a former Head of Department and is the author of a number of publications for teachers and students of GCSE and A Level English. Tom writes a regular column for NATE's Teaching English magazine.

B for AQA Digital Student Book (2 Years)

$42.35

B for AQA Digital Student Book (2 Years)

View product
A for AQA Student Book with Digital Access (2 Years)

$57.00

A for AQA Student Book with Digital Access (2 Years)

View product
B for AQA Student Book with Digital Access (2 Years)

$57.00

B for AQA Student Book with Digital Access (2 Years)

View product
A for AQA Student Book

$56.45

A for AQA Student Book

View product
B for AQA Student Book

$56.45

B for AQA Student Book

View product
This site uses cookies to improve your experience. Read more Close

Thank you for your feedback which will help us improve our service.

If you requested a response, we will make sure to get back to you shortly.

×
Please fill in the required fields in your feedback submission.
×