KS3 Intent
Within English at KS3, we have carefully designed our curriculum to are develop considerate communicators and empathic thinkers.
When students join us in Year 7, they embark on an exciting journey that builds on the strong foundations laid in primary school. They will dive into a rich and diverse selection of high-quality literature—works that don’t just tell stories, but spark curiosity, challenge ideas, and provoke deep thinking beyond the written page. Throughout Key Stage 3, students will engage with both fiction and non-fiction, mastering a wide array of reading and writing skills that empower them to understand and create many different types of texts with confidence and creativity.
We also nurture their spoken language abilities, encouraging students to refine their performance and delivery so they can communicate with clarity, passion, and assurance. Our commitment to fostering a genuine love of reading drives us to inspire curiosity, opening doors to new worlds and enriching their cultural and emotional intelligence.
In a rapidly evolving world, exceptional reading, writing, and speaking skills are not just valuable—they are essential. These are the tools that will equip our students to thrive, lead, and make a lasting impact as confident, thoughtful global citizens.
Year 7 – A Writer’s Craft: Great writers make great choices.
Spine Tingling Tales: The Gothic Genre: Here students are introduced to storytelling and the conscious choices of the writer behind the pen as they study A Christmas Carol. They begin to understand the elements writers utilise to fit a genre and to entertain their readers through conscious word choices and structures. These skills will be built upon throughout their Burton Borough journey as they revisit the gothic genre.
The Powerful, The Mighty & The Moral: Greek Heroes and Mythology: Here students are introduced to the origins of language and the purpose of storytelling: to entertain, to inform and to help decipher the world that we live in. Greek myths and the morals within them pervade literature and this unit provides students with the cultural capital necessary to make links between texts, and gives key knowledge to apply to wider life. Students will build upon the authorial methods undertaken in unit one and add to their repertoire of methods and structures.
Power & Exploitation: The Tempest: Here, students are introduced to the form of plays and Shakespeare as a creative writer making conscious choices for an audience. Students transfer their skills of analysing language, structure, purpose and form. This writing brings in the new element of crafting their writing to be performed on stage. Students will also be introduced to themes, both building on their knowledge of the supernatural and beginning to understand ideas about colonialism in preparation for studying contexts in Year 8 and 9.
Year 8 Time tells: the construct of society shapes our stories
Here, students revisit the genre of gothic to enhance their understanding of authorial choice. However, students begin to deepen their understanding of storytelling, and are guided to consider societal and historical-based influence over the characterisation of women in patriarchal societies. Building on the foundations explored at the end of Year 7, students also develop their analysis of thematic ideas around the darkness within characters and the shaping of characters within literature as a whole.
Investigating the Criminal Mind: Here, students transfer their prior learning about humanity’s inner darkness and begin to explore societal prejudice, and how that is exploited by writers historically within the detective genre. Students begin by exploring how the introduction of the Metropolitan Police Force first created the detective genre which has continued to enrapture readers to this day. Through the writing of Dickens, Conan Doyle, Wilke Collins (and various non-fiction texts), students learn about the introduction of the very first detectives and compare them as time and literature progresses. Students also learn how scientific advancements and thinking influences the depiction of characters and criminals.
The Course of Love Never Did Run Smooth: As their journey progresses, students revisit their knowledge of Shakespearean plays and dive deeper into the influence of a patriarchal views upon Shakespeare’s writing within Romeo & Juliet. Students are introduced to tragedy as a structure and build upon their understanding of authorial choices within drama. Students also develop their analysis of authorial purpose exploring love as a theme within both plays and poetry and non-fiction. The unit develops empathy within our community, exposing the challenges faced by lovers throughout time, exploring issues around consent, abuse and LGBTQ+
Year 9 – Fighting talk: finding your voice in an ever-changing world
Overcoming Adversity: After students started to explore the subliminal messages and the ways literature reflect society in Year 8, students now explore ‘The Why’: the reasons writers write and the social commentary they are making about the world. As a critical thinker, students will consider the world with a critical eye and explore through detailed analysis of the: what, how and why. Through the study of Refugee Boy and various poems, students will empathise with modern-day affairs and reflect on the writer’s own perspectives on the topics they encounter. They will build upon ideas around overcoming prejudice, trauma and adversity. Students begin to explore rhetoric and transfer their learning to their own persuasive writing.
This Means War: Through the study of modern play, Journey’s End, and various forms of war poetry and non-fiction, students begin to compare the experiences of writers in war. Students learn about propaganda and its influence on society in WW1. They also explore the pressures patriarchal expectations put upon men and the impact it had upon their experiences. Building on their understanding of the purpose of writing, students explore writing as more than just an informant or entertainment but both a form of cathartic and critical experience. Building upon their prior analysis of both plays and poetry in younger years, now Year 9 students are enhancing their comparison of methods by exploring the hidden and inferred perspectives of writers. Finally, students are introduced to dystopia as a post-war genre revisiting and contrasting ideas of utopia from Year 7.
Tragedy: How the Mighty Fall
In their final chapter in their KS3 journey, Year 9 students combine all of the authorial methods explored through lower years and brining them to life to reflect the ways writers critique universal experiences of man. Students stroll through back through history exploring how the tragedy, a universal experience of man, has been used to commentate on society throughout time. They will come full circle and revisit the initial ideas of Year 7 where they explored Greek stories the origins of storytelling as answers to the mysteries of the universe, through to the post-Victorian patriarchy of Year 8 before finally exploring more modern tragedies and modern hurdles. Now students begin to combine the heroic feats of the original Greek Heroes such as Hercules, and our universal darkness and criminality from Year 8, and unpick the social influences that led to authorial choices and messages they are inflicting. Students will analyse the trajectory of the original tragic hero Oedipus, to Shakespeare’s Othello and Macbeth, to the contemporary and often real life.