Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.
70 Valentine’s Day Writing Prompts for Teens: Story Starters, Characters, Settings & Visual Ideas
Valentine’s Day isn’t just about romance. These 70 teen-friendly writing prompts explore friendships, awkward crushes, heartbreak, comedy, identity, and the messy reality of February 14th. With plot hooks, character ideas, titles, openings, closings, settings, and picture prompts, this post is perfect for classrooms, clubs, and young writers craving fresh ideas beyond clichés.
Poetry Writing Activities for the Classroom
Bring poetry to life with these 10 creative writing activities for middle and high school students. Low-prep, flexible, and classroom-tested — perfect for National Poetry Month or any time of year.
7 Genre Writing Collections to Transform Your Creative Writing Lessons (With 30 Daily Prompts Each!)
Creative writing is exciting for some students and existential for others — especially when faced with a blank page. Genre prompts change that dynamic entirely. In this post, I’m sharing seven complete genre collections (plus a free one!) that make daily writing actually work in real classrooms.
15 Best Fantasy Novels to Teach in the Classroom
Fantasy is one of the most powerful genres to teach — high-interest without being low-rigour. This post explores 15 of the best fantasy novels for the classroom, from classic texts to contemporary favourites, each chosen for their discussion potential, thematic depth, and ability to engage students in meaningful thinking and writing.
70 New Year Writing Prompts for Teens: Midnight Thresholds, Hidden Promises, and the Moment Between Years
This collection of 70 New Year writing prompts for teens explores the moment between years: when time turns, promises are made in secret, and the future feels both vast and unforgiving. Drawing on themes of Father Time, midnight thresholds, hidden resolutions, and cosmic consequence, these prompts invite writers into stories where celebration fades and meaning sharpens. Blending contemporary realism with magical realism, gothic atmosphere, and high-fantasy imagery, the prompts include plot hooks, story starters, character ideas, settings, and cinematic visual prompts — perfect for classrooms, writing clubs, or independent writers ready to explore what it really means to step into a new year.
20 Best Texts to Teach in January: Fresh Starts, New Beginnings, and Smart Classroom Momentum
January is one of the most important — and underestimated — teaching months of the year. After the break, students don’t need noise or novelty; they need texts that rebuild focus, invite reflection, and spark meaningful discussion. This curated list of 20 novels, short stories, poems, films, and podcasts offers flexible, high-impact texts that work across ages and formats, helping you reset classroom momentum without overloading your planning.
70 January Writing Prompts for Teens: New Beginnings, Aftermaths, and Turning Points
January is a month of quiet turning points — what comes after the celebrations, when routines return and choices begin to matter. This collection of 70 January writing prompts invites teen writers to explore aftermath, new beginnings, and moments of change through plot hooks, opening and closing lines, character ideas, settings, and visual prompts designed for classrooms or independent writing.
70 Christmas Writing Prompts for Teens: Story Starters, Characters, Settings & Visual Ideas
Christmas is a season full of contrasts — cozy fireplaces and glittering lights, but also mystery, magic, and the occasional bit of chaos. These prompts invite teen writers to explore the holiday across genres, from festive romance and fantasy adventures to gothic tales and eerie mysteries. With 70 story starters, titles, characters, settings, and picture prompts, this collection sparks creativity for classrooms or independent writing, offering fresh takes on the season that go far beyond the expected.
20 Great Texts to Teach at Christmas (or during Winter)
Looking for meaningful texts to teach in December? These 20 Christmas and winter-themed classics — from short stories and poems to films and podcasts — offer rich discussion, creative writing opportunities, and seasonal engagement without sacrificing academic depth.
12 Engaging Podcasts to Hook Teens and Deepen Classroom Analysis
Podcasts aren’t just background noise or Friday-afternoon filler. Used intentionally, they become rich texts for analysis, offering students access to real voices and real perspectives. From true crime to poetry to investigative journalism, podcasts allow students to explore ideas, examine viewpoint, and analyse how meaning is constructed through sound, structure, and tone. Here are twelve powerful podcast recommendations to transform listening into real learning.
10 Dystopian Texts to Teach Beyond 1984 (Classroom Ideas & Creative Writing)
Every time dystopian fiction comes up in the classroom, 1984 takes centre stage. And for good reason — it’s chilling, essential, and one of those texts I’ll always defend teaching. But Orwell isn’t the whole story. Dystopia is also about fear, climate collapse, isolation, memory, love, and the choices people make when systems fall apart. This post shares ten powerful texts that go beyond Orwell, each with themes, classroom ideas, and creative writing extensions you can use straight away.
The Best Netflix Shows and Films to Use in the Secondary Classroom
Streaming doesn’t have to mean “switching off.” Netflix is packed with series and films that open up rich discussions in the secondary English classroom — from dystopian cautionary tales like Black Mirror to tender coming-of-age stories like Heartstopper. Used thoughtfully, these titles can spark debate, connect literature to students’ lives, and bring themes like identity, grief, and power into focus. This guide rounds up some of the best options, with classroom pairings, creative activities, and cross-curricular links to help you use screen time as a powerful teaching tool.
Micro Writing for the TikTok Generation (Why Short Bursts Spark Big Ideas)
Micro writing is about stripping things back — short bursts of creativity that can grow into something bigger. This post explores how daily prompts, complete with titles, images, opening and closing lines, and plot ideas, can be used for quick five-minute writes that fit neatly into any lesson. Think of it as a clean, minimalist approach to writing practice: simple to set up, but powerful in what it sparks.
The Hemlock Collection: A Witch Trial Mystery Across Centuries
Step into Crowhurst, 1628. A child’s screams in the night, whispered accusations, and a village consumed by fear. The Hemlock Collection is a digital-first creative writing mystery that blends witch trials and folklore with the modern-day disappearance of Beth Crowhurst in 2023. Through letters, grave rubbings, diary entries, and newspaper clippings, students and writers are invited to investigate both timelines and craft their own stories from the shadows left by history.
1000 Creative Writing Prompts: Spark Imagination in Every Classroom and Notebook
Discover a free collection of 1000 Creative Writing Prompts designed to spark imagination in every classroom and notebook. From eerie openings to beautiful settings and clever twists, this downloadable PDF is packed with story ideas for teachers, students, and writers who want to make creativity part of their daily routine.
10 Haunting Poems to Teach This Halloween (That Aren’t Just The Raven)
Halloween isn’t just for spooky short stories — poetry can be just as haunting. From Poe’s The Raven to eerie ballads like The Unquiet Grave, these poems bring atmosphere, symbolism, and Gothic chills into the classroom. Perfect for middle and high school, this list offers ten haunting poems that make October lessons both literary and seasonal.
10 Books by Young Authors That Show Students Their Voices Matter
Many students believe they’re “too young” to write something meaningful. Yet history proves otherwise. From Anne Frank’s diary to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and Malala Yousafzai’s memoir, young authors have created works that changed literature, history, and even global movements. This post explores ten powerful books written by teenagers and young writers, showing how their voices can inspire students to write with confidence today.
Halloween Gothic Short Stories & Creative Writing Bundle: Teach Analysis and Imagination in One Go
Looking for ready-to-go Halloween ELA activities? This Gothic short story and creative writing bundle is perfect for middle and high school lesson plans. Explore The Tell-Tale Heart, The Fall of the House of Usher, and The Monkey’s Paw with complete activities, then let students create their own eerie narratives through the Victoriana Creative Writing Mystery Box. A time-saving, engaging way to combine analysis and imagination this October.
70 Halloween Writing Prompts for Teens: Story Starters, Titles, Characters, Settings & Visual Ideas
Get into the spooky spirit with 70 Halloween writing prompts designed for teen writers. From eerie plot hooks and chilling titles to haunted settings and creepy character ideas, this collection brings the mystery and magic of October to life. Perfect for classrooms or young writers, these prompts encourage creativity through suspense, atmosphere, and a touch of fear.
10 Personal Reading Rules We Should Let Students Break
We tell students to read for pleasure — then load them up with rules that would put most adults off books too. Sit at a desk. Finish what you start. Only read “serious” texts. In this post, I share the 10 reading rules I think we should let students break, from rereading favourites to abandoning books that don’t fit. When reading feels personal, comfortable, and choice-driven, students don’t just read more — they actually enjoy it.