Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.
My Favourite Shakespeare Plays for the Classroom (And How I Teach Them)
Shakespeare’s plays remain some of the most rewarding — and most challenging — texts to teach in the classroom. Rather than treating his work as a checklist of required plays, this post explores the Shakespeare plays that genuinely work in the classroom, focusing on discussion, interpretation, and moral complexity rather than memorisation. From tragedy and comedy to romance and sonnets, these are the texts that consistently engage students and reward close reading. Drawing on classroom experience, this guide groups Shakespeare plays for teaching around key themes such as power, identity, justice, love, and consequence. Each section explains why the play works, how it sparks discussion, and what students gain from studying it. Whether you’re choosing your next Shakespeare text or rethinking how you teach a familiar one, this post offers a thoughtful, practical starting point.
The Ultimate Guide to Teaching Shakespeare in the Secondary English Classroom
Teaching Shakespeare in the secondary English classroom can feel intimidating, but his plays remain some of the most powerful texts for developing close reading, discussion, interpretation, and creative writing. From tragedy and political drama to explorations of power, identity, and moral choice, Shakespeare’s work offers unmatched opportunities for student engagement across secondary and further education. This comprehensive guide brings together key Shakespeare plays, effective teaching approaches, and flexible classroom resources, showing how Shakespeare can be taught through language, performance, and interpretation rather than memorisation or reverence. Whether you’re introducing Shakespeare for the first time or refining your practice, this pillar provides a clear, confident framework for teaching Shakespeare with depth and purpose.
Why Macbeth Is the Only Shakespeare Play I’ll Never Get Sick Of (And Why It Works So Well in the Classroom)
Why is Macbeth still one of the most effective Shakespeare plays to teach? Because it refuses easy answers. Packed with ambition, power, guilt, and moral consequence, Macbeth invites students to interrogate responsibility, persuasion, and the slow erosion of ethical boundaries. Far from feeling dated, the play’s questions about decision-making and complicity remain deeply recognisable in modern classrooms. In this post, I explore why Macbeth continues to work so well with students, how its structure naturally invites debate and interpretation, and how creative and discussion-based approaches can deepen understanding without sacrificing rigour. I also share a free Macbeth classroom resource and explain how I use flexible, reusable teaching tools to support analysis, creative writing, and meaningful discussion across the play.
70 Creative Writing Prompts Inspired by Macbeth: Plot Hooks, Opening Lines, Characters & Visual Ideas
Explore 70 creative writing prompts inspired by Macbeth, designed to help teen writers engage with ambition, fate, guilt, and psychological conflict through original storytelling. This collection includes atmospheric plot hooks, book-style title ideas, opening and closing lines, character concepts, setting ideas, and visual prompt guidance — all inspired by Shakespeare’s play without retelling its plot. Ideal for classroom use, writing clubs, or independent creative practice, these Macbeth-inspired writing prompts encourage mood-driven, symbolic writing that builds confidence with voice, tone, and narrative structure. Writers can explore Shakespeare’s ideas creatively while developing skills in description, perspective, and thematic storytelling.