Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.
Futility by Wilfred Owen: Meaning, Themes, and How to Teach the Poem
Futility by Wilfred Owen is one of the most quietly devastating poems in First World War poetry, challenging readers to confront loss, creation, and the possibility that meaning itself may fail under pressure. Rather than depicting the violence of battle, Owen focuses on a single, still moment after death, using restrained language and natural imagery to question whether life, care, and sacrifice were ever guaranteed purpose. This deep dive explores the meaning, themes, form, and structure of Futility, examining how tenderness, love between soldiers, and faith in nature gradually give way to philosophical doubt. Written for teachers, this post moves beyond summary to support classroom discussion, close analysis, and thoughtful teaching, showing why Futility remains one of the most challenging and powerful war poems to study at higher levels.
10 Dark Poetry Prompts for Teens & Adults: Exploring Shadow, Silence, and Emotion
Dark poetry explores shadow, silence, and the emotions we rarely name out loud. In this collection of dark poetry prompts for teens and adults, you’ll find atmospheric writing ideas designed to encourage restraint, tension, and emotional depth rather than shock or spectacle. Each prompt invites writers to focus on imagery, form, and what remains unsaid. This post includes 10 dark poetry writing prompts, craft techniques such as enjambment and repetition, suggested opening lines, and ekphrastic poetry images inspired by gothic art, surrealism, and classical forms. Whether you’re teaching poetry, writing independently, or exploring darker themes with care and intention, these prompts offer a thoughtful starting point for powerful, atmosphere-driven writing.
Favourite Short Stories for the Classroom: Powerful Texts That Spark Discussion and Debate
Short stories offer some of the richest opportunities for discussion in the classroom. Their compact form allows students to engage deeply with power, choice, identity, and consequence, while leaving space for interpretation rather than easy answers. The best short stories do not rush towards resolution; they invite debate, uncertainty, and close attention to language. This post brings together favourite short stories for the classroom — texts that consistently spark discussion and reward close reading. Organised by theme, it explores stories such as The Lottery, The Yellow Wallpaper, The Necklace, and The Monkey’s Paw, alongside practical classroom ideas designed to support thoughtful, discussion-led teaching.
Pre-Reading Poetry Activities for Secondary English (Before Analysis Begins)
Poetry often becomes difficult in classrooms not because the poems themselves are inaccessible, but because students are asked to analyse them before they have had time to encounter them as readers. When lessons begin with context, terminology, and line-by-line breakdowns, many students assume there is a correct interpretation they are meant to find — and that poetry is something to decode rather than experience. Pre-reading and pre-analysis poetry activities slow that process down. They give students space to hear a poem, react to it, and form instincts before analysis begins. By focusing on first impressions, emotional response, and pattern-spotting, these approaches help students build confidence and curiosity — making later close reading more meaningful, purposeful, and far less mechanical.
70 Paranormal Romance Writing Prompts for Teens: Story Starters, Characters, Settings & Visual Ideas
Explore 70 paranormal romance writing prompts for teens featuring ghosts, witches, vampires, and otherworldly love stories shaped by longing, secrecy, and emotional risk. This collection includes plot hooks, opening and closing lines, character ideas, settings, and cinematic picture prompts—ideal for creative writing lessons, quick writes, writing clubs, or longer YA paranormal romance projects rooted in atmosphere and connection.
The Fly by Katherine Mansfield: Post-War Grief, Masculinity, and Trauma (For English Teachers)
The Fly by Katherine Mansfield is often taught as a short, symbolic story — but its real power lies in what it reveals about post-war grief, masculinity, and emotional repression. Written in the aftermath of the First World War, The Fly explores what happens when loss is expected to be over, yet trauma quietly persists beneath ordinary life. This post is designed for English teachers looking to bridge WW1 poetry and post-war prose, showing how lived experience shapes literature long after conflict has ended. It explores Mansfield’s personal connection to war, the symbolism of the fly as repeated trauma, and the story’s unsettling portrayal of power, control, and suppressed emotion. With classroom-ready activity ideas and links to wider conflict poetry, this deep dive helps teachers position The Fly as more than a standalone short story — but as part of a broader conversation about aftermath, memory, and the long shadow of war.
How to Teach The Crucible: Context, Chaos, and Classroom Activities That Actually Work
Teaching The Crucible works best when you keep context manageable, lean into fear and reputation, and give students structured ways to talk before they write. In this post I’m sharing practical classroom strategies, discussion ideas, revision activities, and two resource bundles — plus a free set of Act 1 discussion cards to get you started.
70 St Patrick’s Day Writing Prompts for Teens: Folklore, Myth & Irish-Inspired Story Ideas
These St Patrick’s Day writing prompts for teens draw on Irish folklore, mythology, and quiet magic to inspire atmospheric storytelling. This 70-prompt collection includes plot hooks, opening and closing lines, character ideas, evocative settings, and visual prompts designed for mature, thoughtful creative writing. Ideal for classrooms, creative writing clubs, and independent writers, the prompts explore belief, consequence, and the place where myth and everyday life overlap.
The Resurrection Collection: Writing Into the Dark History of Body Snatching
Edinburgh, 1828. Anatomy lectures are full. Graves are not staying closed. As medical knowledge advances, a quiet trade emerges in the shadows of churchyards and lecture rooms. Bodies are exhumed, sold, recorded, and forgotten — while institutions continue as normal. The Resurrection Collection is a document-led creative writing experience inspired by the real history of body snatching, anatomy, and institutional silence. Through fragmented records, personal writings, ledgers, adverts, and modern historical commentary, writers and students are invited to investigate what happened — and what was deliberately left unrecorded. This isn’t a single story or a guided prompt. It’s an archive. The documents don’t agree, some voices are missing, and the truth depends on what you choose to trust. Every reader uncovers a different version of events — shaped by inference, interpretation, and the uncomfortable spaces between evidence.
20 Conflict Poems to Teach: A Timeline from WW1 to Modern Warfare
Looking for conflict poems to teach? This teacher-friendly guide brings together 20 powerful poems about war and conflict, spanning World War One, Vietnam, modern warfare, and media-driven violence. Each poem includes a brief overview and practical classroom ideas, making it easy to dip in and out when planning lessons on ethics, trauma, protest, responsibility, and witnessing conflict from afar.
Teaching The Lottery by Shirley Jackson Without Context (And Why It Works)
When teaching The Lottery by Shirley Jackson, I deliberately avoid giving students historical context before the first reading. Instead, I let them experience the story as it was designed to be read: ordinary, unsettling, and deeply uncomfortable. In this post, I explain why teaching The Lottery without context leads to stronger discussion, deeper understanding, and more meaningful student responses — and how delaying explanation allows the text itself to do the work.
70 Gaslamp Fantasy Writing Prompts for Teens: Story Starters, Characters, Settings & Visual Ideas
Explore 70 gaslamp fantasy writing prompts for teens inspired by fog-filled streets, gaslight, secret societies, and quiet supernatural unease. This collection blends historical fantasy, gothic atmosphere, and character-driven storytelling, offering plot hooks, opening and closing lines, character ideas, settings, and cinematic picture prompts. Ideal for creative writing lessons, quick writes, or longer YA projects rooted in mystery, restraint, and the uncanny.
How and Why to Teach Dulce et Decorum Est: Context, Meaning, and Classroom Approach
Dulce et Decorum Est is one of the most widely taught and frequently misunderstood poems of the First World War. This in-depth guide explores how and why to teach Wilfred Owen’s war poem through historical context, changing attitudes to war, and thoughtful classroom practice. From first encounters with the poem to assessment and common teaching pitfalls, this post offers a clear, purposeful approach to teaching Dulce et Decorum Est as more than an exam text — but as a powerful challenge to the language used to glorify war.
10 Graphic Novels for Reluctant Readers (That Actually Work in the Classroom)
Graphic novels are brilliant for reluctant readers because they reduce cognitive overload without reducing complexity. Here are 10 classroom-friendly titles, why they work, and how to use them — plus an affiliate note and a link back to “10 Personal Reading Rules We Should Let Students Break.”
How to Teach Animal Farm: Practical Strategies, Discussion Ideas, and Activities That Actually Work
Teaching Animal Farm works best when you slow students down and focus on how Orwell builds power through language, propaganda, and responsibility. In this post, I break down how to teach it without drowning students in context, share activities that actually work in the classroom, and include a free set of Chapter 1 creative writing prompts you can use straight away.
The Distance Fragments: A Free Poetry Writing Experience for Blackout & Erasure Poetry
The Distance Fragments is a free poetry writing experience designed for slower, more reflective writing. Built around blackout poetry, erasure, images, and fragment-led prompts, the collection invites writers to work through removal rather than expansion — noticing what remains once language is pared back. This resource acts as a taster for a new series of fragment-led poetry prompt collections, offering open-ended materials that can be used independently, combined, or revisited over time. Ideal for writers, teachers, and classrooms exploring blackout poetry or contemplative creative writing, The Distance Fragments prioritises space, restraint, and return over speed or completion.
70 Romantasy Writing Prompts for Teens: Story Starters, Characters, Settings & Visual Ideas
Romantasy writing prompts blend fantasy worldbuilding with romantic tension, creating stories where magic, power, and emotion collide. This curated collection of 70 romantasy writing prompts for teens explores enemies-to-lovers dynamics, political intrigue, forbidden bonds, and love shaped by consequence rather than destiny. Featuring plot hooks, character concepts, opening and closing lines, immersive settings, and cinematic picture prompts, this post is designed for teachers and teen writers looking to develop high-stakes romantasy stories with depth, atmosphere, and emotional impact.
My Favourite Texts to Teach in March (Novels, Plays, Short Stories & Poems)
March is a turning point in the school year. Students are no longer settling in, but they’re not quite finished either — and that shift matters. This is the moment when texts about voice, power, and resistance begin to land differently. From novels and plays to short stories and poems, these are the texts I return to every March because they meet students exactly where they are: questioning, restless, and ready to think more deeply.
Ekphrastic Writing for the Classroom: Art, Photo & Science Prompts for English Teachers
This comprehensive guide to ekphrastic writing in the classroom brings together image-based writing prompts using art, photography, sculpture, science imagery, and AI-generated visuals. Designed for secondary English teachers, the post includes practical ways to use ekphrasis across poetry, prose, monologue, and creative nonfiction, alongside adaptable classroom activities and cross-curricular ideas. Whether you’re planning a poetry unit, setting low-prep bell-ringers, or encouraging close observation and voice-driven writing, these ekphrastic writing prompts for students support inference, imagery, and creative confidence. With clear guidance, differentiated approaches, and links to ongoing writing resources, this post is built for real classroom use.
The Ultimate Guide to Ekphrasis (for Secondary Classrooms)
Bring art and writing together with this in-depth guide to ekphrasis — from Homer to high school. Includes examples of famous and classroom-ready poems, student-friendly activities for poetry and prose, and creative ideas for cross-curricular work with Art. Bookmarkable and ready to use.