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Is Yacapaca really "such stuff as dreams are made on"? Try these auto-marked, formative assessments on your students and see what you and they think.
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There'll be no daggers in your smiles, your students will love these assessments. Fun and formative they will consolidate knowledge, reinforce understanding and encourage evaluative skills.
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"Our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt".
Go on, give it a go! Formative feedback lets your students see where they have misunderstood a concept and points them in the right direction (never merely giving the correct answer). Bags of system support for you, the teacher, as and when you need it. What is there to fear?
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Snatch your students "out of the jaws of death"-by-Shakespeare using these fun and formative assessments which bring the story behind the words to life whilst cleverly reporting your students' levels of knowledge and understanding (individually and as a group). Their evaluative skills should improve too and the sun will definitely shineth every day!
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"...some are born great, some achieve greatness and some have greatness thrust upon them"
Yacapaca caters for them all: challenging and searching questions for those born great, formative feedback encourages them to achieve greatness and great question-writing thrusts greatness upon them when they surpass expectation. Teachers think it's great too: "the students loved it and the assessment data is really useful".
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Yacapaca is the difference between enthused students raring to 'go Shakespeare' and the "‘T’is neither here nor there" brigade. From small chunk theme-by-theme to diagnostic whole-of-play, all assessments suit a wide range of uses and all offer formative feedback to stretch the brightest students and support the weaker ones.
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"Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May" and, before you know it, it's exam time. Do your students know their play or do they, like me :-), invariably muddle their quotes. Yacapaca questions reinforce knowledge, promote understanding and encourage evaluative skills. Auto-marked assessments report instantaneously where your students (individually or as a group) are weak so you can focus your teaching in those areas.
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» Macbeth (1)
Macbeth for GCSE English.So far, just Act III, Scene IV is covered.
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