macbeth essay sentence starters

Macbeth Essays

There are loads of ways you can approach writing an essay, but the two i favour are detailed below., the key thing to remember is that an essay should focus on the three aos:, ao1: plot and character development; ao2: language and technique; ao3: context, strategy 1 : extract / rest of play, the first strategy basically splits the essay into 3 paragraphs., the first paragraph focuses on the extract, the second focuses on the rest of the play, the third focuses on context. essentially, it's one ao per paragraph, for a really neatly organised essay., strategy 2 : a structured essay with an argument, this strategy allows you to get a much higher marks as it's structured to form an argument about the whole text. although you might think that's harder - and it's probably going to score more highly - i'd argue that it's actually easier to master. mainly because you do most of the work before the day of the exam., to see some examples of these, click on the links below:, lady macbeth as a powerful woman, macbeth as a heroic character, the key to this style is remembering this: you're going to get a question about a theme, and the extract will definitely relate to the theme., the strategy here is planning out your essays before the exam, knowing that the extract will fit into them somehow., below are some structured essays i've put together., macbeth and gender.

macbeth essay sentence starters

Miss Huttlestone's GCSE English

Because a whole class of wonderful minds are better than just one!

‘Macbeth’ Grade 9 Example Response

Grade 9 – full mark – ‘Macbeth’ response

Starting with this extract (from act 1 scene 7), how does Shakespeare present the relationship between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth?

In Shakespeare’s eponymous tragedy ‘Macbeth’, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s relationship is a complex portrait of love, illustrating layers of utter devotion alongside overwhelming resentment. Though the couple begins the play unnaturally strong within their marriage, this seems to act as an early warning of their imminent and inevitable fall from grace, ending the play in an almost entirely different relationship than the one they began the play with.

In the exposition of the play, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth initially appear immensely strong within their marriage, with Macbeth describing his wife as ‘my dearest partner of greatness’ in act 1 scene 5. The emotive superlative adjective ‘dearest’ is a term of endearment, and acts as a clear depiction of how valued Lady Macbeth is by her husband. Secondly, the noun ‘partner’ creates a sense of sincere equality which, as equality within marriage would have been unusual in the Jacobean era, illustrates to a contemporary audience the positive aspects of their relationship. Furthermore the lexical choice ‘greatness’ may connote ambition, and as they are ‘partner(s)’, Shakespeare suggests that Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are equal in their desire for power and control, further confirming their compatibility but potentially hinting that said compatibility will serve as the couple’s hamartia.

However, the strength of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s relationship falls into a rapid downward spiral in the subsequent scenes, as a struggle for power within the marriage ensues. This is evidenced when Macbeth, in act 1 scene 7, uses the declarative statement ‘we will proceed no further in this business’. Here, Macbeth seems to exude masculinity, embracing his gender role and dictating both his and his wife’s decisions. The negation ‘no’ clearly indicates his alleged definitive attitude. However, Lady Macbeth refuses to accept her husband’s rule, stating ‘when you durst do it, then you were a man’. She attempts to emasculate him to see their plan through. The verb ‘durst’ illustrates the risk taking behaviour that Lady Macbeth is encouraging; implying an element of toxicity within their relationship, and her harsh speech makes the cracks in their relationship further visible to the audience. It is also probable that a contemporary audience would be made severely uncomfortable in the presence of Lady Macbeth’s unapologetic display of power, and it is possible that Shakespeare attempts to paint Lady Macbeth as the villain of the play, playing upon the audience’s pre-determined fears of feminine power. Though Lady Macbeth appears to be acting entirely out of self-interest, another reader may argue that she influences her husband so heavily to commit the heinous act of regicide, as she believes that he crown may as a substitute for the child or children that Shakespeare suggests she and Macbeth have lost previously, and in turn better Macbeth’s life and bring him to the same happiness that came with the child, except in another form.

As the play progresses, Shakespeare creates more and more distance between the characters, portraying the breakdown of their relationship as gradual within the play but rapid in the overall sense of time on stage. For example, Lady Macbeth requests a servant ‘say to the king’ Lady Macbeth ‘would attend his leisure/ for a few words’. Here she is reduced to the status of someone far lesser than the king, having to request to speak to her own husband. It could be interpreted that, now as king, Macbeth holds himself above all else, even his wife, perhaps due to the belief of the divine right of kings. The use of the title rather than his name plainly indicated the lack of closeness Lady Macbeth now feels with Macbeth and intensely emotionally separates them. This same idea is referenced as Shakespeare develops the characters to almost juxtapose each other in their experiences after the murder of Duncan. For example, Macbeth seems to be trapped in a permanent day, after ‘Macbeth does murder sleep’ and his guilt and paranoia render him unable to rest. In contrast, Lady Macbeth takes on an oppositional path, suffering sleepwalking and unable to wake from her nightmare; repeating the phrase ‘to bed. To bed’ as if trapped in a never-ending night. This illustrates to the audience the extreme transformation Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s relationship undergoes, and how differently they end up experiencing the aftermath of regicide.

In conclusion, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth begin the play almost too comfortable within their marriage, which seems to invite the presence of chaos and tragedy into their relationship. Their moral compositions are opposing one another, which leads to the distancing and total breakdown of their once successful marriage and thus serves as a warning to the audience about the effects of murder, and what the deadly sin of greed can do to a person and a marriage.

Image result for impressed meme

Share this:

Published by.

' src=

gcseenglishwithmisshuttlestone

Secondary English teacher in Herts. View all posts by gcseenglishwithmisshuttlestone

9 thoughts on “‘Macbeth’ Grade 9 Example Response”

wheres the context

Like Liked by 1 person

It is also probable that a contemporary audience would be made severely uncomfortable in the presence of Lady Macbeth’s unapologetic display of power, and it is possible that Shakespeare attempts to paint Lady Macbeth as the villain of the play, playing upon the audience’s pre-determined fears of feminine power.

Also ref to ‘divine right of kings’

Thank you! This is a brilliant response. Just what I needed. Could you also please include the extract in the question.

We will proceed no further in this business. He hath honored me of late, and I have bought Golden opinions from all sorts of people, Which would be worn now in their newest gloss, Not cast aside so soon.

—> until end of scene

She did (Act 1 Scene 7)

Another great resource for grade 9 Macbeth analysis https://youtu.be/bGzLDRX71bs

In order to get a grade 9 for a piece like this would you need to include a wide range of vocabulary or could you write the same thing ‘dumbed down’ and get a 9.

If the ideas were as strong then yes, but your writing must AT LEAST be ‘clear’ for a grade 6 or above.

This is really great, I’m in Year 10 doing my Mock on Thursday, a great point that i have found (because I also take history) Is the depiction of women throughout the play, during the Elizabethan era, (before the Jacobean era) many people had a changed view of women as Queen Elizabeth was such a powerful woman, glimpses of this have been shown in Jacobean plays, in this case Macbeth, Lady Macbeth is depicted as powerful although she had to be killed of to please King James (as he was a misogynist) women are also depicted as evil in the play, such as the three witches, I also found that the Witches are in three which could be a mockery to the Holy Trinity.

Leave a comment Cancel reply

' src=

  • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
  • Copy shortlink
  • Report this content
  • View post in Reader
  • Manage subscriptions
  • Collapse this bar

douglas-wise-logo

Sentence Stems for Better Academic Writing

Picture of Douglas Wise

Over the past week or so, I’ve been experimenting with providing my students with  sentence stems  to help them develop their academic writing.  The idea is that they either use or adapt them.  A messy process, no doubt.  But one that, eventually, will be beneficial.  I’ve listed some stuff that I hope will be helpful below.

Picture1 (1)

Hope the stuff’s useful –

KS3 RESOURCES

Related posts

macbeth essay sentence starters

One-Pager on Target Setting for Academic Mentoring

macbeth essay sentence starters

Macbeth Essay and Feedback Sheet (A1S2)

Macbeth essay task on A1S2 and feedback coversheet, click on button above to download now.

macbeth essay sentence starters

Act-by-Act Questions on An Inspector Calls

  • International
  • Education Jobs
  • Schools directory
  • Resources Education Jobs Schools directory News Search

Macbeth - essay plan with sentence starters

Macbeth - essay plan with sentence starters

Subject: English

Age range: 11 - 14

Resource type: Worksheet/Activity

MissR's Shop

Last updated

9 April 2018

  • Share through email
  • Share through twitter
  • Share through linkedin
  • Share through facebook
  • Share through pinterest

ppt, 40.5 KB

Tes classic free licence

Your rating is required to reflect your happiness.

It's good to leave some feedback.

Something went wrong, please try again later.

This resource hasn't been reviewed yet

To ensure quality for our reviews, only customers who have downloaded this resource can review it

Report this resource to let us know if it violates our terms and conditions. Our customer service team will review your report and will be in touch.

Not quite what you were looking for? Search by keyword to find the right resource:

COMMENTS

  1. GCSE English Literature Paper 1: Macbeth

    Complete the activities on these page. 2. Remember to use index cards to write down key quotations to learn. 3. Plan/write answers to the questions at the back of this back. Themes you need to revise. • Ambition.

  2. How to Write a Macbeth Essay

    Ensure your argument is consistent throughout your essay. Write a topic sentence for each paragraph which include the key words from the exam question. Include a conclusion that summarises your line of reasoning. "Critical style". Make sure you have offered your opinion on the question.

  3. AQA English Revision

    Strategy 2: A structured essay with an argument. The key to this style is remembering this: You're going to get a question about a theme, and the extract will DEFINITELY relate to the theme. The strategy here is planning out your essays BEFORE the exam, knowing that the extract will fit into them somehow. Below are some structured essays I've ...

  4. PDF Six Macbeth' essays by Wreake Valley students

    In Act 5. 1 Lady Macbeth starts to sleep walk because she can't deal with the fact that her husband killed King Duncan and that it's all her fault and she says "My bloody hands". This shows she's saying it's her fault and she holds the guilt. This leads to her committing suicide in Act 5.5. Level 5 essay.

  5. GCSE English Literature-Paper 1-Macbeth and ACC

    and the whole text for 'Macbeth' and and the whole text for 'Macbeth' and 'A Christmas Carol''A Christmas Carol' Approaching an extract- Sentence Starters: • I think at this point in the text, the writer is trying to establish for the reader …. • One aspect of the character that the writer focuses on, or develops here is ….

  6. PDF Macbeth essay plan

    The Supernatural is an important theme in the play of 'Macbeth'… Conclusion - Sum up the main points of your argument and reach a conclusion Possible opening sentence: In conclusion it is clear that there are many possible reasons why Macbeth may have behaved in the way that he did… This essay plan was found free at www.englishresources ...

  7. 'Macbeth' Grade 9 Example Response

    For example, Macbeth seems to be trapped in a permanent day, after 'Macbeth does murder sleep' and his guilt and paranoia render him unable to rest. In contrast, Lady Macbeth takes on an oppositional path, suffering sleepwalking and unable to wake from her nightmare; repeating the phrase 'to bed. To bed' as if trapped in a never-ending ...

  8. English Macbeth sentence starters Flashcards

    T (TOPIC SENTENCE)-. In Macbeth by Shakespeare, the author uses (literary device) to explain (central idea/theme). Background info. (one sentence summary of story. E (EVIDENCE OF CENTRAL IDEA/MEANING OF STORY. One example where the author shows the reader the central idea/theme is copy quote from text. A (ANALYSIS OF CENTRAL IDEA)

  9. Macbeth

    Macbeth - essay plan with sentence starters ELA_Team. Subject English Language Arts — Reading Standards for Fiction. Grade Level Grades 6-8. ... This is a handout that is used to help 6th grade students get used to writing essays; with sentence starters etc. Title: How and why does Macbeth persuade the murderers to murder Banquo? Resources ...

  10. PDF Lesson 9

    L.O. To improve sentences by using a range of sentence openers Bronze Improve these sentences by adding a verb or adverb opener. 1. Macbeth informed the murderers of his cunning plan. 2. Banquo and his son were hunting in the woods. 3. Two strangers approached Banquo and his son. 4. The murderers attacked Banquo but his son escaped. 5.

  11. Macbeth

    A Combination of lessons and resources to guide and aide the teaching and learning of Macbeth at GCSE level. Different Levels of differentiation are included as well as exam structures, model essays and contextual lessons. £15.00. This resource hasn't been reviewed yet. To ensure quality for our reviews, only customers who have purchased this ...

  12. MACBETH: AQA-style Essay Plan Starters

    notebook, 2.29 MB. pptx, 110.36 KB. Inspired by fellow English teachers @Team_English1 over on Twitter, I've produced these essay plan starters for use with AQA GCSE English Literature: MACBETH. The intention is to use them frequently as starters to maintain retention and to develop students' recall skills, which are essential in the context of ...

  13. PDF PowerPoint Presentation

    Another word for Chapter; a set of five lines upon which music is written. A part of a film/movie, play, etc. that shows a scene that happened earlier in time than the main story When the narrator talks directly to the reader usin wods like ' 00'. Belonging to the same time. Of the present time.

  14. GCSE English Literature Sentence Starters

    1f industrialisation and the people: britain, c1783-1885. 2d religious conflict and the church in england, c1529-c1570. Medieval period: 1066 -1509. World war one. World war two & the holocaust. 1l the quest for political stability: germany, 1871-1991. The fight for female suffrage.

  15. Sentence Stems for Better Academic Writing

    Sentence stems to help develop academic writing. All free to download. English teaching resource for KS3 and KS4. ... Macbeth essay task on A1S2 and feedback coversheet, click on button above to download now. Read more An Inspector Calls, KS4. Act-by-Act Questions on An Inspector Calls.

  16. Macbeth exam practice pack

    GCSE English Literature Paper 1: Macbeth Contents • How to revise • The exam question • Mark scheme • How to answer the question • Example answers

  17. Macbeth

    Macbeth - Essay Plan with sentence starters. This is one of the many lessons and resources that I have uploaded for the teaching of Macbeth to year 7s working at level 4/5 in English. It's based on an end result of old SATs style type question that can be APP'd. This is a worksheet that is used to help the pupils get used to writing Essays ...

  18. Macbeth Topic Sentences Flashcards

    Macbeth Topic Sentence 1. As Macbeth murders and commits crimes the audience sees his anxiety and paranoia grow until it is all consuming. Macbeth Topic Sentence 2. Shakespeare presents Macbeth as a manipulator and liar, hidden underneath the fake and disingenuous demeanour he puts forward. When his independent 'wicked (ness)' is revealed as ...

  19. Macbeth

    Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like Starting with this extract, write about how Shakespeare presents witchcraft and the supernatural. Write about: •how Shakespeare presents Macbeth's reaction to the witches •how Shakespeare presents witchcraft and the supernatural in the play as a whole., Starting with this extract, explain how far you think Shakespeare ...

  20. Sample exam question

    Sentences are correctly constructed and punctuated but not always phrased well. Sample answer 2 Macbeth starts this scene in a decisive mood but by the end of it has given in to his wife's powers ...

  21. Macbeth Revision Starters

    Macbeth Revision Starters. Subject: English. Age range: 14-16. Resource type: Assessment and revision. File previews. pptx, 442.99 KB. A series of slides based on key characters to be used as a starter/plenary to help with revision. - Students find key quotations about the character. - Students analyse key quotations given.

  22. Macbeth

    Macbeth - essay plan with sentence starters. Subject: English. Age range: 11 - 14. Resource type: Worksheet/Activity. File previews. ppt, 40.5 KB. This is a handout that is used to help 6th grade students get used to writing essays; with sentence starters etc. Title: How and why does Macbeth persuade the murderers to murder Banquo?