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  1. Full colour, A4 paperback edition; Annotated sample answers and essay advice; Expert help with Structure and Language, Themes, Contexts and Characters. Test yourself on To Kill a Mockingbird: GCSE A*–G questions and progress checks

  2. Your work on To Kill a Mockingbird. There are TWO main stages to your reading and work on To Kill a Mockingbird. Firstly, the study of the book as you read it. Secondly, your preparation or revision for the exam or controlled assessment. These top tips will help you with both.

  3. Introducing To Kill a Mockingbird. Setting and location, Characters: Who's who, Harper Lee: Author and context. Plot & Action. Characters. Key Contexts & Themes. Language & Structure. Grade Booster.

  4. Revision – develop routines and plans! Good revision comes from good planning. Find out when your exam or controlled assessment is and then plan to look at key aspects of To Kill a Mockingbird on different days or times during your revision period. Use different ways of revising.

  5. York Notes GCSE GCSE English Literature Revision. ... NEW A4 GCSE guide to Arthur Miller’s gritty 1950s domestic tragedy. Absent Friends: GCSE Alan Ayckbourn.

  6. Explore the full plot summary, an in-depth analysis of Scout, and explanations of important quotes from To Kill a Mockingbird.

  7. The mockingbird (Tom/Boo/Atticus) is a key symbol representing innocence and purity. There are many other symbols (e.g. the oak tree representing Boo’s communication with the children). THEMES. To Kill a Mockingbird.