Free livestreamed CPD for English teachers of Years 10 – 11.
About Macbeth in Context CPD
Get new inspiration, practical tips and resources for teaching Macbeth at Key Stage 4, drawing on the Library’s Discovering Literature collection.
Join our fantastic speakers for a lively discussion of the play in context, delving into themes of agency and blame.
What to expect?
Teacher and author Michael Donkor will host the event, and suggest fresh ways of approaching Macbeth with your students, using rich contextual sources from the British Library
Professor Emma Smith will explore ideas of agency and blame in the play, looking at Macbeth, Lady Macbeth and the supernatural
There will be time for the speakers to respond to some of your questions.
Following the event, delegates will receive a digital resource pack, full of expert articles and vivid sources to strengthen students' understanding of Macbeth in its social and political context.
Emma Smith is Professor of Shakespeare Studies at the University of Oxford. She explores the reception of Shakespeare in performance, print and criticism, and her book This Is Shakespeare (2019) was a Sunday Times Best Seller.
Professor Emma Smith has worked with theatre companies including at the Royal Shakespeare Company, National Theatre and Donmar Warehouse, and is a regular speaker in schools, literary festivals, theatres, libraries and book groups, as well as universities. She has contributed to radio and TV programmes and written extensively for newspapers and magazines, including The New York Times, The Telegraph, The Observer and The Guardian.
Michael Donkor studied English at Wadham College, Oxford, and then undertook a Masters in Creative Writing at Royal Holloway and a PGCE at the Institute of Education. He has 15 years of teaching experience, and has worked at a range of institutions including Esher College and St Paul’s Girls’ School, Hammersmith.
He is a novelist too: His debut Hold (4th Estate) was published in 2018, he was longlisted for the International Dylan Thomas Prize, shortlisted for the Desmond Elliott Prize and selected by Scottish poet laureate Jackie Kay as one of the ten best writers in the UK. His second novel, Grow Where They Fall, was published by Penguin in 2024. He also reviews books for The Guardian, Independent, Times and TLS.