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Revising Romeo and Juliet

Last updated: 07/03/2025
Contributor: Teachit Author
Romeo and Juliet Revision - Downloadable Student Revision Workbook
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Romeo and Juliet revision workbook for GCSE English Literature, featuring in-depth plot analysis, character studies, theme exploration and exam preparation materials designed to boost grades.

What's included

  • Complete Romeo and Juliet plot summary, character profiles, and detailed analysis of key themes including love, conflict, and fate
  • Form, structure, and language analysis with focus on Shakespeare's dramatic techniques and dramatisation choices
  • Sample exam questions with model answers covering all major exam boards

Access this downloadable revision resource instantly with a Premium English subscription or as a one-off purchase.

Comprehensive Romeo and Juliet revision content

Our Romeo and Juliet revision guide breaks down every aspect of the play into manageable sections, with engaging activities designed for both independent study and classroom teaching. Spanning 90 pages of detailed content, this guide offers everything students need to achieve examination success.

This digital resource offers flexibility and versatility for teachers. It is easy to download and store across multiple devices. The ready-to-use worksheets and activities can be used immediately or adapted and customised to create personalised study materials. Whether accessed on tablets during classroom discussions or printed for detailed annotation at home, the workbook adapts to individual study preferences.

Plot analysis and character development

Follow the tragic tale act by act with our detailed plot summaries, character development tracking, and exploration of key relationships. From the star-crossed lovers to Mercutio and the Nurse, we examine each character's role through innovative activities like 'The Prince's Perspective' and 'Surrogate Parents'. Our unique 'Stickman Summary' and timeline activities help students visualise the plot's progression.

Themes and dramatic devices

Understand how Shakespeare crafts meaning through comprehensive theme exploration. Dive deep into love, fate, family, conflict, death and the roles of women with our themed revision activities. Each section includes true/false exercises, close analysis tasks, context studies and 'exploding quotations'. Learn how Shakespeare uses dramatic irony, imagery and symbolic devices whilst building essential terminology knowledge.

Exam success strategies

Build confidence with our extensive bank of practice questions, model answers and revision strategies designed to target top grades across all examination boards. Each themed section concludes with targeted practice questions, whilst our 'WYOO (What's Your Opinion On...)' activities develop the critical thinking skills essential for exam success.

Take a look inside

Introduction (pages 3-4)

Plot summary (pages 5-7)

Overview: whole play revision activities (pages 8-17)

  • Terminology – language and structure
  • WYOO (What’s your opinion on …?)

Love revision activities (pages 18-28)

  • Revision activity 1: Types of love
  • Revision activity 2: A love timeline
  • Revision activity 3: Stickman summary
  • Revision activity 4: Structure (and language) analysis
  • Love practice exam questions

Fate revision activities (pages 29-39)

  • Revision activity 1: True or false
  • Revision activity 2: Close analysis
  • Revision activity 3: The Prince’s perspective
  • Revision activity 4: The wheel of fortune
  • Fate practice exam questions

Family revision activities (pages 40-50)

  • Revision activity 1: Rules were meant for breaking?
  • Revision activity 2: Surrogate parents
  • Revision activity 3: All the married ladies (all the married ladies …)
  • Revision activity 4: Exploding quotations
  • Family practice exam questions

Conflict revision activities (pages 51-62)

  • Revision activity 1: Types of conflict
  • Revision activity 2: Ordering the fight scene
  • Revision activity 3: Context and conflict
  • Revision activity 4: Analysing Juliet’s inner conflict
  • Conflict practice exam questions

Death revision activities (pages 63-75)

  • Revision activity 1: The ‘extra’ deaths
  • Revision activity 2: Understanding the key elements of tragedy
  • Revision activity 3: Romeo’s imagery
  • Revision activity 4: The families unite
  • Death practice exam questions

Roles of women revision activities (pages 76-90)

  • Revision activity 1: Juliet’s change
  • Revision activity 2: What did Shakespeare think?
  • Revision activity 3: Strong or weak?
  • Revision activity 4: Close analysis
  • Roles of women practice exam questions

Example student revision activities from the pack: 

Timeline:

Using the notes from Revision activity 1, create a quick timeline of love-related events in the play.

Stickman summary: 

In the centre of the page, create a very quick cartoon strip (with simple stick people), focusing only on the main events of Romeo and Juliet’s relationship.

Write brief summaries alongside each image. Then, in a different colour, put some of the events that happen outside of the relationship above and below your cartoon strip, using arrows to show where they happen.

Once you have finished this visual diagram, think about how the romance between the couple is or is not affected by other plot events.

  • Do the other events slow down or hinder the relationship?
  • Do the other events make the relationship speed up?
  • How do you think audiences feel when reflecting on the play’s action taking place in less than a week?
  • How does Shakespeare want us to react?

Structure and language analysis: 

Use the questions below to closely analyse this quotation from Juliet during the balcony scene. Though she is very much in love with Romeo, she admits that her feelings are more complicated.

‘It is too rash, too unadvised, too sudden;
Too like the lightning, which doth cease to be
Ere one can say ‘It lightens’.’

  • What do you notice about the pattern in the first line?
  • What words are repeated and what do they show about Juliet’s feelings?
  • What technique is used in the second line?
  • Why might Juliet worry about their engagement being like ‘lightning?’ What does this show she wants from Romeo?
Revising Romeo and Juliet
£15.00
Free for Premium Subscribers.

All reviews

Have you used this resource?

5
An excellent resource! Makes Shakespeare accessible to a wide audience.

Therese Frey

11/12/2021

5

02/03/2021

5
Very useful. Learning from home during Covid has challenges and this is brilliant

Jessie Mukondiwa

04/02/2021

5

03/02/2021

5
An excellent resource! Makes Shakespeare accessible to a wide audience.

Therese Frey

11/12/2021

5

02/03/2021

5
Very useful. Learning from home during Covid has challenges and this is brilliant

Jessie Mukondiwa

04/02/2021

5

03/02/2021

5

14/01/2021

5

10/01/2021

5

04/01/2021

5

02/01/2021

5

07/12/2020