ICSE English isn’t generic ELA—and it shows quickly
Monday, Period 3 with Class 9 English, Riya handed in a beautiful “editorial” for a prompt that actually required an email + notice pair. She wasn’t lazy; the resource I’d used was on-topic but not ICSE-fit. That’s the gap I see most: tasks that teach argument or summary in general but ignore ICSE formats, the weighting of content versus expression, and those sentence-transformation items that catch kids out.
For Language (Paper 1), I need resources that respect directed writing formats (formal/informal letters, email + notice), comprehension with inference and vocabulary in context, and grammar the ICSE way: transformation, prepositions, synthesis. For Literature (Paper 2), I want extract-based questions that demand textual evidence, device spotting, and clean paragraphing—not generic “theme essays.”
When I’m scouting, I look for prompts written in the familiar ICSE voice (“Write an email to your Principal...” rather than “State your claim”). If I’m pulling community-made stuff, I skim for tone and marking language that mirrors board rubrics. If you want a quick trawl of what other teachers are sharing, it’s easy to browse the Language Arts community and see what might be worth adapting.