Operational Objectives
By the end of the lesson, learners will be able to:
- Identify and recall key biographical and historical contexts surrounding Gerard Manley Hopkins and H.G. Wells, and connect them to the rise of literary modernism. 
- Demonstrate an understanding of how God’s Grandeur critiques industrialisation and conveys a spiritual response to ecological damage. 
- Explain how The Time Machine functions as speculative fiction that critiques capitalist systems and envisions the human consequences of unchecked technological progress. 
- Analyse the formal innovations in Hopkins’s use of sprung rhythm and Wells’s narrative framing device, examining how each enhances thematic complexity. 
- Evaluate the relevance of Hopkins’s spiritual environmentalism and Wells’s dystopian vision in relation to current global issues such as climate change, AI, and social inequality. 
- Compose a critical or creative response that synthesises literary experimentation with social critique, imagining future or alternative realities influenced by present-day ethical dilemmas. 
