I have 21 years teaching experience and am an AQA examiner. My resources are designed on the principle that students will learn if they are made to think. All activities involve the student doing the hard work, in order to ensure that the content and skills stick. All of my resources have been tried out in the classroom and I would not upload anything that wasn't effective! I hope that by using my resources, others can save themselves a bit of time and also improve their educational outcomes.
I have 21 years teaching experience and am an AQA examiner. My resources are designed on the principle that students will learn if they are made to think. All activities involve the student doing the hard work, in order to ensure that the content and skills stick. All of my resources have been tried out in the classroom and I would not upload anything that wasn't effective! I hope that by using my resources, others can save themselves a bit of time and also improve their educational outcomes.
This is a cut and sort activity, with solution included, aimed at supporting students with the 8 mark consequences question. It was designed to support my students who were having difficulty differentiating between causes, events and consequences. At times they were identifying either events or causes and wrongly including them as consequences. At the same time as developing this key skill, the resource will help boost student knowledge of most of the key events needed for the GCSE. The students cut the cards out, sort them into groups of 3 and organise them in order of cause-event-consequence for each set. Once they have completed this they have to match the set to the appropriate 8 mark examination style question. To stretch them, they can then be asked to come up with a second consequence of their own (and even then match other question types to the topic as an extension task). The students can work individually or in pairs/groups.
This is a worksheet designed primarily for the new Edexcel GCSE, but it can be adapted for other exam boards. The worksheet has a range of activities attached to it and could be used as a whole lesson. It begins as a chronology activity, and then pupils are asked to colour code the sheet according to a range of factors. To develop their thinking skills for higher ability students, they can make links between different factors. The evidence they have explored is then used to construct an examination style question. There is also an answer sheet provided for non specialists.
A self-contained and active double lesson on Education in the Elizabethan Era which includes subject content and examination questions. It includes an examination question support sheet and a teacher solution ideal for non-specialists.
This resource has the appropriate content needed for the Tudor Edexcel GCSE unit on the Early Elizabethan England 1558-1588. There are some active tasks which involve students sorting statements into the most appropriate category. They are then encouraged to think about how/why education changed and for whom by doing a Venn Diagram. Finally, I have created 3 mock examination questions to cover each of the 4, 12 and 16 mark types which are in the exam. The worksheet should give them the knowledge they need to answer the questions. There is also a support sheet which includes a few exemplar paragraphs to model how they should answer each question, as well as some additional hints.
This is primarily designed for AQA A Level Year 2, but it could be adapted for other specifications. It includes a powerpoint with detailed instructions and a worksheet that accompanies it. The powerpoint includes an engaging starter task which provides the framework for the rest of the lesson, and some different options to be used at the end . Essentially the aim of the lesson is to support the student in applying their knowledge correctly. There are a range of 4 mark questions provided on the worksheet and they have to select the correct term and place it next to the right question. The powerpoint includes a range of possible intervention strategies that can be differentiated according to the needs of each pupil and allows for a greater depth dependent on ability.
This task is appropriate for non specialists as it includes the answers. I have also included an additional task sheet which contains a similar task for 6 mark questions with a range of possible answers. An answer sheet accompanies that as well. This lesson could be used during an observation and adapted to ensure it is outstanding in meeting the needs of your specific learners.
This stand alone lesson is designed to be used at the end of a unit on Action Theory. It was designed for an observation and thus has a good level of challenge, interaction and differentiation.
The Powerpoint starts with a fun key word memory activity game to hook them in. They then attempt a matching task on the worksheet which allows them to demonstrate their AO1 Knowledge and Understanding of Action Theories (Social Action Theory, Symbolic Interactionism, Phenomenology and Ethnomethodology are all included). The real depth of the worksheet involves selecting an appropriate AO2 Application example and matching it to the correct theory. Higher ability students can think of their own examples. There are also 2 extension tasks, one of which stretches them to include some AO3 Evaluation of the Action Theories. This is designed with AQA Year 2 A Level in mind and as such it builds into an essay question that they can complete as homework or in class. However it could easily be adapted for use with other exam boards or even year groups as it is not that specific. It is well suited to non specialists as I have included a solution sheet and detailed notes of how to deliver the lesson on the notes section of the Powerpoint.
Described by one student as a ‘game changer’, this resource has been designed to support students who struggle to access all of the AO marks available when writing a 30 mark essay. The resource includes a powerpoint with tasks, information, teacher notes and solutions, an optional heads and tails starter task, and an interactive workbook. The powerpoint includes an explanation of the meaning behind each of the AO descriptors. Working as an AQA examiner has helped me to understand what students need to write to access these marks.
It is based on the Crime and Deviance part of the specification. The lesson contains a 30 mark exam question with an item, on the topic of Globalisation and Green Crime.
The main purpose is to encourage the students to start including key phrases/statements/connectives that will ensure they meet all 3 of the AO descriptors. The workbook includes a phased activity (which could also be adapted for differentiation purposes) which provides a framework for the students to select the appropriate statements in order to achieve all of the criteria. There is an annotated solution for both of the interactive activities (and also a solution for the heads and tails activity) which means this resource is also suitable for non-specialists. The powerpoint has clear lesson instructions so that it will be easy to follow and deliver.
The amount of time required to deliver this lesson can vary. If you wanted it to be over a double lesson you could make full use of the engaging starter task and heads and tails activity, and utilise all of the feedback on the powerpoint. It could be shortened by cutting that out and just focusing on the essay task.
The plenary task of feeding back on the annotated essay is optional. A homework task could be to complete the essay. Beyond this, they could use the AO grid to support them in writing additional essays at home.
Following the success of my 30 mark essay intervention lesson on Globalisation, I have replicated the activity for Labelling Theory and Crime. I have used my experience as an AQA examiner and feedback from students, who described the activity as a ‘game changer’, to adapt it. It includes an engaging starter activity and presentation with essay writing advice. The crux of the lesson is an essay writing grid which demonstrates how to apply different AO descriptors successfully in an essay. There is an interactive activity and a solution sheet with detailed advice on how to gain marks and what an examiner is looking for. This activity was the most powerful activity I used all year, and especially enabled middle to lower ability students to access the top marks which eventually helped them in all 3 papers and resulted in some tremendous grades. Solutions, guidance and notes are provided in order to support non specialists.
This sorting activity is designed to give students confidence in their knowledge of the different plots against Elizabeth. It was designed as a response to an exam question which showed my students got very easily mixed up between the different plots and tended to give the same description of each plot. It could be used as a stand alone activity or as a review lesson after covering the plots in more detail. There are a range of extension tasks to ensure that this resource can be used for a whole, or even a double lesson if the examination questions are incorporated. The questions are based on the Edexcel GCSE but could be adapted to other specifications. In order to answer the 12 and 16 mark questions, the students would need access to more detailed information. I have included the solution so this lesson can be delivered by non specialists.
A simple but accessible resource on Population Growth. The focus is a local study on Birmingham but this can be used to demonstrate the general principles of population growth. A fully resourced and differentiated lesson to stretch and challenge. The powerpoint has a snappy picture starter (including notes on how to use). There is a card sort activity. The first use will require either class teacher or students to cut out, but once this has been done and cards kept in an envelope, this activity can be re-used. The differentiated activity sheet makes this an observation friendly activity. All students start with a chronology sorting activity, and then select their own activities (or teacher directed) which are based on blooms taxonomy. This stretches and challenges. A simple plenary requires ALL students to engage by holding up a card to match up to a selected category. Ideal for KS3 history. Please review!
A collection of activity worksheets (including teacher solutions) on the following sections within the topic of ‘Couples’ for Families and Households.
Domestic division of labour worksheet
Domestic division of labour retrieval timeline (for start of next lesson)
Explaining the division of labour worksheet
Domestic Violence worksheet
Activities can be used as isolated activities, revision tasks, or alongside the teaching of content in another way.
Content of worksheets has been gathered from a range of sources, including many sociological studies.
I have taught sociology for 20+ years and worked as an AQA examiner in sociology. All tasks are designed to provoke thought and ensure students develop AO1, AO2 & AO3 via different activities. Ideal for non-specialists as solutions are included. I find these activities helpful for increasing student engagement and thus enhancing retrieval strength.
The focus of all of these resources is on improving examination technique. All of the resources do this through the delivery of content (on a range of Crime & Deviance/Theory related topics). There are a lot of examination style questions across all of these resources, with engaging activities aimed at helping them to gain marks across all AO descriptors. A lot of work has gone into preparing all of these resources and I am confident (hopeful!) that they will make a significant difference to outcomes. For non-specialists a range of teacher solutions and lesson notes are provided.
This lesson is designed to help students write more effective essay answers and give them a set of AO2 examples on the theme of Knife Crime and The London Riots. It includes a key term matching activity and an essay technique tool, alongside a powerpoint presentation. I noticed that my group were not getting credit for using topical examples in their answers, often as they were choosing the wrong examples or not wording it clearly. This lesson starts with a fun memory recall starter. The students then match up key sociological terms with key topical news stories relating to the current rise in knife crime or The London Riots of 2011 (a teacher solution is provided for non-specialists). Once they are armed with knowledge that they can apply, they do an activity that is based around 30 mark exam questions. For each question they have to select the appropriate topical example and write a sentence to show how they would include it in an exam answer. A framework is given with some completed examples, and there are then graduated activities which can be accessed at different levels depending on ability. Plenty of options for differentiation are available (as is the case with the earlier matching activity).
Once they have completed this activity, they not only have a range of examples that they can drop straight into a range of examination questions, but they also have the skill and ability to do so in an explicit way which will ensure they are rewarded. Hopefully this can help them to gain valuable marks in the exam!
Two straightforward worksheets to support teaching of this chapter.
Worksheet 1 is an accessible task requiring students to label a map with the way that childhood differs across different cultures/locations.
Worksheet 2 is a heads and tails activity requiring students to match the cause of changes in the cult of childhood to the description.
The level of challenge is relatively low, but both worksheets are designed as platform for further exploration, by encouraging them to actively engage in order to improve their Knowledge and Understanding.
A teacher solution accompanies worksheet 2 to help non-specialists.
This is a straightforward worksheet with 2 tasks. The first task is a heads and tails activity requiring students to match the description with the theory to ensure they are ready to access the main activity,
The main task requires them to colour code a worksheet to identify different theoretical arguments, including evaluation of them.
There is a teacher solution included making this ideal for non-specialists.
This task could be used alongside teaching or as a revision activity. Ideally it would be followed up with an examination question.