Who was Cleopatra?
Lesson aim:
A complete lesson on Cleopatra which would last about an hour or two.
understand who Cleopatra really was.
build a body of knowledge about the life of Cleopatra. (She was an important Egyptian Queen during the time of the Romans).
Success Criteria:
Complete a filling in the gaps exercise
Create a quiz on Cleopatra and swop with a partner
Write a radio advert which include lots of facts but also suggests what type of leader Cleopatra was
Historical Skills:
Historical context
Historical interpretation
Source Analysis
One hour lesson which could be extended to longer practicing the skill of communicating through hieroglyphics. A complete lesson from connect task, lesson aim, success criteria and consolidate task.
A lesson which will help:
To build up a knowledge about hieroglyphics.
To practice using hieroglyphs
Complete a frayer’ model
Write a secret message using hieroglyphics
Analysis of a primary source as an archaeologist.
Historical skills: Historical Content, significance, source analysis.
A challenging lesson exploring the importance of the Rosetta Stone.
Lesson Aims:
To research the Rosetta Stone
To explain why the Rosetta Stone is significant
To develop your understanding of the Rosetta Stone and its connection to Hieroglyphics
A full lesson which could be completed over an hour or comprehensively in an afternoon.
Activities include:
A History/questioning matrix
Research
Blooms Taxonomy range of questions from lower to higher level questioning.
Historical skills:
Historical significance
Historical context
Source Analysis
Consequence
A great way of engaging students and parents/carers as a homework activity.
I’ve personally used homework postcards at the end of different topics and it is lovely to see families engaging with their child’s learning.
Great for oracy
Great for engaging parents and families
Raises motivation for the subject
Great for assessment of a child’s knowledge.
A complete lesson on leisure time in Ancient Egypt.
A great lesson for Key Stage 2 & 3.
Lesson Aims:
What did the Ancient Egyptians do for fun?
To find out which pastimes were popular in Ancient Egypt.
How is leisure time today different to leisure time in Ancient Egypt?
What has stayed the same/similar?
Success Criteria:
To conduct research on BBC Bitesize
To communicate with others
To conduct research using source work
To complete source analysis using primary sources and COP
Historical skills:
Change and continuity
Source analysis (using COP)
Historical context
Literacy Skills:
Oracy
Writing
What happened to King Tut?
A CSI style lesson for KS2 and KS3 students. Collect information about King Tut. What diseases did he have? Why injury did he sustain to his skull? Create a police report with your findings.
Great literacy lesson whilst developing key historical skills such as Historical Interpretation and significance.
To build up a knowledge about the discovery of the tomb of King Tutankhamun.
Explain why the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun is historically important.
Explain why the discovery of King Tutankhamun is such an important historical discovery.
Decide what happened to King Tut
Become an Egyptologist
What might an egyptologist be?
Who was Tutankhamun?
An hour to two hour lesson for Key Stage 3 students. Development of literacy skills whilst studying Tutankhamun.
Key historical concepts- Historical significance and source analysis using COP; content, origin, purpose. Use of PEEL; POINT, EVIDENCE, EXPLANATION, LINK.
To build up a body of knowledge about the discovery of the tomb of King Tutankhamun.
To identify content, origin and purpose of a primary source.
To explain why the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun is historically important.
Connect activity, lesson aim, purpose, success criteria, activate, demonstrate and consolidate activities all included.
Bonus creative homework activity: Imagine if historians thousands of years into the future found a picture that had clues about what your life is like in modern times. What sort of clues would you want them to see?
GCSE style question - Elizabeth I- Popularity and Portraits
Ideal for WJEC/Eduqas
Ideal follow up lesson to Elizabeth I Coronation lesson.
Source Analysis. Source ladder.
Starter activity/consolidate task. History in Numbers activity.
Lesson 3 in a series of lessons on Elizabeth I. Elizabeth I Royal Court. A full lesson including connect and consolidate activity. Ideal lesson for WJEC/Eduqas GCSE.
Lesson 4 in a series of lessons on Elizabeth I. Ideal for GCSE - WJEC/Eduqas.
Full one hour lesson from connect to consolidate activities.
How far would you agree… question.
A full lesson on Elizabeth I’s Privy Councillors. Lesson 5 in a series of lessons. Full lesson from connect to consolidate activity.
Fun connect task - Come Dine with me!
Alphabet recall- Elizabeth I.
GCSE WJEC/EDUQAS Lesson 6 in a series of lessons on Elizabeth I.
Observation lesson.
Full lesson from connect to consolidate activities.
Source analysis
Rubiks cube activity
venn diagram works well if drawing on table with whiteboard markers.