This is a GCSE sociology lesson [EDUQAS/ WJEC] which focuses on the importance of material factors within education. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 12 slides on the power point. By the end of the lesson students will be able to outline and explain the different material factors and start to make connections to class differences in achievement.
Included:
Starter, methods recap. Primary Vs. Secondary data (retrieval practice)
Title page- encouraging students to think about what material factors are and whether they are internal or external.
How free is school? student task- write down all the things their parents need to pay for within education. Example list with prices included on the pp.
Explanation of material factors and material deprivation.
Explanation of how material factors could lead to working class underachievement. Link back to key question ‘is education meritocratic?’.
The effects of income on attainment.
Student task- rank the material factors in order of biggest impact on educational achievement.
Link to choice of school.
Short youtube clip- students to make a note of the cultural and material factors affecting the student’s achievement at school.
Poor housing and underachievement.
Wider connections to class differences- student task.
Plenary- Bingo.
This is a GCSE sociology [WJEC/ EDUQAS] lesson which focuses on the education unit. The lesson is centered around the hidden curriculum and anti-school subcultures. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 13 slides on the power point. Challenge questions and extension tasks provided throughout.
Included:
Starter, methods recap. Board rush game. Instructions on the pp. Post-it notes are needed for this task.
Title page, encouraging students to think about what a anti-school subculture is.
Explanation of what an anti-school subculture is. Easy and difficult explanation provided. Students choose which one they write down.
Short video clip outlining the behaviours of an anti-school and pro-school subculture.
The impact of labelling on anti-school subcultures. Reading/ question task. Questions and answers provided on the pp. However, students will need access to the GCSE eduqas textbook to complete this task (pages 102-103).
Paul Willis and anti-school subcultures.
Explanation of the difference between the formal and hidden curriculum.
Explanation of what each theory argues about the hidden curriculum. Feminists, Marxists and Functionalists. Examples and challenge questions provided. This then leads on to an application task whereby students summarise what each theory says using the key concepts on the power point.
Plenary- guess the fact. Teacher will need an envelope with a key fact written down from the lesson. (most important piece of information from the lesson) Students to guess what key fact the teacher has written. A key fact is provided in the notes section of the pp.
This is a GCSE sociology lessson [WJEC/ EDUQAS]. The lesson focuses on the social stratification and differentiation topic. With a particular focus on social exclusion and deprivation. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 11 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity. Education recap- students work out the missing words.
Title page. Encouraging students to think about what deprivation means, recap absolute and relative poverty. Outline of spec provided on pp slide.
Definition of deprivation and how it can be a social construct.
Research into relative deprivation. Townsend. Handout provided on a separate document.
The cycle of deprivation. Explanation and student task. Provided on a separate work sheet. Students make their own cycle of deprivation, put the statements in the correct order. Answers provided on a separate document.
What is social exclusion? - explanation & student task. On pp slide.
Social inclusion, explanation provided & challenge question for students.
Why are poverty and social exclusion hard to solve?
What do sociological theories say about poverty? Student task- instructions on the pp slide. Goes through, marxism, the new right, functionalism and feminism.
Plenary- student task. Explaining why some groups are more likely to suffer from poverty, Instructions and examples on pp slide.
This is a power point which includes a mind-map which summaries each of the key topics taught in the GCSE sociology eduqas specification. The mind-maps include key concepts and studies where necessary. The topics included are: Cultural transmission, Families & households, Education, Crime & Deviance, Social stratification & differentiation.
This is a GCSE psychology lesson which focuses on the sleeping and dreaming unit. The lesson is based upon a key study; Freud- Little Hans. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 17 slides on the power point. The lesson also comes with a worksheet with activities for students to fill in which go along with the power point. Challenge/ extension questions are provided throughout.
Included:
starter, criminal psychology recap.
title page- encouraging students to think about what they already know about Freud.
explanation of case studies- including strengths and weaknesses.
background to the study with a short video clip.
explanation of aims, procedure, results and conclusions. Tasks in the booklet for students to complete.
strengths and weaknesses of the study.
9 mark exam question. Question provided on the pp along with a brief outline of how to structure an answer. Mark scheme provided on the power point.
plenary- summary task. Students write a snapchat message using the key concepts on the power point.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the crime and deviance unit. The lesson focuses around patterns of crime with specific reference to class and ethnicity. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there is a total of 14 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity, social stratification and differentiation recap. Connect 4- students to pick out key concepts and put them into categories.
Title page, encouraging students to think about what is meant by the term ‘institutional racism’.
Ethnicity and crime overview. Graph to show conviction rates of different ethnic groups.
5 slides containing a detailed explanation of Paul Gilroy and negative stereotypes, Stuart Hall and scapegoats, The Stephen Lawrence enquiry, The Macpherson report and police racism and policing styles. There is a worksheet which students can fill in whilst the teacher goes through the key content. Worksheet attached as a separate document.
Brief overview of class and crime. This lesson focuses on corporate crime, it requires students to already have a basic understanding of white-collar crime which may have been covered when teaching the Marxist perspective.
Patterns of crime consolidation sheet. Attached as a separate document. Students to fill in key details of class, ethnicity, gender and age when they have been taught.
15 mark exam style question - planning task. Question provided on a separate worksheet. Indicative content included on the power point to help students.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson based on the education unit. This lesson is lesson 2 of ethnic differences which focuses on internal factors. The lesson is designed to last a 90 minute lesson and there are a total of 9 slides on the power point. Challenge questions provided throughout.
Included:
Starter- methods recap. Unscramble the key words. (answers on pp)
Title page- encouraging students to think about how schools/ teachers may be unconsciously racist.
Quick recap of ethnic differences lesson 1. Includes, who performs better in education, also material and cultural factors.
Explanation of how racism can lead to underachievement.
Explanation of how institutional racism can lead to underachievement.
Explanation of how labelling and low expectations can lead to underachievement.
Explanation of how the ethnocentric curriculum can lead to underachievement.
Consolidating knowledge task. Students to complete the mind-map using all the information they have learnt about ethnic differences. The mindmap has been started, students too add as much information as they can. Attached as a separate document.
15 mark practice exam question. Students have the option of two questions focusing on ethnic differences. Example structure provided.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson [wjec/ eduqas]. The lesson focuses on the eduction unit, specifically labelling, banding and setting. The power point has a total of 12 slides and is designed to last a 90 minute lesson. Challenge questions and extension tasks provided throughout.
Included:
Starter, methods recap. 2 mark exam questions, students answer whilst register is being taken.
Title page. Encouraging students to think about what labelling means and the type of sociologists that are interested in labelling.
Guess your label game! post it notes with different labels written on are needed for this task. Instructions included on the power point. Students tick the labels on their head- partner acts out their partners label until they guess it correctly.
Outline of what labelling is and where labels come from.
Explanation of how teachers arrive at their labels.
Diagram of how self-fulfilling prophecies occur. Student task.
Explanation of how teachers communicate their labels.
Explanation of what banding and setting is.
The effects of banding and setting on labelling. Reading task (Ball), students answer questions. Reading provided on a separate document.
Applying understanding, 5 mark exam question. Success criteria provided.
Marking exam question- mark scheme provided. Encourage peer assessment.
Plenary 5,4,3,2,1. Students to reflect on what they have learnt during the lesson.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on the crime and deviance unit. The lesson is specifically about the Marxist view of crime and deviance. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter, based on recapping the social stratification and differentiation unit.
Title page- encouraging students to think about what Marxists would say about crime.
‘The price is right’- students to guess the price fraud costs per year. All answers on the pp.
Definitions of white-collar and corporate crime. Example of white collar crime, encouraging students to think about why rich people may get treated differently.
Capitalism and consumerism.
Short video clip, questions for students to answer. Link on pp slide.
Social power and crime- links to William Chambliss.
Fill in the blanks task, provided on a separate worksheet. Answers on pp slide.
What is white collar crime? reading and question task. Reading provided on a separate worksheet.
Evaluation of Marxism.
Plenary- summary task, students write a tweet using the key concepts on the board.
This is an A-Level AQA sociology lesson. The lesson focuses on The Marxist view of education. There is a total of 9 power point slides and it is designed to fill a 90 minute lesson.
Included:
-true or false starter activity, based on Functionalism and New Right perspectives. (worksheet attached)
-starter, encouraging students to think about what key concepts they associate with Marxism.
-detailed explanations of Althusser, Bowles and Gintis ideas.
-the lesson finishes with a reading task for students to complete. The A-Level AQA book one (orange textbook) will be needed to complete this exercise. A worksheet containing the questions is attached.
This lesson focuses on Green crime part of the crime and deviance unit of the AQA specification. The power point consists of 8 slides and would fill a 80 minute lesson. The starter activity consists of a true or false task which assesses students previous knowledge on globalisation and crime. The lesson then goes on to give a definition of green crime, explain global risk society and the environment and types of criminology.
One activity included in this lesson refers to primary and secondary crimes. Students are required to read about types of green crime and decide whether they are primary or secondary (worksheets are included with this lesson, along with the correct answers). The lesson then leads on to an independent research task whereby they should have access to the internet. The lesson finishes with a 4 mark exam style question.
This is lesson 7 of a series of lessons on the developmet topic. This lesson focuses on the key study by Gunderson et al 2013 - the power of praise. This powerpoint consists of 20 slides and is designed to fill a 90 minute lesson. This lesson goes alongside the development booklet which is available in my shop.
Included:
articulate psychological problems starter, this acts as a retrieval practice task.
recap activity- ‘what’s the key term?’, students should be able to work out the key terms being described- these are from the development topic.
discussion task- introducing students to start thinking about the significance of praise.
explanations of the types of praise- person and process.
match up task- students are encouraged to decide whether a statement is referring to person or process praise- assessment activity.
6 slides discussing the background to the study, aims, procedure, results and conclusions.
student task- draw the study.
strengths and weaknesses of the study.
2 mark exam question practice, question and mark scheme on the powerpoint.
review and reflect plenary activity
This is lesson 2 of a series of lessons on the development topic. This lesson focuses on Piaget’s stages of development. The powerpoint consists of a total of 17 slides and is designed to fill a 90 minute lesson. This lesson goes alongside the workbook which is also available in my shop.
***Included: ***
a starter activity on the psychological problems topic. This acts as a retrieval practice task.
a true or false recap activity- this assesses students understanding of the areas and functions on the brain as taught in lesson 1.
explanations of how students learn- Piaget’s four stages of development, with diagrams.
explanations of the key features of each of his four stages
a short video clip demonstrating Piaget’s conservation task.
a progress check half way through the lesson- question and answer task.
application tasks for students to complete- scenarios and questions included on the power point.
‘playing Piaget’ activity. This requires students to decide and explain how a child in a particular stage of development would respond in the 2 situations. - worksheet included.
plenary- review of what students have learnt. This includes a short video clip which should aid students to answer the key question ‘what does this tell us about child development?’.
This is lesson 9 of the memory topic, the lesson focuses on issues and debates. For this topic, the focus is on Holism and Reductionism. This powerpoint consists of 16 slides and is designed to fill an 100 minute lesson. This lesson can be used alongside the memory booklet available in my shop. Or it can be purchased individually as the worksheet pages are also attached and included in this lesson.
The starter of this lesson is based on the social influence topic, it acts as a retrieval practice task. By the end of this lesson all students will be able to explain and evaluate both reductionism and holism. The lesson then leads students to complete a 9 mark exam question- the question and mark scheme is included.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson (WJEC/ EDUQAS) based on the Marxist perspective of the family. The lesson is designed to fill 90 minutes and it consists of 11 power point slides with two worksheets.
Included:
-starter activity whereby students need to unscramble key concepts.
-recap of the Functionalist view of the family.
-explanation of Marxism as a conflict theory.
-explanation of how families serve the interests of capitalism.
-Zaretsky ‘the cult of private life’. This includes a fill in the blanks activity for students to complete.
-explanation of Zaretsky’s view that the family benefits capitalism.
-evaluation of the Marxist perspective.
-worksheet whereby students are encouraged to compare the Functionalist and Marxist perspective.
-poster activity, students consolidate their knowledge about Marxism. They may need to use the GCSE wjec textbook to support them with this task.
-plenary- questioning activity. Questions based on different difficulty levels, students to choose which ones they can level.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on divorce as part of the family unit. The lesson explains changes in patterns of divorce. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there is a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
-starter activity. Introducing key statistics about divorce. Students to predict the missing statistics. (answers then included on the power point)
-key statistics, encouraging students to think about what they show about divorce.
-background of divorce in the UK. Dominoes match up task. Students to get a pack of dominoes which contain key dates and explanations, they should then match these up. Answers included on the power point. This shows how divorce laws have changed and encourages students to think about the impact they have had.
-key trends-graph. Briefly introduces the Family Law Act 1996
-legal changes to divorce timeline.
-changes to laws- more detailed explanation of the Divorce Reform Act 1996 and what it entailed. Links to The Family Law Act 1996 and Legal Aid (1949).
-explanation of the reasons for changes in divorce. Student task- to rank them in order of importance.
-explanation of how expectations of marriage have changed- reference to Giddens.
-plenary- true or false activity.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson [WJEC]. The lesson focuses on the role of older people in the family. The powerpoint consist of 11 slides in total and is designed to last a 90 minute lesson.
included:
Starter activity. Students to try and identify the key terms and key sociologists.
Title page, encouraging students to think about the role older people have played in their lives and within their family.
Explanation of what has happened to life expectancy. Graph interpretation. What impact will this have on families?
The result of increased life expectancy on the family and society. Students to create a list or mind map. Answers included on the power point.
Explanation of the modified extended family, how this links to increased life expectancy and how it benefits families.
Explanation of traditional extended families. With reference to Forester (1990s).
Explanation of how increased life expectancy has lead to an increase in beanpole families.
Is the ageing population in Britain a problem? this is a reading task for students to complete. Questions for students to answer on the powerpoint. The reading is provided on a separate document. This task starts to refer to some of the A-level content, this is therefore a ‘challenge’ higher ability task.
Evaluation, with reference to the sandwich generation and boomerang children.
Summary/ comparison worksheet. Students to summaries their knowledge on the role of children, role of men and role of older people in the family.
Plenary. Students to define as many key terms as they can from the slide.
This is a GCSE sociology lesson which focuses on ‘planning successful research’. The lesson covers pilot studies, triangulation and designing your own research. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and there are a total of 7 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity, retrieval practice- families and households. Key studies match up task- answers provided.
Using mixed methods in research. Explanation of triangulation.
Reasons for using mixed methods. Reading task- provided on a separate document. Students to complete the reading and answer the questions on the power point.
Explanation of what a pilot study is- evaluation included.
For the rest of the lesson students are encouraged to design their own research project. This is where they can apply their knowledge about everything covered in the research methods unit. Included, what method they will use, aims/ hypothesis, who their sample will be and how they will obtain them. All instructions are included on the power point.
This is a GCSE Sociology lesson{WJEC/ EDUQAS]. The lesson focuses on the Functionalist view of education. The lesson is designed to last 90 minutes and has a total of 12 slides on the power point.
Included:
Starter activity- recap of research methods. True or false task. Answers provided.
Title page- students to think about what they already know about Functionalism and to predict what they think they may say about the education system.
Theory recap.
Recap of consensus and conflict theories. Do we need education for society to function effectively?
Schools as agents of socialisation.
Durkheim and social cohesion.
Parsons and status.
Schools are preparation for employment. Mind map task, students to write down all the ways school prepares students for work.
Parsons, meritocracy and role allocation.
Evaluation of Functionalist view of education.
Functionalism quick quiz.
Cram your brain activity. Students fill their brain outline with as many key concepts as they can remember from the education unit so far. Brain outline provided on a separate worksheet.
This is a GCSE psychology lesson, the lesson focuses on revising the sleeping and dreaming unit. The lesson is designed to fill a 90 minute lesson and the power point consists of 15 slides. There is a worksheet to go with this lesson, students should complete the activities on the worksheet whilst the teacher goes through the power point. The GCSE Edexcel textbook will be needed to complete some tasks.
Included:
-Starter activity. Students to work out the missing words in the sentence. The statements are from the whole unit.
-Explanation of the features, functions and benefits of sleep.
-Explanation of internal and external influences on sleep, along with their strengths and weaknesses.
-Explanation of sleep disorders. Insomnia and Narcolepsy.
-Freud’s theory of dreaming- youtube clip. Students to complete the task on the worksheet after watching the clip.
-Key studies task. Students to use pages in the textbook to answer the questions on the worksheet. (Siffre and Freud, Little Hans).
-Independent revision task.
-Retrieval practice, question task. Students to answer as many questions as they can. These are differentiated (colour coded) in terms of difficulty. Answers also included.