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KS3 Operation Barbarossa (WW2)
ellie_rylellie_ryl

KS3 Operation Barbarossa (WW2)

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Pupils will: Analyse a source to suggest what the relationship was like between Hitler and Stalin describe two reasons Hitler chose to invade Russia - guided questions on the PPT for support suggest what Britain should do - four options to engage pupils before they discover Churchill’s speech as a response Explain why Stalin was able to beat Hitler - rank a worksheet and then explain one in detail. create a battle plan as if they are Hitler, what could they have done to beat Stalin? WALT: Evaluate the causes and consequences of Hitler’s decision to invade Russia. Level 3: Identify what the relationship between Stalin and Hitler was like in 1941. Level 4: Describe the causes of the invasion of Russia. Level 5: Explain why Russia were able to beat Hitler. Level 6: Create a battle plan to try to overcome Stalin.
Who was Henry VIII?
ellie_rylellie_ryl

Who was Henry VIII?

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Introductory lesson for Henry the Eighth. Pupils compare reasons Henry is remembered as a good and a bad king to come to a conclusion as to how they think he should be remembered. Pupils also answer an interpretation question - training for the new GCSE reforms. WALT: Explore the type of king Henry VIII is remembered as. Level 3: Identify what makes a good king. Level 4: Describe the type of person Henry VIII was. Level 5: explain how features of Henry’s personality made him a good king. Level 6: assess the main difference between two interpretations.
REVISION Rebellions and exam skills (Edexcel 9-1: Anglo Saxon and Norman England)
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REVISION Rebellions and exam skills (Edexcel 9-1: Anglo Saxon and Norman England)

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WALT: Revise the rebellions against William and evaluate how big of a threat they made towards his reign Identify reasons people were upset with William’s leadership Describe each rebellion. Compare rebellions to explain how William responded to each threat. evaluate how far you agree with a statement to come to a clear judgement As with all of my revision lessons the worksheets cover all tasks so that pupils do not require their exercise books. Task one: what did people have to be unhappy about? Task two: Video task Task three: line task (pictured as cover image) alongside information sheet to help pupils remind themselves of key content. Task four: Exam question from past paper fully planned on slides to support pupils
Abolition in America and Britain - two lessons, worksheets and homework
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Abolition in America and Britain - two lessons, worksheets and homework

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Lesson 8 and 9 in slavery scheme of work. Worksheets included within the lesson powerpoint as hidden slides. Homework: Profile of a famous abolitionist. Lesson 1: Abolition in Britain - Focus on Slave Trade Act 1807, reasons for and against, William Wilberforce Lesson 2: Abolition in America - focus on comparison of Britain and America, Abraham Lincoln, civil war
REVISION Treaty of Versailles and Weimar (Edexcel 9-1 Weimar and Nazi Germany)
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REVISION Treaty of Versailles and Weimar (Edexcel 9-1 Weimar and Nazi Germany)

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Part of a series of revision lessons in which pupils prepare for their final examination for Paper Three Weimar and Nazi Germany as part of the 2016 Edexcel specification. Pupils will: WALT: Revise the Treaty of Versailles and problems with the Weimar government. Grade 3: Identify the terms of the Treaty of Versailles and describe how the Germans felt about it. Grade 5: Describe the strengths and weaknesses of the Weimar constitution. Grade 7: Explain why the government was unpopular and who opposed it. Grade 9: Evaluate whether Hyperinflation was positive or negative for the people of Germany.
Consequence and Importance skills lesson (American West Edexcel 9-1)
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Consequence and Importance skills lesson (American West Edexcel 9-1)

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aim: consolidate knowledge of key principles and build consequence and importance of skills Starter: Match the event with the consequences on the worksheet Pupils have a worksheet with two consequences for each significant event in the unit establish the difference between consequence and importance Colour code consequences into importance question types (key themes like destruction of Indian culture and Settlement of the west) attempt an importance of question as a class create a question using question stems and answer it themselves.
Early Elizabethan England Revision Bundle inc. Mock (Edexcel 9-1)
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Early Elizabethan England Revision Bundle inc. Mock (Edexcel 9-1)

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This revision bundle covers the content required to revise Paper Two of Early Elizabethan England (Edexcel 9-1). Sessions included in this bundle: Key people (Elizabeth, Walsingham, Mary QoS) Life and problems (poverty, education, entertainment) Plots against Elizabeth (Ridolfi, Babington, Throckmorton, Northern Earls, Armada) Exploration (Drake and Raleigh with exam practice) Full mock also included
Elizabethan England: Poverty and the Poor Laws
ellie_rylellie_ryl

Elizabethan England: Poverty and the Poor Laws

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WALT: Investigate poverty in Tudor England. Level 3: Identify reasons people live in poverty today. Level 4: Describe reasons people lived in poverty in Tudor England. Level 5: Explain why categories were needed to cope with the poor and what those categories were. Level 6: Evaluate how fair these categories were, give reasons why.
The Rising Against Tostig Godwinson (Anglo-Saxon and Norman England (Edexcel 9-1))
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The Rising Against Tostig Godwinson (Anglo-Saxon and Norman England (Edexcel 9-1))

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WALT: Evaluate the reasons and response to the rebellion against Tostig. 2-3: Recall key facts about the role of an earl. 4-5: Describe reasons Saxons did not like Tostig. 6-7: Explain why factors would make somebody rebel. 8-9*: evaluate whether Harold was right to exile his brother. Pupils will recall the roles of an earl for the starter. They will then go through each of the reasons the Saxons hated Tostig (printable handout that pupils highlight and annotate) They write a letter to Harold (LA) or a response from Harold (HA) explaining why they are upset/ how they are going to offer help They analyse the impact this had upon Harold’s claim and whether he was right to exile his brother.
'What is history?' introductory lesson (What is History? (KS3))
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'What is history?' introductory lesson (What is History? (KS3))

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The first lesson in a scheme of work designed to introduce KS3 pupils to the concept of history and help them acquire historical skills. WALT: identify key historical skills and explain why history is important. L3: Define what the study of history is. L4: Describe key skills a good historian needs. L5: Explain why history is important. L6: compare history to another subject and justify which you think is most important. Pupils define what history is in their own words. Investigation of blooms words, describe, explain, infer etc. Discussion of what history is, prior learning and a video. Lesson includes homework for pupils to complete, teacher can use homework to gain a baseline of pupils ability.
Slave Trade Triangle
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Slave Trade Triangle

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Lesson surrounding the Triangular Trade, animation included. Differentiated worksheet- comic book strip with gapfill for LA, titles for MA and can be provided empty for HA. Aims: Identify key stages of the triangular trade Explain why the slave trade was so profitable Compare which part of the triangular trade was most profitable.