Let history come to life with an escape room lesson!
New version: no preparation, self marking, remote learning ready.
Get students to puzzle their way through the history of the Berlin Wall, trying to stay in touch with their long lost friend Thomas on the other side of the wall.
Engage students with a story website that will require them to work through a mix of text, video, jigsaw puzzles and codes to be the first one to win.
This resource can be used as a revision lesson on the topic of the Berlin Wall or, with some internet research by the students, as a first introduction to the topic. It should take between 45 min and 2 hours, depending on age and prior knowledge. The new digital version is longer.
As a native of Berlin I have been teaching this topic as part of my German lessons for about 10 years now. On the 3rd October, German national day, all my classes (aged 13-18) get a one lesson run through of the history of the wall and students are always fascinated by it.
The topics covered here are:
• the situation of Germany under the occupation of the allies after the war
• the differences between East and West
• why people escaped to the West
• the building of the wall
• what is the Stasi
• what led to the fall of the wall
• what happened on the 9th of November 1989
Includes:
• link to dedicated story website (2 versions)
• documents, excel and powerpoint files
• puzzles
• lesson plan
• answers
I have also included a powerpoint presentation of statistics showing the present-day differences between former East and West Germany and a collection of my favourite youtube videos on the topic.
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We have got stuck on the slide where you have to sort phrases into East and West Germany. It says to "go to the next page" but we're not sure how to get to the next page. Advice please @jusch12
Students loved it.
This is an excellently constructed resource with clear instructions and answers. I used with an A-Level history group as an end-of-term activity. You will need to go through all of the quiz and answers yourself to double check. I found some small mistakes in the teacher answers. Date of the Berlin Wall construction is August 61 - so the date should be 13/08/1961 The code for the crossword puzzle - RYAHUOF (not RYAHULF) The students can find 'Thomas' running through the border at 03:48 in the YouTube video. But these are all correct on the student-side of things But excellent, student-led and really fun resource! Thanks for putting on TES :)
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