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Narrative Account Skills Lesson (Edexcel History American West 9-1)
Lesson aimed at intervention prior to examination, pupils develop narrative account skills as well as knowledge of the cattle industry - an area that, judging by SAMS material the exam board are keen to examine.
Pupils read the sample answer and pick out what is wrong with it
Pupils catagorise information into rise and fall of the cattle industry, they colour code it rather than writing it out to save time
pupils create a word bank of connectives
pupils create a narrative account using step by step guide and template which can be found on the worksheet - PPT takes pupils through the account step by step so you can give your group as little or as much support as necessary.
Titanic - who was to blame?
Group lesson, pupils work in groups to analyse sources which help them decide who was to blame for the disaster - they annotate each source before moving onto the next.
At the end of the lesson pupils are asked to evaluate who was most to blame, this task is levelled with different tasks for each attainment level.
REVISION American West Thinking Quilt (Edexcel 9-1)
American West thinking quilt designed to provide pupils with the opportunity to make links between different events and consider their impact on the development of the American West.
I have checked through both the Pearson textbook and revision guide to ensure that all key content is included in this A3 thinking quilt.
Pupils first read the boxes and add a sentence to any that they are not sure of with the support of peers, revision guides or the teacher.
They then colour code them based on catagories they could fit into such as ‘law and order’ and ‘conflict with Plains Indians’.
You can find the lesson that this thinking quilt is a part of here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/revision-key-features-of-the-american-west-edexcel-9-1-11884964
Henry VIII Wives
Full lesson and homework. Pupils evaluate which wife Henry loved most by firstly completing a carousel activity that allows them to explore each wife and the reasons Henry divorced her before creating an extended writing piece (differentiated) about who he loved most.
Homework: to write a letter to the Pope explaining why you want a divorce from Katherine of Aragon.
WALT: Evaluate who Henry loved most.
Level 3: Identify Henry’s six wives.
Level 4: Describe each of his wives and what happened to them.
Level 5: explain why Henry divorced each wife.
Level 6: Compare which wife was Henry loved most, give reasons why.
Command word display
Bunting that includes command words for the new specification:
identify, describe, explain, define, recall, evaluate, infer, compare, evaluate
Early Modern Medicine (1700-1900) Revision Session
This session covers
Jenner, Pasteur, Koch, Nightingale, Cholera (Chadwick and Snow) And the Public Health Acts.
Weimar and Nazi Germany key words (Edexcel 9-1)
Three page document of key words for the Weimar and Nazi Germany unit.
I used the Hodder textbook and went through cover to cover to produce a document of all key words to support pupils with the content prior to examination.
Elizabethan England: Events of the Spanish Armada 1588 (Narrative Account skills lesson)
WALT: Explain why Phillip launched the ArmadaLevel 3: identify key features of weapons used during the battle.
Level 4: describe the events of the battle in detail.
Level 5: Explain why Elizabeth won the battle.
Level 6-7: Evaluate the reasons for the victory and which part of the narrative was most important.
Elizabethan England: What caused the Spanish Armada? (Skills lesson)
This skills lesson is aimed to encouraged independent extended writing - pupils examine the causes of the armada before reading and annotating a WAGOLL that demonstrates how to reach level 7 at KS3. They then create their own piece analysing the reasons Philip launched the Armada.
WALT: Explain why Phillip launched the Armada
Level 3: identify more than one cause of the Spanish Armada.
Level 4: describe each cause in detail.
Level 5: Explain why each cause upset Phillip enough for him to launch his Armada.
Level 6-7: Evaluate the importance of causes to reach a judgement.
Controlling Religion (Weimar and Nazi Germany: Edexcel 9-1)
WALT: Analyse how far Hitler succeeded in controlling religion.
Identify Hitler’s early policy towards the Church in the Enabling Act.
Describe how Hitler hoped to control the Catholic and the Protestant Church.
Explain why not everyone accepted Hitler’s policies about religion.
Analyse a source to explain how useful it is to a historian examining the catholic response to Hitler’s reforms.
Task one: pupils examine a source from the Enabling Act explaining how Hitler wanted his relationship to look with the church and make an inference
Task two: Carousel activity - how did Hitler gain control of the church? was there any immediate opposition (covered in more detail in a church opposition lesson).
Task three: how far did Hitler succeed in controlling the church? discussion
Task Four: How useful question including structure to guide weaker pupils and key words to prompt focus on knowledge and judgement. Full mark answer accompanies so that you can go through expectations for the 8 mark question with pupils and allow them to self assess and improve their own work based on the example.
REVISION Life and problems in England (Early Elizabethan England (Edexcel 9-1))
Part of a series of lessons covering content required for the Early Elizabethan England module in the new Edexcel specification.
This lesson covers
Poverty and the poor laws,
education,
past times,
financial weaknesses
There are also opportunities embedded to develop the skills required to answer the 12 and 16 mark questions.
Elizabethan England: Education
A lesson that explores the education system fully differentiated with AFL for each task.
Pupils will:
Identify what education is like today and why it is seen as valuable
Describe why not everyone valued education in Elizabethan England
Explain why attitudes changed
Analyse the education system - was it fair?
Compare the similarities and differences to education today.
REVISION Stresemann and recovery (Edexcel 9-1: Weimar and Nazi Germany)
This lesson covers the content required for Stresemann and recovery of Germany after the first world war for Paper 3 of the new Edexcel specification (2016).
Pupils will explore both interpretations and source questions within this revision lesson.
They will be provided with a worksheet that covers all of the steps Stresemann takes to ensure Germany is able to recover following the TOV. They can then take this home to support independent revision.
Pupils will:
analyse the Stresemann as our saviour source
Highlight key changes made by Stresemann and explain why people did and didn’t like them.
Answer the two four mark interpretation questions and plan an explain why question.
REVISION Hitler's Rise to Power (Edexcel 9-1: Weimar and Nazi Germany)
This lesson is set to help pupils revise content surrounding Hitler’s rise to power in preparation for Paper 3 of the new edexcel specification (2016).
Pupils will:
Describe the Reichstag Fire
Analyse the reasons he rose to power - differentiated
Plan and answer (if time) a 20 mark interpretation question
Analyse how useful a source is
Modern Medicine Revision (Edexcel 9-1)
Session covers:
new technology, lung cancer, magic bullets, penicillin and the creation of the NHS
Pupils complete a worksheet whilst teacher leads the session
Medieval Medicine Revision (Edexcel 9-1)
Session designed to last one hour and includes everything for medicine 1250-1500 cross referenced with the first chapter of the Pearson textbook.
Included is a worksheet for pupils to complete alongside the session.
Pupils cover:
causes of disease image starter
key words
theory of the four humours
miasma theory
different people that could treat you
treating the sick
hospitals
the Black Death 1348-1349
REVISION Succession crisis and events of 1066 (Anglo-Saxon and Norman England (Edexcel 9-1))
This is part of a series of revision sessions aimed at preparing pupils to succeed at the Edexcel 2016 specification: Paper Two Anglo-Saxon and Norman England.
As part of this session pupils will explore:
Succession crisis: who should be king?
Gate Fulford
Stamford Bridge
Hastings
Why did William Win
Aftermath: march on London, Submission of the earls
KS3 defeat of France (WW2)
Aimed at developing skills required for the GCSE reforms at KS4, this lesson encourages pupils to develop PEEL paragraphs for the explain two consequences question.
This is part of a scheme of work about WW2 - the rest of which can be found within my shop.
Pupils will:
Identify who Winston Churchill is as a hook to the lesson
describe why France surrenders using images to challenge them to think outside of the box
Use a WAGOLL to identify examination skills required and the structure of a PEEL paragraph
Use an information sheet (included) and the WAGOLL to structure their own PEEL paragraph explaining a consequence of the defeat of Poland.
Peer assess their work to reflect on their own progress within the lesson.
Bundle
What is History? KS3 introduction to history
This scheme of work has been created to introduce and embed historical skills across KS3.
Pupils explore key concepts such as chronology, bias, and interpretations before conducting their own investigation over a series of six lessons.
The seventh lesson of the series can be used as a baseline assessment and is in line with the interpretation skills included in Paper 3 (edexcel 9-1).
REVISION CLOCK ANGLO-SAXON AND NORMAN ENGLAND ( Edexcel 9-1: Anglo Saxon and Norman England)
The concept of a revision clock is that pupils spend five minutes completing each section - thus meaning they revise a large amount of a single topic in an hour.
this resource includes two revision clocks, i plan to provide my pupils with it printed double sided, they will complete one side in class and one side for homework.
I have based these clocks largely on the Pearson purple revision guides, the clock follows the pages from front to back.
Another technique is to ask pupils to fill out what they know in one colour, and then use a second colour to revise using a revision guide or textbook, giving them a colour coded guide to what they need to focus their revision on.