How can you love an enemy?
A Teach Peace lesson from Coventry Cathedral (coventrycathedral.org.uk)
If your home was bombed by an unseen enemy, how would you respond? That was the reality for the people of Coventry in 1940, and thousands of other towns and cities around the world before and since. Learn about this story.
History & Society | Citizenship and action | Religion and ethics
A Teach Peace lesson from Diversity Role Models.
What is the effect of bullying and discrimination against LGBT+ people? How
can we stand up to bullying? Students will explore inspiring examples of upstanders and reflect on how their school can challenge discrimination.
Wellbeing | Citizenship and action
A Teach Peace leeson from Facing History & Ourselves UK.
How do we connect with the past? How have we memorialised war? Students will look at examples of memorials from World War I to Iraq and consider their messages, reflecting on how they think we should remember war. Facing History & Ourselves uses the lessons of history to challenge teachers and their students to stand up to bigotry and hate.
Antisemitism is increasing in Britain and around the world. To be able to challenge it, young people need to be able to recognise and challenge antisemitic messages and myths. This lesson teaches students about antisemitic tropes, their troubled history, their evolution and their present manifestation, and the harm that their circulation can cause. It is the first lesson in a unit designed with the support of the Association of Jewish Refugees (AJR) that helps teachers have conversations with learners about contemporary antisemitism in a safe, sensitive and constructive way. Build on this lesson with more material from the unit ‘Discussing Contemporary Antisemitism in the Classroom.’
Citizenship and action | Religion and ethics | Talking and Listening
A Teach Peace lesson from War Child.
What happens to children in war and conflict? Drawing on War Child’s experience protecting children’s rights in war affected countries? Learners will unpack what we mean by war and conflict and the children’s rights consequences, from becoming refugee to being forced to fight as a child soldier.
Citizenship and action | Talking and listening
A Teach Peace lesson from War Child. Explore the geography of conflict and the fact that many wars have common threads.
Examine the impact of conflict and how it disproportionately affects children. Learners will build empathy with children affected by war by considering and researching the long-lasting effects on their lives.
Citizenship and action | Literacy
Can the world be at peace when 2,000 billionaires have more wealth than the 4 billion poorest people on Earth? Learners will critically engage with real research data on the effects of inequality, articularly as it relates to the incidence of violence within society.
Citizenship and action | STEM
1. Using your inner wisdom
A Teach Peace lesson from Values Based Education (valuesbasededucation.com). Values-based Education (VbE) is an approach to education for schools and other settings.
VbE gives learners access to an ethical vocabulary based on human values, such as respect, justice, integrity, harmony, trust and honesty. During this lesson learners will explore how to activate and use their inner wisdom to find their own inner peace.
This lesson focuses on inner peace.
Wellbeing | Religion and ethics
A Teach Peace lesson from War Child).
Think about what emergencies mean and what causes them. Investigate how conflict can change communities by focusing on the experience of refugees. Examine the different consequences of emergencies for children.
Citizenship and action | Literacy
A Teach Peace lesson from War Child.
Examine the different ways that children’s rights are protected. Learn how children’s rights can be compromised by conflict. Reflect on the similarities and differences between life in the UK and life for street children.
Citizenship and action | Wellbeing
This lesson looks at the rich history of Afghanistan and explores the long Afghan
tradition of kite-flying. It can be easy to forget that Afghan history didn’t start in 2001 with the US-British invasion. Young people, however, may have only encountered Afghanistan after the fall of the last government in 2021, when
the news was full of distressing stories. This interactive lesson will explore Afghan history and culture behind the news. It will also look at how kites have become symbols of peace and resistance.
History & Society | Creative expression | Citizenship and action
A Teach Peace lesson from Corrymeela.
The organiser of a march in the Northern Ireland city of Armagh receives frightening phone calls, and then a letter that threatens her life. What will she do? In this sample lesson from Corrymeela’s Upstanding, learners will hear the real-life story of Mary Healy, who marched with Peace People despite threats to
her life in 1976, which went on to win the Nobel Prize. This leads to an exploration of why it is so easy to be a bystander, and what it takes to stand up for peace.
A Teach Peace Secondary lesson from West of Scotland Development Education Centre (WOSDEC).
Explore Scotland’s connection with Nelson Mandela and feel empowered to take action on issues of importance to them today. Leaners will explore the context of apartheid South Africa and the life of Nelson Mandela and the Scottish anti-apartheid movement and practise speech-making as an awareness-raising tool.
History & Society | Citizenship and action | Creative expression
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Curriculum for Excellence Scotland**
Curriculum for Excellence: Responsible citizens |
Curriculum for Excellence: multi-discipilinary learning levels 2-3
Social Studies | | SOC 3-01aI can use my knowledge of a historical period to interpret the evidence and present an informed view.
Social Studies | develop my understanding of the principles of democracy and citizenship through experience of critical and independent thinking
Social Studies | SOC 2-16b Z | I can gather and use information about forms of discrimination against people in societies and consider the impact this has on people’s lives.
Literacy | Reading |LIT 2-15a | I can make notes, organise them under suitable headings and use them to understand information, develop my thinking, explore problems and create new texts, using my own words as appropriate.
Social Studies | SOC 3-05a | I can describe the factors contributing to a major social, political or economic change in the past and can assess the impact on people’s lives.
Social Studies |SOC 3-06a | I can discuss the motives of those involved in a significant turning point in the past and assess the consequences it had then and since.
Literacy | Reading |LIT 3-15a | I can make notes and organise them to develop my thinking, help retain and recall information, explore issues and create new texts, using my own words as appropriate
National Curriculum, England
History | KS3 | challenges for Britain, Europe and the wider world 1901 to the present day | Britain’s place in the world since 1945
Citizenship | GCSE (AQA) | 2. Life in Modern Britain |Identity | The need for mutual respect and understanding in a diverse society
Citizenship | KS4 | human rights and international law
History | KS4 | the ability to create their own structured accounts, including written narratives, descriptions and analyses.
English Language | KS3 | giving short speeches and presentations… participating in formal debates and structured discussions…
English Literature | KS4/GCSE | AO1 - Read, understand and respond to texts
History | GCSE | Thematic studies, which can include war, peace and nonviolence
“British Values” | Mutual respect and tolerance of different faiths and beliefs
SMSC - Moral | | interest in investigating and offering reasoned views about moral and ethical issues and ability to understand and appreciate the viewpoints of others on these issues.’
Curriculum for Wales
In this lesson from the London Mining Network, learners will find out about a situation in which nonviolent direct action succeeded. This is the story of the successful nonviolent direct action taken by the Mirrar people and their allies against the Jabiluka uranium mine which was to be built on their ancestral land dangerously close to the Kakadu National Park in Northern Territory, Australia. Learners will carry out a
guided group research project on the topic.
Citizenship and action | Geography