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Dan's History Highway

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270+ ready to use and fully resourced History lessons.

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270+ ready to use and fully resourced History lessons.
Slavery and abolitionism - 7-page full lesson (notes, card sort)
danguineydanguiney

Slavery and abolitionism - 7-page full lesson (notes, card sort)

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In this lesson students read through background information before reading through the extremely detailed evidence cards which they break up into the following factors : the role of abolitionists, economic reasons, and the role of enslaved people. From this scaffold students can then create a piece of extended written work and this lesson works really well as assessment preparation also. Please watch the short video to see just how well this set of resources works in action and in the classroom and I hope your students get just as much out of it as mine.
Assessment for Learning Personalised Marking Stickers for History Teachers
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Assessment for Learning Personalised Marking Stickers for History Teachers

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My students love finding these in their books! Not only are they prettier than my messy handwriting but they make marking much faster and more precise. Each of the twenty seven statements is based specifically upon common skills and targets from the curriculum and they can be personalised further if needed. Simply print off on sticky label paper et voila. They look impressive and work superbly well for the busy teacher who wants to fine tune their AFL.
FDR & the 1932 election - 7 page full lesson (notes, campaign activity, plenary)
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FDR & the 1932 election - 7 page full lesson (notes, campaign activity, plenary)

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This is one of my go-to lessons when I want to impress. Students are given information packs on the lead candidates and create their own short election speech. I always encourage students to make posters, rosettes, and bring in jackets and ties where possible before finishing with a class vote. I hope you enjoy this lesson as much as I always do.
Revision Menu – World War One Peace Settlements (CIE)
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Revision Menu – World War One Peace Settlements (CIE)

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Last year I achieved ninety-four% A*-A in my I G C S E exam results. The year before it was eighty-eight%, making the History Department consistently high achieving and one which students want to sign up for. One of the main reasons for this is the detailed and focused set of revision menus I give to my students to help them prepare for exam success. Now you can have them too. Of all of my resources these revision menus are my must-haves! I hope they can be of much use to your students as they are to mine. If you enjoyed this resource please leaf through my collection of other revision menus and resources. This pack focuses on the Peace Settlements, includes space for student notes, and includes revision content for the following topics: What were the motives and aims of the Big Three at Versailles? Why did all the victors not get everything they wanted? What was the impact of the peace treaty on Germany? Could the treaties be justified at the time?
Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe - 9-page full lesson (notes, card sort, jenga activity)
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Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe - 9-page full lesson (notes, card sort, jenga activity)

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This is one of my favourite lessons. Students read through a very detailed set of notes focusing on the roles of Gorbachev, Reagan, economics, Solidarity and people power. Students then test their understanding of their newly acquired knowledge through a game of Jenga (attach the cards to a block - students place them into factors using the colour coordinated bricks. This activity can also be done as a more traditional card sort). Students then complete the lesson with a word search to promote key terms and literacy. I really hope your students enjoy this as much as mine do. It is pitched at very able 16-18 year old students.
Who opposed the New Deal? - Full lesson pack (odd one out starter, notes, journalist task, plenary)
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Who opposed the New Deal? - Full lesson pack (odd one out starter, notes, journalist task, plenary)

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This is a great lesson which encourages students to hone their historical skill of interpretation. Students begin by suggesting which of the historical characters are the ‘odd one out’ and this leads to a discussion about why so many of them were assassinated. From here we explore a detailed set of notes about those who opposed the New Deal and students complete the structured journalist activity to consolidate their learning. Students complete the lesson by reviewing some historiography and placing their argument within this. My students always make excellent progress in this lesson and I hope your students enjoy it just as much.
Life in Mao's China - 5-page lesson pack (starter PPT, notes, movie maker activity,  plenary PPT)
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Life in Mao's China - 5-page lesson pack (starter PPT, notes, movie maker activity, plenary PPT)

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In this lesson the class begin by playing a game where they are given a series of statements and need to vote with their feet to decide if they are true or false. Once incorrect they return to their seats and the winner is crowned as the last person standing. (This starter is based on the Great Helmsman goes swimming in order to introduce concepts of power and virility in Maoist China.). The class then work through detailed notes about different groups in society and are given a movie making activity. The lessons concludes with a great plenary PPT in which students are given a series of caption competitions and need to try to use some of the knowledge they have accrued thus far. There are examples given. My students love this topic and I planned these resources during my time teaching in Shanghai so they really mean a lot to me and my students. I hope you can get just as much use from them.
Twentieth Century China – Trivial Pursuit Revision Activity (180+ questions)
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Twentieth Century China – Trivial Pursuit Revision Activity (180+ questions)

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My students love this activity. 180+ questions based on the following categories: The Qing Dynasty Warlords Mao’s rise to power The Great Leap Forward The Cultural Revolution Daily Life It takes a little while to cut out the cards and the board and works best once laminated but your students will love this revision activity. The questions are designed to boost subject knowledge and focus on precise historical detail which in turn helps student examination performance. I hope your classes enjoy this activity as much as my IGCSE and IB classes always do.
Suffragettes - 8-page full lesson (notes, sources worksheet)
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Suffragettes - 8-page full lesson (notes, sources worksheet)

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In this lesson students read detailed background knowledge before attempting to handle 9 very carefully selected source on the Suffragette movement. There are a range of written questions which students are asked to respond to. This is a powerful lesson which always generates a healthy level of debate in my classes.
History Assessment (Causation) What were the causes of Slavery?
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History Assessment (Causation) What were the causes of Slavery?

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This is a one-page Power point slide (editable) which can be set as a project-based assessment on the causes of slavery. Students are given clear criteria (beginning, developing, expected, and mastery) and a set task with a list of key words which can help them. The slide also has a section to show students how long they have to work on this assessed piece of work. Please note: this assessment task can very easily be edited for any assessed piece of work focusing on the second order concept of causation and works especially well with my lesson resource on the causes of slavery which can be found here - https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/the-causes-of-slavery-7-page-full-lesson-notes-hexagonal-card-sort-11920311 Thanks for your interest in this and I hope it helps you ! Best wishes, Daniel
Black Death - 6-page full lesson (notes, card sort)
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Black Death - 6-page full lesson (notes, card sort)

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This activity includes twenty detailed cards which are shaded to show the political, social and economic impact of the Black Death. Students acquire exceptionally precise and carefully selected historical detail and learn about the impact on salaries, the creation of the British pub, and the growth of the perfume industry as well as the many negative aspects of the disease. Its one of the lessons my students really enjoy because they get the opportunity to question previously held assumptions which in turn gives their ability to argue a case greater texture and resonance. I really hope you enjoy this as much as I do - makes for a great debate preparation task as well as a precursor to an extended piece of assessed written analysis.
The Battle of Hastings - 5-page full lesson (notes, card sort)
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The Battle of Hastings - 5-page full lesson (notes, card sort)

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After reading through the background information students sift through the 21 evidence cards provided to create columns which show how skill, luck, mistakes, and technology explain the outcome of the Battle of Hastings. This is an ideal task to help scaffold student responses to a piece of extended written work or timed assessment. Cards are colour-coded for differentiation.
The murder of Julius Caesar - 10-page full lesson (notes, card sort)
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The murder of Julius Caesar - 10-page full lesson (notes, card sort)

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After reading through the background information students sift through the twenty four incredibly detailed evidence cards provided to create columns which show how power, politics and people explain the reasons Caesar was killed on the Ides of March. This is an ideal task to help scaffold student responses to a piece of extended written work or timed assessment. I hope your students enjoy this lesson as much as mine do!
Was Haig a donkey/Butcher of the Somme? - 15-page full lesson (notes, card sort)
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Was Haig a donkey/Butcher of the Somme? - 15-page full lesson (notes, card sort)

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This is one of my most popular lesson activities. Here students will collate information to both sides of the historiographical debate and make links between their factors to create a visual map which they can use for an extended piece of written analysis. I am especially proud of the level of precision and detail in the historical content here as this is a niche area of mine formed whilst working for the Royal British Legion on the Somme a few years ago. The 60 cards are broken down and colour-coordinated for differentiation purposes into personality, tactics, technology, and politics in order to promote a factor-led response. I really hope you enjoy this activity and that your students get as much from it as mine do.
Slave experience - 9-page full lesson (notes, card sort, emotional rollercoaster task)
danguineydanguiney

Slave experience - 9-page full lesson (notes, card sort, emotional rollercoaster task)

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In this lesson students work through background information before completing a card sort to show positives and the many negatives of slave life from getting off slave ships through to working on plantations. Students need to place the events in a chronology in order to recount a story of the conditions and place them on an emotional rollercoaster graph to show which conditions they felt were the most horrific and why. This is a powerful lesson which should be taught with great sensitivity and a flavour of which can be experienced in the video file attached.
How and why did castles change? 6-page full lesson (notes, worksheet, project)
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How and why did castles change? 6-page full lesson (notes, worksheet, project)

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This is one of my students’ absolute favourite lessons. They are given the starter activity ‘sellotape challenge’ and are asked to design a castle defence on their desks. Following this students then proceed to work through an incredibly detailed set of notes which outline the key features and changes as well as reasons for this. The cloze / scaffolded activity then tests and measures comprehension. I really hope your students gain as much from these activities as I know mine always do. These activities are fantastic for setting up a ‘build a castle competition’ - the kind of showcase event that brings great kudos and energy to a History Department!
Abyssinian Crisis - 6-page full lesson (starter, notes, source analysis tasks, charades, plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Abyssinian Crisis - 6-page full lesson (starter, notes, source analysis tasks, charades, plenary)

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This is one of my most detailed IB lessons. Students are introduced to the topic with a hard hitting starter (please use with discretion) to introduce them to the idea of chemical weapons and to make links over time. They then read through the extremely detailed information pack before completing a range of source activities designed to help them with IB Paper 1 source handling skills. Students then test subject knowledge with the charade cards provided and conclude with a plenary PPT. I hope your students get as much from this lesson as mine always do.
Was King John a hero or zero? - 6-page full lesson (starter PPT, notes, card sort, voting plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Was King John a hero or zero? - 6-page full lesson (starter PPT, notes, card sort, voting plenary)

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This lesson will really get your students to engage with evidence handling and to think like Historians. I am confident that the level of detail and precision in my resources is much stronger than you will find elsewhere (because of the amount of pride I take in my own historical research). During this series of activities students are introduced to John through singing along to the lyrics of a Disney song in the PPT. They then read through background information before siphoning through 31 detailed factor led and differentiated evidence cards about King John’s life ranging from his military defeats in France through to his love of bad wine and fondness for chewing his nails. Students place these two columns, positive and negative qualities and choose which cards are most significant and which to discard. The lesson concludes with a PPT asking students to vote on a report that John was the ‘worst Briton’ ever. I hope you enjoy this lesson as much as my students do! It is an excellent lesson in helping students comb through evidence to form historical interpretations.