This is a question/work sheet that has been created to go with the watching of the movie Selma. It would be a great resource to use towards the end of a teaching unit of US Civil Rights as some assumed knowledge of Martin Luther King and events of the US Civil Rights Movement is required.
You will have to source the movie yourself, this is simply a question sheet to accompany it so that students are still learning and engaged.
If you like this resource, please give feedback and a rating :)
Mrs Ratu
This task is intended to assist students in understanding who Hitler was, what his ideologies were and his impact while studying Nazi Germany or the Holocaust.
This is a template for students who can copy it exactly or use it to create their own. It is a good introduction activity to assist students in understanding the leader of Germany.
It is a good task for a cover lesson or if you are teaching remotely.
I hope you find this useful.
Tara
This resource was created for teaching of Indigenous rights and freedoms within an Australian context. It is perfect for the Australian National Curriculum Stage 5 Rights and Freedoms unit.
In the UK, it could be used during Black History Month to teach about the experiences and struggles of the Australian Aboriginal people.
Any questions about this resource, please do not hesitate to get in touch.
If you purchase, please leave feedback and a rating :)
Mrs Ratu
This is an assessment I created for Year 10 students (15-16 year olds) for their study of the Holocaust.
We studied the Holocaust in part as a comparative study looking at other genocides around the world - Armenian, Cambodian, Rwandan and Bosnian. In order to give students some flexibility, they were able to choose which genocide they were to look at in conjunction with the Holocaust.
This is designed for a higher ability Year 10 group and would also work for older students.
Tara
This is a lesson from a Holocaust Unit that focuses on Hitler’s book Mein Kampf as a source. Students learn about Hitler’s ideology and that of the Nazi Party from the study of a documentary about his book ‘Mein Kampf’.
This lesson includes a lesson plan, the links for short YouTube videos and the Mein Kampf documentary, a documentary worksheet, essay questions, and a Chalk Talk routine poster.
This should take 2-3 50-55min lessons.
Hope it can be useful to you in your classroom :)
This resource is a great introduction to Martin Luther King’s famous ‘I Have a Dream’ speech. There is background information about him and the civil rights movement happening at the time. There is a task at the end for student to complete. No student devices necessary.
This has been designed to take one 50-55minute lesson. A great resrouce to add to your teaching of Civil Rights, Black History or key historical figures across many different curriculums and countries.
Feel free to adapt to suit your needs.
Please leave some feedback and a rating if you enjoyed this resource : )
Mrs Ratu
This resource has been created so that students can undertake video and website analysis on the Montgomery Bus Boycott which was started when Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a white man on a bus.
Great inquiry bused learning task as students can move at their own pace. It has been designed to take one 50-55 minute lesson, however can take longer if needed.
Students will need access to a computer/device and headphones in order to watch the videos and answer the questions.
If you like this resource, please leave some feedback :)
Mrs Ratu
This is a full resource pack that teaches students how to analyse historical sources in detail. It includes a PPT and the worksheet that students complete as your work through the PPT.
It is designed to take two 50-55minute lessons.
It uses the acronym OMCAPUR for students to remember what they need to be looking for when analysing both primary and secondary sources, and it analyses World War One cartoons and recruitment posters (one world focus and one Australian focus).
The worksheet also has some tasks that could be used for homework to check students understanding after the lesson.
This resource goes well with the classroom poster pack for OMCAPUR source analysis.
If you like this resouces, please leave a review of your purchase :)
Mrs Ratu
This resource includes the task details for students and a detailed marking rubric for the teacher.
It is a research task that can be used for ages 14-18 and explores different ideas and movements and their historical roots - capitalism, chartism, communism, imperialism, nationalism and/or darwinism.
Students research their chosen idea/movement and complete both in-class and at home research, a written component, a source analysis component, a timeline and Harvard reference list.
If you purchase this resource, I would love for you to leave feedback if you find it useful :)
This is a set of A3 classroom posters to assist in the teaching and remembering of source analysis. Using the acronym OMCAPUR, students can quickly and effectively remember all the elements they need to be looking for in a source in order to understand and analyse it. OMCAPUR stands for:
O - origin
M - motive
C - content
A - audience
P - perspective
U - usefulness
R - reliability
Each letter of the acronym can be cut out and then the box with the explanation stuck below or beside. It is also colour coded to assist students. These can also be printed for students to glue in their books.
I have another resource which is a complete lesson on analysing WWI sources using the steps of OMCAPUR. It breaks it down really well for students to understand and goes well with this classroom poster is this is how you would like to teach source anlaysis. The lesson includes Powerpoint and student worksheet and takes approximately two 50-55 minute lessons to complete.
If you enjoy this resource, please leave a review :)
Mrs Ratu
This is a lesson I created for a unit on the Holocaust following the NSW Australian History Curriculum. It can be adapted for the Australian Curriculum for both Year 10 History and Senior Modern History.
Feel free to use it in English when studying war or other History topics.
Hope you find it useful! :)
I have developed some of the visible thinking routines to suit a History class. This have been created as classroom posters but could be made smaller and given to students to use when undertaking any of the activities.
Visible thinking routines included are:
Chalk Talk
Headlines
Think Puzzle Explore
Zoom In
Connect Extend Challenge
Circle of Viewpoints
Think Pair Share
Stop Look Listen
Each of these make learning very accessible to students and are a great way to change up the learning activities within the classroom. Each poster has the following:
title
brief explanation of the routine
step-by-step instructions for students to follow and implement in the
History classroom.
If you like this resource, please leave a review :)
Mrs Ratu