Cold War
This first lesson aims to set the scene of Europe from 1945 with the defeat of Germany.
The first part of the lesson investigates Hitler’s death, as the students break down and summarise some text into headings before writing a narrative account of the events.
The second part investigates the aims of the Big Three and what they agreed should happen to Germany and Berlin at the end of the War. Students scrutinise and decide what each of the leaders (Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill) might have said at Tehran and Yalta and complete a suspicions grid to be able to explain and justify these growing tensions.
The central theme throughout this and the proceeding ten lessons is to ask why civilians feared for their lives? In a new era after World War 2, suspicions and rivalries arose between the two new superpowers, the USA and the USSR. Each lesson explores these growing tensions and ultimately questions why people thought a nuclear war was imminent.
The resource comes in PowerPoint format if there is a wish to adapt and change and is differentiated.
I have also included suggested teaching strategies to deliver the lesson.
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Amazing resources as always. Informative and clear to follow with great lesson activities that stretch and engage students in equal measure. Amazing history lessons!
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