An amazing selection of resources of Law and Religious Studies. Suitable for KS3, KS4 and KS5.
All our resources are created with love and care, we take pride in ensuring that they are beautiful to look at, because how are we expected to learn if things aren't pretty?
An amazing selection of resources of Law and Religious Studies. Suitable for KS3, KS4 and KS5.
All our resources are created with love and care, we take pride in ensuring that they are beautiful to look at, because how are we expected to learn if things aren't pretty?
This crib sheet is a great resource for helping students organise their notes on breach of duty (standard of care).
The sheet can be used during lessons, as a homework activity or as a revision activity.
The sheet has boxes to complete on:
Blyth v Birmingham Waterworks (1856)
Who is the reasonable man?
Modified standards of care
This worksheet would be suitable for all exam boards and would also suit BTEC Unit 1.
Looks great printed in colour but also prints perfectly well in black and white.
This is a great way for students to organise their knowledge on criminal appeals.
The sheet has space for them to fill in key information on the different types of appeals and also key cases.
There is space to fill in:
Magistrates’ Court Appeals
Crown Court Appeals
Key Case: C v DPP (1995)
Why a good appeals system is important
The sheet is bright and colourful and looks great printed in colour. Students can fill in the digital PDF and it also works fine printed in black and white.
This worksheet is a great resource to help support students making notes on the judiciary.
This is a great well to help students structure their work in class or as homework or revision.
Boxes to fill in are:
Separation of powers
How are judges appointed
Different types of judges
Tribunals, Courts and Enforcement Act 2007
Advantages and Disadvantages
This is a bright, colourful sheet that looks great printed in colour but can also print in black and white. It also looks good completed digitally.
This sheet allows students to organise their knowledge on legal professionals for A-Level law.
The sheet has various spaces for them to fill in and is a great task for in class lessons but can also be used as a homework or revision task.
Boxes to complete:
Solicitors
Barristers
Legal Executives
Should the legal professions be merged? Arguments for and against
The sheet looks great printed in colour but also works perfectly well printed in black and white.
It can also be completed digitally.
This template is designed for A-Level law but would suit all subjects that have evaluation style questions.
The template helps students to structure their answer, with clear space for evaluation and evidence to support arguments.
It also helps students get used to writing the start and finish of their paragraphs using the wording of the question so as to show clear links.
Looks great in colour but prints fine in black and white.
This crib sheet is designed to help support students as they study contract law remedies.
It can be useful for structuring notes in class, as a revision activity or as a homework task.
The sheet looks great printed in colour but also prints fine in black and white.
Boxes to complete:
What are the limitations on the availability of damages?
Hadley v Baxendale
How are damages calculated?
Rules for equitable remedies
This sheet is designed to help students structure their notes on Law Reform.
It has four boxes to fill in, these are designed to fit the four roles of the Law Commission but you could use them in other ways.
These are great to help students structure their notes during class but are also a helpful homework or revision exercise.
Designed for the Eduqas curriculum but will suit other law exam boards.
This crib sheet is designed to help students support their learning of law making as part of A-Level Law.
The crib sheet is great to support students in making notes but is also perfect for a revision activity or as homework.
There are boxes to fill in:
Influeces on Law Making
Types of Bills
Dicey’s Theory of Parliamentary Sovereignty
This crib sheet is designed to help support students in studying statutory interpretation.
This can be used to help students structure notes in class, as a homework activity or as a revision activity.
The sheet has four boxes to fill in information about the four types of statutory interpretation:
Literal Rule
Golden Rule
Mischief Rule
Purposive Approach
The sheet is fun and colourful with images based on some of the key cases for each type of statutory interpretation.
This crib sheet is a great resource for helping students organise their notes on exclusion clauses as part of contract law.
The sheet can be used during lessons, as a homework activity or as a revision activity.
The sheet has boxes to complete on:
Signature
Notice
Ticket
Reference to another document
Previous course of dealings
Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977
Consumer Rights Act 2015
This worksheet would be suitable for all exam boards although it has been designed for Eduqas.
Looks great printed in colour but also prints perfectly well in black and white.
Topic: Delegated Legislation
Unit: Sources of Law (English Legal Systems)
Exam Board: Eduqas
Paper: Paper 1
This table contains the three cases students must known for delegated legislation. These are the cases that will appear in every 15 mark application answer.
Students have spaces to fill in the facts and ratio decidendi for each case.
The cases are:
Agricultural Training Board v Aylesbury Mushrooms (1972)
Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd v Wednesbury Corporation (1948)
R v Home Secretary, ex parte Fire Brigades Union (1995)
This can be used as a starter in a revision lesson or as a homework activity.
I get students to fill in as much as they can without their notes first and then use their notes to complete the table.
Topic: Precedent
Unit: Source of Law (English Legal Systems)
Paper: Paper 1
Exam Board: Eduqas
This case table is designed to help support students with doing revision on precedent.
It contains the tier one cases (most important) that students will have to know in order to answer a 15 mark application questions on Paper 1.
This can be given as a revision or homework activity.
I get students to fill in as much as they can without their notes by themselves, then work together and finally using their notes.
Topic: Necessity Defences
Unit: Criminal Law
Exam Board: Eduqas
Papers: Paper 2 & Paper 3
This case and statute table is a great revision resource for A-Level law students. It contains gaps to fill in the facts and legal principle for the key cases for necessity defences.
These cases are the ‘tier 1’ cases and sections. These are cases and sections that will appear in every problem question answer for that defence. The relevant defences are duress, self-defence & necessity.
Cases included:
R v Cole (1994)
R v Howe (1987)
R v Hudson & Taylor (1971)
R v Willer (1986)
Palmer v R (1971)
R v Owino (1996)
R v Shayler (2001)
Re A (Conjoined Twins) (2000)
Statutes included:
Criminal Justice & Immigration Act 2008, s 76
Criminal Justice & Immigration Act 2008, s 76(1)(b)
Criminal Justice & Immigration Act 2008, s 76(3)
How I Use This Resource
I give the sheet to students and give them five minutes to complete as much as they can by themselves without notes.
I then give them a further five minutes to work as a group.
They can then complete the table with notes if there are still gaps.
I usually have the table on the board and fill it in throughout if students as me for clarity or shout out any answers! By the end of about 15 minutes every students should have a completed sheet.
Topic: Other Defences
Unit: Criminal Law
Exam Board: Eduqas
Papers: Paper 2 & Paper 3
This case is a great revision resource for A-Level law students. It contains gaps to fill in the facts and legal principle for the key cases for other defences.
These cases are the ‘tier 1’ cases and sections. These are cases that will appear in every problem question answer for that defence. The relevant defences are consent and mistake.
Cases included:
R v Donovan (1934)
R v Reid (1973)
R v Tolson (1889)
How I Use This Resource
I give the sheet to students and give them five minutes to complete as much as they can by themselves without notes.
I then give them a further five minutes to work as a group.
They can then complete the table with notes if there are still gaps.
I usually have the table on the board and fill it in throughout if students as me for clarity or shout out any answers! By the end of about 15 minutes every students should have a completed sheet.
This crib sheet is designed to help support students who are studying criminal law. It is based around the capacity defence of insanity.
The crib sheet can be used to help make notes in class, as a revision activity or as a homework task.
It looks great printed in colour but can also be printed in black and white.
Boxes to complete:
Defect of Reason
Disease of the Mind
Nature and Quality of Act
Act was Wrong
The problem of diabetes
R v Clarke (1972)
This crib sheet is designed to help support students as they are studying voluntary manslaughter.
The sheet can be used as a revision activity, as a homework task or as a way to make notes during lessons.
The sheet looks great if it is printed in colour but can also easily be printed in black and white.
Contains boxes to complete:
Homicide Act 1957, s 2
Abnormality of the mind
Recognised medical condition
Significantly contribute to killing
Substantially impaired
This is an A3 poster that can be printed out and stuck around the classroom. It shows the learning journey that students following the Eduqas A-Level Law syllabus will follow.
It is based on my own SOW which teaches one unit at a time. It also has my own lesson highlights and skills build up on it. You may want to modify it to suit your own SOW.
Looks really good printed, there is one margin issue (the arrow next to university gets cut off), I literally drew the point on with a red marker on mine and you can’t tell until you are close up!
This sheet is a great way for students to organise their knowledge of bail.
It has several spaces to fill in whilst you go through your lesson, it can also be used as a revision activity or homework activity. It also works as a good complement to online learning as students can email you the completed sheet.
Spaces to complete are:
Definition of bail
Advantages/disadvantages table
Police bail
Court bail
Attempts to restrict bail
Bail conditions
A nice pastel theme which is very colourful. Looks great printed in colour but also prints fine in black and white. Can also be filled in digitally.
This crib sheet is designed to help students whilst they study delegated legislation.
The sheet can be filled in during class to add more scaffolding to notes, or as a homework activity or, alternatively, it makes a brilliant revision resource.
The sheet has spaces to fill in:
Types of Delegated Legislation
Controls on Delegated Legislation
Substantive ultra vires
Procedural ultra vires
This is designed for the Eduqas A-Level law specification but would suit other exam boards as well.
This is a fun game to play with your students during revision lessons. Students can also play it in small groups as part of their own revision.
Each pair/group will need a dice or an online dice roller.
How to Play
Teacher displays a case name on the board
Student 1 rolls the dice
Student 1 answers the question
If the student gets it correct they get a point
Repeat with student 2
You may want to prepare by doing a list of cases on a PowerPoint or you could use a random list generator or spin the wheel to generate cases.