I am a Geography specialist who has also been teaching GCSE history for the past few years. I have uploaded some lessons for History and Geography. I hope people find them useful.
I am a Geography specialist who has also been teaching GCSE history for the past few years. I have uploaded some lessons for History and Geography. I hope people find them useful.
Key Stage 3 lesson for a scheme of work on The Rise of The Dictators. In this lesson we look at how the Nazis used both terror and propaganda and censorship to indoctrinate & control the populace of Germany. We start with a simple retrieval practice quiz. We then look at how the Nazis used terror. the pupils look at both the SS and Gestapo, rating the different aspects of each for terror and intimidation, explaining as they go. We then look at Josef Goebbels and propaganda and censorship. The pupils read each method and rate their effectiveness before deciding which method was the most effective. We look at a propaganda poster from 1936 and answer a question around this, and finish with a to what extent style plenary where the pupils can either debate or write about whether terror or propaganda & censorship was the most effective method of gaining control over the people,
I hope this proves useful and saves you some time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
Lesson on significant factors in the fight for women’s rights after the second world war. The lesson will probably cover two hour long lessons, but can easily be shortened. We start by looking at the Ford Dagenham strike in 1968, we look at why the strike happened and what it’s impact was. We them create a chart of importance using other significant events since WW2. The pupils then complete a Wheel of Life for all the lessons they have completed on women’s rights so far and finish by answering a question on which factors were the most significant using a writing frame to help them. Hope this helps. Included is:
starter
Activity on Ford Dagenham Strike in 1968
Video Clip on the strikes
Chart of Importance activity
Wheel of life for womens rights
GCSe style question with structured guidance on how to answer.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
AQA GCSE history lesson for The Power & The People thematic unit. In this lesson we look at the longer term causes of the Civil War before the short and long parliaments.
We start with a retrieval practice grid filled in for the P&TP Unit so far. We briefly look at James I and his relationship with Parliament. We have a look at Charles portrait and the pupils try to deduce his personality and beliefs from that, they then fill in a character profile of Charles and note his greatest strengths and weakness. We then look at the role of Parliament in the 17th Century, before looking at Parliaments grievances against Charles. The pupils complete a thermometer analysis to work out which of Charles’ actions made parliament the most angry. We then look at William Laud and his changes before completing a source question with guidance. The pupils finally complete an extentometer exercise to debate how much of Parliaments dislike of Charles is about his personality or about his politics or both.
I hope that this saves you some valuable planning time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
AQA GCSE History lesson as part of the Reform and Reformers Section of the Power and the People unit. The lesson is roughly one hour long. We start with a source question on the Copenhagen Fields Protest March. We then look at who the Tolpuddle Martyrs were and why they were transported. The pupils watch a video clip then read the information sheet. The main task is constructing a movie poster on the story of the Tolpuddle Martyrs. The poster is divided into sections and involves several skills such as summarising, describing and evaluating as well s being creative! There are some extension questions on the significance of the Tolpuddle Martyrs to finish the lesson off. Included is:
Starter activity on Copenhagen Fields march
Video clip on the Tolpuddle Martyrs
Movie Poster Task using an Information sheet provided
Extension questions on the siginifcance of the event
hope this helps.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
This bundle contains four lessons that are 1 hour long as part of the Norman Conquest SOW. All lessons are fully resourced, prepared, ready to photocopy with video clips.
lesson titles include
What was life like in Early 1066?
Who should be King in 1066?
Who won at Stamford Bridge?
Why did William win the Battle of Hastings.
Hope these lessons help.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
The second lesson in a Key stage 3 unit of work on the Welfare State. The lesson covers the reasons why the decade was known as ‘The Hungry Thirties’, then we seek to assess whether the decade deserves this name or not. We start with a simple multiple choice retrieval practice starter. We then move onto the start of the thirties and briefly introduce the Labour Party. We then look at a series of photographs from the 1930’s and the pupils try to work out what is happening and what this tells us about life in Britain in that decade. We then watch a video clip on the decade and the pupils write down examples of hardship and examples of prosperity. We then look at the situation from the point of view of various types of people. Using the emoji pictures the pupils annotate the emojis based on what reaction these various people would have to their situation in the decade with an explanation. We then answer the question whether the decade deserves the nickname. This is done with the pupils responding to a ‘To what extent do you agree with the statement’ type question. A countdown plenary finishes the lesson.
I hope that this proves useful and saves you some time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
This lesson looks at all the potential contenders for the throne in 1066. The pupils will use the contenders cards to complete a worksheet which features a variety of ways the pupils can rate the claims of the contenders including a visual scoring system. The pupils then complete a campaign poster on who should be king, this has detailed success criteria and guidance for the pupils. The lesson therefore can be 2 periods or shortened if needs be. included is:
Bayeux tapestry starter
Video clip on contenders
The contender information cards
Worksheet activity
Campaign poster with success criteria.
Hope this helps.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
A Key Stage 3 History lesson on corruption in the Catholic Church as part of a Tudor’s SOW. The lesson includes:
The pupils will explore the evidence for corruption in the Catholic Church from Thomas Cromwell’s investigation then finish with a writing task with a structured writing frame to guide them.
Starter.
Video interpretation.
Source interpretation on Cromwell’s investigation.
Writing task.
Scrabble plenary.
All resources are provided.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
A Key Stage 3 double lesson or two single lessons on the Great Fire of London. No extra resources are needed for the lesson, but it does work best if the pupils all have a copy of the lesson on Google Classroom or such like. The activities are all differentiated so pupils can choose the level they work at. The lesson finishes with an extended writing task.
Included is
Video clip on how the great fire started
Differentiated Activity worksheet
Evaluation exercise on how Great the fire was.
Hope this helps.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
GCSE Anglo Saxon and Norman England 1060-87 for the new specification 2016. In this lesson we look specifically between the relationship between the Norman Kings (William I & II) and the Church.
We start with a editable retrieval practice grid, already filled in for the topic.
We then look at what William’s concerns about the Church, this is a chance for the pupils to familiarise themselves with some key vocab. We then briefly look at the Investiture Controversy (1078) and William Rufus’ accession to the throne. We study William’s fractured relationship with the Pope and Anselm. The pupils conduct a summarising activity on this topic. Pupil then create spider diagram on the overall relationship between the kings and the Church. They then use this to create a graph (a relationshipometer!) on how the relationship has fluctuated over time. We finish with a GCSE-style question with some points for the pupils to try and develop.
Hope this saves you some valuable planning time!
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
The third lesson in a Key stage 3 unit of work on the Welfare State, but could easily be adapted to Key Stage 4.
We start with a simple retrieval practice starter where the pupils have to put the events in order, you just adapt to suit your previous learning.
We then introduce the term antibiotic and what this means and why it might have been important in the war effort and elsewhere. We then look at the story of the discovery of penicillin. The pupils stick the outline road into their books at watch the information slides as the teacher scrolls through. They are fully illustrated with some amusing sound effects too. The pupils then watch a short video which discusses the science in more detail. We then look at an interpretation and the pupils complete a differentiated task answer the questions around the interpretation in 10mins. We then finish with a ‘to what extent do you agree’ type question where the pupils consider the significance of the discovery compared to other scientific discoveries.
I hope that this proves useful and saves you some time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer