I've been teaching history for four years, and I aim to provide lessons that are ready to go with minimal tweaking just to personalise the resource to your class and their prior learning. I'm a big fan of paired discussion, group work, debates, living graphs and hot seating, and I provide a variety of tasks in each lesson to ensure learning happens at a pace and that all learning styles are catered for. All feedback gratefully received.
I've been teaching history for four years, and I aim to provide lessons that are ready to go with minimal tweaking just to personalise the resource to your class and their prior learning. I'm a big fan of paired discussion, group work, debates, living graphs and hot seating, and I provide a variety of tasks in each lesson to ensure learning happens at a pace and that all learning styles are catered for. All feedback gratefully received.
This resource provides a one lesson overview of the slave revolt on St Dominique (later Haiti) and asks students to make a judgement as to how far it was the actions of Toussaint L'Ouverture that gave Haiti its independence, and how far it was events in and ideas coming from France.
Tasks include:
source based starter
living graph
identifying information to make an argument with
speaking to persuade in pairs
writing a structured paragraph that has been differentiated for learners between L3-L6 and may easily be adapted for SEN, or be part of an extended essay for the most able to achieve L7.
If you download this, please review! I'd love so WWW/EBI so I know what works well.
This lesson should follow a previous lesson on peasants as this lesson highlights the differences in gender roles.
Learning Objectives:
ALL: Will be able to describe the traditional roles of men and women in medieval times
MOST: Will be able to do so in detail
SOME: Will make inferences from a source that they will include in their detailed description.
This lesson is highly visual with pictures and a matching task for LA students. There is an element of numeracy in interpreting two graphs on the causes of death of each gender, and a literacy based task in which students write a diary entry of a peasant. I usually allow them to pick their gender, but it would be equally more valuable to make them all be women.
I've put on two PowerPoints as I taught this to two classes of differing abilities. There are no monumental differences.
If you like this lesson, have a look at my other Medieval Resources in my shop - I have a big chunk of resources that could form a large part of your scheme of work.
All necessary resources included, this lesson includes a music based starter, questions on a British Pathe clip, a cart sort exercise, a structured literary task and a guided research homework task that asks them to assess the prediction they made in the plenary. The big question that students can answer following this lesson is 'Why did people migrate to Britain after the Second World War?' The lesson covers both push and pull factors and examines why Britain wanted immigrants to come in the first place.
Lesson Objectives:
ALL: Will be able to identify reasons why Britain wanted immigrants and why people in the West Indies wanted to emigrate
MOST: Will be able to describe the push and pull factors and come to a conclusion as to why people migrated in the 1950’s
SOME: Will be able to bring their ideas together to explain why so many people migrated in the 1950’s and predict what effect this might have on communities in the UK
Suitable for all KS3, HA KS2 or LA KS4
All activities are differentiated and resourced, this lesson can be a standalone lesson or part of a series of lessons on either migration, race or post war recontstruction.
Too often do year 7 arrive in my classroom having learned the basics of the 1664 plague at primary school and so thinking they already know about the 1348 plague as the symptoms were the same. This creative writing task and role play revitalises what can for some students be a surprisingly well trodden topic.
NB: Primary school teachers - this task is equally appropriate for KS2 when covering the 1664 plague, although I imagine you will want to add more structure to the writing task.
Melton Task: Students will write a short story detailing the events in the fictional village of Melton when the Plague arrives. The story will be in three distinct stages that are already prestructured for students: What happens when the Black Death reaches Melton, how the villagers respond and what happens to the survivors.
Melton Background - this is the beginning of the story, or the prelude. You can get students to read this, read it too them or do a 'knock and read' to keep students following along. (This is where you begin to read and circle the room, knock on the table of a student you want to read next, then keep walking and knocking so as many as possible get to read. the uncertainty of knowing who is next makes all students keep up with the reading in front of them.)
Melton Role Play - the second part of the play asks students to detail a discussion the villagers might have had in the village church when they knew what they were up against. This task allows students to role play in groups, you will want to prompt them to be finding solutions - what 'cures' were on offer? What did people believe caused the Black Death?
Finally students will write up their story, most likely they will do this for homework. There is great potential for you to use your own success criteria to generate a relatively painless level for this work.
Thanks to Paul Durnall who gave me these.
A complete lesson - ready to go if you’re in a hurry, or full of tasks to pick and choose from if you have time to personalise this for your class.
All resources included on the Power Point to make it easy to access and print the necessary parts. Aims to cover these objectives:
* To understand how segregation came about
* To give detailed descriptions of segregation
* To explain the attitudes towards race that made segregation so pervasive
* To predict the challenges faced by civil rights campaigners
Includes a variety of tasks, classroom discussion with additional information for the teacher to support questioning, group work task with opportunity for students to move and a 7 minute clip of a primary source for students to evaluate.
Includes ideas for differentiation for each task and so is suitable as a stand alone resource for KS 3 and KS 4, a great intro to the topic for KS 5 but would need to be accompanied by a textbook on the topic to support the research task.
Originally designed to support teaching of Edexcel AS Level D5 Civil Rights module.
Straightforward lesson on factory conditions with the following tasks: A picture source starter, a 6 minute clip with accompanying questions, then a source analysis of a grisly factory death. Its totally gross, but year 8 love this disgusting source, particularly the bloodthirsty ones!
Learning Objectives:
ALL students will be able to describe how factories were dangerous for children
MOST students will be able to explain why factory owners employed children and how the children ended up there.
SOME students will be able to analyse the caption of a source to assess reliability.
This lesson has a large visual element as pictures are used to illustrate peasant tasks. There is a moving around the room to find out information element and a structured literacy tasks with literacy challenges such as 'include three adjectives in this answer'.
Resources fully differentiated, just print and go.
ALL: Will be able to describe aspects of a peasant’s life
MOST: Will be confident using keywords in their explanations
SOME: Will write a detailed account using keywords and grammar challenges to describe the life of a peasant
Fairly straightforward game for consolidating knowledge at the end of a unit, or for revising for a test. Board game is already assembled, students need a dice and a counter to represent them. Depending on what they land on, the game either gives a fact about factory conditions and instructs them to move further or back, or it prompts them to ask a question in order to advance one space. I have provided a question sheet, but you may want to supplement it with your own specific revision/ consolidation questions or get students to make up their own.
A huge thanks to Paul Durnall who gave this to me :-)
This resource is designed for use with the NEW History 8145 AQA specification Paper 1: Section A: Understanding the Modern World. This guidance is appropriate for:
1A America, 1840–1895: Expansion and consolidation
1B Germany, 1890–1945: Democracy and dictatorship
1C Russia, 1894–1945: Tsardom and communism
1D America, 1920–1973: Opportunity and inequality (all examples are from this paper)
So what is this? Well for each question I have prepared a 'how to' guide. This includes:
- Student friendly guidance to the marking levels
- Examples of what an answer at each level would look like
- a writing grid to help answer each question
- Student friendly self assessment grid for Assessment for Learning
- Suggestions for how to use these resources in your lessons and incorporate these skills into your SoW
DISCLAIMER: I do not work for AQA and I haven't examined for them. However my experience working as an examiner for Edexcel combined with four years teaching KS4 makes me as confident as its probably possible to be with this new exam spec. This resource is not provided by AQA, but has been compiled following a thorough investigation of all resources online as well as speaking to the advice centre at AQA.
This resource really got my year 7 classes engaged and involved with the 'who should be king?' conundrum because they really liked taking on the personas of the judges from the X factor. The PowerPoint is a pretty straightforward mini play that students read out to the class in the persona you have allocated to them. It worked really well as a whole class activity, but it could also work in groups.
As they go, students fill out their voting sheet, giving points out of ten for how well each contestant performs in each question. Your role as teacher is simply to ham it up, express suspicions about William's intentions, play the devil's advocate with students as they chose their King.
Finally, the class vote and a King is chosen. This lesson works best if students haven't yet found out who wins the battle of Hastings, it tends to put them firmly on Harold Godwinson's side!
The main bulk of this is the newspaper task, designed to meet the following LOs
* ALL: Will be able to describe aspects of what happened at Dunkirk
* MOST: Will be able to support an opinion as to whether Dunkirk was a defeat or a victory
* SOME: Will be able to use the origin of the source to comment on whether the source is reliable.
* ONE or TWO... Might be able to use their analysis of source reliability to explain why they trust some sources over others and how this has affected their own overall judgement.
There is a presentation about Dunkirk with pictures and statistics, you may choose to deliver this yourself, or stick it up around the room for students to find and examine themselves. They may then read the interpretations/opinions sheet in which various sources give their verdict on Dunkirk, and the Dunkirk survivors sheet which does the same. Finally I have included an electronic template for the newspaper front page that the students will write, this could be set for homework over a VLE, or printed and handed out for students to fill in. If they are making handwritten copies, I would recommend having a stash of plain paper ready as most students prefer to establish the layout themselves.
Thanks to Paul Durnall who gave me parts of this.
These are the first ten lessons I have taught in this course, some of the lessons require you to have the textbook provided by Edexcel for this paper but where this is the case I have made sure to let you know in the description.
This highly versatile resource can be used as part of a scheme of work (following on from my Toussaint L'Ouverture resource) or as a stand alone lesson. It is aimed at KS3 but contains sufficient challenge for KS4 and can be adapted down for LA KS3 (students aged 11-16). It has been designed to enable students to meet these objectives:
LO: To be able to describe the actions of these freedom fighters
LO: To make a comparison of their strengths and weaknesses
LO: To evaluate their significance in ending slavery in Jamaica
There are a range of activities contained, these include:
- a very brief overview of Jamaican history up to colonisation
- individual reading task that can be adapted to move students around the room
- paired peer to peer teaching task
- a worksheet that encourages additional detail to be used in answers (old NC level 5)
- opportunity for students to set their own criteria to assess significance
- opportunity for debate
- ideas for homework task and plenary
This lesson is ready to go once downloaded for the majority of learners, just minor tweaks needed if you want to differentiate down, or refer back to the prior learning of your class. Teacher notes included with slides.
Feedback gratefully received,
Ruth
This resource may be used as a stand alone lesson, or to follow on from other lessons on Toussaint L'Ouverture and Haitan independence (resources for this available in my shop). All activities and resources necessary are on the PowerPoint, although you will want to print some slides to allow students to complete the active listening task and perhaps so they can have the questions/ sources in front of them.
Aimed at KS3, (students aged 11-14) the lesson objectives are:
* To be able to describe what happened in the slave rebellion in Barbados in 1816
* To be able to find similarities between sources
* To be able to evaluate why a source may have one point of view
* To demonstrate how newspapers can give one sided information on history
This resource includes a variety of tasks including a 'Bussa Bingo' task for active listening while students watch a video clip. A set of questions on the content of the clip, two sources and questions asking students to compare these and use the origin of the sources to explain the differences.
Feedback gratefully received,
Ruth
This game is great for consolidation of a 20th C unit, or as part of a series of lessons on change and continuity, looking at the differences between the world in 1900 and the world in 2000. You will need a dice and a coin, students move along the board encountering either multiple choice questions on 20th c trivia such as 'which house hold appliance was invented in the 1910s?' (toaster). There are also events squares where students flip a coin to decide which event will take place and how many squares they will move as a result. eg 'If you throw a heads you land in the middle of the war between Russia and Japan in 1905 – miss a go. If you throw tails you witness the signing of the entente-cordiale between France and Britain in 1904 – have another go.'
Many thanks to Paul Durnall who gave me this.
This lesson is great for a brand new year 7 class and requires minimum preparation. You will need a suitcase of your possessions though as the lesson requires students to handle objects and make inferences as to what kind of person might own that stuff. I have done this lesson several times and I take things such as:
a travel guide
the case to Resident Evil V for Xbox 360
a picture of my goddaughter
an old pipe
a jar of marmite
a caribena
a copy of George Orwell's 1984
The better the objects, the better this lesson will go. I once encountered a teacher who used the contents of her handbag and the lesson flopped. You want to create some intrigue and use this lesson as the basis for building a relationship with your students and allowing them to get to know you.
The homework task allows students to select their own objects as evidence of who THEY are, all the while making inferences before they even get it drummed into them that that is a skill. Speaking of skills, here are the learning outcomes:
ALL students will know what evidence is and how we use it to build a picture
MOST Students will be able to make inferences from the evidence and link evidence
SOME Students will be able to explain how evidence can lead to misunderstandings
This is my absolute favourite lesson to teach to year 8 - I hope you enjoy it! It is quite a long one though, so either keep the pace up, use fewer sources, or break it into two lessons.
Lesson objectives:
LO: To know the story of the Gunpowder plot
LO: To use evidence to find out more about the Gunpowder Plot
LO: To use evidence to question whether the story as we know it is true.
LO: To decide whether Guy Fawkes was innocent or guilty and use the evidence to prove it
This lesson works best if you have students working in groups of 4, but I have done this in pairs and it works fine as well. You will need a focus on good group work, praise for groups that are working well together and rewards for groups who are really discussing and getting into the evidence. One year, I did have to set this lesson as cover so I have also included that as a resource in case you need a quick cover, or need work for a student in inclusion.
Enjoy!
Ruth
This is an active lesson which borrows heavily from thinkinghistory.com and their re-enactment instructions http://thinkinghistory.co.uk/ActivityBase/BattleofHastings.html
I have provided the resources I use before and after the re-enactment; weighing up the advantages of each side, a quick paragraph on who is most likely to win, the re-enactment itself and then the news report with NC level success criteria.
Lovely lovely lesson, works well as part of my Hastings Scheme of Work that you can find in my shop.
If you are using this bundle and are looking for Lesson 8, it is the lesson entitled 'Red Scare'. Apologies this is not more clearly labelled.
I'm uploading this lesson for free because the bulk of the lesson I taught on it was me drawing a flow diagram of the wall street crash and students making their own diagrams. There is a good clip though with a summary attached.
ALL will understand that the Wall Street Crash resulted from the boom years of the 1920s, will also be able to describe the effects of the WSC
MOST Will understand the relationship between the boom and the bust and explain the effects of the WSC
SOME Will be able to analyse aspects of both the boom and bust to identify where ideas of isolationism and laissez-faire had contributed to the crisis.
This resource is essentially just a link to an external website. I have uploaded it because it forms the fourth lesson of my scheme of work, but is not my creation so of course it needs to be a free upload. My Hastings lesson is also free if you want to try out a more substantial resource of mine and if you like this style of teaching, please have a look at the full scheme of work in my shop.
All I will say about this is you will read it through and be daunted, no doubt your year 7 class are new to you and new to the school, and possibly just a little crazy. But take a risk and give it a go! The more you make this a pantomime, the more fun it is and the more memorable it is for students.