The French Revolution
The aim of this lesson is to assess whether Louis deserved to be executed
Firstly, students have to put a number of events in chronological order leading up to the execution. This can be done wither as a verbal or card sort activity.
They are also given a narrative account of Louis XVI’s last day, from which they have to compose a number of tweets, imagining how he might have felt at the time.
There is some further source analysis and video links to help them with their learning.
The main task is to turn the classroom into a mini courtroom. Students are given information either defending King Louis XVI or opposing him. They will then make choices and decide whether to defend or send him to the guillotine. There is a writing frame to accompany this task with argument words to help if required.
The final task is to decide what happened to Louis’ body and why this was done.
A find and fix plenary will consolidate their learning from the lesson, with answers provided.
The lesson comes with retrieval practice activities, differentiated materials, suggested teaching and learning strategies and is linked to the latest historical interpretations, video clips and debate.
The lesson is enquiry based with a key question posed at the start of the lesson and revisited at the end to show the progress of learning.
The lesson is fully adaptable in PowerPoint format and can be changed to suit.
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