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 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 sheet helps students to organise the key knowledge they will need to know about the CPS.
It has several boxes to fill in which they can do during lessons or as additional homework.
It also makes a great revision activity.
Boxes to fill in are:
Role of CPS
Narey Review
Glidewell Report
Macpherson Report
Auld Review
Abu Hamza (2006)
Setting the Standard
It has a nice pastel brown theme which looks very pretty. It looks great printed in colour but also works fine printed in black and white. Can also be filled in digitally if you prefer.
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 sheet allows students to organise their knowledge on the criminal justice system.
It contains spaces to fill in the bare minimum of information that they will need to know.
There is space to fill in:
Case information forT & V v UK (1999)
Criminal trial process
Table for different types of trials
Summary of Magistrates’ trials
Summary of Crown Court trials
It is bright and colourful, looks great printed in colour but works perfectly well printed in black and white.
Students can also add text into the digital PDF version if you prefer.
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 revision homework booklet is designed for students to complete each week.
Exam Board: Eduqas
Year: Second Year
Topics: English Legal System; Tort Law; Criminal Law; Contract Law
Number of Activities: 40
This booklet is designed to provide structured revision activities for law students in their second year of study.
Students should complete one page per week. These can be done in order or teachers can select specific activities if they want students to revise certain topics.
The revision booklet has the following activities:
Judiciary: Create a PowerPoint
Defences & Remedies: Cornell Note Page
Vicarious Liability: Match-up
Economic Loss: Research
Solicitors & Barristers: Article extract
Murder: Problems & Solutions
Elements of Criminal Liability: Sticky Notes
Tribunals: Crossword
Non-Fatal Offences: Online Flashcards
Defences: Flashcards
Criminal Appeals: Poster
Involuntary Manslaughter: Quiz
Bail: Essay Plan (25 Marker evaluation)
Psychiatric Injury: Case Report
Formation: Task Choice
Juries: Blooket
Civil Trial Process: Correct the errors
Alternative Dispute Resolution: Backwards Essay Plan
Civil Appeals: Picture
Occupier’s Liability: Knowledge Organiser Gaps
Express Terms: Summary Sheet
Precedent: Essay Plan
Implied Terms: Fill the Gaps
Sentencing: 10 Mark Question
Trespass: Quiz
Criminal Trial Process: Triple Sided Flashcards
Robbery: Write your own exam question
Law Making: Past Paper Question
Discharge: 25 Mark Question
Remedies: Case Summary Sheet
Economic Duress: Knowledge Organiser
Res Ipsa Loquitur: Diagram
Privity: Re-write notes
Negligence: Spider diagram
Nuisance: Mark an answer
Voluntary manslaughter: Create your own resource
Strict Liability: Case List
Magistrates: Fill the gaps
Misrepresentation: Mind-map
Delegated Legislation: Glossary
Although this is designed for Eduqas A-Level Law it can be modified to suit other exam boards.
Updated August 2024
This is a brief key knowledge organiser for Occupier’s Liability.
It has everything that students must know before the exam, including the most important cases and sections of the Occupiers’ Liability Acts.
Colourful and fun to look at, a very nice floral design.
Designed to compliment the rest of their study and/or more detailed knowledge organisers.
This template is a brilliant resource to help support students at KS3 and KS4 Religious Education when looking at Bible verses.
It can be printed, stuck in books and then filled in. You could even ask them to create a folder or book just with these in for each bit of key scripture at GCSE.
Can also be used to support A-Level.
It is also great fun for Bible journalling!
This worksheet is designed to support students in research the Law Commission, Reform of the Offences Against the Person (2015) report.
Designed for the Eduqas A-Level Syllabus but would also be relevant for the OCR syllabus or BTEC Unit 2.
A simple table with criticisms on one side and recommendations on the other.
A good visual task to help support them with their evaluation of the OAPA 1861.
This is a 66 page booklet that contains six tasks for students to complete over the Summer Holidays between Year 12 and Year 13.
It is designed for Eduqas A-Level Law (you could remove the evaluation question and swap it for a different style question if you wanted it for another exam board).
Tasks:
Case Sheets
Goals for next year
Glossaries
Find the Connections
Problem Question (25 marker)
Evaluation Question (25 marker)
More information about the tasks is below
Case Sheets
Contains a list of cases from English Legal Systems, Tort and Criminal. These have been selected as the most important cases (the ‘know it or die’) cases from Year 12.
Students have to fill in the facts and legal principle for each case. There are five case boxes per page.
Goals
Students should set five smart goals to help them in Year 13
Glossaries
Split into ELS, Tort and Criminal. Students have to write a definition for each key term they are given. There are 11 terms per page.
Connections
Students are given 20 terms. They have to sort these terms into four groups of five. There is one connections page for ELS, Tort and Criminal. It contains key terms, legislation, cases etc.
Problem Question
The problem question is a 25 marker based on fatal offences from criminal law.
Students have space to answer within the booklet
Evaluation Question
The evaluation question is a 25 marker on murder.
Students have space to answer within the booklet
This booklet is designed for year 11 students as they enter year 12 law. It can be used for any syllabus but was designed for Eduqas A-Level. It is completely general though so will suit any exam board (also suitable for BTEC).
It contains a selection of additional reading that students can look at over the summer.
This includes:
Books
The Secret Barrister
Fake Law
The Rule of Laws
Podcasts
Law in Action
The Hearing
Law Pod UK
RightsUp
Websites
The Secret Barrister Blog
UK Supreme Court Blog
Baby Barista
Lawyer Watch
Bright and colour it is designed to be appealing and accessible for all students.
This handy flow chart will help students work through the various elements of greivous bodily harm when studying criminal law.
It is bright and colourful and they can stick it in their revision notes, or you can just post it onto Teams/Classroom etc. for them to copy.
Really helpful when they are starting to structure lessons on the OAPA 1861.
Designed for A-Level Law, Eduqas syllabus but suits any A-Level law course or BTEC.
This resource is designed to be provided to Year 11 students who are taking Law at A-Level.
It is designed for the Eduqas syllabus but is pretty universal! It can easily be adapted to suit any course you want :) The introduction says it is for Eduqas and you will be studying contract, but easily edited (you definitely have my permission to do this)
Tasks:
(1) Sort the key terms into criminal and civil
(2) Write a definition of the key terms from task one
(3) Research a recent English or Welsh law case and make a note of: facts; importance; what was decided; why you chose the case
(4) Research arguments for and against the death penalty ready to write an essay about it in week 1 (this can be used as a baseline assessment of student writing style/ability)
Document is bright, colourful and fun. It is meant to be appealing to students. It is designed to start to give them a foundation in terminology but is also helpful as a teacher to diagnose ability levels early on.