I am a History Teacher with a love for producing high quality and easily accessible history lessons, which I have accumulated and adapted throughout my teaching career.
I am a History Teacher with a love for producing high quality and easily accessible history lessons, which I have accumulated and adapted throughout my teaching career.
A complete SOW (9 lessons) including an assessment centered around the enquiry question ‘How far was the Industrial Revolution a turning point?’
The central aim is that pupils recognise change and continuity not a single homogenized centrally-planned event, but a process that occurred over time (150 years). They will engage in the second-order concept of change and continuity that will be centered on the Industrial Revolution.
This download includes:
Powerpoints
lesson plans
SOW
Knowledge organiser
All reading documents are included as Word docs.
Fully editable
Title: Why do we remember Queen Elizabeth?
Learning objectives:
-Identify the achievements of Queen Elizabeth I.
-Decide which are the most important/significant achievements of Queen Elizabeth I.
-Evaluate why these achievements are important and compare them to how she is remembered in history.
The lesson is aimed at KS3 level students. Its intention is to investigate the main achievements of Queen Elizabeth and decide which are the most significant. It also leads to the discussion of why she is remembered as the virgin queen rather than a more formidable name to suit those achievements. This can lead to really interesting discussions in my experience.
The main activities are a gap fill introduction, diamond nine activity and a PEE paragraph to conclude. This is followed by class discussion and a homework.