AQA GCSE 9-1 Elizabethan England, 1568-1603
The overarching aim of this and the subsequent bundle of eleven lessons is to question and explore how Elizabeth tried to assert and establish her authority in the early years of her reign.
The lessons are therefore linked together to build up a picture of her difficulties in trying to overcome this.
This is the third lesson and attempts to clarify the problems Elizabeth faced as a ruler in her first ten years; from being a female to the succession, foreign policy, Ireland, taxation and religion.
Students have to answer a variety of different questions from the start and engage in a thinking quilt to challenge them and link definitions to key words.
Students are given a chance to review her biggest problems either in a knockout tournament or using structured questions.
This will enable them to answer two of the exam question types; the ‘interpretation’ question and the ‘write an account’ question.
Two plenaries focus on retrieval practice and what the students have learnt in the lesson.
The lesson is enquiry based with a key question using a lightbulb posed at the start of the lesson and revisited at the end to show the progress of learning.
The resource includes suggested teaching strategies, retrieval practice, differentiated materials and comes in Powerpoint format if there is a wish to adapt and change.
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