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Medieval World: The White Ship
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) that examines the consequences of the White Ship disaster of 1120. The lesson covers King Stephen, Empress Matilda and (briefly) the Anarchy. It also offers an opportunity to consider the issue of gender in medieval Europe.
Activities include
Starter activity in which students write a definition of illegitimate.
Analysis of a list of King Henry I’s children to identify why the White Ship disaster presented such a problem.
Analysis of King Henry’s family tree to identify a suitable heir to the throne (prior knowledge of William Rufus will aid pupils here).
Discussion of the pros and cons of Henry I’s decision to name Matilda as his heir.
Source analysis to explain why the reign of King Stephen became known as the Anarchy.
Analysis of the Treaty of Wallingford to consider who won the civil war.
Extension on whether Matilda’s gender was the main reason she never ruled England.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering aspects of the Medieval World.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: Achievements of the Women's Movement
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and one Word Document that examines the achievements of the Women’s Rights Movement in post-war America in relation to equal pay, the Equal Rights Amendment, abortion, domestic violence and women’s depiction in the media. The roles of NOW and Women’s Lib are also covered.
Activities include
Odd one out starter activity that tests earlier elements of the course; Red Scare, Civil Rights etc.
Connection activity linking the problems facing women, the actions of the Women’s Rights Movement and the extent of success.
Matching activity on the actions of Now and the Women’s Liberation Movement.
Ranking activity on the relative achievements of the Women’s Rights Movement.
Reading and comprehension activity on the reasons for opposition to Women’s Rights Movement linked to the aims and actions of the Movement.
Concluding judgment on the relative importance of NOW and the Women’s Lib to the success of the movement.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: Causes of the Women's Rights Movement
PowerPoint (with 4 slides) and two Word Documents that examines the causes of the Women’s Rights Movement in post war America. It considers the contributions of scientific and technological developments and the roles of Eleanor Roosevelt and Betty Friedan in inspiring movement.
Activities include
Starter thinking activity on what other protest movements may have inspired the Women’s Rights Movement.
Source analysis activity on the status of women based on an extract of The Feminine Mystique.
Connection activity on the consequences of scientific and technological developments for women.
Reading and comprehension activity on the roles of Roosevelt & Friedan in inspiring the movement.
Concluding judgment on the relative importance of the individuals in causing the movement.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 45min depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: The Birmingham Campaign
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and one Word Document that examines Martin Luther King’s Birmingham Freedom Marches of 1963 as part of the wider Civil Rights Movement. It considers the consequences of the campaign and whether it can be judged a success or a failure.
Activities include
Starter activity in which students order the stages of the non-violent direct action tactic.
Reading and comprehension activity on the events of the Birmingham Campaign.
Source inspired discussion on the morality of the Children’s Crusade.
Source analysis activity on a Kennedy quote about Bull Connor.
Ranking activity on the consequences of the Birmingham Campaign.
Interpretation question to write or discuss whether the campaign can be judged a success.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
Henry VIII: Wolsey's Rise to Power
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and two word documents that examines the reasons for Thomas Wolsey’s rise to power at the start of King Henry VIII’s reign.
Activities include
Source analysis starter to establish Henry’s priorities and the nature of his government at the start of his reign.
Reading and comprehension task to complete a table on the leading candidates to run Henry’s government.
Source analysis task to establish the power vacuum at the heart of Tudor government at the start of Henry’s reign.
Source comparison task to judge whether they agree on why Wolsey rose to power.
Plenary ranking activity to stimulate discussion on the most important factor in Wolsey’s rise to power.
Designed for the teaching of OCR History Y106 The Early & Mid Tudors.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: The Black Panthers
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and one word document that examines the aims of the Black Panthers, and their successes and failures as part of the wider Civil Rights Movement. It also considers whether the FBI’s view of the organisation as dangerous was accurate.
Activities include
Starter activity on what a photo can tell us about the Black Panthers.
Source analysis exercise on the aims of the Black Panthers.
Reading, comprehension and highlighting activity on the successes and failures of the Black Panthers.
Interpretation activity testing the FBI’s view of the Black Panthers.
Plenary discussion / ranking activity on the most important reason for the failure of the Black Panthers as an organisation.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
German Nationalism: The North German Confederation
PowerPoint (with 7 slides) and three word documents that examines the aftermath of the Seven Weeks War between Prussia and Austria and the establishment of the North German Confederation. The lesson also considers the nature of the North German Confederation.
Activities include
Analysis of the Treaty of Prague to consider the attitude of various countries to its terms.
Comparison activity on the Holy Roman Empire, the German Confederation & the North German Confederation to establish similarities and differences.
Sorting activity to decide whether the North German Confederation was democratic or not.
Evidence based discussion on the extent to which the North German Confederation was dominated by Prussia.
Matching activity on the different attitudes to Bismarck by political groups in the Prussian Parliament after the end of the Seven Weeks War.
Source analysis on the changing nature of German nationalism after 1866.
Designed for the teaching of OCR History Y314 The Development of German Nationalism 1789-1919.
Lesson Length: 1hr 30min depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: The Crisis at Little Rock
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and two word documents that examines the causes and consequences of the crisis at Central High School, Little Rock in 1957 as part of a wider series of lessons on the Civil Rights Movement in America.
Activities include
Quick Quiz recapping previous learning on the Montgomery Bus Boycott.
Starter activity on why a photo of the Little Rock Nine attending school is unusual.
Reading & comprehension activity on the crisis at Little Rock. Pupils complete a table on the attitudes, aims and extent of success of the key figures and groups involved in the crisis.
Discussion on why Governor Faubus pursued the policy he did, linked to prior learning on the obstacles black people faced in the south when trying to vote.
Source analysis exercise on the key reason Eisenhower chose to intervene.
Plenary discussion on why Little Rock was the key turning point for integrating schools after the initial resistance to Brown vs Board of Education (with supporting statistics).
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: Sit-ins and Freedom Rides
PowerPoint (with 4 slides) and two word documents that examine the Sit-in Movement (1960) and Freedom Rides (1961) within the context of the wider civil rights movement.
Activities include
Starter activity in which pupils interpret a picture of the first sit in to understand what is going on and why.
Reading, comprehension and comparison activity to establish the aims, tactics and extent of success, etc, of the two campaigns.
Discussion to reach a judgment on which campaign was more significant in advancing the rights of Black people.
Discussion of the changing tactics employed by the Sit-in Movement and Freedom Rides in comparison to the Montgomery Bus Boycott to establish an understanding of why these later tactics were more effective.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
USA - A Divided Union: The Montgomery Bus Boycott
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and a worksheet that examines the actions of Rosa Parks, the resulting Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955-1956 and the end to segregation in bus transportation.
Activities include
Quick Quiz recapping previous learning on the murder of Emmett Till.
Discussion to probe pre-existing knowledge on bus segregation and Rosa Parks’ role in challenging it using two photograph prompts.
Reading and comprehension exercise covering the details of the Montgomery Bus Boycott and its outcome, including the Supreme Court ruling on Browder vs. Gayle.
Discussion with photograph prompt on why the tactic of a boycott was particularly effective.
Debate on whether the bus boycott was more significant than Brown vs Board of Education for the improvement of civil rights.
Plenary conclusion in which pupils write whether the NAACP or the Montgomery Improvement Association were more important in ending bus segregation.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 7 A Divided Union: civil rights in the USA, 1945-74.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The Stuarts: Persecution of Witchcraft
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and three word documents that examine the causes of persecution of witches in Early Modern Europe. The lesson covers causes such as poverty, climate change, misogyny, warfare, changing attitudes to magic, the Reformation and the invention of the Printing Press. Specific witch hunts which are considered are the St Osyth witches (1582) the North Berwick Witch trials (1590) and the Manningtree Witches (1645).
Activities include
Starter activity in which students analyse the mortality records from Cumbria to identify high levels of popular superstition.
Matching activity on the causes of witchcraft persecution with the correct explanation.
Reading and comprehension of three examples of witch hunts from the early modern period to identify what factors caused persecution to take place.
Linking activity to consider how the causes of persecution were interrelated.
Source analysis to identify how the rise in scepticism helped end witchcraft persecution.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering aspects of Stuart Britain / Early Modern Europe.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
China: The Great Leap Forward
PowerPoint with five slides and two worksheets that examines Mao’s attempts to industrialise China via the First Five Year Plan and the Great Leap Forward. Reasons for the success of the First Five Year Plan are contrasted with reasons for the failure of the Great Leap Forward.
Please note that the lesson refers to collectivisation and the Great Famine but does not delve into the specific causes and consequences of these.
Activities include
Quick Quiz starter activity focused on prior knowledge of China’s economy and Mao’s agricultural reforms.
Reading and comprehension on the First Five Year Plan and the Great Leap Forward leading to an activity to identify differences between the two.
Matching task on the causes of the failure of the Great Leap Forward.
Source analysis activity on a speech by Mao on the reasons for failure of the Great Leap Forward.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 2 Breadth Study B4 China: Conflict, Crisis and change, 1900-89.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace
The First World War: General Haig
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and one worksheet that examines the actions of General Douglas Haig during the First World War and the impact this has had on his reputation. The lesson covers the Battle of the Somme in 1916, the Battle of Passchendaele in 1917 and the Hundred Days Offensive in 1918. The lesson also considers the competing views of Haig as a ‘butcher’, an incompetent General or a victim of circumstance who was ultimately a successful commander.
Activities include:
A reading and comprehension exercise in which pupils highlight successes and failures in a passage on Haig’s career.
A ranking exercise on Haig’s biggest failure as commander of the British Army.
A source analysis activity to establish the differing views of General Haig.
A true or false activity in which students judge various statements true or false and provide evidence in support of their view.
A concluding paragraph / plenary discussion in which pupils argue in favour of the most convincing interpretation.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 2 A1 The Origins and Course of the First World War, 1905-1918.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace
The French Revolution: Napoleon
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and two word documents that examine whether Napoleon Bonaparte betrayed the ideals of the French Revolution.
Activities include
Starter activity that requires pupils to discuss what the painting of Napoleon’s Coronation as Emperor in Notre Dame suggests about the success of the French Revolution.
Source analysis and comparison exercise on two views of the Coup of Brumaire supported by explanatory text to provide context on the event.
Chronology activity to put nine key events in Napoleon’s life in the correct order.
Evidence colour coding activity to determine whether Napoleon’s actions betrayed or maintained the ideals of the French Revolution.
Concluding paragraph for pupils to formulate their overarching judgment on the enquiry question.
Final slide with supporting notes and images for teacher to summarise the end of Napoleon’s reign and the Revolutionary period as a whole.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering aspects of the French Revolution.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The British Empire: Causes of the American War of Independence
PowerPoint (with 4 slides) and two word documents that examine the causes of the American War of Independence. Factors/events that are considered within the lesson are the Seven Years War, The Royal Proclamation of 1763 limiting westwards expansion, The Stamp Act, the Boston Massacre of 1770, the Boston Tea Party and the events at Lexington in 1775. The issue of whether the British or the American Colonists were more responsible for causing the war is also considered.
Activities include
Starter activity that requires pupils to match groups relevant to the situation in America with the correct definitions to establish the different sides in the conflict.
Student analysis of statistical data and a map to establish why the Thirteen Colonies were becoming culturally, economically, politically and practically difficult for Britain to control in the late 18th Century.
Comprehension task in which pupils read about six key events in the build up to war and complete an evidence table of how the British and/or the American colonists were to blame for the deteriorating relationship in each case.
Pupils judge which side was most to blame for each of the key events and rank their importance in causing the War of Independence.
Using a source by James Otis as stimulus, pupils reach an overarching judgment on whether the British had acted like tyrants in the build up to the War of Independence.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering aspects of the British Empire.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The First World War: Franz Ferdinand & tension in the Balkans
PowerPoint with 7 slides and three worksheets that examines the crises in the Balkans between 1900 and 1914 . The lesson covers the Austro-Hungarian annexation of Bosnia in 1908, the Balkan Wars of 1912-13 and the Assassination of Franz Ferdinand.
Please note this lesson does not cover the aftermath of Franz Ferdinand’s assassination such as the Blank Cheque or actual outbreak of the First World War.
**Activities include: **
Matching exercise in which the key countries and territories in the Balkan region are matched to descriptions of their status at the start of the 20th Century.
Comprehension and analysis activity in which pupils use the information they have learned from activity one to explain the likely attitudes of key countries and territories to new developments in the region such as the 1908 annexation, the Balkan Wars and the assassination of Franz Ferdinand.
Reading and comprehension activity in which pupils read the detailed story of Franz Ferdinand’s assassination and identify evidence that demonstrates the responsibility of elements within the Serbian Government, the responsibility of the Black Hand and the unwitting responsibility of Austria & Franz Ferdinand himself.
Plenary discussion on how the assassination in Sarajevo could spark the First World War
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 2 A1 The Origins and Course of the First World War, 1905-1918.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace
Medieval World: The Feudal System
PowerPoint and two worksheets that focuses on the purpose of the Feudal System in England during the reign of William the Conqueror and who benefited from it and who did not.
Activities include
Reading and comprehension activity in which pupils read a passage on the Feudal System and identify evidence in the text to support a series of statements.
Labeling exercise of a diagram of the Feudal System using the previous passage for support.
Activity in which students link various groups in Anglo-Norman society with what they gained from the Feudal System and with what it required of them.
Ranking task to consider which group or individual benefited the most / least from the Feudal System.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering the Medieval World.
Lesson Length: 1 hour depending on pace.
Medieval World: The Domesday Book
PowerPoint that focuses on the purpose of the Domesday Book, the role it played in William the Conqueror’s reign and what the document can tell us about England in the eleventh century.
Activities include
Source analysis activity in which pupils work out the reasons the Domesday Book was compiled based on an extract from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle.
Domesday Book data analysis activity to determine what it tells us about land use, the role of women in Anglo-Norman society, the balance of power between Normans and Saxons, the power of the monarch and the Church, etc.
Analysis of a timeline of William the Conqueror’s reign to determine the importance of the Domesday Book in helping him to control England.
Extension source analysis activity to determine why the Domesday Book was called Domesday.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering the Medieval World.
Lesson Length: 1 hour depending on pace.
Medieval World: Robin Hood
PowerPoint and worksheet that consider whether Robin Hood was a real historical figure. The lesson focuses on what elements of the legend of Robin Hood have a basis in history and also whether the Robin Hood story conformed to, or challenged, medieval society.
Activities include
Starter activity in which pupils complete a spider diagram on what elements of the Robin Hood legend they already know about.
A main activity in which pupils read the legend of Robin Hood and highlight any real historical events, figures or locations contained within the story that they are aware of. Pre-existing knowledge of King Richard, King John and the Crusades is helpful for this activity.
Pupils consider a timeline showing what evidence for Robin Hood’s existence is available from the reigns of various medieval monarchs to judge when and if he really existed.
Sorting activity in which pupils decide whether elements of the Robin Hood legend conformed or threatened medieval society.
Conclusion in which pupils discuss why historians might still find the legend of Robin Hood useful in helping them study the past despite the limited evidence he existed.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering the Medieval World.
Lesson Length: 1 hour depending on pace.
Women and the Vote: Emily Davison
PowerPoint, source pack and worksheet that consider whether or not suffragette Emily Davison intended to kill herself at the Epsom Derby and the importance of her actions to the wider campaign for votes for women.
Activities include
Starter activity in which pupils discuss the meaning of the word martyr.
Teacher introduction on who Emily Davison was supported by information on the PowerPoint including a video of the incident at the Derby which caused her death.
Main activity in which pupils analyse a variety of sources and fill in a table to determine whether Davison was intent on martyring herself or whether what happened was an accident.
Plenary conclusion discussion on why Davison’s death was important for the suffragette campaign and whether her intentions matter?
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class.
Lesson Length: 1 hour depending on pace.