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The British Empire: Impact of the 1857 Indian Rebellion
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and four Word Documents that examines the impact of the 1857 Indian Rebellion.
Activities include
Quick Quiz Starter activity on prior lesson on the causes of the 1857 Indian rebellion.
Reading and comprehension on the impact of the rebellion on three individuals to consider whether their treatment by the British was justified; Laksmi Bai, Margaret Wheeler and Bahadur Shah Zafar.
Source analysis activity on whether the British responded to the rebellion with moderation.
Matching task on changes in British policy in the aftermath of the rebellion to ultimately judge whether Indian grievances were addressed.
Plenary discussion on the extent the Indian Rebellion of 1857 failed.
Homework task to explain two effects of Indian rebellion with supporting structure sheet with model paragraph focused on an earlier topic from Britain’s involvement in India.
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.
USA - A Divided Union: Malcolm X
PowerPoint (with 8 slides) and two Word Documents that examines the impact of Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam on the Civil Rights Movement.
Activities include
Quick Quiz starter activity on the Selma Marches (feel free to change depending on your lesson sequence)
Reading and gapfill on the origins of the Nation of Islam.
Source analysis (including brief video) on the appeal of Malcolm X’s message.
Source analysis activity to establish why Malcolm X and Martin Luther King were critical of each other.
Discussion based activity on the significance of Cassius Clay joining the Nation.
Discussion based activity on why Malcolm X’s departure from the Nation of Islam limited his contribution to the civil rights movement.
Ranking activity on Malcolm X’s achievements.
Source analysis to consider whether Malcolm X’s approach may have provoked more change than he is usually given credit for.
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.
King Henry VII: The Yorkist Threat
PowerPoint (with eight slides) and three Word Documents that examine the threat posed to King Henry VII. The lesson focuses on the foreign and domestic support enjoyed by Francis Lovell, Lambert Simnel, Perkin Warbeck and the Earl of Suffolk as well as the strength of their respective claims to the throne and the longevity of their threat. The lesson also considers Henry’s success in use diplomacy, force and mercy in dealing with his Yorkist opponents.
Activities include
Starter activity source analysis on how secure Henry VII was on his throne.
Analysis of the Yorkist family tree to determine the extent of threat Henry faced after 1485.
A reading and comprehension task in which students complete a comparative table on the four main Yorkist threats.
A ranking activity on the Yorkist threats.
A matching task on how Henry used diplomacy to weaken the the Yorkists.
A discussion based task to establish the link between diplomacy and the threat of force.
A sorting task on the eventual fates of Henry’s Yorkist opponents and their supporters to help students consider the relative importance of various factors in dealing with the threat.
A ranking task to determine the importance of factors in determining Henry’s success against the Yorkists.
Designed for the teaching of OCR History Y106 The Early & Mid Tudors.
Duration: 2x1hr lessons approx.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
Slavery: Rebellions by Enslaved People
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and one Word Document that examines the resistance to slavery by enslaved people focusing on Toussaint Louverture in Haiti (1791-1804) and Sam Sharpe and the Baptist War in Jamaica in 1831. The lesson also considers what impact, if any, these rebellions had on Britain and its eventual abolition of slavery in 1833.
Activities include
Quick Quiz on prior learning on the slave trade (feel free to edit to fit your previous learning)
Starter activity sorting examples of resistance into active and passive.
Reading and comprehension tasks on the Haitian Revolution and Baptist War to identify similarities in causes and differences in events to explain why the Baptist War ended in failure in the short term.
Evidence analysis task on how the Baptist War might have helped bring about the abolition of slavery in Britain eventually.
Timeline analysis task to identify which revolt was more important in ending Britain’s involvement in slavery.
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.
China: From Mao to Deng
PowerPoint with eight slides and one Word Document that examines the transfer of power from Mao to Hua Guofeng to Deng Xiaoping between in 1976 and 1978. The lesson also considers the fall of the Gang of Four.
Activities include
Quick Quiz of prior learning focused on the demise of leaders in other parts of the course. Feel free to edit to fit your own topics.
A decision making exercise looking at the events of 1976-1978 from various perspectives to determine how and why power shifted from Mao to Hua to Deng.
Source analysis exercise on Hua and Deng’s respective attitude to reforms to determine why Deng emerged as China’s paramount leader.
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.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The Tudors: Early Modern Europe
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and three Word Documents that introduces the Early Modern period and contrasts it with the medieval period by considering changes in art, exploration & discovery, warfare, the status of women, architecture, astronomy, anatomy and the spread of knowledge. The lesson doesn’t reference the Tudors in any great depth but might be a useful introduction to a Tudor course or act as bridge between a medieval and early modern unit.
Activities include
Word association starter activity on the medieval period
Source analysis activity to identify developments in various aspects of life in the early modern period and then judge the extent of change having compared to the medieval period.
Discussion based task on why the fall of Constantinople in 1453 is sometimes seen as the start of the Early Modern period.
Timeline analysis task to consider why dating the start of the early modern period is difficult.
Analysis of two Asian sources to consider the limitations of the concept of an early modern period .
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering the Early Modern period.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
Weimar Germany: The Munich Beerhall Putsch
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and one Word Document that considers what caused the extent the Munich Beerhall Putsch was a failure for the Nazis.
Activities include
Quick Quiz on previous units studied at GCSE - feel free to change to suit your context.
Analysis of a timeline to identify why the Weimar Government was particularly vulnerable in November 1923.
Reading, comprehension and highlighting activity on successes and failures of the Putsch for the Nazis.
Ranking activity on the consequences of the Putsch for the Nazis.
Source analysis exercise to establish the consequence of Hitler on trial.
Discussion based comparison activity on the most threatening revolt faced by the Weimar Government.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 3 Germany: development of dictatorship, 1918-45.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The British Empire: Robert Clive
PowerPoint (with 5 slides) and one Word Document that examines the career of Robert Clive in India in the context of a modern petition that exists to have his statue in London taken down. The lesson considers Clive’s victory at the Battle of Plassey in 1757, his resulting wealth, the Treaty of Allahabad in 1765 and Bengal famine of 1770. The lesson also considers the wider context of the importance of Clive in extending the East India Company and Britain’s control over India.
Activities include
Quick Quiz on prior learning on the British in India (Feel free to edit to suit your prior learning)
Starter activity on the purpose of erecting statues.
Reading, comprehension and highlighting exercise on Clive’s life and career.
Ranking exercise on the relative importance of events in extending Britain’s control over India.
Source analysis activity on Clive’s justification for his actions.
Discussion on what arguments, if any, can be made about why the statue should be kept.
Plenary feedback about whether students agree with the petition.
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.
Bundle
German Nationalism: 1789-1847 Bundle
Six lessons covering the start of the OCR Y314 German Nationalism A Level Unit. The bundle is made up of six PowerPoints (one for each lesson) and eight supporting Word Documents. The lessons are as follows -
The Holy Roman Empire in 1789
The Romantic Movement
Napoleon and Germany
The Congress of Vienna
Prince Metternich
The Zollverein
Lessons are designed to last approx. 1hr depending on pace and contain a variety of different learning activities.
German Nationalism: The Zollverein
PowerPoint (with 8 slides) that reasons for the establishment of the Prussian Customs Union and its expansion as the Zollverein in 1834. The lesson also considers the establishment of railways in the German Confederation and Austrian opposition to the Zollverein.
Activities include
Starter matching activity on definitions of economic terminology relevant to the lesson.
Map analysis on the positive and negative economic consequences of the Congress of Vienna.
Map analysis on the utility of the Prussian Customs Union in solving Prussia’s trading problems.
Analysis of the German railway network to determine the success of the Zollverein.
Source supported discussion on the impact of the Zollverein on political and cultural nationalism.
Analysis of a timeline of the Zollverein to evaluate the extent of Austrian success in managing the threat to its dominance of the German Confederation.
Designed for the teaching of OCR History Y314 The Development of German Nationalism 1789-1919.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The First World War: Trenches
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and two Word Documents that examines the development of trenches during the First World War, their structure, the conditions that characterised them and the development of stalemate as a result.
Activities include:
Source analysis starter activity of a photo from the Battle of the Marne about the nature of fighting in the First World War.
A reading and comprehension task on the establishment of trenches. Pupils to find evidence to support various statements.
Labeling task on a diagram of a trench cross section.
Source analysis task to identify key aspects of life in the trenches; trench foot, boredom, rats, lice, mud, shell shock, etc.
Consolidation task in which pupils match key trench terminology to definitions.
Plenary discussion with picture source stimulus about why trench warfare led to stalemate on the Western Front.
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
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
Medieval World: The First Crusade
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and two Word Documents that examines the causes and outcome of the First Crusade.
Activities include
Starter activity in which students match definitions to different types of conflict.
Discussion of an annotated image of central Jerusalem to identify why the city was fought over.
Source analysis activity to determine how Pope Urban II motivated people to go on crusade with judgments made on whether these motivations were selfish or selfless.
A reading and comprehension exercise to identify reasons the first crusade was successful.
Ranking exercise to identify the relative importance of key factors.
Plenary discussion on whether the First Crusade took place for selfish reasons in the light of the events that occurred.
Extension map analysis of the Middle East after the First Crusade to determine whether the crusader states were in a strong or weak position.
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
Weimar Germany: Hyperinflation
PowerPoint (with 7 slides) and two Word Document that considers what caused the Hyperinflation crisis of 1923, its impact on society and how the Weimar Government dealt with the problem.
Activities include
Starter activity which requires pupils to recall key statistics related to the Treaty of Versailles.
Discussion based activity on how the Treaty of Versailles led to the invasion of the Ruhr by the French in 1923.
Discussion based activity on why the Weimar Government encouraged passive resistance / strikes in opposition to the French.
Source analysis exercise to establish the consequence of printing money for inflation.
Matching exercise on groups in German society and the impact of hyperinflation on them.
Judgment activity on whether different groups benefited or not from hyperinflation.
Discussion based activity on how Gustav Stresemann’s policies solved the hyperinflation crisis.
Extension / consolidation chronology activity of the key events.
Designed for the teaching of Edexcel iGCSE History 4HI1 Paper 1 Depth Study 3 Germany: development of dictatorship, 1918-45.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The Mid Tudors: The Succession
PowerPoint (with five slides) and two Word Documents that examine the extent the succession was stable during the mid-Tudor period. The lesson focuses on Henry VIII, Edward VI and Mary I’s plans for the succession and the extent those plans came to fruition. Please note that while the Lady Jane Grey Plot is covered in this lesson, it and particularly the reasons for its failure are covered in more detail in a separate lesson.
Activities include
Starter activity matching relevant terminology to the correct definition.
A reading and comprehension task that requires students to highlight evidence that the succession contravened the monarchs wishes during the mid Tudor period.
An activity in which the key considerations for the succession are ranked in importance for each of the monarchs in the period.
A discussion based activity on the extent Edward VI may have been influenced by Salic Law.
A judgment task to determine which mid Tudor monarchs were successful in achieving their aims for the succession.
Designed for the teaching of OCR History Y106 The Early & Mid Tudors.
Duration: 1hr lessons approx.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The Tudors: Mary, Queen of Scots
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and three Word Documents that considers the reputation of Mary, Queen of Scots, the threat she and the plots that surrounded her posed to Queen Elizabeth I and the controversies that surrounded her execution.
Activities include
Reading and highlighting activity on Mary’s life before her arrival in England to identify whether she was a victim of circumstance or a villain.
Comparison activity to determine why Mary was a threat to Queen Elizabeth I.
Reading and comprehension task to identify the reasons why the Revolt of the Northern Earls, Ridolfi, Throckmorton and Babington Plots failed.
Matching task on why Elizabeth was reluctant to execute Mary, Queen of Scots.
Discussion based activity on the extent Elizabeth was responsible for Mary’s execution.
Designed for teaching an academically able Key Stage 3 class covering the Tudors.
Lesson Length: 1hr depending on pace.
Resource reviews are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The Stuarts: The Great Plague
PowerPoint (with 7 slides) and one word document that examine contemporary beliefs about the causes of the Great Plague of 1665, the effectiveness of responses to the plague and reasons for the end of the outbreak.
Activities include
Source analysis exercise on Samuel Pepys’ diary to identify the cause of his concerns.
Quick Quiz activity focused on the Black Death (prior learning).
Matching exercise on causes of the spread of the Plague, both accurate & inaccurate.
Source analysis of a Daniel Defoe extract.
Analysis of responses to the outbreak to determine what they suggest people believed was the cause. Judgment on the effectiveness of these actions.
Analysis of a map to determine the importance of the Great Fire of London in ending the outbreak.
Analysis of the monthly death statistics to identify alternative reasons for the end of the outbreak.
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.
The First World War: The sinking of the Lusitania
PowerPoint (with 9 slides) that examines whether the Germans were justified in sinking the Lusitania during the war at sea during the First World War.
Activities include:
A quick quiz on previous learning focused on examples of other civilian deaths in the various topics we cover. Feel free to edit to fit your circumstances.
A source based analysis activity on why Germany targeted Britain with unrestricted submarine warfare.
A source based analysis activity on whether Germany adequately warned passengers of the dangers of journeying to Britain by sea during the war.
A source based analysis activity on whether the nature of the Lusitania’s cargo justified Germany’s actions.
A discussion activity on how the second explosion helped Germany justify its actions.
A source based analysis activity on the extent of British responsibility for the sinking of the Lusitania.
A timeline analysis activity to consider the extent the sinking damaged the German war effort.
Concluding discussion on the extent the Germans were right to sink the Lusitania.
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
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The First World War: The Battle of the Somme
PowerPoint (with 9 slides) and two Word Documents that examines whether the Battle of the Somme was a victory or defeat fro the British army.
Activities include:
A quick quiz on the opening stages of the First World War.
A chronology exercise in which the stages of General Haig’s plan of attack are put into sequence.
A matching exercise in which British errors are connected with the correct explanation.
A ranking exercise on Britain’s biggest error during the Battle of the Somme.
A sorting exercise on British successes and failures.
A concluding paragraph / plenary discussion in whether the Battle of the Somme was a victory or defeat for Britain.
A re-evaluation of that judgment after the tactic of attrition is introduced and considered in the context of the Somme.
A past paper exam style question (8 marks) on the Battle of the Somme.
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
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
Mid Tudor Crisis: Economics
PowerPoint (with six slides) and two Word Documents that examine what caused the mid-Tudor economic crisis. The lesson focuses on economic problems including debasement, enclosure, unemployment, population growth, war, declining trade, inflation, disease and famine. It considers the social consequences of these problems, government attempts to deal with them and ultimately who was responsible.
Activities include
Quick quiz focused on events from the reigns of Henry VII and Henry VIII that link to economic problems in the mid-Tudor period.
A reading and comprehension task that requires students to connect the economic problems with the correct social impacts & government attempts to deal with them.
A connection task requiring students to consider the interrelated nature of mid-Tudor economic problems.
A judgment task to determine who or what was responsible for each economic problem.
A judgment task to determine which figure in Tudor government was most responsible for the Mid-Tudor economic crisis.
A reading and evaluation exercise to determine the utility of common contemporary commentators on the mid-Tudor economic crisis.
Designed for the teaching of OCR History Y106 The Early & Mid Tudors.
Duration: 1hr lessons approx.
Resource reviews and ratings are always much appreciated and help others using the site.
The Stuarts: The Great Fire of London
PowerPoint (with 6 slides) and two word documents that examine the causes of the Great Fire of London, who specifically was responsible and its consequences for the development of London.
Activities include
Quick Quiz starter activity on some Great Fire of London key facts.
Source analysis exercise on the causes of the Great Fire.
Source analysis exercise (A-G) to investigate who was responsible for the Great Fire; Thomas Farriner or Robert Hubert.
Discussion based exercise on whether Hubert received a fair trial.
Discussion based exercise on why Christopher Wren and Valentine Knight’s plans for rebuilding London were impractical.
Conclusion on how far the Great Fire had a negative impact on London.
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.