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GCSE Cold War L19 - Gorbachev's New Thinking
This lesson contains:
A starter which gives the background of the Chernobyl disaster to lead onto this lesson about change in policy.
A task to note down information from the slides about the problems facing the USSR in the 1980s including social issues, lack of freedom, living standards and economic problems.
An introduction into Gorbachev and his new thinking ideas. Students use the information provided to complete the info on glasnost and perestroika.
An overview of the summits with Reagan and the INF Treaty. Students complete a table to store the info all together.
An introduction into the impact on relations from Gorbachev’s actions, including his impact with the people of the USSR and with the U.S. Students complete the worksheet.
A plenary quiz at the end to consolidate their knowledge.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
2 x Publisher Files
GCSE Germany L24 - Opposition to the Nazis
This lesson contains:
A starter on the board to recap some previous knowledge.
An introduction to opposition to the Nazis using a YouTube video and some discussion questions on the side of the PPT to answer.
A Cornell Notes worksheet which the students use to complete info on the different resistance groups including the Edelweiss Pirates, Swing Youth, the army itself and members of the clergy.
An opportunity to write 5-8 questions on the worksheet and complete a summary of what they have learned to consolidate.
A chance to study a source and practice source analysis on it using the on-screen guidance.
A plenary to complete a tick sheet to show the effectiveness of the opposition and how much of a threat each group was.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
2 x Word Files
GCSE Germany L25 & L26 - Nazi Policies Towards Women
Lesson 1:
A starter to recap previous course knowledge.
A background to the lives of women in Weimar Germany and the new views of women in Nazi Germany, including the principles of Kinder, Kirche, Kuche.
Some slides which give an insight into the Nazi views of women, with quotes from key Nazis, discussion of motherhood, girls and toy dolls etc.
An activity to use a series of sources, which can be used as a carousal or in groups, which students use to extract the key information and fill in their worksheets to show attitudes and laws about work, marriage and appearance.
A tick table with lots of statements about the success of Nazi policies towards women. Students judge the effectiveness of each statement, and overall.
A plenary to discuss the major changes since Weimar Germany.
Lesson 2:
A starter with a source and a two inferences question.
An opportunity to study a source from a woman at a Nazi rally, using the content, nature, origin, purpose method to analyse it.
A video from YouTube to help recap the policies and lws towards women to allow the completion of stronger analysis. An exemplar is also provided for you to potentially work through with your students and critique.
A final exam question asking ‘how far’ they agree with a given statement.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
5 x Publisher Files
2 x Word Files
GCSE Germany L17 & L18 - Hitler's Road to Chancellorship
Lesson 1:
A starter, which can be stuck in, to answer a quick quiz about previous course material.
A recap of the need for a ‘big push’ to capitalise on the Great Depression and how the Nazis planned to do this.
An overview of the different reasons Hitler gained massive popularity and power in this period, from those that the Nazis controlled (the SA, Hitler’s personality etc.), and those they couldn’t control (i.e. Depression, weak opposition etc.)
An activity to study the information provided and complete the worksheet to show the facts about each reason. This will take a bit of time.
An opportunity to rank the reasons in order of their importance and explain why.
Lesson 2:
A starter to recap from lesson 1.
An activity to complete the ‘road to power’ worksheet using the on-board information about the political scheming which led to Hitler’s appointment as chancellor. Alternatively, you could print the slides and students could work in groups to share the information as info cards.
A task to rank all reasons, including political scheming, in ‘significance circles’.
An opportunity to complete an exam question to consolidate knowledge.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
6 x Publisher Files
GCSE Germany L16 - The Impact of the Depression on Germany
This lesson contains:
A discussion of a starter image of America sneezing. Students interpret the quote about America sneezing and everyone else getting a cold.
A background into the situation by 1928 after the failure at the elections and the Nazis struggling. This is consolidated by an interpretations question.
An introduction to the Great Depression using info and a YouTube video to discuss the impact it might have on Germany.
A worksheet task to complete a gap fill diagram to show how the Depression in the USA affected German businesses, the economy and then the people, resulting in increased popularity for the Nazis. Excellent to keep in their books.
A task to study reasons why people now started voting for the Nazis from different social groups. There is a consolidation task on this at the end.
A plenary to argue for or against the views of two women sat at a cafe table.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
WW1 L16 - Was the U-Boat Campaign Successful?
This lesson contains:
A starter to study some selected provisions of the Defense of the Realm Act and student shave fun deciding which are important and which were just inconvenient.
An overview of the British blockade and its impact on Germany.
A discussion of the use of U-Boats and their purpose in trying to starve Britain. Students watch a short YouTube video and discussing the impact of the U-Boats and how the British could solve the problem.
An activity to learn about the home front by watching a YouTube video and completing information on the worksheet provided about rationing, allotments and the growing of food by women while the men were away.
A discussion of the unrestricted submarine warfare and the sinking of the Luisitania, leading to the U.S. entry into the war. Students complete a worksheet with guided reading.
A final plenary to judge whether the U-Boat warfare was successful or ineffective overall.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
2 x Publisher File
WW1 L15 - Was Gallipoli a Noble Plan or Tactical Mistake?
This lesson contains:
An overview of the Ottoman entry into the war and the threta they posed to Britain’s ally, Russia.
A discussion acitivity to plan where the British should invade to open up a third front in the war.
An overview of the Gallipoli strategy. Students discuss why it might work and why it might fail based on the map.
A YouTube video which tells the story of what happened and students complete a gap fill on the worksheet provided. There are further follow up consolidation questions.
A task to colour-code the reasons the invasion failed.
A final activity to study interpretations and judge whether it was a failure of a good strategy.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentations
1 x Publisher File
WW1 L14 - Did the Empire Help Win WW1?
This lesson contains:
A starter to check student knowledge about the Empire and where the Empire reached.
An overview on the need for the Empire to call up troops from all over the world.
A short case study of Khudadad Khan, the first Indian recipient of the Victoria Cross.
An overview of the use of propaganda across the Empire and the study of some different types.
An activity to study a series of information cards provided to fill in the worksheet mind map for South Africa, Australia, Canada, India, the West Indies and New Zealand.
A final activity to argue for or against a viewpoint about the Empire making a huge impact on the victory in WW1.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
1 x Word File
WW1 L12 & L13 - Why Do Historians Differ Over the Somme?
This lesson contains:
A taught segment on the differences between sources and interpretations.
An overview of what to consider when studying sources.
A run through of how to study interpretations and why they differ. There is an example of two images with two different things in it. Some in the class will see different things.
An exercise for students to write down what happened last lesson, then the teacher can take different interpretations of the same lesson from different experiences. This helps illustrate the point.
A recap of the Somme battle and an introduction to the lions vs donkeys argument.
A depth study of two sources that differ. Students analyse the nature, origin and purpose.
A depth study of two interpretations that differ. Students study them, determine the viewpoint and what they are saying about the guilt over the Somme.
A final judgement about the reasons the two interpretations studied differ.
Attachment:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
1 x Word File
WW1 L11 - What Happened at the Somme?
This lesson contains:
A starter to consider what the students have heard about the Somme and to look at a picture source.
A background to the battle including the purpose of the Somme attack.
An overview of who Field Marshall Haig was.
An overview of the plan and a discussion activity to determine what might go wrong.
A brief YouTube video from Blackadder to look at a comedic perspective of the plan.
An exercise to study statements about the Somme and determine which show success or failure. A judgement is then written.
An overview of the consequences using an interpretation and finding arguments for and against it Haig being ultimately responsible.
A plenary to consider whether Haig was guilty or not.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
WW1 L10 - Why Was Censorship Used?
This lesson contains:
A starter which recaps previous knowledge about trenches, but if you haven’t covered it, there is also a starter to consider what a Field Service Post Card was and its purpose.
A worksheet which is completed as the students work through the different activities.
A consideration about why soldiers wrote home.
A summary of the Defense of the Realm Act and its purpose. Defining censorship and its purpose.
A video from YouTube to illustrate the things that were cut out of letters as part of censorship, and students discuss this.
A guided reading to analyse why censorship was used.
An opportunity for the students to analyse a sample letter and censor it themselves based on what they have learned.
A plenary to assess whether we can trust everything written in the letters.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
WW1 L7 - Were the 'Conchies' Cowards?
This lesson contains:
A starter to consider the lyrics of a song and whatit shows about the person’s feelings of war.
A background into who the conchies were and an exercise to consider why they disliked war.
An overview of conscription and the need for more troops, while there were exemptions allowed and how they could be achieved.
A consideration of what happens to those who get their exemptions denied, and a consolidation exercise to bring it all together.
An activity to read 6 short case studies, real examples, and to assess their exemption case. Students decide the verdict, then find out what really happened afterwards.
A final judgement of whether conchies were misunderstood or cowards.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentations
2 x Word Files
2 x Publisher Files
WW1 L6 - How Was Propaganda Used in WW1?
This lesson contains:
A starter to analyse a propaganda poster, the effect it may have had and whether it might be a push or a pull.
Background into the enthusiasm for the war and an exercise to consider why people were eager to fight at the start.
An overview of the lessoning of interest in joining the war and the need to get people to feel enthused through propaganda. This is done through a YouTube video.
An activity to study a series of propaganda posters and judge the effect and whether they were push or pull types, and why.
A plenary to design their own poster, or a small leaflet.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
GCSE Germany L19 & L20 - Hitler from Chancellor to Dictator
LESSON 1:
A starter to recap previous knowledge from the course.
An overview of the difficult situation Hitler was still in, surrounded and controlled as chancellor with little power.
An activity to take notes about the Reichstag Fire and Enabling Act.
A Cornell Notes activity to make notes as the slides move on and give an overview of the Night of the Long Knives. The causes, events and consequences are covered by a YouTube video and the students make notes on their worksheet.
**
LESSON 2:**
A starter to recap the Night of the Long Knives events.
An opportunity to complete the consequences of the event using on-board guidance.
A video to summarise the relationship between Hitler and Von Hindenberg, and then his death and the effect it had on Hitler’s proclamation of Fuhrer.
An activity to complete a timeline graph of the events which led to Hitler becoming dictator. Students assess the importance of each on the graph.
A choice of plenaries: the first is a discussion about how Hitler overcame certain obstacles and the second is a source analysis.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
5 x Publisher Files
GCSE Germany L21 - Nazi Terror and Control
This lesson contains:
An introduction to the methods used by the Nazis to control people.
A YouTube video which summarises the main methods of fear and terror used to control the masses, including the SS, SD, Gestapo, Concentration Camps and the Courts. Students use Cornell Notes to make notes as it plays.
A longer, indepth look at concentration camps, including the spread of them, the way people were treated and the badges.
An indepth literacy task to write an exam-style question as the students research using the information sheets provided. This is advanced, as the students not only read the info, they have to process the info and then convert it into an exam response all at the same time.
A choice of plenaries: either a comprehension quiz, or a source skills exam question.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
2 x Publisher Files
1 x Word File
GCSE Germany L22 - Nazi Propaganda
This lesson contains:
A starter quiz based on previous course material.
An introduction to the role of Goebbels as propaganda minister.
A Youtube Video to emphasis the role of propaganda and its aims.
An activity on the worksheet provided, with students making notes on rallies, newspapers, radio, film, lierature, art architecture, sports and censorship as forms of propaganda.
A review activity to consider the most effective methods.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentations
1 x Publisher File
GCSE Germany L23 - Nazi Control of Religion
**This lesson contains: **
A review of the spread of religion in Germany.
A discussion of why Christians may have supported the Nazis.
A study of the information sheets provided to complete a page of info under the following topics: Control of Protestants, Control of Catholics and those religious people who resisted.
A YouTube video about Reich Church established by the Nazis.
Source work on the Church and what can be learned about support for it.
A plenary review with questions.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Word File
Bundle
World War Two Turning Points BUNDLE
This bundle contains:
Was Dunkirk a Success or Failure?
Was the Battle of Britain Our Finest Hour
Was Operation Barbarossa a Turning Point
Was Pearl Harbour a Japanese Victory or Failure?
Was D-Day a Major Turning Point?
WW2 - Was D-Day a Major Turning Point
This lesson contains:
A starter to recall other WW2 operations.
Background into the D-Day landings, from tehran to the the situation in Europe at the time with the Atlantic Wall.
A discussion to plan an attack on France against the Nazis.
A YouTube video discussing the planning that went into D-Day with a gap fill consolidation task.
An overview of the invasion on the board, including the paratrooper landings, the deception tactics, the bombardment and the invasion itself.
A YouTube video giving an overview of the invasion while students complete the comprehension questions as it plays.
A brief colour-coding activity to determine the consequences.
A source task plenary.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
1 x Publisher File
WW2 - Was Pearl Harbor a Victory or Mistake?
This lesson contains:
A starter to consider what Roosevelt meant by his speech about a ‘day in infamy’.
An overview of the Pacific Theatre from the invasions of the Japanese and domination of the islands with a gap fill activity to note down the declining relations between the U.S. and the Japanese.
An overview of the location of Pearl Harbour, importance and the reasons it was a good target for the Japanese.
A YouTube video to watch some scenes from the Pearl Harbour Film, then an activity to study a series of sources and what we can learn about the attack and the consequences.
A plenary to write a news report from the American perspective of the attack.
Attachments:
1 x Powerpoint Presentation
2 x Publisher File