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Dan's History Highway

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(based on 53 reviews)

300+ ready to use and fully resourced History lessons.

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300+ ready to use and fully resourced History lessons.
Tollund Man - 10-page full lesson (notes, history mystery cards, matrix)
danguineydanguiney

Tollund Man - 10-page full lesson (notes, history mystery cards, matrix)

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I use this as an introduction to Historical skills for my 7th graders and it works really well. Students are given background knowledge and then handed the 13 sources in order. As they receive them they discuss what can be inferred from each piece of evidence and complete the history mystery grid. This is a great lesson designed to get students thinking and handling evidence. I hope your students enjoy it as much as mine do! It also works really well as a transition lesson for students coming to high school and perhaps studying History as a specialist discipline for the first time. This activity sets students up really well for a piece of follow up Historical writing.
Stalin & the Purges - Who killed Kirov? - 20-page full lesson (notes, history mystery evidence sort)
danguineydanguiney

Stalin & the Purges - Who killed Kirov? - 20-page full lesson (notes, history mystery evidence sort)

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This is one of my absolute favourite lessons. Students read through the background knowledge/notes before working their ways through a 21 piece evidence sort to answer the question ‘Who killed Kirov?’ Students then place the card sort information into piles which suggest Stalin was guilty of the murder and evidence that suggests he was not, before arriving at an opinion abotu why the 1st December Law and the subsequent purges and period of Yezhovschina occured. My students truly love this lesson and I really hope yours do too!
FDR's New Deal - Full lesson (source starter PPT, notes, emoji storyboard activity, bingo plenary)
danguineydanguiney

FDR's New Deal - Full lesson (source starter PPT, notes, emoji storyboard activity, bingo plenary)

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My students always feel exam-ready thanks to this lesson. The class begin with a source analysis starter in which they have to reconstruct a source from a jigsaw. This allows for great discussion about what is in the foreground/background etc. The class then work through a set of very detailed notes on the First and Second New Deals before creating an emoji storyboard to explain it in order to show comprehension. Finally a bingo plenary allows for testing of comprehension. I hope your students enjoy this as much as mine do.
Social & cultural changes in 1920s USA - 9-page full lesson (starter PPT, notes, character cards)
danguineydanguiney

Social & cultural changes in 1920s USA - 9-page full lesson (starter PPT, notes, character cards)

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This is a great full lesson. Students begin with a starter activity which teaches them the basic steps to the Charleston before progressing through a very detailed and comprehensive set of notes covering the changes in the period in music, women, sports, architecture, religion, leisure and cinema. Students are then allocated a character card (flapper, housewife, young black American, Italian immigrant, gangster, businessman, Klansman, farmer) and complete a scaffolded worksheet explaining how there character would feel about the changes. They are then paired together to hold a discussion with another character in a meaningful way in order to reveal the different attitudes in the period. My students love this topic and I really hope yours do as well.
Slavery Bundle - Outstanding Fully Resourced Lessons
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Slavery Bundle - Outstanding Fully Resourced Lessons

5 Resources
This bundle includes 5 mini units entitled: What were the main causes of slavery? What were conditions like on board the Middle Passage? What was life like for enslaved people in the New World? How did enslaved people fight back? Why was slavery abolished? Each lesson includes detailed notes and a range of activities such as word searches, card sorts, rollercoaster activities and much more. You won’t find more detailed resources on this topic online and I hope your students enjoy these lessons as much as mine do.
Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe - 9-page full lesson (notes, card sort, jenga activity)
danguineydanguiney

Collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe - 9-page full lesson (notes, card sort, jenga activity)

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This is one of my favourite lessons. Students read through a very detailed set of notes focusing on the roles of Gorbachev, Reagan, economics, Solidarity and people power. Students then test their understanding of their newly acquired knowledge through a game of Jenga (attach the cards to a block - students place them into factors using the colour coordinated bricks. This activity can also be done as a more traditional card sort). Students then complete the lesson with a word search to promote key terms and literacy. I really hope your students enjoy this as much as mine do. It is pitched at very able 16-18 year old students.
Causes of the First Gulf War - 6-page full lesson (notes, storyboard, plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Causes of the First Gulf War - 6-page full lesson (notes, storyboard, plenary)

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In this lesson students are issued an exceptionally detailed pack of information and are required to create evidence based storyboard using the template provided which causes them to focus on the five key reasons. A plenary is also included which asks for them to develop two of these points using ‘on the other hand.’ I hope you enjoy this lesson as much as my students do.
IB History AFL Essay Front Sheets (Papers 1, 2, and 3)
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IB History AFL Essay Front Sheets (Papers 1, 2, and 3)

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These two sided front sheets look great when attached to student work. Moreover, they save teacher time and increase the level of precise feedback received by students. They have been designed specifically for the IB History course. I hope your students find them as useful as mine do.
Twentieth Century China – Trivial Pursuit Revision Activity (180+ questions)
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Twentieth Century China – Trivial Pursuit Revision Activity (180+ questions)

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My students love this activity. 180+ questions based on the following categories: The Qing Dynasty Warlords Mao’s rise to power The Great Leap Forward The Cultural Revolution Daily Life It takes a little while to cut out the cards and the board and works best once laminated but your students will love this revision activity. The questions are designed to boost subject knowledge and focus on precise historical detail which in turn helps student examination performance. I hope your classes enjoy this activity as much as my IGCSE and IB classes always do.
China's 1911 Revolution - 15-page full lesson (starter, notes, hexagonal card sort, plenary)
danguineydanguiney

China's 1911 Revolution - 15-page full lesson (starter, notes, hexagonal card sort, plenary)

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I am very proud of the precision and amount of detail in this lesson and its designed to be engaging and to ensure students make measurable progress. The class begin by exploring an odd one out exercise for the starter activity and this draws their attention to early Chinese views of westerners. This then leads into an extremely detailed set of notes (which I created when teaching in China) before students attempt a 30 piece hexagonal card sort which is colour-coded into factors. The class then make links and explain the Key Question before finishing with a fun ‘Just-a-Minute’ plenary in order to test their understanding and knowledge gained. I hope you enjoy this lesson as much as my students do.
Weimar's Early Problems 1919-23 - 10-page full lesson (starter, notes, funneling activity, plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Weimar's Early Problems 1919-23 - 10-page full lesson (starter, notes, funneling activity, plenary)

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This lesson will introduce your students to Weimar Germany fantastically well. Students complete a maths challenge in the starter PPT to introduce them to some of the financial difficulties Germany was facing. After this the class work through a set of exceptionally detailed notes before completing a funneling activity designed to help them discriminate between evidence to form a judgement to help them answer the Key Question. The lesson concludes with a class vote PPT plenary. I hope your students get as much out of this lesson as much as mine do.
Impact of WWII on USSR - 10-page full lesson (starter, notes, memorial task, plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Impact of WWII on USSR - 10-page full lesson (starter, notes, memorial task, plenary)

(0)
This is a powerful lesson which really gives students pause for thought. The class start with a what’s behind the squares activity which reveals a female Soviet sniper and which is designed to stimulate discussion about the nature of war. The class then read through an incredibly detailed set of notes before beginning a design-a-memorial task for which they are expected to include precise historical detail. The lesson concludes with a powerful piece of source analysis which invites further informed comment on the nature of fighting on the Eastern Front. I hope your students get as much out of this lesson as mine do.
Germany 1918-45 Battleships Revision - Activity
danguineydanguiney

Germany 1918-45 Battleships Revision - Activity

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Great activity for revision. There are two different question cards and the battleships are all named after significant ships (eg Hitler’s personal yacht, the Grille). Students take it in turns to guess a square and if they answer the quesiton correctly they are awarded a hit or miss. Needs to be printed back to back. I hope your students enjoy this as much as mine do.
Hungary 1956 - 10-page full lesson (starter, notes, hexagonal card sort, plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Hungary 1956 - 10-page full lesson (starter, notes, hexagonal card sort, plenary)

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In this powerful lesson students begin with a what’s behind the squares activity designed to get them questioning why an Olympic polo player might have been bloodied. They then work through a very detailed set of notes before completing a 48 piece hexagonal card sort which is colour coded into causes, events, and consequences. This activity is designed to ensure students can identify links and causation as well as encouraging them to select the most compelling piece of evidence. This then leads to a piece of extended written work. Students complete this lesson with a source matrix on a famous Vicky Weisz cartoon from the Daily Mirror to draw out their findings. I hope your students enjoy it as much as mine.
Vietnam - 9-page full lesson (chronology starter, notes, task, Dingbats plenary)
danguineydanguiney

Vietnam - 9-page full lesson (chronology starter, notes, task, Dingbats plenary)

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In this lesson students piece together a linear card sort as a starter activity to understand how US troops ended up fighting in Vietnam. Once this has been achieved the class work through very detailed notes on the nature of fighting on both sides before beginning a model making task to explain US/VC tactics (the model can be a built model, a written model, a picture model or a computer generated model). The lesson concludes with a Dingbats plenary on some of the key terms covered in the lesson (punji trap, domino theory, guerilla tactics). I hope your students enjoy this lesson as much as mine do.
How justified was Versailles? - 48-slide full lesson (Bingo starter, notes, Blockbusters Activity)
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How justified was Versailles? - 48-slide full lesson (Bingo starter, notes, Blockbusters Activity)

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The lesson begins with a game of Bingo to see how much they already know (there are 30 different cards and a list of 61 key questions to read out with answers such as Article 231, Woodrow Wilson, 100,000 etc). The winner is the first to get a line crossed off and to shout out Bingo. A second starter activity then leads to students address the views of Harold Nicolson who said the treaty was “neither just nor wise” with historian Alan Clark who argues that this view “needs to be abandoned.” Lesson aims and objectives are introduced and these are graduated (all will/most will/some will). Students then proceed to work through a very detailed set of slides (teacher talk) which is broken into for and against arguments. Arguments that it was justified include the Kaiser’s September programme, the harshness with which Germany had treated Russia at Brest-Litovsk, and the need to crush German militarism after the invasions of France in 1870 and 1914. Arguments given that the Treaty was not justified include how it created the stab in the back theory, German expectations based on Wilsonianism and the 14 Points, the argument that Germany might not be solely responsible for the First World War, and of course the economic and political instability it caused in Germany. Students then complete a 14-piece card sort activity (there is a colour-coordinated version for purposes of differentiation if required) and they then fill in and glue on the explanation cards. The lesson concludes with a Blockbusters game plenary. Students choose an acronym and the teacher reads out the clue. If they get it right they continue. The winner is the person who makes a continuous line from top to bottom or from left to right. The final plenary asks students to revisit the debate between Nicolson and Clark and to vote with their feet.
Versailles, the victors - 7-page full lesson (Starter PPT, notes, hexagonal card sort, Plenary PTP)
danguineydanguiney

Versailles, the victors - 7-page full lesson (Starter PPT, notes, hexagonal card sort, Plenary PTP)

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In this lesson students explore the reasons the victors left Versailles feeling that they did not get everything they wanted. To introduce the topic the class work through a series of map-based questions before proceeding to dig into detailed notes. The class then complete a 24 piece hexagonal card sort to answer the Key Question. This lesson finishes with a fun Who Wants to be a Millionaire Plenary designed to test student understanding. I hope your students enjoy it as much as mine do.