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I am a History teacher in the North West, and head of Citizenship in my school. I have been teaching since 2007, in four secondary schools across the area. In between times, in 2012, I taught as a volunteer teacher in Ghana, with English, French and Maths classes (you can read about my adventures in my book, Teaching in the Sun, available on Amazon). All of my resources have been extensively tried and tested. I hope that you, like me, are able to use them for good and outstanding lessons.

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I am a History teacher in the North West, and head of Citizenship in my school. I have been teaching since 2007, in four secondary schools across the area. In between times, in 2012, I taught as a volunteer teacher in Ghana, with English, French and Maths classes (you can read about my adventures in my book, Teaching in the Sun, available on Amazon). All of my resources have been extensively tried and tested. I hope that you, like me, are able to use them for good and outstanding lessons.
Causes of poor Medieval public health
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Causes of poor Medieval public health

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This is a card sort / Diamond 9 for GCSE students. Students are invited to categories and prioritise the reasons that Medieval towns had very poor public health. Students should answer the 2 questions underneath the card sort, and then more able students can attempt the extension questions. This can lead to discussion / debate or an exam question on the reasons that towns were lacking in public health, or why it needed to improve.
UK responses to Spanish flu
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UK responses to Spanish flu

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This is a resource for GCSE 9-1 students. It gives a list of responses to the Spanish flu epidemic in 1918-9. Students are invited to explain the effect of each of these measures. This can take the form of why it was done, how effective it was, or who benefitted - in some cases. therev is an exrtension activity at the bottom of teh sheet. On page 2 is a list of useful words / phrases students can use - useful for loewer ability students.
Monasteries and public health
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Monasteries and public health

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This is a card sort / Diamond 9 for GCSE students. Students are invited to categories and prioritise the reasons that monasteries were important in maintaining public health. Students should answer the 2 questions underneath the card sort, and then more able students can attempt the extension questions. This can lead to discussion / debate or an exam question on the importance of the contribution of the monasteries.
Events in Spanish Armada
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Events in Spanish Armada

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This is an activity for GCSE students. They should arrange the events into chronological order - it can be done as a card sort, cut and stick or a numbering exercise. As an extension they then have a series of questions to answer to explain and justify their thoughts on the Spanish Armada and the reasons that it was improitant for Elizxabethan England. I have included an answer sheet with the events in chronological order.
Reasons that Hippocrates is known as the ‘Father of Medicine’
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Reasons that Hippocrates is known as the ‘Father of Medicine’

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise reasons that Hippocrates is known as the ‘Father of Medicine’. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for Hippocrates’ moniker. The task could also be done as a diamond activity, with categories taken out for the more able. This is an ideal activity for preparing students for longer-answer exam questions. It allows discussion to develop as students explain their thoughts and defend them in front of their peers.
Election of Roosevelt 1932
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Election of Roosevelt 1932

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This is a diamond 9 card sort to categorise and prioritise the reasons that FDR was elected in 1932. As an extension, you can challenge students to explain the more / less important reasons. There are further extension questions, differentiated for more / less able students. This can lead to a class discussion. Categories could include, but not be limited to, FDR’s personality, failings of Republicans, FDR’s policies, FDR’s methods and others.
Success of the New Deal
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Success of the New Deal

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This is a resource for GCSE students. I have used it with the new GCSE spec for US History. Students highlight the positives and negatives of the New Deal. This can lead to judgment and priority activities, which are structured at the bottom of the lower ability sheet. I have also used it to lead to an overall debate on how successful the New Deal was. There is a higher ability sheet without the judgement sentences too, so that they must do their own wrting.
Indian reservations and assimilation
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Indian reservations and assimilation

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This is a card sort or diamond 9 activity designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise the ways that the Plains Indians were assimilated on reservations. Students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on which were more / less restricting effects of the reservations. More able students can prioritise reasons for the Indians ending up on reservations. Categories could include, but not be limited to: Religion Lifestyle Governance Health / nutrition
Medieval regression in medicine
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Medieval regression in medicine

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This is a card sort or diamond 9 activity designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise reasons for the Medieval regression in medicine. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for the Medieval regression in medicine, and suggest reasons why the period saw some progress in surgery. At the end, they are challenged to make a hypothesis for life expectancy in the period, which can be returned to in a later lesson. Categories could include, but not be limited to: War Communication Religion It could be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet.
African American soldiers US Civil War
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African American soldiers US Civil War

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This card sort allows students to judge the good and bad parts of life for African American soldiers. Students can split the cards into advantages and disadvantages. They can decide on categories for the factors - such as army life, families, money. More able students can explain the best and worst features of life for African American soldiers. they can use the video to explain what happened in the Civil War.
Causes of the Civil War
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Causes of the Civil War

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A card sort to show the events which led to the outbreak of the Civil War in 1642. This is a very flexible activity and can be used with all abilities. Students can decide which causes fit into each of the three categories - political, economic and religious (these are defined on the sheet). Students can use more than one colour for any that overlap categories. Students can also decide which were the fault of the king, and which were the fault of Parliament. More able students can categorise the long- and short-term causes. Students are invited to make and explain judgments on the most important causes, and on whether the King or Parliament was to blame. This can be used as the base for a piece of extended writing. The card sort can be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet.
The terms of the Treaty of Versailles
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The terms of the Treaty of Versailles

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This is a cut and stick activity for Key Stage 3 students. There are worksheets for core and less-able students. Students must decide which of the terms relate to war guilt, reparations, military restrictions and land. Students then decide on the worst of the punishments, placing themselves in the position of Germany. This can lead to a piece of extended writing.
An overview of the First World War
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An overview of the First World War

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This is a lesson for Key Stage 3, looking at the events of the First World War. It is designed for near the end of a module on the First World War. Students place events on a timeline and decide whether each event was a victory for the Allies or Germany. They reach an understanding of how the war unfolded and why it did so. They are challenged to think of a turning point. Students then look at a range of memorials, and think about why they are developed in such a way - location, design etc. They can then design their own memorial.
McCarthyism
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McCarthyism

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Thus is a resource of KS4. Students watch the YouTube link and can discuss the effects of the fear of communism. The link contains use of a term now considered racist. Students then make a diamond 9 on the different effects of McCarthyism. This can lead to extended writing or a debate.
Failure of the League in Abyssinia
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Failure of the League in Abyssinia

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise reasons that the League of Nations failed to stop the invasion of Abyssinia. It can be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet, or as a diamond 9. Categories for a diamond 9 could include: Self interest of members Failure of sanctions Inability to make decisions Others More able student can explain which was the most significant of the consequences, in the short and long term. They are encouraged to give their thoughts on the role of the League and its weakness. This is an ideal activity for preparing students for longer-answer exam questions. It allows discussion to develop as students explain their thoughts and defend them in front of their peers.
Soviet failure in Afghanistan
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Soviet failure in Afghanistan

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise reasons that the Soviet Union failed in Afghanistan. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for the USSR’s failure. This could also be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet.
End of Communism (mid 1980s-1991)
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End of Communism (mid 1980s-1991)

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A card sort which allows students to place in chronological order the events (from the start of Glasnost and Perestroika to the end of 1991) which led to the fall of the USSR. More able students can be challenged to explain what each of these events meant, and how much of a threat it was, with the higher end resource.
Success of the Berlin Airlift
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Success of the Berlin Airlift

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise reasons that the Berlin Airlift was successful. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for the Airlift’s success. The task could also be done as a diamond activity. It could be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet.
King John evidence
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King John evidence

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A resource for KS3. The PowerPoint has a starter activity to detail the qualities of a good king, and a YouTube link to Disney’s Prince John. Students decide in gthe Word doc whether King John was good, bad or unlucky, by marking different pieces of evidence. This can lead to a PEE paragraph, which is scaffolded in the Powerpoint. The powerpoint then goes on to detail the Magna Carta. Students read through key terms and then make decisions. A written homework from the point of view of a baron is added near the end of the ppt.
League of Nations 1920s - revision
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League of Nations 1920s - revision

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This is a revision resource for GCSE students. Students are presented with 10 events / issues surrounding the League in the 1920s. they are invited to analyse the strength or otherwise of the League in addressing these issues. There are hints to help the weaker students contained on the powerpoint slides, as well as an introduction /refresher to the Article 10 of the covenant. As an extension, students decide whether the league’s ‘successes’ were worth much in the bigger picture, by deciding how well the League contained bigger / smaller countries’ ambitions. This can lead to debate or a variety of extended writing tasks.