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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.
Trench life difficulties
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Trench life difficulties

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This is a diamond 9 card sort to categorise and prioritise the reasons that life in trenches was difficult. As an extension, you can challenge students to explain the more / less important reasons, and there is a further extension question for more able students. This can lead to a class discussion. Categories could include, but not be limited to, health//hygiene, time, mental health and others.
Reasons for outbreak of WWII
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Reasons for outbreak of WWII

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This is a card sort or diamond 9 activity designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise reasons for the outbreak of WWII. As an extension, students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for the outbreak of WWII, and apportion responsibility to the major nations involved. More able students have a differentiated resource which allows them to exemplify and explain each of the reasons given. Categories could include, but not be limited to: The Treaty of Versailles The League of Nations Hitler’s foreign policy It could be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet.
The League of Nations, border disputes in the 1920s
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The League of Nations, border disputes in the 1920s

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An interactive decision-making sheet for students to fill in. They place themselves in the position of the League and decide what they would do in each scenario. Information on each scenario is provided, as is space for students to give an explanation of each of their choices. This could be done as a group, paired or individual activity.
Effects of prison
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Effects of prison

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This is a card sort or diamond 9 activity designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise the effects of prison. Students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the importance of positive and negatives of the effects of prison. Categories could include, but not be limited to: job / careers social / family and friends skills character / personality As an extension, students can choose to write a letter of advice to a prisoner, or to make a poster aimed at advising prisoners…
Impacts of TNCs
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Impacts of TNCs

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A card sort and written task on the positive and negative aspects of TNCs. There are two versions of the activities, for higher- and lower-ability students. Students classify the impacts as to whether they are positive and negative. Students then arrange them into categories such as job creation, job loss, effect on richer/poorer countries, money, environment. Students complete a scaffolded written task to describe and explain the best and worst impacts of TNCs. They finish by examining whether a boycott of TNCs such as Nike would have a positive or negative effect. A list of key words is provided on the lower-ability resource.
Assassination of Franz Ferdinand
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Assassination of Franz Ferdinand

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This is a lesson for the events of the assassination and afterwards. Students can watch the clip and have a writing frame provided in the powerpoint to write an article. Key terms and people are explained in the powerpoint too. The second half is a card sort designed to allow students to understand what happened during and immediately after the assassination of Franz Ferdinand. Students arrange the cards into groups - what happened during and what happened immediately after the assassination. They can also be arranged as a chronology exercise. There is a differentiated version for less able students, and the very weak ones could be encouraged to match the country to the reaction… Students can pick out and explain 2 or 3 of the more significant of the events, which were important in the First World War breaking out, or the assassination itself.
Caesar's invasions of Britain
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Caesar's invasions of Britain

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This is a card sort for the two invasion of Britain in 55BC and 54BC. Students can arrange the events in chronological order. It could be done as a card sort or numbering activity. Students can then decide the reasons why Caesar’s invasions failed. They give an explanation of each reason. More able students can reach their judgement on the key reasons for failure.
Nuclear power
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Nuclear power

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The first activity is is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise information do to with nuclear energy. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the best and worst aspects of nuclear energy. There is a differentiated card sort for the lower-ability students. The second activity is a letter to the local council. This has a writing frame which can be used, and is differentiated for abilities.
Terms of the Treaty of Versailles
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Terms of the Treaty of Versailles

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This is a cut and stick activity. Students must decide which of the terms relate to war guilt, reparations, military restrictions and land. There is a differentiated version for lower ability students. Students then decide on the worst of the punishments, placing themselves in the position of Germany. Students are invited to consider the extent to which the terms of the treaty met the aims of the Big Three. This can lead to a piece of extended writing on which would be the worst aspect of the Treaty, or on comparing aspects of the treaty as per GCSE high–mark questions. Videos can be used to support learning.
Reasons for the invasion of Abyssinia
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Reasons for the invasion of Abyssinia

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise reasons that Mussolini conducted the invasion of Abyssinia. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for the invasion. It can be done as a venn diagram using the second sheet.
Treaty of Versailles - aims of the Big Three
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Treaty of Versailles - aims of the Big Three

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A card sort to show the aims of the Big Three leaders at the Treaty of Versailles. Students can use this to make a decision on why each of the leaders held these aims, and which were the more or less reasonable of the aims. More able student can explain which was the most likely to achieve an agreeable peace settlement, in the short and long term. 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.
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.
Slave plantation assessment
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Slave plantation assessment

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An assessment for Key Stage 3 students about assessing the accuracy of a source. Students are invited to label the picture of slaves working on a plantation. They then fill in what they notice on the worksheet, which is differentiated for the lower-ability students. They give their own explanation of the evidence in the picture. E.g. P - slaves’ clothes, Ev - they are European, and look new and fresh, Exp - Slaves did wear European clothes, but after a long day in the fields they would be looking more tatty than they are how to be. There is a writing frame and mark scheme attached. The mark scheme is NC levels, but can easily be adapted to GCSE style grades.
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.
Migration to Britain
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Migration to Britain

2 Resources
A resource pack to support the teaching of migration in the C21st. Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
International criminal law
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International criminal law

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This is a resource for Key Stage 4 Citizenship. Students are invited to discuss human rights and then the responsibilities that come with those rights. There is a run-down what constitutes international crime, and a video to support this, and a run-down of the ICC and Rome Statute. There is a diamond 9 or categorising (choose) activity for the ICC’s impact. The final aspect of the lesson is a double-sided worksheet. The first side takes recent examples of breaches of International criminal law and invites students to explain what they feel about what happened in each case. The second side takes occasions when the ICC did not intervene; students are invited to explain why the ICC did not intervene. Answers as to what really happened are in the powerpoint. Students can fill in the final section on their thoughts afterwards.
Human Rights
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Human Rights

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This is a resource for Key Stage 3 Citizenship. Students are invited to discuss human rights and then the responsibilities that come with those rights. The worksheet links these rights with the precious rights of UK citizens; students are invited to make a key and highlight which rights link to which precious liberties. The second half of the lesson takes recent examples of breaches of human rights and invites students to explain what they think should have happened in each case. Answers as to what really happened are in the powerpoint. There is a teacher notes document to help delivery as well.
Rights and responsibilities.
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Rights and responsibilities.

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This is a resource for Key Stage 3 Citizenship. I use it at the end of a module about criminal / civil law, court and anti-social behaviours. Students are invited to discuss human rights and then the responsibilities that come with those rights. The worksheet takes recent examples of how people have been irresponsible and to decide who is at fault, what would have been better and what should happen next. Answers as to what really happened are in the powerpoint. There is a teacher notes document to help delivery as well.
Citizens in the community
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Citizens in the community

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This is a lesson for KS4 Citizenship. Students are invited to think of actions that citizens can take to benefit their communities, the UK government and its recent cuts to aid, and the work of charities. These can both lead to class discussion or written up pieces. Students than can complete card sorting activity on the types of things that citizens can do. There is an extended writing task at the end of the lesson.