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.
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.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the Russian Revolution.
Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, although could also be suitable for KS4 if this I a new topic for students, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the Cold War and (mainly) post-Cold War world, 1945-2000.
Activities include plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the communities and their importance.
Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the Treaty of Verailles from 1919 to 1939.
Activities included to suit the new GCSE requirements, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of Hitler and the causes of Second World War.
Activities included to suit the new GCSE requirements, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the Medieval life.
Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
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.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the Second World War.
Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the American West.
Activities included to suit the new GCSE requirements, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the British Empire and associated slave trade / slavery period.
Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the Stuart period.
Activities included to suit KS3 teaching, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the USA during the 1920s.
Activities included to suit the new GCSE requirements, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the USA from 1930-9.
Activities included to suit the new GCSE requirements, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A resource pack to support the teaching of the League from 1919 to 1939.
Activities included to suit the new GCSE requirements, with plenty of scope for differentiation by either task or outcome for more- or less able students.
A bundle to support the teaching of the GCSE Conflict and tension course. Included are resources on the Treaty of Versailles, League of Nations and Hitler's foreign policy 1933-9.
There is scope for differentiation and class discussion throughout.
This is a resource for GCSE Medicine, with activities for higher- and lower-attaining students. It allows students to identify and explain the positives and negatives of Medieval hospitals in terms of how they cared for people’s health. Students can either use this as a card sort or a cut and stick, or as a highlighting/colour coding activity.
They are then invited to judge the biggest positives and biggest negatives of hospitals, and more able students can reflect on how far they reflected the Church’s teachings (for this, you will need to make clear that the church ran most hospitals). Finally, students can evaluate their own thoughts on the effectiveness of hospitals.
This could lead well into class discussion, extended writing or an exam-style question.
A bundle to support the teaching of the new GCSE on the USA from 1920-73. I have used it for the AQA course.
Included are resources on the economic boom, prohibition, the Depression and New Deal, and the Civil Right movement.
This is a card sorting activity to help students revise the American West for the GCSE.
They are to arrange the 12 dates in chronological order, and then match the events to the dates. I have found that giving them a highlighter for drawing out the key information can be helpful.
There is a differentiated version, for lower ability students, with 6 key dates. The information is less detailed on these as well.
Powerpoint can be used to support learning, as it allows students to reflect on the reasons that the dates are significant for the Indians and the settlers. There are key concepts to jog students’ memory on the powerpoint.
More able students can reflect on these questions as an extension.
Which are the 2 most significant events in:
The settling of the Plains
The destruction of Indian culture?
This is a role play and chronology lesson for KS3, possibly KS4.
Students are assigned a country to play the part of. These are differentiated as resources, but also within each resource: weaker students read about Austria and Serbia, middling students can have Germany and Russia and more able students can have France and Britain. Students are shown the July Crisis unfolding on the powerpoint. They must decide what they would feel, advise or actually do on each of the 6 dates / events shown. There are many opportunities for class discussion through the exercise, as students can be asked what they feel so far, whether they have taken any actions or merely advised one action or other to their allies.
There is a seperate worksheet for students who would not react well to the role play aspect.
As an extension, (more able?) students can explain whether their country triggered war, willingly went to war or were dragged unwillingly to war.
The second activity is a chronology activity to decide what order events happened in as countries slid to war. Students look at 12 events and decide the order in which they happened. This can be done as a card sort or numbering activity. Answers can be shown later on the powerpoint. Students can also be asked whether Franz Ferdinand’s murder simply brought forward a war than was inevitable at some point.
This is for GCSE Medicine. Students look through the pieces of evidence. They decide which of these suggest that Islam helped medicine, and which suggest that Islam hindered it. It can be done as a card sort, cut and stick or highlighting activity.
Higher ability students can be challenged, particularly in a card sort, to prioritise the pieces of evidence on either side of the argument.
There are extension questions provided at the end of the task.
There are resources for higher and lower ability students included
This can lead to a class debate or a piece of extended writing.