I am a Geography specialist who has also been teaching GCSE history for the past few years. I have uploaded some lessons for History and Geography. I hope people find them useful.
I am a Geography specialist who has also been teaching GCSE history for the past few years. I have uploaded some lessons for History and Geography. I hope people find them useful.
AQA GCSE History lesson from the Reform and Reformers section of the Power and the People unit.
In this lesson we look at what New Unionism is and begin by looking at two strikes. The Match Girls’ strikes of 1888 and the London Dockers’ strikes in 1891. We compare the strikes and evaluate their success. We then contnue to a short source extract practice question on the strikes. The pupils then examine a longer extract about the impact of New Unionism to evaluate how successful the movement was at gaining control over their employers and from the government. Included is:
Source starter using newspaper extract
Comparison task with two strikes
4-mark inference question practice
Extract task using highlighters and written response from pupils.
Hope this helps.
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Key Stage 3 lesson on the Black Death. In this lesson which is approximately 1 hour, we introduce the disease, the symptoms and practice some source interpretation as well. We start with an enquiry mystery around uncovering a plague pit where the pupils are given more and more information to try to work out what the story behind the burials might be. We then introduce the disease, its origins and how it is transmitted through watching a film clip. We then create an annotated diagram around the outline of a body. The pupils will listen to the symptoms of the Black Death at various stages throughout the illness of a victim. The slides have sound effects that the pupils always enjoy. We then look at a source from medieval times and the pupils answer the question about the sources usefulness. This is supported with a writing frame and some ideas to help the pupils. We then finish by playing the game “would you have survived the plague?”. Here the pupils choose numbers that correspond to actions a medieval person may take to help them avoid catching the plague. Some work and some don’t.
In a nutshell included in the lesson is:
Time team investigation starter around uncovering a plague pit
Video clip on the origins of the plague and symptoms
Annotated diagram task around the symptoms
Source task for extended writing with writing frame
“Would you survive the plague?” Bingo.
Hope this saves you valuable planning time.
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Key Stage 3 lesson on Magna Carta. The lesson is approximately one hour long but can easily be extended. We start with a retrieval practice quiz on last lesson which was about King John, but this is easily adapted. We then introduce Magna Carta trhough watching a video clip and the pupils make use their video notes sheet to answer questions. We then look at the clauses in Magna Carta where the pupils sort the clauses into a diamond nine and explain their choices. We then complete an extended writing task. The pupils write a diary entry for King John dated the day he signed Magna Carta explaining how it limits his power and why he dislikes it so much.
In a nutshell the lesson includes.
Retrieval quiz starter
Video clip with notes sheet for the pupils
Diamond 9 ranking activity based on the clauses in Magna Carta
Extended writing exercise “Medieval Dear Diary: King John Edition”.
Emoji plenary.
Hope this saves planning time.
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Key Stage 3 lesson on whether King John deserves the prenom “Bad” King John. The lesson is at least an hour long but can be easily extended into two lessons. We start by looking at an interpretation of John in the Disney movie, the pupils then use a speaking frame to explain what they can glean from the clip. We then move onto a categorising task. The pupils are presented with factual information about John, they have to categories into evidence a him being a good or bad king, they then further categorise into warfare, taxation, religion and role of the individual. The pupils then complete a school report for King John based on the information. We then finish with a question where pupils have to explain to what extent they agree with a statement. Included is:
Disney interpretation speaking frame starter
Differentiated categorisation task
School report task
Extended writing task
Kingometer plenary.
Hope this helps and saves planning time.
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included in the bundle are all the lessons for the AQA Water Management Section of Unit 2C. All the lessons are fully resourced and differentiated. Each is at least 1 hour long (some will be several lessons), include practice questions, video clips were appropriate, photocopying ready to print. key vocab and follow the Oxford textbook.
One lesson does use the AQA Oxford Textbook (The Lesotho highland Water Project), but can easily be taught without.
Lesson titles in order are:
Global Water Supplies
The Impact of Water Insecurity
How Can Water Supply Be Increased?
The Lesotho Highland Water Project
Sustainable Water Supplies
The Wakel River Basin Project
Hope this saves you valuable planning time.
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AQA GCSE Geography lesson for Unit 1a. in this lesson we start with a photo starter of a pyroclastic flow where the pupils can design their own GCSE style question then answer. We then move on to look at interpreting photographs of natural hazards which is something we do more of later in the unit. We practice on the landslides in Burundi in 2015. We then look at when a natural event becomes a natural hazard. We progress to categorising various hazards to introduce the categories of hazards. We watch a short video clip on human interaction with natural hazards before the students complete a mind map using hexagons of the factors that increase hazard risk. We finish with a practice question with guidance should the students need it.
In a nutshell, the lesson includes:
Create a question starter
Photo interpretation task
Hazard categorising shaded grid task
Video clip
Factors mind map task
GCSE practice question with writing frame.
Hope this saves you some valuable planning time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
GCSE Anglo Saxon and Norman England 1060-87 for the new specification 2016. In this lesson we look at the events of early 1066 before moving on to th eBattle of Fulford. The objective of the lesson is to determine to what extent luck, strength/skill and tactics played a part in the outcome of the battle. We start with a quick retrieval quiz from last lesson. We then look at the early events of 1066 and the pupils look at an extract from Marc Morris’ book regarding the problem William had providing for his delayed army. We then consider the movements of the various contenders and plot this information on a map. The pupils then look at the Battle of Fulford. Using information from 3 stages of the battle, the pupils annotate a map of the battlefield to show the events of the battle. We finish with a piece of extended writing on to what extent luck, strength/skill and tactics played in the outcome of the battle. the pupils have some guidance on how to structure their answer.
Hope this saves you some valuable planning time!
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GCSE Anglo Saxon and Norman England 1060-87 for the new specification 2016. This lesson looks at the four claimants to the throne. the pupils start with scenes from the Bayeux Tapestry which they then have to put in order. We then briefly look at the situation at the start of 1066 before considering the strengths and weaknesses of the four claimants. There is a brief video clip and the pupils then have time with a fact-file for each claimant. We finish the lesson by looking at an enquiry question “Who had the strongest claim the the throne”. The pupils have guidance on how to structure their answer.
Hope this helps save you valuable planning time.
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Key Stage 3 Lesson which is approximately one hour long, but can be extended into two lessons. We start with a quick retrieval practice starter. The pupils then take part in a reading activity to set the scene for what post-plague England was like in 1350. We then look at the types of impact the plague had on England. The pupils are given various quotes about the impacts and they are asked to classify them in a number of ways including, social, economic, political, positive and negative, long-term and short-term. They also grade them according to their seriousness. We then briefly look at the Statute of Labourers 1351 before the pupils completing a podium analysis. Here the pupils arrange the types of people onto a podium to show who came out on top after the Black Death.
In a nutshell the lesson includes:
Retrieval practice starter
Class reading activity
Classifying the impacts activity using worksheet
Discussion task using the Statute of Labourers 1351
Podium Analysis: Who benefited most after the Black Death
Emoji Plenary.
Hope this saves valuable planning time.
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Key Stage 3 lesson for a scheme of work on The Rise of The Dictators. In this lesson we look at the Russian Revolution of 1917 and its causes. We begin by looking at Tsar Nicholas II, we then watch a video clip on the reasons for the Revolution. We use info cards and visual hexagons to examine the causes in more detail. We then look at the rise of the Bolsheviks and the pupils create a scroll through history to explain the events of the rise of Bolshevism. We look at a source featuring Lenin and finish on a “to what extent” question.
I hope this proves useful and saves you some time.
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A Key Stage 3 lesson on how Motte and Bailey castles changed into stone castles as part of the Norman Conquest SOW. The pupils will explore the weaknesses of Motte and Bailey castles before investigating the first stone castles, how and why they were built, their advantages and disadvantages. The lesson include the following:-
Questioning starter
Video clips
Differentiated source task
Worksheet on castle features
Plenary
All worksheets included at the end for photocopying.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
Key Stage 3 lesson for a scheme of work on The Rise of The Dictators. In this lesson we look at Stalin’s leadership of the Soviet Union and his actions. We start with a quick retrieval practice quiz. We then introduce Stalin via a video clip and the pupils complete sentences as they watch the clip. We then look at Stalin’s actions as leader and the pupils decide if they are good ideas or bad ideas using a visual indicator scale and explanation. We then look at how different types of people within the Soviet union would react to Stalin’s actions as leader. We look at a source and the pupils answer a GCSE-style 4-mark question.
I hope this proves useful and saves you some time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
Template for the rating sliders worksheet. Can be used for a variety of subjects and tasks. Fully editable.
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Another quick retrieval practice slide based on field sketches. This one is High Force Waterfall on the River Tees. Hope it proves useful.
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AQA GCSE history lesson on the war at sea, the Germans use of U-boats and unrestricted U-boat warfare and America’s decision to enter the war. For the Conflict & Tension 1894-1918 unit.
We start with a simple retrieval practice quiz. We then look at the U-boat threat in detail, firstly by looking at the design and function of the U-boats and then by watching a video clip where the pupils answer questions about how they were used. The pupils then consider how the British responded to the threat and what innovations were adopted. We then progress to look at the sinking of the Lusitania and the pupils complete a tensionometer to record the rising tensions between the USA and Germany. We look at a source “Destroy this Mad Brute” and the pupils answer questions. There are two plenary options to assess the impact or potential impact of America entering the war.
Hope you find this useful and it saves you some planning time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
AQA GCSE history lesson on the Hundred Days Offensive and the ending battles of WWI.
We start with a simple ‘if this is the answer, what is the question?’ retrieval practice quiz. We then have a brief recap of the events of the failed Ludendorff Offensive and Germany’s precarious position. We then look at Foch’s plan for the offensive in a video clip and the pupils think about Germany’s preparedness for the offensive. We then follow events in a series of event slides. The pupils read the information on the board and record the German army’s level of control at that point on the Western Front. This could be done as a round the room or carousel activity. The pupils reflect on what the critical events were. We then use a source comparison question as consolidation and finish with the pupils writing a bio-poem to General Ludendorff.
Hope you find this useful and it saves you some planning time.
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AQA GCSE history lesson on the war at sea, the naval blockade and the Battle of Jutland for the Conflict & Tension 1894-1918 unit.
We start with a simple retrieval practice timeline quiz. We then have a recap on the naval arms race before looking at why a blockade was an effective tactic against Germany and the impact that the blockade had on Germany at home. Pupils explain each effect and try to explain how this would impact Germany. We then look at the early engagements in the Indian and Southern Atlantic Ocean before looking at the new German approach using ‘bait ships’. The pupils analyse the events of the Battle of Jutland using sources and an information strip and reach a reasoned conclusion as to who won the battle.
Hope you find this useful and it saves you some planning time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
AQA GCSE Geography lesson for the new specification unit 2B. In this lesson we look at why countries are in debt and how debt relief can help reduce the development gap. We start with a photo of the G7 and the pupils will think about what the organisation is and who is in it. We then consider why countries have built up a large amount of debt. We then look at the pattern of HIPC’s around the globe and the pupils complete a differentiated activity around a map which shows their locations. We then look at how debt relief can reduce the development gap and then onto micro finance with a brief look at the Grameen Bank. We then tackle a 6-mark GCSE-style question and the pupils use structure strips to answer the question if needed.
In a nutshell lesson includes:
Photo interpretation starter
Activity: Why are some countries in such debt?
Activity: Debt relief and roadmap to reducing development gap
Video clip: Grameen Bank
GCSE-style 6-mark question with guidance.
hope this saves you valuable planning time.
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AQA GCSE Geography lesson for Unit 1 A. Comparing the responses of the Chile 2010 and Nepal 2015 earthquakes. In this lesson we start with a retrieval practice grid which you can populate with your own questions. We then look at the difference between immediate and long-term responses. The pupils complete a photo interpretation task around the searching of buildings before completing a worksheet on the responses to the two earthquakes and answer some questions on what they have found. We then use the worksheets to answer a GCSE-style 9 mark question. using a structure guidance sheet together with mark scheme for content and SPAG.
In a nutshell lesson includes:
Retrieval practice starter
Photo interpretation task
Responses worksheet with questions
GCSE 9 mark question with guidance and mark scheme
Hope this saves you valuable planning time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer
AQA GCSE Geography lesson for Unit 1A. We start with a simple retrieval quiz, before then looking at the situation of Naples and asking why such a large city has developed near a clear potential threat. We explore this by completing a photo challenge activity with differentiated questions. Pupils will then complete a question wheel about the different reasons why people would choose to live in areas of tectonic hazards. We move on to consider Iceland and the benefits that the country has experienced by living on a plate margin. We then tackle a GCSE-style question with some guidance on structure should the students need it.
In a nutshell the lesson includes:-
Retrieval starter
Photo challenge differentiated activity on Naples and Vesuvius
Question wheel for explaining reasons for living in a hazardous area.
Video on Iceland’s geothermal energy.
Activity exploring benefits for Iceland
GCSE-style question with guidance
I hope this saves you valuable planning time.
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/markthegeographer