Hero image

461Uploads

212k+Views

131k+Downloads

GCSE History for Edexcel
Edexcel History: L3 Which are the most useful sources for telling us about policing in Whitechapel?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Edexcel History: L3 Which are the most useful sources for telling us about policing in Whitechapel?

(2)
The focus of this lesson is for students to learn about the sources that we might study to find out about policing in Whitechapel and to begin to use criteria to evaluate the usefulness of different sources to improve sources skills for Q2. in the exam. Students are introduced to a school SIMS image which they discuss about how useful this source is for finding out about behaviour and what other sources we could investigate to get a better picture. Following this they discuss a source from the time period and working with a partner they create a criteria for judging how useful the source is. After discussions the class create a tip/ help sheet for working with sources (prompts are given as well as a worksheet). Using a continuum line students rank various types of sources based on their usefulness in learning about policing, which they annotate (examples given in presentation) before completing an exam question. AA resources are included in a work booklet. Terms of Use: Purchase of this item entitles the purchaser the right to reproduce the pages for personal and classroom use only. Duplication for other classes, an entire school or for commercial use is strictly prohibited without written permission from the author. Minor editing is allowed but only for personal use. The document remains under copyright even when edited. Pasting this item in whole or part on the Internet in any form is strictly prohibited and a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Copyright 2017
LO: Introduction lesson to Crime and Punishment (Edexcel 9-1 History GCSE)
planmylessonplanmylesson

LO: Introduction lesson to Crime and Punishment (Edexcel 9-1 History GCSE)

(1)
An introductory lesson to the Edexcel GCSE Crime and punishment through time course. This lesson introduces students to the conceptual vocabulary, key concepts and chronology of the period of study and grounds students in the ’ big picture’ of the thematic study. Terms of Use: Purchase of this item entitles the purchaser the right to reproduce the pages for personal and classroom use only. Duplication for other classes, an entire school or for commercial use is strictly prohibited without written permission from the author. Minor editing is allowed but only for personal use. The document remains under copyright even when edited. Pasting this item in whole or part on the Internet in any form is strictly prohibited and a violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Copyright 2017
Nazi Germany:  Lesson 2 What was Germany like at the end of the First World War?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Nazi Germany: Lesson 2 What was Germany like at the end of the First World War?

(4)
A lesson which looks at the state of Germany at the end of 1918. The students start by imagining what Germany was like in 1918 and they draw an image and describe their surroundings. They are then introduced to several sources which show some of the problems affecting the German people, the economy, the government and the army/ navy. After annotating the sources they write a report about the state of Germany in 1918. Literacy support included (writing frame and key words). Plenary revisits their starter illustration and they undertake the same activity but use the knowledge from the lesson to support their images and descriptions. GCSE skills are incorporated throughout.
'Who was to blame for the sinking of Titanic?'
planmylessonplanmylesson

'Who was to blame for the sinking of Titanic?'

(2)
An easy to follow lesson on Titanic. Students review pieces of evidence and categorise and organise this these into a diamond 9 (or score each piece of evidence) to determine who they think was to blame for the Titanic disaster. They follow this up with a report writing activity to explain their theory and also to offer suggestions on how future disasters might be avoided. Literacy support and differentiated materials/ resources are included. As always there are clear instructions and high quality differentiated resources. These lessons take many hours to plan and create so please leave a review if you have time :)
Nazi Germany and the Rise of a Dictatorship: Lesson 4 Who was Adolf Hitler?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Nazi Germany and the Rise of a Dictatorship: Lesson 4 Who was Adolf Hitler?

(6)
A lesson on Hitler's early life (1889-1924). Students extract information to create a time line and a story board to help explain how/ why he developed his views and the main task requires class to create an annotated front cover for a book which looks at his early life. As always there are clear step by step instructions and high-quality differentiated resources.
Edexcel 9-1 Whitechapel L5: What was the greatest challenge to the police during the Ripper murders?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Edexcel 9-1 Whitechapel L5: What was the greatest challenge to the police during the Ripper murders?

(3)
Easy to follow lesson which examines the key factors that hindered the police during the Ripper investigation. Students analyses evidence cards, categories evidence, explain its significance and create a Penny Dreadful article that criticizes the police investigation into the murders. The following lesson will examine the police methods and their effectiveness. After students have gained this knowledge they will be able to attempt the source based questions.
Edexcel GCSE Superpower Relations & Cold War L9 'What was the Berlin Crisis & what were its impacts?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Edexcel GCSE Superpower Relations & Cold War L9 'What was the Berlin Crisis & what were its impacts?

(3)
Building on from lesson 8, tensions continue to rise in 1948-49 during the Berlin Crisis. In this lesson we begin to unravel that tricky narrative question. Students learn about the Berlin Crisis of 1948-49 by creating a map to show the zones, a few quick activities to develop their knowledge, they work their way through a simple card sort and diamond 9 to understand the key issues (and those links) that got the Soviets so angry, a quick write up and a report making activity (based on sources) on the impacts of the Blockade and the West's response. The lesson concludes with the students applying their A01 knowledge and A02 skills to complete the 8 mark narrative question by using the chronolink technique. Fully differentiated with a student friendly mark scheme, structure strips, clear advice and instructions on how to complete this type of question. Suggested teaching time 2 hours (a double lesson).As always there are clear step by step instructions and high-quality differentiated resources.
Medieval Castle Activity Pack
planmylessonplanmylesson

Medieval Castle Activity Pack

(3)
A medieval castle attack and castle defence activity book. A package of activity / projects related to the Medieval Castles. Includes six different activities. Each activity includes a creative and detailed activity sheet, templates, literacy support and a self assessment sheet. Also included are some feedback labels (check sheets with space for a teacher comment). Ideal for homework tasks, a sequence of lessons or project.
Nazi Germany & the Rise of a Dictatorship: Lesson 5  What was the Munich Putsch and why did it fail?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Nazi Germany & the Rise of a Dictatorship: Lesson 5 What was the Munich Putsch and why did it fail?

(3)
A comprehensive lesson on the Munich Putsch. Students work through a range of student-led activities, such as creating a fact file, sequencing and organising information, analysing sources and completing an extended response task which develops GCSE skills. As always there are clear instructions, and high-quality differentiated resources. This lesson should ideally be taught over two lessons.
GCSE 9-1 History Crime & Punishment Revision and Quiz Book
planmylessonplanmylesson

GCSE 9-1 History Crime & Punishment Revision and Quiz Book

(3)
A 15 page Crime Punishment revision and quiz booklet. Perfect for that end of term lesson(s), for revision sessions, homework tasks, plenary or starters or can simply be used as a fun Christmas lesson for a topic quiz. The booklet includes 5 quick fire questions for each of the five units c1000-c1500,c1500-c1700, c1700-c1900, c1900-present & Whitechapel. In addition there is a famous individual round, matching crimes and laws to the correct era, an event and change quiz, anagrams and significant events in the story of crime and punishment. This product can be purchased in the 1700-present Bundlehttps://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/edexcel-history-gcse-91-crime-and-punishment-c1700-present-11501920. Or if you are new to TES set up an account and get this resource for free with the code NOVEMBERNEWBIE. A teacher answer booklet is included too
Edexcel GCSE 9-1 Weimar & Nazi Germany, 1918-1939 revision resource pack (Unit 1)
planmylessonplanmylesson

Edexcel GCSE 9-1 Weimar & Nazi Germany, 1918-1939 revision resource pack (Unit 1)

(2)
A concise 6 page A4 revision and teaching guide for the first unit of the Edexcel 9-1 Weimar and Nazi Germany specification (The Weimar Republic 1918-29). This comes with key vocabulary, an overview of the period, exam info on each sub topic, quick fire revision tasks, such as multiple choice questions, a student assessment grid and exam question examples and advice/ tips and skills. The is also a quick fire test, which can be used as a starter or a plenary or simply included in the booklet. This is perfect to give to each student either before or after the unit. I'll be doing one of these for each of the units, so keep your eyes on my page.
Nazi Germany & the Rise of a Dictatorship: Lesson 11 How did Hitler become a dictator?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Nazi Germany & the Rise of a Dictatorship: Lesson 11 How did Hitler become a dictator?

(3)
A lesson focused on the events of 1933-1934 which led to Hitler gaining control over Germany. Students analyse the key events (Reichstag Fire, Enabling Laws, Night of Long Knives, Hindenburg’s death, Oath of Loyalty) give examples and explanations of how each led to Hitler’s control and they must give each event various scores in order to create trump style trading cards. As always there are clear step by step instructions and high-quality differentiated resources.
China and Africa.
planmylessonplanmylesson

China and Africa.

(1)
Decision making activity and presentation. Students to decide if China's investment is benefiting or exploiting Africa
Christmas Activities: Christmas through the ages!
planmylessonplanmylesson

Christmas Activities: Christmas through the ages!

(1)
Time travel Britain! Students learn about Christmas during two different eras; the medieval period and Christmas during the rule of Oliver Cromwell. These two booklets include a range of activities (that need minimal teacher intervention) such as a time travel activity, source analysis, writing up a report about Christmas in the period of study (a differentiated version included with sentence stems and a version without literacy support is included), a stamp making activity, a word search and a quick recap at the end where students change their time travels views based on what they now know. Each book will take the students a 60 minute lesson to work through (so enough material for two lessons here). Enjoy a stress free end of term lesson :-). If you are new to TES you can open an account and get this resource for free with the code NOVEMBERNEWBIE (simply enter the code at checkout). Use code WOWVEMBER to get this resource for free for existing buyers
GCSE 9-1 Edexcel Cold War: L19 What was the main reason why the USA & Soviet Union followed detente?
planmylessonplanmylesson

GCSE 9-1 Edexcel Cold War: L19 What was the main reason why the USA & Soviet Union followed detente?

(1)
The first lesson from unit 3 ‘The end of the Cold War, 1970-91’. In this lesson students explore the key events and factors that led the two superpowers to follow a policy of detente. A range of student-led tasks, such as creating a star chart linked to 4 key events and exam preparartion tasks are included in the lesson. As always there are clear step by step instructions, differentiated resources, literacy support and structure strips for the exam question.
First World War Trench Survival Activity Pack
planmylessonplanmylesson

First World War Trench Survival Activity Pack

(1)
A booklet containing a range of activities about life in the trenches during World War One. The activities look at the kit a soldier had to carry, the problems faced on the Western Front (source analysis and creative thinking task), daily routine activity and a No Man's Land task. The final activity requires the students to use their knowledge to create a trench survival guide for new recruits. This can be used for a sequence of lessons or as an independent project/ homework task. I teach this over 3 lessons (2 weeks). The lessons run themselves.
Why did the lives of women change in the 1920s (USA)?
planmylessonplanmylesson

Why did the lives of women change in the 1920s (USA)?

(1)
Easy to follow lesson. Students have to organise information about the changes onto a graph before writing up speech bubbles for different types of women to explain how much their life changed and why it did/ did not change. Exam style question to finish.