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(based on 13 reviews)

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.
Impact of slave trade on Britain
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Impact of slave trade on Britain

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A resource where students look at the various effects of the slave trade on Britain. The powerpoint has a series of slides that can be used as discussion points about the buildings / street names / people involved / statues, with notes added on street names. Card sort alternatively can be done as a diamond 9 or a highlighting / categorising activity. It can stimulate lively discussion or a written up piece. Research and vocab-building task added too.
Events in the Peasants' Revolt
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Events in the Peasants' Revolt

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A lesson featuring a chronology activity for students and an opportunity for extended writing and source analysis. Students can cut up the cards and have students arrange them into the correct order. Answers: B, F, E, A, G, C, H, D YouTube link covers causes more than events - but a great lead-in. Potential questions to ask students either orally or as written answers:- Questions – answer in any order: Do you think that the peasants were right to march to London and attack the city? Or should they have protested differently? Why? Was there a point where it became a real threat to the monarch’s power? Why? / why not? What do you think of King Richard tricking the peasants at the end? Why? Should the peasants have gone home when they were promised what they wanted? Why? / why not? This could be turned into a storyboard or article afterwards.
Medieval life
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Medieval life

7 Resources
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.
Pre-colonial Africa
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Pre-colonial Africa

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This is a resource to introduce topic on slavery. Students explore David Hume’s view on Africa why he and the British were wrong to label the continent barbaric. The card sort can be dome as a diamond 9 or higlighting / categorising activity. Lively discussion or extended writing can follow.
Causes of the Wall Street Crash
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Causes of the Wall Street Crash

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This is a card sorting resource for KS4 students. I have used it with the new GCSE spec for US History. Students read examples of reasons why the Depression happened. They arrange them into the longer term causes and the stock market’s problems (make clear – or allow the more able to work out – that it was these mainly that led to Wall St crashing, and the longer term ones that made the crash turn to depression). They are then invited to prioritise the reasons in each of the two categories, and explain a judgement of the most important to do with longer term causes and the stock market’s problems.There is an exam-style question for the GCSE spec for US History at the bottom of the sheet. This can lead to a debate or piece of extended writing.
USA 1920s
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USA 1920s

5 Resources
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.
Stuart England
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Stuart England

4 Resources
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.
Causes of the English Civil War
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Causes of the English Civil War

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This is a lesson resource in including a two-fold card sorting or cutting and sticking exercise. Students start by matching up key terms which will be used in this lesson and others on the Civil War. Students then move on to the causes of the war, on the worksheet. They decide which are the long-term and short term factors. They can subsequently arrange them according to blame - the king, Parliament, or no particular blame. Lower-ability students can move straight on to blaming the king, Parliament, or no-one in particular. Students can use the writing frame at the end to decide on the more important causes of the Civil War, and attach overall blame to the king / Parliament. A fun and informative lesson.
Second World War
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Second World War

7 Resources
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.
Causes of Second World War
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Causes of Second World War

4 Resources
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.
The Press Codes
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The Press Codes

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This is a card sort for students to categorise what the press are and are not allowed to do. Students can explain what is the more important of these liberties and responibilities.
Literacy tasks
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Literacy tasks

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This is a literacy task for Year 9 pupils to look at punctuation. They must add punctuation and capital letters where appropriate. The topic is the First World War.
Quarry Bank Mill controlled assessment sample paragraph
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Quarry Bank Mill controlled assessment sample paragraph

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This is a sample paragraph to supply students doing the SHP controlled assessment question on Quarry Bank Mill. Students are invited to read through the answers, and highlight what is done well in each They will find that the second question is far more thorough than the first, as it compares the importance of factors to the site / context and then to other factors. They can label on the second page where this happens.
Activities of the KKK
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Activities of the KKK

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This is a diamond 9 card sort to categorise and prioritise the reasons that the KKK were a menace to black Americans. As an extension, you can challenge students to explain the more / less serious 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, violence, non-violenmce and ceremonies.
Republican and Democrat ideas USA
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Republican and Democrat ideas USA

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This is a resource for students startijg the study of the USA. Students are invited to explain what the parties believe in via a serioes of pictures. they can then write definitions. Students then look at policies more carefully. They decide which are for eaach party. It can be done as a cut and stick, highlighting ar card sort activity. I prefer a card sort as it allows a ‘not sure’ pile initially. Students can idenitfy economic, social and other policies. Less able ones have a differentiated resource. there are extension questions at the bottom of each. This can lead to a debate, either straight away or following more extensive research as homeowrk or ICT facilities in lesson.
Black Power - impact
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Black Power - impact

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This is for KS4, and could be used at A level too. Students watch the videos to gain an insight into elements of the Black Power movement. Students then use the differentiated card sort activity to cut and stick, or complete in any other way, the venn diagram. The venn diagram categorises what attracted poorer people to Black Power, and What many people disliked about Black Power. It would be helpful to rtell students beforehand that: poorer, younger, working class black Americans were more likely to support the Black Panthers, and Black Power. Richer, older, middle class black Americans were more likely to support peaceful protest. This can lead to a class debate / extended writing / exam Q on whether Black Power was effective - either looking at it as a stand-alone, or copmparing it with prior knowledge on the peaceful Civil Rights movement.
Medieval childbirth
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Medieval childbirth

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to categorise and prioritise reasons that childbirth was dangerous in the Middle Ages. More able students can use the cards to explain their thoughts on the most important reason for the danger of childbirth. The task could also be done as a diamond activity. It could be done as a venn diagram using the venn diagram template.
Activity for RAF Cosford and Hack Green fieldwork
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Activity for RAF Cosford and Hack Green fieldwork

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A pair of resources, in the same document, to use on a GCSE field trip to RAF Cosford in Telford, and Hack Green Secret Nuclear Bunker near Nantwich. Questions are arranged in groups based around exhibits in the museums. Non-specialists supervising students on the trip can easily keep up with the answers.
Uses of the rainforest
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Uses of the rainforest

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This is a card sort designed to allow students to arrange uses of the rainforest, and problems caused by humans. There is a differentiated sheet for lower-ability students. They can explain judgments on the best and most damaging uses.. More able students can come up with ways that the rainforest can be better used.
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.