
This KS4 History lesson explores why Mikhail Gorbachev emerged as such a different kind of Soviet leader and how his personality, background and beliefs contrasted sharply with those who came before him. Students investigate what made him willing to introduce bold reforms and why many people across the USSR reacted with excitement, hope or suspicion when he came to power in 1985.
The lesson is designed for the Edexcel GCSE unit The Cold War 1945–91, but it can be easily adapted for other exam boards.
Students work through a sequence of engaging and fully resourced activities including:
• A register starter based on a real Gorbachev magazine cover
• A card-sort exploring the weaknesses of Brezhnev, Andropov and Chernenko
• A one-word summary task to capture the essence of each leader
• A character match-up activity analysing how different Soviet citizens responded to Gorbachev
• A grouping task exploring levels of support and suspicion
• A final headline activity evaluating what truly made Gorbachev unique
Teacher notes are included for every slide, offering clear guidance, key insights, and suggestions for differentiation and extension.
This lesson can be taught as a single 60–75 minute session or extended into a double lesson for greater depth. It forms part of a wider Cold War enquiry series that includes Détente: Did It Bring the Superpowers Closer Together? and Why Did the Soviet Union Tighten Control After 1945?
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