A series of display posters that define different skills and key words/phrases in History.
Includes:
Cause, Consequence, Change & continuity, Chronology, Evidence, Inference, Interpretation
A 45 page booklet & unit of work which builds and embeds Historical Skills with Year 7. It can be used after a Baseline Test, establishing the skills required to access and understand work undertaken throughout Key Stage 3. There are opportunities for self assessment throughout, with the aim that pupils can see their progress. Teacher marking and comments can be recorded at the back of the booklet. The old levelling protocols are also included, although you will no doubt wish to change these reflecting current developments in the History curriculum. Each chapter should enable pupils to more fully understand the demands of the subject, to discuss and debate the topics studied using the terminology that displays their progress. The chapters of the booklet cover the following Historical Skills:
1. Crime Scene Investigation.
2. Digging for Clues.
3. Chronology.
4. Understanding the Past (timelines).
5. What is a Century?
6. BC/AD.
7. Bias.
8. Historical Evidence.
9. Primary & Secondary Evidence.
10. World War 2 Headstone in France.
11. Self Assessment Exercise.
It goes without saying that should you wish to change or tweak anything within the booklet to better fit your class, you should go right ahead.
A PowerPoint which I use to introduce the Investigation at the beginning of Grade 12 for South African IEB students. Gives guidelines on how to structure the investigation and explains how source material should be selected and described.
From a series of introductory lessons for Key Stage 3, covering historical skills.
Can be used at the start of term, or to revisit and teach skills during a scheme of work.
From a series of lessons covering historical skills. Aimed at Key Stage 3, these lessons can be used as an entire unit at the start of the year, or used/revisited throughout the year to focus students on specific skills.
All lessons in the series are resource free, and each have a pre-prepared homework task.
This particular lesson can be used to get students thinking about cause and consequence, linking factors together or developing their explanations.
From a series of introductory lessons for Key Stage 3, covering historical skills.
Can be used at the start of term, or to revisit and teach skills during a scheme of work.
Historical Skills Escape Room for a class. This is a print and play digital escape room. Every student loves to solve a mystery. This brand new escape room activity will not only improve students knowledge of Historical Skills but will hone their problem solving skills, build up their teamwork and leadership skills and allow opportunities to show creativity and resilience.
The plot…
“Everyone is scrambling, the Ringmaster cannot go on without his hat! This hat in particular is very special to the performance. It is as old as the show it self and no show has been performed without it!”
“The show begins in an hour, and you have a lot of ground to search. You will have to work together to figure out the computer password and return the Ringmasters hat before the show begins. Without those two things, the show may not go on!”
Escape Room Contents
☞Interactive Tracker PowerPoint - Keeps the competitive nature on display
☞ Escape Room Keys (Six Sets for up to Six Teams)
☞ Escape Room Puzzles (7 Rooms = 7 Different styles of Puzzles)
☞ Teacher Answer Sheet - We do the hard work for you!
☞ Teacher instructions to run the escape
☞ Successful Escape Certificates for those that complete the entire challenge (There is a difficult bonus escape for any quick finishing teams :)
☞ The 7 Rooms each have subject specific Puzzles that have been adapted to suit the topic of this Escape Room and are suitable for a variety of students. Each Escape Puzzle is designed by our amazing subject specialist!
☞ Optional Escape Room Script you can use!
☞ Professionally made optional Video to introduce the Escape Room Plot - With Voice overs and alternate endings.
✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰✰
As well as solving 7 different subject themed puzzles they will have to answer a series of bonus questions (12 in total) testing their subject knowledge to the max!
As students complete each puzzle they will be one step closer to solving the mystery. Teams must be careful as they are racing against up to 5 or 10 other teams via an interactive PowerPoint displayed on the board to see who will escape first!!
This Escape Room is a great way to have an education treat lesson for your students and make learning new topics / or consolidating old ones fun!
The Escape Room is fully editable so you can chose to adapt the vocabulary and questions if you wanted.
From a series of introductory lessons for Key Stage 3, covering historical skills.
Can be used at the start of term, or to revisit and teach skills during a scheme of work.
From a series of introductory lessons for Key Stage 3, covering historical skills.
Can be used at the start of term, or to revisit and teach skills during a scheme of work.
From a series of introductory lessons for Key Stage 3, covering historical skills.
Can be used at the start of term, or to revisit and teach skills during a scheme of work.
It never fails to amaze me how much children enjoy a good murder investigation! This lesson is an introduction to how historians 'do' history. Pupils are introduced the concept of inference during the lesson. It also has a literacy twist in that after they have investigated the murder they have to write a piece of discursive writing.
Rote learning, rote writing... we get what we teach. For example, according to evidence cited in a recent study, if we’re not careful, students rely on their teachers’ and textbooks’ interpretation of historical events rather than work from different documents to make their own interpretation of an issue.
Well resourced and interactive revision lesson on key concepts in history. Revision of time-lining historical events, defining key terms and source analysis. This lesson works well as a revision lesson before a key skills assessment.
Suitable for KS3, this is a fictional investigation to utilise pupils’ source analysis and historical investigation skills. All resources attached and full notes on slides to help teachers guide pupils through the investigation. Please leave a review and let me know what you think!
Drawing on the new History Curriculum and focussing on Aims: Strands 4 and 5 this resource includes:
A collection of ten quotes from contemporary sources,
An explanation of five activities that can be carried out using these resources
Planning Templates to support arguments and a chart to help summarise arguments about the Abolition of Slavery.
Learning Objectives
• To understand historical concepts such as continuity and change, cause and consequence, similarity, difference and significance,
• To make connections, draw contrasts, analyse trends, frame historically-valid questions and create their own structured accounts, including written narratives and analyses
• To understand the methods of historical enquiry, including how evidence is used rigorously to make historical claims, and discern how and why contrasting arguments and interpretations of the past have been constructed.
Learning Outcomes:
Pupils will be able to:
• recognise and discern between arguments made for and against the Abolition of Slavery.
• draw on primary resources to produce a reasoned debate on the pros and cons of slavery.
• produce their own persuasive argument in favour (or against) the abolition of slavery.
• produce a balanced argument on the advantages and disadvantages of slavery.
• Produce their own written narrative of what led to the Abolition of Slavery
Historical Skills Escape Room Knowledge Escape Room Quiz - End of term fun for the whole class. No printing required! Just project the Powerpoint and off you go. Built in timers, video clips and answer reveals after every slide. This is an educational fun immersive 'themed Escape Room’ experience.
Have the students compete individually, in teams or as a whole class the choice is yours! This resource is a great team-building activity to keep your students engaged during the last few days (or week) leading up to the end of term.
There are seven different challenging puzzles and you have the choice of setting the timer at easy, medium or high difficult level for each escape. Students will complete a variety of tasks using different skills including: problem-solving, critical thinking, reading comprehension, literacy challenges and some clever deduction.
The puzzles, bonus questions and challenges are a fun way to assess a topic or subject area. This resource covers a variety of different elements including: vocabulary, key terms. key themes, general subject knowledge, literacy and much more…
** Historical Skills Escape Room Quiz Experience** Saving the Mascot Escape Room Contents
☞ Interactive 26 slide Powerpoint Escape Room Challenge
☞ Optional Escape Certificates
☞ Optional Team Sheet (Print it or use scrap paper instead)
Common FAQ’s
★Group sizes: 1-30 students per team - (Participants up to 180)
★Time: Approximately 50-60 minutes (Provide hints along the way if time is a factor!)
★Materials: Aside from Powerpoint - all students need is a pen / pencil.
How to run this Historical Skills escape challenge
This escape room can be done without any printing we have however still included a team sheet (Slide 2) should you wish to use it, if not plain paper will more than suffice.
The escape room is story driven by a YouTube video which is split into 9 sections.
Introduction - Puzzle 1 – Puzzle 2 - Puzzle 3 – Puzzle 4 – Puzzle 5 – Puzzle 6 – Puzzle 7 - Success
At various points you will be instructed to pause the video at these points you can go to the next slide in the presentation.
Each video section (excluding Introduction and Success) will be followed by a puzzle.
Every puzzle has three built in timers in the lower right hand corner to put the teams on a time limit of your choice if you so wish.
Once the timer has expired or everyone has completed the puzzle teams can check their answers on the next slide using the CLICK TO REVEAL boxes.
Once all answers for the current puzzle have been revealed move on to the next video section and subsequent puzzle until all 7 puzzles have been completed and everyone has escaped successfully
(Optional) Give out winning certificates to the highest scorers.
This Historical Skills lesson encourages students to consider pros and cons of different types of evidence, including websites, photographs, books etc. Students will look at one controversial website and book author to open their discussion on useful evidence before going on to consider the uses and limitations of other types.
This download includes a fully editable powerpoint with all activities, instructions, clip links and worksheets/information sheets you need. It is differentiated 2/3 ways where possible with scaffolding and challenge options and is fully planned with plenty of activities for your students to complete including a starter, all clips and related tasks, think pair share activity, card sort with diamond 9, a consolidation explain written question and a plenary.
Activities are planned to encourage thinking and discussion.
Please take a look at our growing TES shop where you can find free or inexpensive lessons:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/shop/DiscoveringHistory
If you are happy with your resource, PLEASE LEAVE US A REVIEW! If, by any chance, you encounter any issues with the resource, please email us at discoveringhistoryuk@gmail.com and we’ll try to solve them for you.
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This lesson was created to support lower prior attaining students grasp the concept of making inferences from sources. It teaches the skill through modeling and repetition. It was created to support learning to master the first question on paper 3 of the EDEXCEL GCSE History specification, but can be used for teaching inferences at any age and on any paper.
This Unit is ideal for providing evidence of English across the curriculum.
Drawing on the new History Curriculum and focussing on Aims: Strands 4 and 5 this resource includes:
A collection of nine extended quotes (with summary information) from contemporary sources,
An explanation of five activities that can be carried out using these resources
Planning Templates to support arguments and a chart to help summarise arguments about Workhouses
Learning Objectives
• To understand historical concepts such as continuity and change, cause and consequence, similarity, difference and significance,
• To make connections, draw contrasts, analyse trends, frame historically-valid questions and create their own structured accounts, including written narratives and analyses
• To understand the methods of historical enquiry, including how evidence is used rigorously to make historical claims, and discern how and why contrasting arguments and interpretations of the past have been constructed.
Learning Outcomes:
Pupils will be able to:
• Recognise the difference between fact and opinion.
• recognise and discern between arguments made for and against education.
• draw on primary resources to produce a reasoned debate on the pros and cons of universal education.
• produce their own persuasive argument in favour (or against) the introduction of universal education.
• produce a balanced argument on the advantages and disadvantages of universal education.
• Produce their own written narrative of life in a school.