I have been teaching for over 10 years in schools and sixth form settings, with additional responsibilities of delivering the EPQ qualification, involvement with transition from primary school to Year 7, and supporting progression to university
I have been teaching for over 10 years in schools and sixth form settings, with additional responsibilities of delivering the EPQ qualification, involvement with transition from primary school to Year 7, and supporting progression to university
This lessons covers policies spanning across 4 governments, from 1979 until the present day
Students explore and evaluate the purpose of government policies: raising stanards, marketisation, economic efficiency
They also evaluate the extent to which policies have created equality or inequality between classes, ethnicities and genders
Activities include:
Name that education secretary
Pre-1979 policies research
Group presentations on each government
Applying perspectives
The lesson also looks at globalisation - cause and effect activity
Example paragraph and essay plan provided at the end
(Lesson follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
A full scheme of work covering research methods in sociology. This includes engaging lesson powerpoints, student activity handbooks, exam questions and example answers.
The scheme of work culminates in students designing and carrying our their own independent sociology research projects, using the research skills they have learned.
Topics covered:
Research design
PET issues
Sampling
Questionnaires
Observations
Interviews
Experiments
Documents
Statistics
Revision
Research project
(Follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
A lesson introducing students to using statistics as a secondary research method in sociology
Covers different types of statistic: official and unofficial
Activities include: a Census challenge, ‘name that statistic’, and ‘name that visual’
Part of a ‘Research Methods in Sociology’ scheme of work aimed at Year 12 students. Students work towards designing and carrying out their own piece of sociology research as a final project
Powerpoint and student workbook included
Separate ‘research project log’ available to download (see shop)
(Follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
This lessons covers ‘Methods in Context’, and is intended for delivery after completing the ‘Education’ and ‘Research Methods’ schemes of work
Students apply their understanding of research methods to specific contexts within education.
Activities include:
‘Be the researcher’ - design sociological research relating to education
Research methods mindmapping
Balloon activity - key research participants
Discussion around contexts and settings
Lucky dip - method and topic
This lesson has a heavy focus on exam technique. Students work through 3 scaffolded questions with example paragraphs. Additional example exam questions also included.
Example paragraph and essay plan provided at the end
(Lesson follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
A lesson to support students with planning their essay (5000 words OR artefact)
Examples of how to structure an essay plan e.g. sandwich and dead fish techniques
Works alongside the EPQ Handbook
An activity book for students to refer to and complete as part of the ‘taught skills’ element of the EPQ qualification
This is to be used alongside a series of powerpoints to deliver the ‘taught skills’ element of the qualification
A bundle containing lesson powerpoints to deliver the taught element of the EPQ (Exam board - OCR). Contains activities corresponding with the EPQ Student Handbook, on the following topics:
Primary research methods
Ethics
Risk assessment
Academic writing
Essay plan
Paragraphs
Introductions
Conclusions
Abstracts
Bibliography
Cover sheet
Literature review
Proofreading
Presentation
Final submission
A bundle containing lesson powerpoints to deliver the taught element of the EPQ (Exam board - OCR). Contains activities corresponding with the EPQ Student Handbook, on the following topics:
Launch
Skills audit
Making a start
Carousel
Focusing your idea
Verification of title
PPR
Supervisor meetings
Time management
Using google
Finding academic sources
Reading and note-taking
Referencing
Primary sources and visual culture
Critical thinking
A lesson to support students with academic writing - tips on what makes a good piece of academic writing, sentence starters for different parts of the essay, and an activity to help with making an argument
Works alongside the EPQ Handbook
A lesson introducing students to using interviews as a primary research method in sociology
Covers different types of interview: structured, unstructured, semi-structured and group
Activities include: dissecting a clip from ‘Graham Norton’, designing an interview, ‘structured or unstructured’ game, interviewer bias and evaluations
Part of a ‘Research Methods in Sociology’ scheme of work aimed at Year 12 students. Students work towards designing and carrying out their own piece of sociology research as a final project
Powerpoint and student workbook included
Separate ‘research project log’ available to download (see shop)
(Follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
A lesson introducing Year 12 students to Marxism
Activities include:
‘StarPower game’ - trading strategy game
Marxism in the news
‘Star rating’ final evaluation
Exam questions at the end, as well as an example paragraph and suggested sentence starters
Follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study
Powerpoint and student workbook included
‘StarPower game’ requires additional resources - coloured counters and envelopes
A lesson introducing students to using observations as a primary research method in sociology
Covers different types of observation: overt and covert, participant and non-participant, structured and unstructured
Activities include: conducting an observation using the New York Street Cam, watching a clip from a Louis Theroux interview, conducting an in-person observation in school
Part of a ‘Research Methods in Sociology’ scheme of work aimed at Year 12 students. Students work towards designing and carrying out their own piece of sociology research as a final project
Powerpoint and student workbook included
Separate ‘research project log’ available to download (see shop)
(Follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
An introduction to Sociology for Year 12 students following the AQA specification.
Covers key concepts, the notion of ‘society’, ‘social problems’ and an interesting case study.
Includes lesson objectives at the beginning (peri-ometer) and stretch and challenge resources at the end (‘be more chef’)
Resources - powerpoint and printable activity booklet
A lesson introducing students to using documents as a secondary research method in sociology
Covers different types of document: personal, public, historic, and prior research
Activities include: conducting content analysis on mobile phone camera reel, personal research, evaluation of methods
Part of a ‘Research Methods in Sociology’ scheme of work aimed at Year 12 students. Students work towards designing and carrying out their own piece of sociology research as a final project
Powerpoint and student workbook included
Separate ‘research project log’ available to download (see shop)
(Follows a ‘Be more chef’ model - the lesson takes cooking as an analogy for the starter, main and plenary. The ‘Be more chef’ concept pushes students to go beyond the recipe at the end of the lesson, and strive towards additional independent study)
A bundle of lessons introducing the key sociological perspectives to Year 12 students.
Comprehensive lesson powerpoints, student handbooks, exam questions and example essay extracts
Covers the following topics:
What is Sociology?
Sociological Perspectives
Functionalism
Marxism
Feminism
Interactionism
Postmodernism
Consolidation - HS2
A lesson to support students with thinking of ideas for their EPQ project
Activities to think of topics, refine their question, and explore the feasibility of their ideas
Works alongside the EPQ Handbook
A lesson supporting students with referencing
Activites include: plagiarism, in-text referencing, footnote referencing, Harvard referencing
Additional card sort activity to download
Works alongside the EPQ Handbook
A lesson explaining the role of the EPQ supervisor, and how students go about using the supervisor to support their project
Includes a suggested meeting log pro forma
Works alongside the EPQ handbook
A scheme of work designed to use in tutor time
A long-term programme introducing students from Y7-11 to university
Works alongside lesson resources (available to download separately)