Bring 19th Century protest to life with this engaging, fully resourced Key Stage 3 lesson, exploring the Anti-Corn Law League, the campaigners who challenged the power of Parliament to bring down to many the unfair and unjust grain laws.
Students will learn about the aims and objectives of the Anti-Corn Law League. The controversy of the Corn Laws and who benefitted from them. How the League spread their message, including the use of mass rallies, pamphlets and the railway networks. How the role of new technology, including the printing press and the penny post helped shape public opinion. Robert Peel’s changing views and whether he cared more about principles or party politics. A prioritisation exercise where pupils evaluate multiple reasons for the repeal, from famine to free trade and decide which mattered most. Finally, a competitive plenary quiz will consolidate learning and assess the understanding of the lesson.
This lesson includes:
An engaging PowerPoint with step-by-step guidance
Skills in causation, prioritisation, significance, debate and argument
Source analysis tasks using contemporary accounts
Retrieval quizzes and plenary tasks to consolidate learning
Differentiated worksheets to support all learners
Why teachers will love this resource:
Fully planned and resourced. Just print or upload and teach
Builds core Key Stage 3 skills such as causation, interpretation and source analysis
Prepares students for GCSE themes like power, monarchy, and Parliament
Encourages critical thinking and balanced historical judgement
Whether you’re exploring Victorian values or tracing the roots of modern democracy, this lesson helps students make meaningful connections between economic protest and political change
Something went wrong, please try again later.
This resource hasn't been reviewed yet
To ensure quality for our reviews, only customers who have purchased this resource can review it
to let us know if it violates our terms and conditions.
Our customer service team will review your report and will be in touch.