51ºÚÁÏ

Last updated

7 April 2025

pptx, 1.93 MB
pptx, 1.93 MB
PNG, 238.82 KB
PNG, 238.82 KB

Migration Nation

The aim of this lesson is to assess the positive impact migration has had on British values and culture today.

The lesson begins with an introduction to recent migration, where students have to guess the countries migrants have come from using flags and clues.

Students watch an introductory video on migration and how it has affected Britain to the present day.

Students can then work in groups. They have to decide how migration has affected them today personally, from food, to music, language, literature and famous entrepreneurs. They can complete some extended writing on this if required.

The Octagon plenary tests their newly acquired knowledge and checks their understanding of the lesson.

The lesson comes in PowerPoint format and can be changed and edited to suit.

The lesson is differentiated, fully resourced and includes suggested teaching strategies.

Creative Commons "Sharealike"

Get this resource as part of a bundle and save up to 25%

A bundle is a package of resources grouped together to teach a particular topic, or a series of lessons, in one place.

Bundle

Migration to Britain KS3 Bundle

I have created these set of resources which focus on the study of Migration to Britain to consolidate and extend pupils’ chronological knowledge of migration from the Stone Age to the present day This bundle will test student skills and historical understanding of migration. It includes significant events such as the docking of the Empire Windrush at Tilbury Docks in 1948. It makes connections between migration to Britain through the ages such as Irish migration as a result of the potato famine and Irish migration today. Students will be introduced to key concepts of change and continuity between Jewish migration as a result of persecution, the Kindertransport as well as the causes and consequences of migration after World War II and the need for workers in Britain. Students will analyse sources, such as for South East Asian migration to Britain and analyse different interpretations of migration through time, particulalry through the media. They will be able to use historical terms and concepts in more sophisticated ways such as assimilation, refugee, scapegoat, colour bar and boycott. Finally they will be able to provide structured responses and substantiated arguments, giving written evidence and context to extended writing tasks throughout this Migration Unit of work. The lessons are broken down into the following: 1) An introduction to migration 2) First Migrants to Britain 3) Jewish migration to Britain 4) Irish migration to Britain 5) Caribbean migration to Britain 6) Empire WIndrush 7) South Asian migration to Britain 8) Eastern Migration to Britain 9) Fighting discrimination – Bristol Bus Boycott and Stephen Lawrence 10) Migration today (free resource) 11) Migration and the Media Each lesson comes with suggested teaching and learning strategies, retrieval practice and differentiated activities and are linked to the latest historical interpretations, video clips and debate. The lessons come in PowerPoint format and can be edited and changed to suit. Please note that some AI has been used in researching this topic, which I have double-checked and verified to be accurate. These lessons are ideal as a way of introducing Migration if you are teaching it at GCSE or if you wish to add an interesting unit of work to engage and challenge the students to encourage them to take History further in their studies.

£25.00

Reviews

Something went wrong, please try again later.

This resource hasn't been reviewed yet

To ensure quality for our reviews, only customers who have downloaded 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.