This bundle gives you the resources to teach several lessons on Jack the Ripper at KS3 (or KS4 with some editing). Do take advantage of YouTube to get the most out of these resources.
This bundles my resources for:
Paper 1 Crime and Punishment
Paper 2 Superpower Rivals and Henry VIII
Paper 3 Weimar and Nazi Germany
They are worksheets, plans and presentations for all of these. All of these files can be edited.
If you cover Elizabeth I - I have included some paid resources too. Enjoy the collected free resources too!
This resource contains short and longer starter activities on the Nuremberg Trials. The PowerPoint is fully editable. I have included the Word Photos so you can edit them further or use them as posters
Presentation Explained.
Simply A4 print slide 2 for a poster. Show slide 3 or 5 as thinking starters before giving the answer using slide 4 or 6. Print out a class set of slide 7 for a practical starter activity for a tutorial period or relevant history lesson (or use slide 10) before showing the answer on slide 8 or showing websites from slide 9.
More key events for On This Day will become available. Entire months will be available ready for the new year. You can use them in history class or with your tutor groups.
Black Peoples of North America Introduction lesson jumps straight into using sources as evidence for opinions.
Learning objective is To use primary visual sources
Learning outcomes are to annotate, to form an opinion through annotation, and develop that opinion by using evidence.
Learning Outcomes (Success Criteria):
• Some students must be aware of the types of conditions, their response to it and begin to form a sentence which explains this.
• As above and should be supported through the use of a source or quotation. Some reference to the consequences, short or long term can be made.
• As above and this could be a supported opinion. This opinion is explained in the context of the period
This is a good coda lesson after you have taught about the Abolitionists and the End of Slavery in Great Britain. It makes use of the song as evidence and frames the factors behind abolition in a different light.
I recommend having different versions of the song, so you can have them playing for students unfamiliar with the song. Home Free Vocal Band have a wonderful acapella version.
This bundle combines the two timeline lessons but it also provides you with resources that allow you to examine the historical significance of the events and people within the timelines. The Keep Calm sheet allows for an anachronistic lesson or homework assignment for the Hundred Years War or the War of the Roses
Resources here for two lessons - Can be one if you have covered Roman Numerals already. Then you can focus on the Extended Tasks.
Lesson works as an introduction into Roman Numerals and evolves into how they permeate our lives. This then feeds into the extended tasks and sees how the legacy list connects to now.
Mind maps can be used in both lessons.
Useful for a new History teacher or for anyone wanting a bargain. Save over 50%
This bundle contains paid and free resources that can be used as activities, worksheets and homework. There are also useful PPTs and tools for teachers to use to reward their students, help them revise and have fun and learn.
A simple worksheet that can be used in class or for a homework assignment. The idea is for the student to generate their own variants of the poster that would fit into a different historical event or time frame. Perhaps "Keep Calm and Ignore the Mongols!"
This means it can be used multiple times throughout the year as an assignment.
You can edit the Docx file to make it work for other subjects.
The resources on sale here are almost every editable general resource I have produced. You can get your class reading through a game, creating a dialogue with characters through text messages, selecting emojis to help with revision, creating timelines, pitching historical events or just watching The Simpsons and making sure they learn.
These resources work well as part of a lesson on Refugees or Immigrants. They are there to support your lesson and provoke thought of the matter.
@teacherstevo