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McDougall, Hannah – Teaching History, 2013
McDougall found learning about Stephen and Matilda fascinating, was sure that her pupils would also and designed an enquiry to engage them in "the anarchy" of 1139-1153 AD. Pupils enjoyed exploring "the anarchy" and learning about it enhanced their knowledge and understanding of the medieval period considerably. However,…
Descriptors: Medieval History, History Instruction, Historical Interpretation, Instructional Development
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Stanier, John – Teaching History, 2013
How can history teachers structure learning pathways through historical content in ways that engage and challenge all pupils, that enable them to work at an appropriate pace and that also encourage pupils to self-assess and monitor their own progress? Stainer reports and reflects on classroom experiments in "Mastery Learning" that aimed…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Educational Improvement, Classroom Techniques, Outcomes of Education
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van Boxtel, Carla; van Drie, Jannet – Teaching History, 2013
The history education community has long recognised that historical thinking depends on the interplay between substantive knowledge about the past and the procedural, or second-order, concepts that historians use to construct, shape and give meaning to that substance. While the nature of that interplay and the processes by which we enable pupils…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Historical Interpretation, Classroom Techniques, Logical Thinking
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Burn, Katharine; McCrory, Catherine; Fordham, Michael – Teaching History, 2013
As proposed changes to the National Curriculum are furiously debated, and details of future changes to GCSE are anxiously awaited, history teachers in England are already wrestling with the implications of one change to the public examination system: the end of "modular" GCSE courses and a return to final examinations. Although modular…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, History Instruction, Educational Principles
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Brown, Mary – Teaching History, 2013
Mary Brown recognised that her A-level students were finding extended writing difficult, particularly in terms of guiding the reader through the argument with appropriate "signposting". To help her students manage this, Brown devised a metaphor to represent the construction of a piece of argumentative writing which she deployed over a…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Figurative Language, Writing Difficulties, Writing Improvement