Cunning Plans

Cunning Plans are one of the regular features in Teaching History. While they all follow the same basic principles, offering a step by step series of instructions for tackling a particular issue, the purpose and scale of each plan varies considerably. They range from detailed suggestions for teaching specific topics or responding to particular challenges, through outline schemes of work for a particular enquiry, to overarching frameworks that map progression in relation to particular concepts or themes.  The vast majority are written by classroom teachers, eager to share their successful ideas in an accessible format. Each one sets out the issue or problem that the plan is intended to address and provides a series of instructions – a kind of recipe – for achieving the core objective(s).

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  • Cunning Plan 100: teaching the First World War in Year 9

    Article

    History teacher and head of department stand outside noisy Year 9 class. Bombs (paper ones) fly everywhere; in corner of room mutiny is being discussed ... many pupils are refusing to follow their leader's last minute orders - they will not be opting for history! The war of attrition (excessive...

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  • Cunning Plan 101: how emailing enhanced students' debating skills

    Article

    Richard Harris and Diana Laffin describe how e-mailing enhanced their students' debating skills.

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  • Cunning Plan 102.1: teaching decolonisation and the end of apartheid

    Article

    Cunning Plan for teaching decolonisation and the end of apartheid to 13 and 14 year-olds. The rationale behind this teaching unit is manifold: first, it takes away the idea in the children’s minds that all that happened in the twentieth century is world war. Second, it is designed to appeal...

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  • Cunning Plan 102: measuring and understanding progress

    Article

    Steven Barnes provides an innovative method for measuring and understanding progress.

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  • Cunning Plan 103: why did Henry VIII marry so many times?

    Article

    This enquiry sequence was inspired by an Historical Association lecture given last year by Susan Doran entitled, ‘Why did Elizabeth I not marry?’ Through its 14-19 conferences, sections of this journal and local branch activity, the Historical Association has started to secure stronger connection between up-to-date historical scholarship and classroom...

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  • Cunning Plan 105: Crusades enquiry

    Article

    Jamie Byrom’s article ‘Using a concluding enquiry to reinforce and assess earlier learning’ (TH 99) offered a practical solution both to weak knowledge acquisition in Year 7 and to effective, worthwhile assessment. This enquiry follows the same model. The assumption is that pupils would be carrying out this enquiry at...

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  • Cunning Plan 106: Political literacy

    Article

    The onset of citizenship brings with it the need to cover political literacy. The topic can be seen as dry and complex by Year 9 pupils. But ‘democracy is not boring’ (Lang in Teaching History 96). We need to educate our pupils to understand the complexity and features of a...

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  • Cunning Plan 107: the big idea of Freedom

    Article

    Big ideas, making connections, citizenship, thinking skills. We were nothing if not ambitious in our planning for this unit for a lower attaining Year 8 group at Langley School in Solihull. Having identified the big ideas which could underpin a dialogue between history and citizenship and make the connections between...

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  • Cunning Plan 108: teaching Tudor architecture

    Article

    In this edition of 'Cunning Plan' Diana Laffin illustrates how Tudor Architecture can be taught.

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  • Cunning Plan 109: teaching the French Revolution to Year 12

    Article

    This edition of 'Cunning Plan' focuses on teaching Year 12 the French Revolution.

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  • Cunning Plan 110: Imperial China

    Article

    This edition of 'Cunning Plan' looks at teaching Imperial China at the beginning of Year 7.

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  • Cunning Plan 111: Year 8 lesson on C.V. Wedgwood's writing

    Article

    This edition of 'Cunning Plan' is a Year 8 lesson on C.V. Wedgwood's writing. There is also a supplementary download commenting on the C.V. Wedgwood text used.

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  • Cunning Plan 112: Empire

    Article

    ‘Empire’ is an historical concept with a rather imprecise range of meanings. Students need to be able to track their changing understanding of what an empire actually is. Into our workschemes for Years 7 to 13 we have therefore introduced a number of enquiry questions that simultaneously build knowledge about...

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  • Cunning Plan 114: building overview understanding of 19th-century social history

    Article

    This five-lesson sequence gradually builds overview understanding of aspects of 19th century social history through a depth study of the campaigner and reformer, Josephine Butler. Through the sequence, pupils build on earlier work on historical significance, first, by reviewing their understanding of the huge range of reasons why things get...

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  • Cunning Plan 116: how do earthquakes affect a place?

    Article

    Cunning Plan for teaching geography: How do earthquakes affect a place?

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  • Cunning Plan 120: Berlin after 1945

    Article

    Anna Hamilton and Tony McConnell have created a 'Cunning Plan' to tackle to the question, 'Why was Berlin such a significant theatre of conflict after 1945?'.

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  • Cunning Plan 123: planning a school trip

    Article

    School trips are a fantastic opportunity for learning, but they must be planned tightly. Each trip must be carefully justified – what will the students learn which they cannot learn in school? Is this sufficient to justify them (and you) having a day out of the classroom? Does the trip...

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  • Cunning Plan 127: Abolitionist icons

    Article

    What makes someone an Icon? A cunning plan to explore the relative significance of individuals involved in abolishing the slave trade.

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  • Cunning Plan 129: Why has there been so much interest in Mary I?

    Article

    The obvious answer to this question is that teenagers love stories about fire, and especially role plays about martyrdom at the stake! But it is a serious question and a very good historical one. When focusing pupils' attention on ‘historical interpretations' as required by the National Curriculum (both the current...

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  • Cunning Plan 132: Year 7 and the new National Curriculum

    Article

    How can we plan for a coherent Year 7 that makes the most of the new National Curriculum freedom and its almost limitless possible content? Answer: borders, boundaries (and books) Please note: this article was published before the current 2014 National Curriculum.

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