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
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Cunning Plan 101: how emailing enhanced students' debating skills
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Cunning Plan 102.1: teaching decolonisation and the end of apartheid
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Cunning Plan 102: measuring and understanding progress
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Cunning Plan 103: why did Henry VIII marry so many times?
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Cunning Plan 105: Crusades enquiry
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Cunning Plan 106: Political literacy
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Cunning Plan 107: the big idea of Freedom
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Cunning Plan 108: teaching Tudor architecture
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Cunning Plan 109: teaching the French Revolution to Year 12
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Cunning Plan 110: Imperial China
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Cunning Plan 111: Year 8 lesson on C.V. Wedgwood's writing
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Cunning Plan 112: Empire
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Cunning Plan 114: building overview understanding of 19th-century social history
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Cunning Plan 116: how do earthquakes affect a place?
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Cunning Plan 120: Berlin after 1945
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Cunning Plan 123: planning a school trip
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Cunning Plan 127: Abolitionist icons
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Cunning Plan 129: Why has there been so much interest in Mary I?
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Cunning Plan 132: Year 7 and the new National Curriculum
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