Overview & Depth
Assessment criteria for public examinations (at A-level and GCSE) require students to study history at different scales of resolution. Sometimes they are required to adopt a wide vantage point that allows them to survey a long sweep of time, making it possible to see the prevailing trends and turning points. On other occasions they are required to zoom in close, focusing on a much shorter time-span, with scope to examine the lives of individuals and particular groups of people. The materials in this section deal with the distinctive characteristics of schemes of work operating at these different levels and also prompt teachers to consider how overview and depth studies can best be combined and sequenced at Key Stage 3 – helping students to develop more coherent frameworks on which to build their own ‘big pictures’ of the past. Read more
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Helping Year 9 explore the cultural legacies of WW1
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Bringing Rwanda into the classroom
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Building an overview of the historic roots of antisemitism
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Move Me On 152: How to teach meaningful overviews
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Continuity in the treatment of mental health through time
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Year 9 - Connecting past, present and future
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Out went Caesar and in came the Conqueror: A case study in professional thinking
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Time and chronology: conjoined twins or distant cousins?
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Polychronicon 146: Interpreting the history of 'big history'
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Community engagement in local history
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Understanding 'change and continuity' through colours and timelines
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Building memory and meaning
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Potential and pitfalls in teaching 'big pictures' of the past
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What time does the tune start? From thinking about 'sense of period' to modelling history at Key Stage 3
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Raising the bar: developing meaningful historical consciousness at Key Stage 3
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The return of King John: using depth to strengthen overview in the teaching of political change
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Into the Key Stage 3 history garden: choosing and planting your enquiry questions
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Thinking across time: planning and teaching the story of power and democracy at Key Stage 3
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"Is it the Tuarts and then the Studors or the other way round?" The importance of developing a usable big picture of the past
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A need to know: Islamic history and the school curriculum
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