Diversity in the past
The materials in this section are all focused on the choices that teachers have to make about the substantive content of their curriculum. The diversity that all students encounter within the past – the range of specific individuals and groups of people about whom they learn – and the ways in which different topics are treated within the curriculum are known to impact on the extent to which young people engage with school history and on the connections that they see between past and present. The resources in this section illustrate different ways in which teachers have increased the diversity of their curriculum – paying more attention, for example, to women other than monarchs in the early modern period; examining the work of Black British civil rights campaigners; or questioning the stereotype of the English ‘Tommy’ in examining who fought for Britain on the Western Front. Teachers will need to develop their own subject knowledge if they are to teach more diverse pasts and many of these resources help to provide some of that new knowledge or show where it can be found.
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Bringing school into the classroom
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Cunning Plan 185… for building difference into GCSE curriculum design
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Diversity resources and links for secondary history
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West Indian Soldier: Learning resources from the National Army Museum
8th October 2021Click to view -
Triumphs Show: Diversifying the curriculum at A-level
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Planning a more diverse and coherent Year 7 curriculum
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Year 7 use oral traditions to make claims about the rise and fall of the Inka empire
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Walter Tull: Sport, War and Challenging Adversity
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Inventing race? Using primary sources to investigate the origins of racial thinking in the past
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Putting black into the Union Jack: weaving Black history into the Year 7 to 9 curriculum
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Decolonise, don’t diversify: enabling a paradigm shift in the KS3 history curriculum
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Cunning Plan 183: Teaching a broader Britain, 1625–1714
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Diversifying the curriculum: one department’s holistic approach
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In pursuit of shared histories: uncovering Islamic history in the secondary classroom
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Move Me On 183: sees no reason to include Black or Asian British history
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CARGO Classroom: digital resources for diverse histories
17th March 2021Click to view -
No more ‘doing’ diversity
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Widening the early modern world to create a more connected KS3 curriculum
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Thinking beyond boundaries
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How should women’s history be included at Key Stage 3?
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