Local Study
The importance of local history for developing a sense of place and identity is emphasised by the National Curriculum. The local landscape and buildings can often reveal a great deal about the use of land and the type of people who lived there in the past. Buildings and landscape can reveal how long a heritage the place has had. Monuments and local heritage or parish records can highlight individual local heroes or provide a window into the lives of ordinary local people in times gone by. How similar or different were their lives? Often, the local picture can also help to reveal the national or international picture.
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Multipage Articles
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Creating a school museum
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Visits and Museums
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Time and Place; Using a Local Historical Site with Key Stage 2 and 3
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Chronology and local history: Year 6
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Shropshire's Secret Olympic History
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Local History and the 2012 Olympics
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A local history toolkit
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The History around us: Local history
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A Local Study
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Urban spaces: inner-city Leeds
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Learning to engage with documents through role play
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Using classic fiction to support the study of childhood in Victorian times
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Local history: young children using written, printed and multimodal sources
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Primary History 55: Doing Local History
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'Be bloody, bold and resolute': Two possible interpretations of 'local history'
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Doing local history
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Local history fieldwork
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Local history for children: through the eyes of a B.ED. student
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How can citizenship education contribute to effective local history?
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The history teacher's craft: Doing local History through the eyes of W. G. Hoskins
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