Similarity & difference
Similarity and difference is based upon an understanding of the complexity of people’s lives, differing perspectives and relationships between different groups. Asking how similar or different allows pupils to draw comparisons across people, their perspectives, motivations and actions as well as across time and space, helping children to develop a greater understanding of modern global society.
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Little coins, big histories
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Local History and the 2012 Olympics
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Making the most of a census
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Migration to Britain through time
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OFSTED, primary history and creativity
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Our Iron Age challenge
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Overground, underground and across the sea
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Pandemics in history: similarity and difference
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Similarity and difference with a tasty twist
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So was everyone an ancient Egyptian?
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Task design for historical thinking
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Teaching crime and punishment as a post-1066 theme
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The Great Fire of London and the National Curriculum
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The Maya: a 4,000-year-old civilisation in the Americas
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The wheels (and horses…) on the bus
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Using shoes as an historical source
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Who is in charge?
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Whose history is it anyway?
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Why stop at the Tudors?
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Why stories?
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