On-demand webinar series: Meaningful and useable assessment in the secondary history classroom

On-demand webinar series for secondary history teachers and leaders

What does this series cover?

In this series of six webinars, Jonathan Grande will explore and exemplify a wide range of types and forms of assessment that can be used to provide precise, accurate and meaningful insights into pupils’ historical knowledge and understanding. The sessions will consider the purposes of assessment in history, approaches to designing meaningful questions and tasks and what history teachers might do with the insights they gain.

  • How is the series structured and delivered?

    The series consists of 6 webinar recordings, each lasting approximately 1 hour. The webinar series was originally recorded in summer 2024.

    Session 1: Invisible assessment within an enquiry (FREE for HA members)
    This session will explore the constant, routine assessment that goes on throughout the history lessons that make up a single enquiry – assessment that forms such a natural part of history teaching that it’s sometimes difficult to notice it as assessment. What is the purpose of this assessment? How can we use it to gain as much insight as possible into pupils’ learning? And what might we do with the insights we gain?

    Session 2: Assessing the historical parts
    This session will explore how history teachers can isolate and assess individual components, or parts, of pupils’ historical knowledge, but without reducing this to an assessment of isolated facts. The session will include examples of questions and tasks that can help teachers assess pupils’ understanding of a particular concept, their chronological knowledge and their knowledge of how historians they’ve studied have established evidence for their claims about the past.

    Session 3: Assessing pupils’ answers to enquiry questions
    This session will consider how history teachers can go about ‘marking’ pupils’ answers to enquiry questions in a way that values the pupils’ own voice and independent thinking, and avoids restricting them to a mark scheme. The session will also explore how we might use the process of answering an enquiry question as a teaching opportunity, without losing it as an opportunity for assessment.

    Session 4: Assessing the historical whole
    This session will set out a range of tasks and questions, beyond answering an enquiry question, that require pupils to draw on the knowledge they have built cumulatively throughout the curriculum. The session will consider the purposes of such assessment tasks and some underlying principles that will enable teachers to design their own.

    Session 5: A year in assessment
    This session will put forward a couple of examples of what meaningful and useable assessment could look like across a school year at Key Stage 3. The session will explore the range of assessment types in each example, the individual and collective purposes of the assessments, and the kinds of actions teachers might make at different points through the year. And all without there being a GCSE-style question in sight!

    Session 6: A history teacher’s 'markbook'
    This session will consider what it might be most useful for history teachers to keep a record of over the course of a year. Every time we read pupils’ work or listen to what they have to say about history, we learn more about their knowledge of, and relationship with, the past. But what might it be most useful for us to capture, and how might we do this most efficiently?

  • Who is the series for?

    The series is suitable for anyone involved in teaching or leading history at secondary level. The series will mainly be focused on Key Stage 3, with relevance for Key Stages 4 and 5.

  • Why should I attend these webinars?

    In recent years, many history teachers have done lots of exciting work to develop the curriculum they teach, incorporating new content, new scholarship and new enquiries. As part of this work, it is vital to uncover how far pupils are learning all that was intended, and the ways in which this is changing their understanding of the past.

  • What are the learning outcomes?

    This webinar series will enable you to:

    • • Gain knowledge of key principles and purposes of effective and meaningful assessment in secondary history
    • • Gain knowledge of a wide range of different types of assessment, and how these can be used individually and collectively to reveal pupils’ knowledge and understanding in history
    • • Plan and design a wide range of assessment tasks that can reveal pupils’ substantive and disciplinary knowledge
    • • Understand the range of insights that can be made from assessments, and how these insights can be used to inform future planning and teaching
  • Who is leading the series?

    The series is led by Jonathan Grande, an experienced Head of Department and the Network Lead for History across Ark Schools.

  • What does it cost?

    Each webinar is charged at £30 for HA members and £45 for non-members (VAT is zero-rated). You must be logged in to your membership account to access the member rate.

    Did you know? You can save money by registering at the membership rate in addition to accessing a range of other benefits all year round. Find out more about Secondary membership.

  • How do I access the webinars?

    You can purchase and access each set of webinars using the links provided. Once you have purchased each webinar, the recording will be available to view at the bottom of the relevant resource page until the stated expiry date.

    Expiry date: 4 January 2027

    Payment is available by card only. We are unable to arrange block purchases or issue invoices, but VAT receipts are available upon request.

    Please note that to register and access the content you will either need to have an active HA membership or a free basic account. You will need to be logged in to your account before you access this course. If you would like to become a member please click here. If you would like to register for a free basic account please click here.

For any enquiries, please contact events@history.org.uk. Please read the HA CPD terms and conditions before registering.

What previous participants have said:

“Clear structure with good ideas to embed into classroom practice immediately.”

“Excellent value for so much CPD time.”

“It has enabled me to rethink how to plan assessment and maximise the use of classroom time to assess students.”

“I thought it was very useful and would recommend the series to others”