Curriculum Support
The Historical Association provides a wealth of resources to help teachers to develop and refine their subject knowledge for all areas of the history curriculum. We also provide guidance related to key developments in the curriculum, such as revised version of the National Curriculum (2014) and on-going developments related to GCSE and A level specifications. Read more
Principles of planning
- Recorded webinar: Holocaust Landscapes (Teach Environmental Histories Network)
- Teach Environmental Histories network
- Structuring a history curriculum for powerful revelations
- New, Novice or Nervous? 172: Curriculum planning
- Move Me On 171: Using existing lesson plans
- New, Novice or Nervous? 171: Teaching Medieval History
Teaching resources
- Lesson sequence: The First World War
- Secondary Education and Social Change in the UK since 1945: KS3 resource packs
- Lesson sequence: Muslim Tommies
- Lesson sequence: Eighteenth-century politics
- Lesson sequence: The Normans - taster lesson
- Lesson sequence: The Normans
Key Stage 3
- Conducting the orchestra to allow our students to hear the symphony
- Film: Making an effective History curriculum
- Questions to help you review your KS3 curriculum
- Structuring a history curriculum for powerful revelations
- How should women’s history be included at Key Stage 3?
- How diverse is your history curriculum?
Key Stage 4
- Curriculum Review Support Module - Secondary
- Recorded webinar series: From Cyrus to Cleopatra: The ancient history adventure
- Move Me On 191: using sources in lessons
- Past Time Toolkit: new learning resource about Victorian Prisons
- Changing thinking about cause
- BBC Class Clips: ‘ClueTubers’ with Carmel Bones
Key Stage 5
- Curriculum Review Support Module - Secondary
- Cunning Plan 190: Using art to make A-level history more accessible
- Bringing historical method into the classroom
- Building Key Stage 5 students’ analysis of interpretations
- Why does anyone do anything? Attempts to improve agentive explanations with Year 12
- Using the Harkness method to help post-16 students make confident historical claims
Periods and Themes
- Real Lives: A German captain’s perspective on the end of WWI
- Doing history: Contemporary narratives and the legacy of the Dagenham Ford Factory Strike of 1968
- Decoding medieval pilgrimage
- Imperial spaces of a ‘miniature world’: the case of Rugby School, c.1828–1850
- Out and About: Locating the Local Lockup
- Finding Bad Bridget: the lives and crimes of Irish immigrant women in America