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  • Cunning Plan 202: interdisciplinary teaching of landscape through time

      Teaching History feature
    From a young age I have been fascinated by the history of the landscape. Family holidays in the Lake District offered early encounters with the past that did not come mediated through textbooks, but through place. Driving over Dunmail Raise, my father would point out that the ancient ruler, Dunmail...
    Cunning Plan 202: interdisciplinary teaching of landscape through time
  • The Historian 168: Out now

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Read The Historian 168: Economic History It is only in recent decades that economic history has become integrated into the mainstream work of historians. Those of us who were undergraduates in the late twentieth century can remember university economic history departments being located in buildings on the other side of...
    The Historian 168: Out now
  • The Historian 168: Economic History

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    4 Ask The Historian 5 Editorial (Read article) 6 A stimulating journey along the ‘weary paths of Dryasdust’: using financial records to gain insights into medieval society – Alisdair Dobie (Read article) 11 Letters 12 Women who stirred the pot: female protagonists in early East India Company history – Karin Doull (Read...
    The Historian 168: Economic History
  • History 370

      The Journal of the Historical Association, Volume 106, Issue 370
    All HA members have access to all History journal articles (Wiley Online Library site). To access History content:  1. Sign in to the HA website (top right of any page)2. Then click this link to allow access to History content on the Wiley site.   NB all links below go to the Wiley Online Library site and open in a new window or tab. Access the full edition online Plenary...
    History 370
  • The Historian 167: Science

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    4 Ask The Historian 5 Editorial (Read article) 6 Social Darwinism: the myth and its reinvention – Geoffrey M. Hodgson (Read article) 10 White heat or hot air? The politics of science in 1960s Britain – Steve Illingworth (Read article) 14 More than skin deep: unmasking the history of cold cream – Farhana...
    The Historian 167: Science
  • What Have Historians Been Arguing About... piracy and empire in the early modern world

      Teaching History feature
    The topic of early modern global piracy has attracted increasing scholarly attention in recent decades, partly due to its own intrinsic interest and, it must be said, its entertainment value. However, historians have also explored its connections with broader themes such as empire and colonisation, social history, global economic networks,...
    What Have Historians Been Arguing About... piracy and empire in the early modern world
  • How foundational concepts, supporting concepts and concrete examples can help untangle the past at Key Stage 3

      Teaching History article
    A central organising principle of any curriculum is the substantive concepts that underpin it. They provide a secure structure and enable students to develop deep understanding through multiple encounters with essential abstract ideas that are given concrete form in different historical contexts. Identifying the different levels or tiers to which different...
    How foundational concepts, supporting concepts and concrete examples can help untangle the past at Key Stage 3
  • Developing historical understanding across all areas of the EYFS framework

      Primary History article
    Children in nursery and reception classes do not, of course, learn history. They meet the subject for the first time when they start Year 1. However, what children learn – and how they learn – in EYFS is important for preparing them to learn history. This goes beyond building knowledge...
    Developing historical understanding across all areas of the EYFS framework
  • Britain on pause: remembering the 1926 General Strike

      Primary History article
    In this article, Kate Rigby looks back at the 1926 General Strike and considers how this could be used to explore significance, cause and consequence in Key Stage 2...
    Britain on pause: remembering the 1926 General Strike
  • What is characteristic of the Indus Valley Civilisation?

      Primary History article
    In this article, Karin Doull examines some characteristic features of the Indus Valley Civilisation and considers what these might tell us about this fascinating, less well-known empire...
    What is characteristic of the Indus Valley Civilisation?
  • The success of the Salford General Strike of 1911

      Historian article
    As we approach the centenary of Britain’s only national general strike, this article by Steve Illingworth tells the story of a successful local sympathetic strike in Salford in 1911. He analyses the reasons for the success of the Salford workers and considers why this kind of concerted industrial action could...
    The success of the Salford General Strike of 1911
  • Castle of Convergence: the Muslim settlement of Lucera

      Historian article
    The later medieval period can often be seen as a time of bitter ideological and military conflict between Christians and Muslims. In this article Paola Laviola tells the story of the southern Italian city of Lucera, where occasional religious division was interspersed with periods of toleration between faiths that allowed...
    Castle of Convergence: the Muslim settlement of Lucera
  • Cunning Plan… for teaching the Haitian Revolution

      Teaching History feature
    One of my favourite parts of the curriculum I teach is the second half of Year 8 (for pupils aged 12–13). We look at early European empire, transatlantic slavery and the age of revolutions. Two books that I have read in the past two years have increased my enjoyment of...
    Cunning Plan… for teaching the Haitian Revolution
  • Doing history: Remembering the Wars of the Roses

      Historian feature
    This article examines how the Wars of the Roses have been remembered through memorials and presents the Battlefields Trust’s Wars of the Roses Memorial Database Project, launched in 2023. The open-access, crowd-sourced database maps monuments, plaques, battlefield markers and local commemorations linked to the conflicts. David Grummitt shows that remembrance...
    Doing history: Remembering the Wars of the Roses
  • Teaching History 201: Interpreting the Past

      The HA's journal for secondary history teachers
    03 Editorial (Read article) 04 HA Secondary News 06 HA Update: SEND matters 08 Working 9–5: how painters, plumbers and programmers help our pupils understand the role of the historian – Jessie Phillips and Sarah Jackson-Buckley (Read article) 18 What use is the myth of Winston Churchill? Teaching Year 9...
    Teaching History 201: Interpreting the Past
  • Using learning outside the classroom at historic sites to explore British history units

      Primary History article
    British history in the National Curriculum (2014) provides extensive opportunities for learning outside the classroom, from the earliest times to the present day. Visiting historic sites is one experience of learning outside the classroom that provides a meaningful and stimulating focus for understanding Britain’s past. This said, any site and...
    Using learning outside the classroom at historic sites to explore British history units
  • Social Darwinism: the myth and its reinvention

      Historian article
    ‘Social Darwinism’ has been associated in academia and popular consciousness with negative concepts such as hyper-nationalism and eugenics. Geoffrey M. Hodgson challenges the notion that Social Darwinism or its proponents were ever well-defined. By tracing the use of ‘Social Darwinism’ across academic disciplines and globally over a long period, Hodgson...
    Social Darwinism: the myth and its reinvention
  • The Roaring Twenties: teaching a decade of change across Key Stages 1 and 2

      Primary History article
    This article explores how one topic can be used in different ways to support historical understanding at Key Stage 1 or Key Stage 2. The themes highlighted could link into possible golden threads to enable connections to be made across a school’s curriculum. The ‘Roaring Twenties’ also provide a real...
    The Roaring Twenties: teaching a decade of change across Key Stages 1 and 2
  • Teaching History 202: Out now

      The HA's journal for secondary history teachers
    Read Teaching History 202: Organising Principles Late last year, the government responded to the final report of the Curriculum and Assessment Review, making clear its commitment to revising the National Curriculum for schools in England and promising various reforms to public examinations. As they await new drafts (with publication of...
    Teaching History 202: Out now
  • Using turning points in anti-racist history to explore historical significance at Key Stage 3

      Teaching History article
    In this article, Joel Sharples explains the organising principles that underpinned his planning for a new enquiry sequence inspired by a local photography exhibition. The exhibition’s title ‘Brick Lane 1978: The Turning Point’ prompted him to think afresh about the idea of ‘a turning point’ – a concept that he...
    Using turning points in anti-racist history to explore historical significance at Key Stage 3
  • Update: The Princes in the Tower

      Historian feature
    A subject of endless fascination for the historian, the story of the ‘princes in the Tower’ hit the news again recently, following the discovery of Richard III’s body in Leicester and Philippa Langley’s ensuing quest to show that the much-maligned king was not responsible for the princes’ deaths. In this...
    Update: The Princes in the Tower
  • Exploring a logical conceptualisation of continuity with Year 9 pupils

      Teaching History article
    As a PGCE student, Miles Eades confronted the challenge of teaching about change and continuity. Reflecting on scientific, mathematical and sociological conceptualisations of change as a constantly occurring process led him to reconsider the common characterisation of continuity in history as the opposite of or absence of change. Eades set...
    Exploring a logical conceptualisation of continuity with Year 9 pupils
  • Teaching History 202: Organising Principles

      The HA's journal for secondary history teachers
    Please note: The print version of this edition will start arriving with members from around Monday 13 April.  03 Editorial (Read article) 04 HA Secondary News 06 HA Update 08 How foundational concepts, supporting concepts and concrete examples can help untangle the past at Key Stage 3 – Gareth Lennon (Read article)...
    Teaching History 202: Organising Principles
  • Reshaping students’ understanding of empire

      Teaching History article
    In interviews with GCSE students across a range of school contexts, Abigail Branford found that many young people regarded Africa as an economic ‘dead zone’ prior to colonial intervention. This conception, as Branford briefly illustrates, is at profound odds with current historical scholarship; yet it persists. In seeking to support history...
    Reshaping students’ understanding of empire
  • Move Me On 202: trainee is struggling to make history accessible...

      Teaching History feature
    Move Me On is designed to build critical, informed debate about the character of teacher training, teacher education and professional development. It is also designed to offer practical help to all involved in training new history teachers. Each issue presents a situation in initial teacher education/training with an emphasis upon...
    Move Me On 202: trainee is struggling to make history accessible...