Learning objective
- To evaluate the significance of sporting people.
Success criteria
- I can research important aspects of a person’s
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National curriculum
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Cross-curricular links
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Before the lesson
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Lesson plan
Recap and recall
Ask the children if they can recall the names of the significant individuals they have learnt about so far in this unit (Elizabeth I, Alfred the Great, William Tuke, Betty Boothroyd and Ellen Wilkinson). Display ‘The £10 note longlist’ (slide 1) from the Presentation: The £10.00 note longlist. In pairs, ask the children to discuss…
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Adaptive teaching
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Assessing progress and understanding
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Vocabulary definitions
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In this unit
Assessment - History Y5/6 (B): Unheard histories
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 1: Who features on banknotes and why?
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 2: Was Alfred the Great or Elizabeth I the more significant monarch?
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 3: How were Ellen Wilkinson and Betty Boothroyd historically significant?
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 4: Why was William Tuke significant? - Option 1
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 4: Why was Mary Seacole significant? - Option 2
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 5: Who was more significant: Lily Parr or Betty Snowball?
Y5/6 (B): Lesson 6: Who will be the face of the new £10 note?