<
Skip to content ↓

KS3

KS3 Course Followed: History
Year 7 – Britain and its place in the Medieval World, c1066-c1450: Migration, War & Identity 
  NAME OF TOPIC KEY CONTENT OF THE TOPIC ASSESSMENT POINTS

HT1

Pre-1066 Study - Impact of Migration to Britain before 1066

Intro to History & Migration topic
Romans
Anglo-Saxons
Vikings

Key Fact Test on Legacy of Migrant Groups

HT2

 Norman Conquest

3 claimants
Stamford Bridge
Hastings
Why William Won
Establishment of Control

Battle of Hastings Essay

HT3

Medieval Castles

Motte & Bailey
Watch Hill Castle, Bowdon
Development of castles
Concentric Castles
Attacking & Defending castles
Life in a Castle

Medieval Castle Display Board

HT4

Medieval Religion

Role & Importance of Religion & The Priest
Doom paintings
Monks & Nuns
Henry & Becket

N/A

HT5

Islamic Golden Age & Crusades

Harun Al-Rashid & Start of Golden Age
Contributions & Key aspects
The Mongols, Siege of Baghdad & End of Golden Age
Intro to Crusades
Motivations of Crusaders
History of Conflict 
Impact of Crusades    

End of Year Exam

HT6

Emergence of Early Modern Britain

John & Magna Carta
De Montfort & Parliament
Altrincham Charter
Edward I’s Wars (2)
Black Death (2)
Peasant’s Revolt
Hundred Years’ War
Comparison: Mansa Musa & The Malian Empire

Hundred Years War Movie Trailer

Year 8 - Britain and its place in the world c.1450-c.1850: Renaissance, Reformation & Revolution
  Table Heading   Table Heading

HT1

European Renaissance & Voyages of Discovery

Introduction: The World in 1450 & Overview of 1400-1850
Intro to & Causes of Renaissance
Impact of Renaissance
Da Vinci
Voyages: Who & Where
Reasons for Voyages
Impact of Voyages

Columbus: A Contested Legacy (Interpretation Question)

HT2

European Reformation & Tudor Britain

Henry VII
Henry VIII
Continental Reformation: Criticisms of Catholic Church
Catholics & Protestants
Henry VIII’s Great Matter
Break with Rome
Dissolution
Edward’s Radical Reformation
Mary’s Counter-Reformation

Break with Rome (Source Assessment)

HT3

Elizabeth & The End of the Spanish Golden Age

Spanish Golden Age
Elizabeth’s Problems
Causes of Armada
Why England Won
Fall of Spain & the Dutch Golden Age

Armada Essay

HT4

Enlightenment & Revolution

Witchcraft
Enlightenment
Scientific Revolution
Key Scientists
Political Revolution: EnglandPolitical Revolution: France &/or America   

Knowledge & Keywords Assessment

HT5

British Empire & Trade in Enslaved Africans

Britain & its pursuit of Empire
Intro to Trade
Aspects of Trade in Enslaved Africans
Resistance
Abolitionists 
Legacy: Statues of Slave Traders 

Knowledge & Keywords Assessment

HT6

Local History: Industrial Manchester

What was Industrial Revolution? Why Britain first?
Tatton Park & the Trade in Enslaved Africans
Canal Mania: Bridgewater Canal
LMR
Cottonopolis
Peterloo Massacre
Cholera epidemic

N/A

Year 9 - Britain and its place in the Modern World, c.1850-c.2000: Fall of Empires & A New World Order
  NAME OF TOPIC KEY CONTENT OF THE TOPIC ASSESSMENT POINTS

HT1

Early Twentieth Century

Intro: The World in 1900; Overview of C20: Democracy, Fascism & Communism

CHINA 1: Boxer Rebellion: Link to Opium Wars

CHINA 2: 1911 Xinhai Revolution

Women’s Suffrage

Long-Term Causes of WW1

Knowledge & Keywords Assessment

HT2

The First World War & its Impact

Franz Ferdinand
Schlieffen Plan
Recruitment Propaganda
Trench Warfare
Haig & the Somme
Chapel Street: The Bravest Street in EnglandEmpire Troops & the Black ‘Forgotten Regiment’

Haig Interpretation Question

HT3

Rise of the Dictators & Outbreak of WW2

Impact of WW1: Versailles, Fall of Empires, Rise of Democracy, Spanish Flu & Race Riots in Liverpool
Rise of Mussolini, Stalin & Hitler (also mention Mosley/BUF in Britain)
Causes of WW2 (2) 
CHINA 3: Long March

Causes of WW2 Mini-Essay

HT4

WW2 & New World Order

Why did Allies Win WW2 overview? (2)
Holocaust (2)
Atomic Bombs
Impact of WW2: Decline of Empires
New World Order: Cold War: Capitalism & Communism

Churchill: A Contested Legacy (Interpretation Question)

HT5

A Divided World

Truman, Containment & Marshall Plan
Berlin: Epicentre of a divided Europe
Nuclear Arms Race
CHINA 4: 1949
Cuban Missile Crisis
CHINA 5: Great Leap Forward 1958-62
CHINA 6: Cultural Revolution 1966-76

End of Year Exam

HT6

The Late Twentieth Century

Britain: Sick Man of Europe? (loss of empire; economic decline, EEC, racial tensions
Reagan & Thatcher’s ‘Second Cold War’
CHINA 7: Den Xiaoping & Economic Reform
Fall of Berlin Wall
CHINA 8: Tiananmen 1989
Collapse of USSR & ‘End of History’?
Britain at the end of the C20  

N/A

What can parents do to support their sons?

Please encourage your son to read around the subject as much as possible. We have an excellent Key Stage Three History library in C5 (usually Ms Cathcart’s room) which all students in Year 7, Year 8 and Year 9 are welcome to use.  Please see Ms Cathcart for further details.  Beyond that, useful historical websites include:

Specialist websites can also be useful for more detailed research, for example:

You can also encourage your son to read historical fiction and non-fiction. He could try to keep an eye on current affairs which often have historical links. There are many well-produced and engaging historical television programmes, from entertaining ‘Horrible Histories’ to informative documentaries. If possible visit local historical sites like the Manchester Museum of Science and Industry, The Imperial War Museum and Dunham Massey.  When you go further afield, Hadrian’s Wall, Edward I’s Welsh castles and the Houses of Parliament are popular attractions. In Europe there are the First and Second World War battlefield sites.  The most important contribution parents can make to support their son’s history studies education is to assist them in developing an active interest in the world around them.