Outside the classroom
Learning in history should not only take place in the classroom. Making use of the built and landscape environment can be an integral part of learning and progression in history, whether through a visit to a historic site, surveying of the landscape to find historical clues, or forming a human timeline across the school field.
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A View from the Classroom: Writing History
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A history of the world - 100 objects that tell a story
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Artefacts handling at Brunel's SS Great Britain
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Assessment and Progression without levels
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Bringing the Civil War to life in Somerset
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Building learning places
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Case Study: Creative chronological thinking
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Case Study: Prehistory in the primary curriculum: A stonehenge to remember
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Case Study: Working with gifted and talented children at an Iron Age hill fort in north Somerset
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Churches as a local historical source
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Co-ordinators' concerns: Visits and Ofsted
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Creating the 'creative history' website
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Curriculum planning: How to write a new scheme of work for history
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Doing history with objects - A museum's role
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Emerging historians in the outdoors
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From Home to the Front: World War I
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Geosong: a transition project
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Hearts, Hamsters and Historic Education
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History in the Urban Environment
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How museum collections make ancient Egypt, and the people who lived there, real
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