Enquiry: How did Gottlieb explore what permacrisis might have felt like in 1938?
Sarah Davis & Katy Dixon
Teaching Appeasement in the Classroom with Year 9 Pupils at King Edward VII School, Sheffield
This enquiry is designed to help students to understand the turbulent political and social atmosphere of 1938 and develop their understanding of what mattered to people in the past. By examining this period through a lens of emotion history, students will also have the opportunity to develop their disciplinary understanding of similarity and difference. The enquiry lessons allow students to ‘Think like an historian’ and curate rather than narrate the process that Gottlieb has undertaken.
The enquiry includes FL Lucas’ diary, Mass Observation and Nicola Baldwin’s play to enrich student appreciation of different experiences of the ‘permacrisis’ of 1938 and the importance of reconstructing hidden voices from the past.
1. Introduction to the research
2. Recruiting research assistants
3. Choosing sources challenge
4. Permacrisis and its relevance to our own society
5. The importance of knowledge exchange
Attached files:
- Teacher Notes and Enquiry Plan
152.7 KB PDF document - Planning Rationale for Teachers
888.9 KB Powerpoint presentation - Student Knowledge Organiser
793.9 KB Powerpoint presentation - Examples of student work
374.2 KB PDF document - Lesson 1: Why is Gottlieb so interested in foreign policy in 1938?
1 MB Powerpoint presentation - Lesson 2: What sources are useful to Gottlieb in exploring what permacrisis might have felt like in 1938
2.92 MB Powerpoint presentation - Lesson 3: Why is Mass Observation useful to Gottlieb in exploring what permacrisis might have felt like in 1938?
957.5 KB Powerpoint presentation - Lesson 4: How did Gottlieb explore what permacrisis might have felt like in 1938?
5.04 MB Powerpoint presentation