Cause and consequence
While E.H. Carr’s claim that ‘all history is the history of causes’ may have been widely challenged by historians anxious to demonstrate the breadth of their concerns and the range of other important questions to be asked about the past, causal explanation features prominently in history teaching and learning at all stages within the school curriculum. The resources in this section will help teachers to think about the nature of progression in students’ understanding of cause and consequence and to recognise common misconceptions that they may need to address. The materials offer a wide range of practical strategies, as well as insights drawn from historians’ practice and research into students’ understanding, that will help teachers to determine the most useful ways of helping students to develop more powerful causal explanations. Some of them also highlight the need to pay more attention in planning schemes of work to the identification, explanation and evaluation of historical consequences. Read more
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Illuminating the shadow: making progress happen in casual thinking through speaking and listening
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Improving Year 12's extended writing
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Investigating students' prior understandings of the Holocaust
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Is any explanation better than none?
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Key Concepts at Key Stage 3
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Marr: magpie or marsh harrier?
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Move Me On 92: Having problems teaching causation
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Moving Year 9 towards more complex causal explanations of Holocaust perpetration
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Mussolini's missing marbles: simulating history at GCSE
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Nazi perpetrators in Holocaust education
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New, Novice or Nervous? 149: Getting pupils to argue about causes
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Planning increasingly complex causal models at Key Stage 3
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Scott's 5-stage model for progression in conceptual understanding of causation
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Teaching the very recent past
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The devil is the detail
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The knowledge illusion
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Thematic or sequential analysis in causal explanations
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Using causation diagrams to help sixth-formers think about cause and effect
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Using diagrammatic representations of counterfactuals to develop causal reasoning
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Using individuals’ stories to help GCSE students to explain change and causation
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