Making knowledge secure
While much has been written about balancing and blending types of substantive content, much less has been written about ways of ensuring that pupils do actually gain the knowledge that such planning intended them to have. On the other hand, this issue can surface indirectly in articles on planning, especially where the focus is on how one layer of knowledge can be used to accelerate assimilation of another. For example, articles on drama are often efforts to embed a story or make it memorable. Articles arguing that it’s a good idea to ‘teach this kind of thing before that kind of thing’ are effectively showing how one kind of knowledge manifests itself in another context. So there is always more on making knowledge secure than meets the eye! Also, articles why secure knowledge matters (e.g. its effects on wider historical learning) often overlap with articles how to make that knowledge secure in the first place. So if you are looking for what has been written about one, you are also likely to find it in the other. Read more
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New, Novice or Nervous? 167: Confidence with substantive knowledge
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Note-making, knowledge-building and critical thinking are the same thing
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Planning and teaching linear GCSE
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Raising the bar: developing meaningful historical consciousness at Key Stage 3
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Securing contextual knowledge in year 10
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The Holocaust in history and history in the curriculum
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The Power of Context: using a visual source
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The knowledge illusion
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The return of King John: using depth to strengthen overview in the teaching of political change
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Thinking across time: planning and teaching the story of power and democracy at Key Stage 3
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Thinking makes it so: cognitive psychology and history teaching
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Trampolines and Springboards
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Triumphs Show 158: interactive learning walls and substantive vocabulary
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Using individuals’ stories to help GCSE students to explain change and causation
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Using timelines in assessment
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Weighing a century with a website: teaching Year 9 to be critical
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What Have Historians Been Arguing About... medieval science and medicine?
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Year 9 - Connecting past, present and future
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‘I need to know…’: creating the conditions that make students want knowledge
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‘One big cake’: substantive knowledge of the mid-Tudor crisis in Year 7 students’ writing
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