History
Year 7
- What is History?
- Roman Alcester (local History study)
- The development of church, state and society in Medieval Britain, 1066- c.1500 (including the impact of migration to the British Isles, a theme continued in Years 8 and 9)
- Islamic Civilisations
Year 8
- The development of church, state and society in Britain, 1509- c.1700
- The French Revolution
Year 9
- Ideas, political power, industry and empire, c.1700- 1901
- Challenges for Britain, Europe and the wider world, 1901-present (including the Holocaust)
Years 10-11
The GCSE course follows the Pearson Edexcel GCSE History (9-1) Specification. We cover the following units:
Paper One: Thematic Study and Historic Environment (30% of the GCSE)
Crime and Punishment in Britain from c.1000 AD to the present day.
- The nature of criminal activity and changing definitions of crime
- The nature of law enforcement and punishment
- The influence of changes in society on crime and punishment
- A case study on Whitechapel, c.1870-1900: crime, policing and the inner city
Paper Two: Period Study and British Depth Study (40% of the GCSE)
British depth study: Henry VIII and his Ministers, 1509-1540
- Henry VIII as ‘Renaissance Prince’ and the policies of Cardinal Wolsey
- The King’s ‘Great Matter’ and attempts to resolve this
- Thomas Cromwell’s rise to power
- Cromwell’s changes to government and reasons for his downfall
- The Break with Rome
Period study: The American West, c.1835-c.1895
- The culture of the Plains’ Indians and early settlement of the West
- The development of the Plains
- Conflict on the Plains
Paper Three: Modern Depth Study (30% of the GCSE)
Weimar and Nazi Germany, 1919-1939
- The origins of and early challenges to the Weimar Republic
- Hitler’s rise to power
- Nazi control and dictatorship
- Life in Nazi Germany