Skip to content
  • Discover More

    History

    'Studying history allows us to understand our place in our local and national community, where we come from and what we have achieved. The study of history helps to widen our understanding of where we stand in the world and to shape it.

    'Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.'  George Santayana

    As students develop their understanding of history they; ask and answer important questions, evaluate evidence, identify and analyse different interpretations of the past, and learn to support any arguments and judgements they make. They appreciate why they are learning what they are learning and can debate its significance.'

    Mrs E Rowe, Subject Leader of History

    ‘A high-quality history education will help pupils gain a coherent knowledge and understanding of Britain’s past and that of the wider world. It should inspire pupils’ curiosity to know more about the past. Teaching should equip pupils to ask perceptive questions, think critically, weigh evidence, sift arguments, and develop perspective and judgement. History helps pupils to understand the complexity of people’s lives, the process of change, the diversity of societies and relationships between different groups, as well as their own identity and the challenges of their time.’ Adapted from National Curriculum, DfE, 2014.

    The Howden School curriculum for history aims to ensure that all students:

    • Develop a stronger understanding of how the past has shaped Britain’s place in the World, our relationship with other countries and life in modern Britain
    • Understand historical facts, change and continuity over time,
    • Consider how to select and question historical sources and interpretations 
    • Express their opinions with well-balanced and well-supported judgements.  

    Key Stage 3 Curriculum

    Year Autumn Spring Summer
    7

    7.01: Empires East and West c.1000

    7.02: The Normans

    7.03: Medieval Church and Life

    7.04: Challenges to Medieval Monarchs

    England’s Relations With Its Neighbours

    7.05: Mali

     

    8

    Early contact with Africa

    The Ancien Regime

    India and Britain’s legacy

    The Agricultural Revolution

    The Vote

    The role of individuals; Wedgwood and Arkwright.

    Case Study; Jack the Ripper

    The period of protest and the changing role of Women.

    Case study - Why did Titanic sink and why did so many die?

    The First World War

     

    9

    The First World War

    The Bolshevik Revolution

    The USA Boom and Bust

    International Relations

    The Rise of Nazism

    World War Two

    The Cold War

    Life in post war Britain

    The Thatcher years

    Global Terrorism

     

    Key Stage 4 Curriculum

    Year Autumn Spring Summer
    10

    Medicine in Britain, c1250–present

    and The British sector of the Western Front, 1914–18: injuries, treatment and the trenches

    1250–c1500: Medicine in medieval England

    Ideas about the cause of disease and illness

    The USA, 1954–75: conflict at home and abroad

    The development of the civil rights movement, 1954–60

    The position of Black Americans in the early 1950s

    The USA, 1954–75: conflict at home and abroad

    Reasons for US involvement in the conflict in Vietnam, 1954–63

    11

    Early Elizabethan England 1558 - 1588

    The situation on Elizabeth’s accession

    Superpower relations 1941- 1991

    Early tension between East and West

    Revision of Medicine through time and Warfare on the Western Front

    The USA conflict at home and abroad; Civil Rights and Vietnam

    Early Elizabethan England

    The Cold War; Superpower relations 1945-1991