The Changing Role of Women
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What You Get
What You Get
This pack includes a complete set of ready-to-teach lessons that together form a coherent scheme of work, written and created by experienced primary teachers.
Each of the lessons within the pack contains:
- An easy-to-follow lesson plan (including plenary and assessment questions)
- An engaging slideshow for the teaching input
- A main activity with three-way differentiation to support adaptive teaching
- An alternative activity for flexibility and choice
- An overview (medium-term plan) showing the scheme contents at a glance
- An assessment grid to track learning and progress
Curriculum Coverage
Curriculum Coverage
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Teacher Benefits
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Activities are designed to spark curiosity, encourage discussion and make learning memorable.
Journey through the ages as your class explore the changing roles and rights of women from ancient times to today with this engaging and topical scheme of work for Year 5 and Year 6. From the law of coverture to modern maternity employment law, this ‘The Changing Role of Women’ scheme will give your class a valuable overview of the ways in which women have been oppressed and the ways in which they have fought for equality, including the militant campaigns of the suffragettes and second-wave feminism of the 1970s.
Containing detailed lesson plans, engaging slideshow presentations, differentiated activities and a range of printable resources, these KS2 History lessons are completely ready to go, meaning you can teach them straight away without the need to spend hours on your own planning. All you need to do is be prepared from some lively debates and discussions!
Traditional Roles
The first lesson in this series starts by exploring the restrictions and roles of women in the ancient world before going on to look at medieval and Renaissance women in Britain. They will find out about coverture which forced married women to submit all their rights to their husbands, as well as looking at social attitudes towards women before 1600 and what daily life was like for both poor and rich women.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated worksheets
- Information sheet
- True or false cards
Victorian Women
This lesson starts with the example of Margaret Hughes and her role as the first British woman to be legally allowed to act on stage as a way of looking at some of the restrictions that were placed on women prior to the 1900s. It goes on to look specifically at how the Industrial Revolution changed certain aspects of society, particularly the role of middle- and upper-class women, and the strict (and frequently bizarre!) etiquette laws Victorian women had to abide by. It also looks at some of the first rumblings of feminism and how some women were starting to fight against their allocated roles.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated worksheets
- Etiquette rules sheet
- Challenge cards
The Suffragettes
Find out about the history of the women’s suffrage movement in this lesson as your class are introduced to the women who fought in different ways for the right to vote. They will learn about the peaceful campaigns of the NUWSS before finding out about the more militant campaigns of the suffragettes, considering how effective their methods were and what public support for the movement was like up to the outbreak of WWI.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated worksheets
- Differentiated challenge sheets
- Date cards
- Timeline cards
Women in the War
The outbreak of World War I forced the suffragettes to temporarily abandon their cause to help the war effort. This lesson will take a look at what women did in Britain during war time, particularly looking at the jobs they now did that they had never been able to do before. Your class will find out what happened when the war ended and how women finally came to be given the vote.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated worksheets
- Question cards
- Picture cards
- Differentiated challenge cards
Women in the 1950s
After recapping some of the major events in the history of women’s rights up to 1928, this lesson will teach your class the difference between primary and secondary sources, and use both to find out about the role of women during the 1950s. They will evaluate why the advances made during the war were in some ways repealed during this period and consider the reasons behind this.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated worksheets
- Statement cards
- Source cards
Second-Wave Feminism
Children will consider the inequality in girls and boys being rewarded differently for the same tasks as a context for exploring the disparity in pay and work options between men and women in the 1960s and 1970s. Using the example of the Ford Dagenham strikes, they will find out about second-wave feminism and the changes to laws relating to women’s pay, work and education.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Character cards
- Statement card
- Information sheet
- Differentiated worksheets
- Challenge card
Women Today
The final lesson in this series gives your class the chance to consolidate what they have learnt about the changes to women’s roles, rights and responsibilities throughout the ages. They will also consider whether women and men are equal in Britain and around the world today. They will have the chance to create a timeline of the women’s rights movement or create extended writing to showcase what they have learnt.
What's included:
- Lesson plan
- Slides
- Activity ideas
- Differentiated timeline cards
- Differentiated challenge cards
- Writing templates
- End of unit quiz
Medium-Term Plan
Download a free overview to show the full content of this scheme of work.
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