Key stage 2 history
Welcome to the Key Stage 2 section of Keystage history where you will find masses of advice on how to make history both fun and satisfyingly challenging. You will be helped to design and plan an exciting primary history curriculum linked to the NC 2014 Orders and taking into account the difficult areas of assessment and progression and mindful of the new focus on curriculum within OFSTED’s 2019 Framework. This is a tricky process at Key Stage 2. It is easy to lose continuity if you are not careful. You will be shown which skills and concepts are best developed in which contexts along with examples of key questions that have proved most effective in deepening learning. You also will be helped to make the most of history’s contribution to the whole curriculum by being shown cutting edge practice in the areas of cross-curricular history planning, literacy, thinking skills and creativity.
The site also offers a unique set of detailed lesson plans and resources for about 150 lessons which have been judged as outstanding by OFSTED. These cover all the major topics linked to an outstanding medium-term planner which expertly hows how to combine the most significant content with the development of conceptual understanding.
You will see below that these resources are constantly being added to , thereby ensuring that you have not only the latest and best advise but also the highest quality learning materials for your pupils.
The top 10 things you need to know about chronology at KS2, but were afraid to ask.
Planner for teaching early Islamic civilization at KS2

Teaching the Iron Age at KS2: are you teaching the right things?
- When was it? The Iron...
How did people enjoy themselves in Elizabethan England? KS2 Enquiry KQ6

10 things you need to know about leading history and the new OFSTED framework
- You will have to show that you are in fact teaching history (and not just doing literacy disguised as history, or very tenuous cross-curricular links). This means teaching not only...
10 things history leaders need to know about the new OFSTED 2019 Framework
- You will have to show that you are in fact teaching history (and not just doing literacy disguised as history, or very tenuous cross-curricular links). This means teaching not only...
Great PowerPoint on World War Two for KS2
Planning for teaching Life in Tudor times at KS2

As you know, the requirement to study Life in Tudor Britain was mysteriously and inexplicably removed from the Key Stage 2 curriculum in 2014. As one of the best-taught and popular of all the history topics that pupils study at junior school, the...
KS2 Why did Henry Break with Rome? Love or religion? Key Question 2

This KS2 history enquiry revolves around Henry VIII’s divorce and the break with Rome, one of the best-known stories in English history. At first, Henry, this larger than life figure, seems almost to be a perfect guest on Jerry Springer. He married his...
Top 10 tasks for effective history subject leaders
KS2 Islam -Today is anniversary of start of Building of Baghdad
Brief 10 question diagnostic assessment task for KS2 Ancient Egypt

Planning for teaching Ancient Greece KS2

Starting the enquiry into Ancient Greece KQ1 part 1

Theseus and the Minotaur: Is there any evidence for the legend? KQ1 part 2

This KS2 smart task places pupils in the role of detectives trying to prove that the legend of Theseus and the Minotaur may actually have been been a fact. First they have to think carefully about what sort of evidence MIGHT have survived. Showing...
What can we work out about everyday life in Ancient Athens? KQ2 part 1

Ancient Greek vases: the answer lies on the pot: KQ2 Part 2

What was life like for women in Ancient Greece? KQ2 part 3

Why was Athens able to be so strong in the 5th and 6th century BC? KQ3

The Battle of Marathon. A history mystery KQ3 part 2

This lesson on the Battle of Marathon makes a major contribution to pupils' thinking skills. They are presented with a paradox. How could the David of Athens beat the Goliath of Persia?
Instead of being given a textbook account or a video explanation, pupils...
Ancient Greece: KQ4 part 1 role play on building the Parthenon

New KS2 assessment task: Stone Age to Iron Age
Ancient Greece KQ6 (the legacy) now ready for subscribers
Final activities for KQ2 on Tudors now ready

Making Greek democracy come to life – a ‘smashing’ lesson KQ4 part 2

Learning objectives
- pupils grasp the...
What can we tell about the Ancient Greeks from a study of their Olympics? KQ5 part 1

We thought we would offer you a range of different cameos showing how the history of the Olympics could be imaginatively integrated into your current teaching.
The teaching activities below have all be tried and tested in schools and have been judged outstanding by...
What can we tell about the Ancient Greeks from their interest in the theatre? KQ5 part 2

Under the Cloth: sorting the muddled collection. Is it all Greek to you? Smart Task KQ6a

Outstanding Scheme of Work for Stone Age to Iron Age

KS2 Outstanding Lesson on the Old Stone Age

Is it true to say that Stone Age man was just a simple hunter gatherer only interested in food and shelter? Key Question 1
This KS2 outstanding history lesson on the Stone Age revolves around the reveal of an object found at Star Carr in Yorkshire...How much did life change when man learned how to farm? SMART TASK Key Question 2

Keeping up-to-date with your teaching of Victorian Britain at KS2
Push or Pull? What were the real reasons why the Saxons invaded? SMART TAKS KS2

A fun thinking skills activity in which pupils infer from visual clues before moving on to analyse a range of influence cards and evaluate a video before coming up with their own explanation.
Step 1
As the pupils enter the room they are told that...
Should the Celts take on the Romans? A reconstruction relay KQ2 part 1

Outstanding medium term planner for Ancient Civilizations: Egypt Y3

Launching the Enquiry. So you think you know about Ancient Egypt. KQ1

How can we discover what Ancient Egypt was like over 5,000 years ago? KQ2

Expert advice on local history at KS1 and KS2 by OFSTED lead inspector
New written source for KQ3 on Baghdad
Guidance Non Western Civilisations: Teaching Islam/Maya/Benin for September 2014
Short KS2 task on the Ancient Greek legacy: language. KQ6b

How Great is your Greek? KQ6c

If life was so hard for families in the towns why did so many leave the countryside and move to the towns in Victorian times? – a history mystery

Starting a lesson with an apparent contradiction is a good way of engaging pupils interest. This 'history mystery' makes excellent use of pupils' thinking skills, enabling them to make their own meaning using information cards which they use to create different patterns of thought....
What the Dickens was life like in the Victorian cities?

This lesson makes extremely good use of a technique called creative tension. Pupils listen, with their eyes closed, to a spoken description which they then have to visualise in their heads. When they open their eyes they discuss what they saw in their mind's...
Children working in Victorian factories: was it as bad as they tell us?

This lesson is designed for Y5/6 pupils who already have a little knowledge of industrial change but have not yet studied cotton mills. Although the main part of the lesson is devoted to a playlet in which pupils act out real testimony about children’s...
Victorian railways: winners and losers. A thinking skills activity leading to a role play

This active, thinking skills lesson asks pupils to consider the likely effect of the coming of the railways on different groups in society before going on to take part in a role play in which villagers have to debate whether they should support or...
Life in Tudor Times: the highs and lows of Catherine of Aragon- Key Question 2

The context of this lesson was to explore the highs and lows of Catherine of Aragon as a lead up to the Break with Rome. Pupils had already looked at the personality of Henry through his portraits. They had noticed, using the 'Police line-up'...
How was the Spanish Armada defeated by the smaller English fleet? Key question 5 Using a technique called Waiting room

This lesson works really well because the tension you build into the waiting room activity gets all the class involved and focused. The more able pupils have a specific, more challenging role to play, working out an explanation that assuages the rage of an...
Henry VIII a question of interpretations. Could you spot Henry VIII in a police line-up? Key question 1

This is a really fun lesson which shows children what is meant by historical interpretations in an engaging and accessible way. It appeals to both visual and kinaesthetic learners by using the police line-up approach. The use of an interactive timeline always succeeds in...