What actually works in A Level History (from my classroom)

It’s Sunday evening and I’m at the kitchen table with two piles: my Year 12 Cold War notes and the AQA mark schemes, both coffee-ringed and full of sticky tabs. Tomorrow’s lesson needs to move my class from “I know what happened” to “I can prove why it mattered.” That gap—between knowing and arguing to the spec—is where A Level History is won or lost.

I’ve taught across AQA and OCR, with a brief Edexcel detour, and the pattern’s the same: content isn’t hard to find, but assessment-fit is. I keep my planning tight to the AOs and build from worked examples I trust. I also keep a short list of places where I can shape slides, source questions, and rubrics without retyping everything. ClassPods sits on that list because I can draft, trim, and re-order quickly, then still print and scribble like I always have. What follows is what I’m actually using this half term: the checks I run on any “resource,” a complete lesson walk-through I delivered last week, a ready-to-lift rubric, and how I tweak it all for mixed-language groups and revision.

History lesson packs

View all →

No matching packs yet.

Spec realities: what British A Level History really asks for

Last Monday, Period 3, my Year 13 OCR Tudor group hit a wall with an interpretations question. They could summarise Elton vs Guy, but comparing methods and convincing significance claims? That’s where A Level gets specific. AQA leans on analytical breadth in 25-mark essays, OCR foregrounds interpretations, and Edexcel blends breadth/depth with tight thematic framing. Across boards, AO1 precise knowledge, AO2 analysis/judgement, and AO3 source/interpretations evaluation are the backbone.

Plenty of on-topic resources miss the mark because they’re AP-style, GCSE-toned, or light on provenance and criteria. I don’t care how glossy a worksheet is if the command words don’t mirror the spec (“assess,” “to what extent,” “evaluate”). I keep a small, vetted shortlist in ClassPods and revisit it each term. If you want to see how colleagues have framed similar questions, the community area is handy to skim while planning—have a look via the browse page.

Fast checks I run to see if a resource truly fits A Level

Wednesday P5 with Year 12 (Russia 1855–1917), a student asked me the difference between “provenance” and “context.” That’s my cue to check the materials: does the task demand both? My audit is quick: (1) are AO1/AO2/AO3 explicitly used or at least implied by the prompts? (2) are the command words board-accurate? (3) does the source work move beyond paraphrase to method and value? (4) are dates/place/actors precise enough for top-band claims?

I also scan for mark-scheme echoes—phrases like “judgement sustained,” “criteria applied,” “provenance integrated.” If I can pair the task with a one-paragraph model that shows line of argument and explicit criteria, it’s a keeper. When I’m short on time, I’ll spin up a draft pack and stress-test alignment in minutes using this quick creator; then I tweak in ClassPods so the vocabulary matches my board.

A complete lesson I taught: Alexander II and the problem of judgement

On 10 October with my Year 12 AQA Russia class, we worked the question: “To what extent did Alexander II’s reforms 1855–70 amount to a turning point?” The objective was simple: build a sustained, criteria-led judgement using precise evidence.

  • Starter (6 min): retrieve five reforms, then rank by structural impact.
  • Main (24 min): model paragraph on emancipation as criteria-setter; students draft one body paragraph on legal reforms.
  • Formative check (10 min): swap and annotate for evidence specificity and criteria language.
  • Source twist (10 min): brief 1864 legal statute extract—value and limitation in context.
  • Plenary (5 min): one-sentence overall judgement on the board; class refines.

I prepped the model with clear topic sentence → precise evidence → criteria phrase (“enduring structural change?”) → mini-judgement. Having the skeleton ready in ClassPods meant I could adjust timings on the fly. If you want a head start, you can generate a blank version of this sequence and drop in your own case.

Copy-and-adapt template: my A Level essay marking rubric + homework sheet

I used this last week for Year 13 Tudors and it slots into any board with a quick tweak to phrasing.

Rubric (out of 25; adjust bands to your spec):

  • AO1 Knowledge (8): 7–8 precise, relevant, well-selected; 5–6 generally secure with some gaps; 3–4 patchy or over-general; 1–2 minimal.
  • AO2 Analysis/Judgement (12): 10–12 sustained line of argument, criteria explicit (“significance,” “change/continuity”), counter-argument weighed; 7–9 mostly analytical with lapses; 4–6 narrative drift; 1–3 assertions.
  • AO3 Sources/Interpretations (5): 4–5 integrated evaluation of provenance/method/value; 2–3 some comment, limited integration; 1 basic/bolted on.

Question stems for modelling: “The most significant… because… However, when judged against [criterion], … Therefore, to a large extent/not to a large extent…”

Homework sheet (one side): Q prompt; space for plan (claims, evidence, criteria); sentence frames; 8-line model strip; self-check: date accuracy, criteria explicitly named, judgement signposted. If you want to slot this template straight into a draft pack, open it here in the creator.

Adapting for mixed-language classes, pacing, and revision

Friday Week 5, my Year 12 Cold War group had Fatima (new to English GCSE) stuck on “containment vs deterrence.” I built a dual-language mini-glossary and used sentence stems (“X was significant because… when judged against security/economic criteria…”) so she could join the discussion. I keep visual timelines on the board and cap sources at 120–150 words for first reads.

Pacing-wise, I interleave short retrieval (three dates, one definition) at the 15-minute mark and before the plenary. For teacher review, exit tickets ask for one precise fact and one criterion. Homework extends the same structure: plan-only tasks early in the unit; full paragraph by Week 3; full essay by Week 5.

I’ve also used ClassPods to hold bilingual glossaries and alternate slides so I’m not juggling folders. If your department is budgeting for shared banks and printables, it’s worth checking the pricing page so everyone can access the same templates without version chaos.

Try the workflow

History for British · A Level on ClassPods.

Open the right workflow, build a first draft fast, and keep the review step inside the same flow.

Common questions

Frequently asked questions