What GCSE History actually asks of us (and where resources misfire)
Second week of September, my Year 10s hit their first causation task: “Explain two causes of the 1348–49 Black Death.” They had plenty to say about fleas but stumbled on linking factors—a classic AO2 wobble. That’s where GCSE History really lives: AO1 secure knowledge, AO2 second-order thinking (cause, consequence, change/continuity, similarity/difference), AO3 source analysis, and AO4 interpretations. The papers slice these differently across AQA, Edexcel, OCR, and Eduqas, and the mark tariffs (4/8/12/16 + SPaG) drive lesson shape.
The misfires I see most often? Resources that sound AP/IB: “Write a thesis,” “synthesize across documents,” or a seven-source DBQ. Our kids need “How useful are Sources A and B…,” “Write an account of…,” and “How far do you agree?” with explicit balance and a sustained judgement. Good stories aren’t enough; the verbs must match the spec. When I’m scouting fresh material, I start with phrasing and tariff before content. If you want to see what other teachers are sharing, the community shelves are a useful first stop here.