Where History sits in the National Curriculum (and why fit beats topic)
First week of September with my new Year 7s, we tackled “What is history?” and half the hands went up for “a list of dates.” That’s where the British · National Curriculum for England matters: it’s not just content blocks; it’s disciplinary thinking—chronology, cause and consequence, change and continuity, similarity and difference, and significance—plus using evidence and tackling interpretations.
Plenty of resources hit “medieval England” but miss those second-order concepts. I’ve seen worksheets that ask for facts without pushing students to weigh causes or source reliability. For KS3, breadth is non-negotiable: local, British, and wider world, with secure chronological knowledge. So my filter is simple: if a resource doesn’t name the concept it’s training—e.g., causation language—it's not curriculum-fit for me. When I’m hunting around, I start in the community history area to get a sense of how others frame enquiries in the same language in the history community library. That keeps my choices honest and the progression intact. I also keep a small bank of concept sentence starters parked in ClassPods so they’re one tap away.