Hero background

Ancient Greeks Today

AU History • Year 7 • 60 • Created with AI following Aligned with Australian Curriculum (F-10)

AU History
7Year 7
60
16 May 2025

Ancient Greeks Today

Overview

Unit: Stage 4 History – Depth Study 2: The Ancient World
Topic: Ancient Greece
Year Level: Year 7
Australian Curriculum Alignment:

Key Inquiry Question: What scientific and technological achievements from Ancient Greece continue to influence the modern world?
Historical Knowledge and Understanding (HT4-3, HT4-6): Describes and assesses the significance of people, groups, places and events in the ancient past.
Historical Skills (HT4-7, HT4-9): Identifies and explains the causes and effects of events and developments; uses a range of historical terms and concepts.

Lesson Duration: 60 minutes
Class Size: 24 students
Lesson Number: 3 of 3 in the unit "How Ancient Greece Shaped Our Modern World"


Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Identify key scientific and technological contributions of Ancient Greece.
  • Explain their relevance and legacy in today's world.
  • Creatively demonstrate their understanding of the significance of these ancient discoveries.
  • Reflect on how historical legacies shape modern societies.

Success Criteria

Students will:

  • Participate in discussions about Greek inventions and innovations.
  • Complete a creative, summative task connecting Ancient Greek innovations to the modern day.
  • Communicate ideas clearly through both visual and written formats.

Sizzling Start (5 Minutes)

Activity: "Ancient Invention Mystery Box"

The teacher presents a sealed cardboard "time travel" box containing modern replicas or images of familiar items: a clock, a compass, a textbook, a calculator, and an architectural blueprint. Students must guess which ancient civilisation influenced each item.

Student Learning Indicators:

  • Activates prior knowledge from previous lessons
  • Identifies examples of continuity over time
  • Sparks curiosity and primes for deeper learning

Teaching Strategies and Quality Teaching Framework:

  • Engagement (QT Element): Stimulating interest with mystery and surprise
  • Prior Knowledge Activation: Links to previously learned content in the unit

Classroom Organisation:

  • Whole-class activity
  • Teacher facilitates discussion and student guesses

Assessment Strategies:

  • Formative: Observation of student participation and prior knowledge recall

Activity 1: Rapid Research Stations (15 Minutes)

Activity Description: Students rotate through four research stations, each focusing on one notable Greek contribution:

  1. Archimedes – Science and mathematics
  2. Pythagoras – Geometry and number theory
  3. Hippocrates – Medicine
  4. Heron of Alexandria – Engineering and mechanics

Each station includes:

  • A short illustrated info card
  • A source artefact copy (e.g., translated fragment or diagram)
  • 1–2 key questions

Modified Support for EAL/D Student:

  • Visuals and key vocabulary list provided at each station
  • Paired with a supportive peer for discussion

Extension for Gifted Students:

  • Challenge question at each station: “How would this discovery impact the world if it was never made?”

Student Learning Indicators:

  • Understands the impact of specific historical figures/discoveries
  • Demonstrates comprehension of source materials

Teaching Strategies and Quality Teaching Framework:

  • Scaffolded Learning: Scaffolded texts and peer collaboration for EAL/D support
  • Varied Representation: Multiple forms of information – visual, textual, discussion
  • Substantive Communication (QT Element): Peer-to-peer talk to build knowledge collaboratively

Classroom Organisation:

  • Students in groups of 6 rotate between 4 stations every 3 minutes (12 minutes total + 3-minute setup/move time)
  • Groups pre-assigned to mix abilities

Assessment Strategies:

  • Formative: Anecdotal notes on student interactions and answers to guiding questions

Activity 2: Creative Summative Task — Greek-Inspired Infomercial (30 Minutes)

Task:
In pairs, students create a “pitch” for a modern audience, promoting an Ancient Greek invention still in use today. They create a mini-infomercial (1–2 mins, presented live or pre-recorded on their iPads/school devices). Each pitch must:

  • Identify the invention
  • Explain its Greek origins
  • Describe its modern use
  • Include visuals (e.g. a diagram on the board, prop, or drawing)

Options for differentiated outcomes:

  • Gifted students encouraged to include persuasive language and technology (e.g., transitions, green screen apps)
  • EAL/D student provided with scaffold (sentence starters, translated support sheet if needed)

Student Learning Indicators:

  • Communicates understanding of Ancient Greek inventions
  • Applies knowledge creatively
  • Demonstrates teamwork and oral presentation skills

Teaching Strategies and Quality Teaching Framework:

  • Creative and Critical Thinking: Applying ancient knowledge in a modern communication context
  • Student Direction (QT Element): Students choose how to present and organise ideas
  • Inclusivity: Differentiated scaffolds to meet diverse student needs

Classroom Organisation:

  • Student pairs work on devices or plan on paper
  • Quiet areas are designated for filming
  • Teacher roves to assist and facilitate

Assessment Strategies:

  • Summative Assessment: Task marked using a criteria sheet for:
    • Historical understanding (10 marks)
    • Communication/presentation (5 marks)
    • Creativity and engagement (5 marks)
  • Peer feedback form used to evaluate two other groups' infomercials

Plenary: Reflective Graffiti Wall (5 Minutes)

Activity:
Exit ticket: Each student adds a sticky note to the “Greek Wall of Influence” with one sentence completing the prompt:

“Without the Ancient Greeks, we wouldn’t have…”

Responses are displayed on the classroom wall.

Student Learning Indicators:

  • Synthesises learning into a meaningful takeaway
  • Reflects on the importance of history

Teaching Strategies and Quality Teaching Framework:

  • Metalanguage: Students express knowledge using discipline-specific vocabulary
  • Engagement: Personalised reflection strengthens learning connections

Classroom Organisation:

  • Whole-class, students write individually then post

Assessment Strategies:

  • Informal teacher analysis of response quality
  • Observation of students’ ability to apply historical learning

Additional Notes

Gifted Student Extension Ideas:

  • Offer the option to create a podcast segment or design an app mock-up that educates the public about Ancient Greek innovations
  • Ask them to compare Ancient Greek discoveries with similar developments in other ancient civilisations

EAL/D Scaffolds:

  • Key vocabulary visuals: invention, science, influence, medicine
  • Partnered tasks with supportive peers
  • Sentence starters and dual-language handouts (if applicable)

Resources Required

  • 4 x research station kits (posters, artefact printouts, guiding questions)
  • Mystery Box items: clock, compass, textbook, calculator, blueprint (or images)
  • iPads or student BYOD devices for filming
  • Sticky notes and pens
  • Task rubric for infomercial assignment
  • Visual glossaries for EAL/D support

Teacher Reflection Prompts (Post-Lesson)

  • Which students demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of continuity from Ancient Greece?
  • How well did students use source material?
  • Were the creative formats of assessment effective in capturing learning?
  • How might the infomercial task be expanded or adapted in future units?

Let the echoes of Ancient Greece inspire the next generation. Let Year 7 not just learn history — let them live it.

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with Australian Curriculum (F-10) in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across Australia