
AU History • 25 • 16 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Australian Curriculum (F-10)
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Students will generate key inquiry questions and sub questions for their assessment on the Russian revolution
This 25-minute Year 12 Modern History lesson is designed to support students in generating their own key inquiry and sub-questions for a research-based assessment task on the Russian Revolution. It aligns with the Australian Curriculum - Modern History | Year 12 | Unit 3: Modern Nations (The Revolution-focused depth study). The activity fosters rich historical questioning and inquiry skills based on Historical Skills (ACDSEH149–153) and Historical Knowledge and Understanding outcomes.
This short but engaging and intellectually rigorous session will equip students to take ownership of their learning and enable differentiated approaches depending on interest areas within the Revolution (e.g. leadership, ideology, causes, consequences).
By the end of this short session, students will be able to:
Students will demonstrate success when they:
Modern History – Year 12
Unit 3: Modern Nations – Russian Revolution Depth Study
“In this task, you’ll become the historian. Your first step is to decide what story you want to uncover or argue about the Russian Revolution. Today, let’s learn how to ask the right kinds of questions — ones that will shape strong, insightful research.”
Briefly model difference between:
| Closed Question | Open-End Inquiry Question |
|---|---|
| When did the revolution start? | To what extent did Lenin's leadership shape the direction of the revolution? |
Students form groups of 4 (mixed interest). Each shares their inquiry question + sub-questions.
Using coloured sticky notes:
Teacher circulates, listening and prompting with guided feedback.
Teacher prompts discussion:
Celebrate a few strong examples aloud.
On mini whiteboards:
Write your refined inquiry question + one way you might answer it using evidence.
Teacher snaps photos or collects reflections for formative feedback.
| Type | Strategy |
|---|---|
| High-Achieving | Encourage comparative or historiographical inquiry (e.g., “How do Western vs Soviet historians interpret the revolution’s outcomes?”) |
| Struggling Students | Provide sentence starters and themes (e.g., "What role did ___ play...") or work in pairs |
| EAL Learners | Provide visual timeline of Russian Revolution + key vocabulary glossary during the session |
After the session, consider:
This inquiry-based approach taps into independence, creativity, and critical thinking, supporting deep engagement with content while aligning with the analytical demands of the Year 12 History curriculum.
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