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Exploring Tramore Beach

History • 40 • 27 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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History
40
27 students
18 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

I want to plan a lesson where children act as historians and explore our counties famous summer time destination; Tramore beach. The children are to work in groups and explore an evidence pack. The evidence pack includes a series of pictures of the beach from the 1930s-1950s, stories from the Dúchais website about the local lore at the time. They will answer a series of questions in their groups related to the data. They will then compare the past to the present by examining data; photos and stories from the present day.

this is my lesson plan template: ST Name: Kym Fox ST Number: 40036679 Class Level: 2nd & 3rd Class Date: 19/05/25

Subject: History Time: 13:20 Duration of Lesson: 40 Minutes No of Pupils: 27 pupils Strand(s) Local studies Strand Unit(s)/ Element(s) My locality through the ages Learning Outcome(s)/ Content Objectives: Study a period or periods in the history of the local village, town, city area, townland, parish or county. Learning Objectives: (Two are required. One other may be added if deemed necessary)

  1. The child should be enabled to:
  2. The child should be enabled to:

Assessment:

  1. Method:
  2. Assessment of:
  3. To be recorded: Teacher Questioning: (Insert I, D, C for relevant part of lesson) Lower order questions (Closed Questions)

Higher order questions (Open Questions) 1. 2. 3. Language Development opportunities in this lesson: Literacy Development opportunities in this lesson: Teaching Methodologies: Please underline the primary methodology/ies to be used during the lesson · All Subjects: Talk and Discussion, Collaborative/Co-operative Learning, Active Learning, Skills Through Content, Using Local Environment, Problem Solving

· For Mathematics: Using cognitively challenging tasks, Promoting Maths Talk, Fostering productive disposition, Encouraging playfulness, Emphasising mathematical modelling

Introduction: Stimulus: Elicit Prior Knowledge: Share Learning Intention:    Development:   Conclusion: Cognitive: Social: Transition (if appropriate:    Universal Design for Learning

Pupil(s) Reason(s) Method(s) Additional Comments/

The Learning Environment: Resources:

Exploring Tramore Beach


ST Name: Kym Fox

ST Number: 40036679

Class Level: 2nd & 3rd Class

Date: 19/05/25

Subject: History

Time: 13:20

Duration: 40 Minutes

No of Pupils: 27


Curriculum Strand(s)

Local Studies

Strand Unit(s)/Element(s)

My locality through the ages


Learning Outcomes / Content Objectives

Students will:

  • Study a period or periods in the history of Tramore Beach, a local summer destination, focusing on the 1930s-1950s compared to the present day.

Learning Objectives

  1. The child should be enabled to explore and interpret historical evidence (pictures and stories) relating to Tramore Beach from the 1930s-1950s to understand how life and the environment have changed over time.
  2. The child should be enabled to work collaboratively in groups to analyse historical data and communicate findings, developing critical thinking and comparison skills by identifying similarities and differences between past and present-day Tramore.

Assessment

  1. Method: Group discussions and completion of a structured question sheet based on the evidence pack, including visual and written sources.
  2. Assessment of: Pupils' ability to observe, interpret, compare and communicate historical information collaboratively.
  3. To be recorded: Teacher observations during group work and final group answers to questions demonstrating comprehension of local history.

Teacher Questioning

Lower order questions (Closed Questions):

  1. When were these photos of Tramore Beach taken? (I)
  2. What activities can you see people doing in the past photos? (D)
  3. Is Tramore Beach crowds bigger or smaller now compared to the past photos? (I)

Higher order questions (Open Questions):

  1. Why do you think Tramore Beach was popular during the 1930s-1950s? (C)
  2. How do you think the experiences of visitors to Tramore Beach have changed over time? (C)
  3. What might cause these changes between past and present Tramore? (C)

I = Introduce / D = Develop / C = Consolidate


Language Development Opportunities

  • Vocabulary related to history (e.g., historian, evidence, past, present, local lore)
  • Oral language development through group discussion and reporting back
  • Use of descriptive language for observations about pictures and stories

Literacy Development Opportunities

  • Reading historical texts adapted from Dúchais stories on Tramore
  • Writing clear responses to question prompts
  • Developing sequencing skills by placing events/photos in chronological order

Teaching Methodologies

Primary methodologies are underlined

  • Talk and Discussion
  • Collaborative/Co-operative Learning
  • Active Learning
  • Skills Through Content
  • Using Local Environment
  • Problem Solving

Lesson Breakdown

Introduction (8 minutes)

  • Stimulus: Show a picture of present-day Tramore Beach and ask, “What do you know about this place?”
  • Elicit Prior Knowledge: Ask children to share if they or their families have visited Tramore before and what they remember.
  • Share Learning Intention:
    • Today, we will be historians and explore how Tramore Beach looked and felt a long time ago using photos and stories.
    • We will work in groups with evidence packs to discover what life was like, then compare the past to the present.

Development (25 minutes)

  • Group Work Setup: Pupils split into 6 groups (4 or 5 pupils each).
  • Evidence Packs: Each group receives:
    • Photographs of Tramore Beach from the 1930s-1950s showing beach scenes, families, games, and landmarks
    • Selected stories from the Dúchais website focusing on local lore, popular activities, and notable events at Tramore during this time
    • A structured question sheet guiding them to examine evidence and answer:
      1. What can you see in the photos?
      2. What kinds of activities did people do at the beach?
      3. What do the stories tell us about life at Tramore in earlier times?
      4. How is Tramore Beach today different or similar compared to the past?
  • Teacher Role: Circulate to support group discussions and facilitate deeper thinking with probing questions.
  • Comparison Activity: Groups will then look at a small set of present-day Tramore photos and short current stories supplied by the teacher to compare with the historical evidence.

Conclusion (7 minutes)

  • Cognitive: Groups share one interesting difference or similarity they found between Tramore past and present.
  • Social: Celebrate how everyone worked together as 'historians' to learn about our locality’s history.
  • Transition: Summarise the importance of history in helping us understand how places change over time and how we can learn from stories and pictures from the past.

Universal Design for Learning

Pupil(s)Reason(s)Method(s)Additional Comments
Pupils with reading difficultiesLiteracy support neededProvide simplified stories and visual aidsUse oral explanations and peer support
Pupils with attention difficultiesEngagement challengeFrequent movement during group workSmall, focused tasks in groups aid concentration
EAL LearnersLanguage supportUse of pictures and vocabulary scaffoldsVisual supports reduce language barriers

The Learning Environment

Resources:

  • Evidence packs (printed photos, printed stories from Dúchais)
  • Structured question sheets for each group
  • Present-day photos and current short stories of Tramore Beach
  • Whiteboard and markers for group report-back
  • Historical timeline displayed (optional, for context)

Notes for Teachers:

  • Encourage creative thinking by asking children to imagine life without modern conveniences.
  • Emphasise respect for local heritage and how small communities grow and change.
  • Link with Geography by discussing coastal features and environment if time permits.
  • This lesson fosters skills highlighted in the IE Curriculum Framework: questioning, critical thinking, communicating ideas, working collaboratively, and developing a sense of place.

Kym Fox – 19/05/25

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