The Transatlantic Trade
Lesson Details
Subject: History
Year Group: Year 4
Lesson Duration: 30 minutes
Curriculum Area: KS2 History – Britain’s role in the wider world
Learning Objective (WALT): Understand how the transatlantic slave trade worked.
Success Criteria:
- I can identify the three main regions involved in the transatlantic slave trade (Africa, the Americas, Europe).
- I can describe the conditions enslaved people faced on the Middle Passage.
- I can state one type of good traded in each part of the trade system (e.g., guns, textiles, sugar).
Starter Activity (5 minutes) - Trade Game
Purpose: To introduce the concept of trading and illustrate the unequal exchange of goods.
- Preparation: Have cards or small items representing goods (e.g., pieces of coloured paper for textiles, sugar cubes, beads for ivory).
- Setup: Assign students different regions (Africa, the Americas, Europe) and give them a set of ‘goods’ to trade.
- Play: Students trade with each other based on a simplified version of the transatlantic trade – e.g., Europe gives weapons to Africa, Africa sends enslaved people to the Americas, the Americas send sugar back to Europe.
- Discussion: Ask students:
- “Did the trade seem fair to you?”
- “Which region gained the most?”
- “How do you think the people who were traded felt?”
This helps to build empathy and contextual understanding before deeper discussion.
Activity 1 (Academic) – Mapping the Trade Route (10 minutes)
Objective: Students will visually explore the key regions involved in the Transatlantic Slave Trade.
Materials Required:
- A large world map (printed or drawn on a whiteboard)
- Labels with ‘Africa’, ‘Europe’, and ‘The Americas’
- String or arrows to highlight key movements of traded goods
Steps:
- Display the map and discuss where each of the three key regions is located.
- Ask students to place labels on the correct areas.
- Introduce the triangular trade route and use string/arrows to show movement:
- Europe → Africa: Weapons, textiles, and manufactured goods.
- Africa → The Americas (Middle Passage): Enslaved people transported under horrific conditions.
- The Americas → Europe: Sugar, tobacco, and cotton.
- Students take turns recalling one thing that was exchanged at each stage.
Assessment: Can students correctly identify the three regions involved in the trade and recall an example of a traded good?
Activity 2 (Sensory/Practical) – Middle Passage Experience (10 minutes)
Objective: To develop empathy and understanding of the conditions enslaved people faced during transportation.
Setup:
- Dim the lights to create a confined, uncomfortable atmosphere.
- Place a small number of chairs or mats close together to simulate the cramped conditions aboard a slave ship.
- Play the sounds of waves and creaking wood (or simply describe them).
Steps:
- Ask students to sit close together on the mats or chairs.
- Read out a short, age-appropriate extract describing conditions on the Middle Passage (e.g., extreme heat, no space to move, little food or water).
- Discuss how passengers would have felt – encourage students to use words like "scared", "trapped", "helpless".
- Ask students to reflect: "What would you miss most if you were taken far from home with no idea of where you were going?"
Assessment: Students articulate an understanding of the harsh conditions enslaved people endured and show empathy in their reflections.
Plenary (5 minutes) – Discussion & Reflection
- Recall Check: Ask each student to say one thing they learned today.
- Human Impact Reflection: Pose the question, “Why is it important to learn about this part of history?”
- Modern Connection: Briefly discuss how trade today is different and why learning about history helps us create a fairer world.
Teacher’s Role: Encourage critical thinking, linking past injustice to modern ideas of equality and ethics.
Differentiation & Adaptations
- For higher-ability students: Ask them to consider the long-term effects of the trade on Africa, the Americas, and Britain.
- For students who may struggle: Use visual aids, sentence starters, and fewer complex terms to simplify concepts.
- For students with sensory sensitivities: Offer an alternative reflection activity that doesn’t require participation in the sensory experience.
Why This Lesson Stands Out
- Engaging & Interactive: Students don’t just hear about history – they experience elements of it in a tangible way.
- Age-Appropriate & Sensitive: While covering a difficult topic, the lesson uses storytelling and hands-on activities to ensure understanding without distress.
- Meets UK Curriculum Standards: Covers Britain’s role in global trade and encourages students to connect the past to today’s world.
This lesson provides a meaningful, thought-provoking introduction to the transatlantic slave trade, helping Year 4 students understand its impact with both academic learning and sensory experience.