
History • Year 3 • 40 • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England
Subject: History
Year Group: Year 7 and 8 (working at Year 3 level)
Lesson Duration: 40 minutes
Class Size: 9 students
UK Curriculum Area: KS1/KS2 History – Significant events beyond living memory
Learning Objective (LO): To find out why the Great Fire of London spread so quickly and stayed alight for so long.
This lesson will be practical, engaging, and interactive, focusing on short bursts of written tasks to maintain attention. There will be a strong emphasis on sensory and hands-on activities to ensure students remain focused and involved.
Question: What dangers might there be in a city made of wood with lots of fire sources?
Build a mini "London Street" from cardboard boxes (pre-made and stacked in a row).
Question: What could have helped to stop the fire earlier?
Introduce a simple flame and oxygen demonstration (teacher-led) using LED candles or a controlled tea light in a glass container.
Give students a simple fill-in-the-blanks worksheet:
"The fire spread quickly because the houses were made of ________ and were very ________ together. There was no proper ________ brigade, only buckets of ________. The wind made the flames move from house to ________."
Students complete this in pairs or with adult support.
Encourage expressive voices and small movements to keep physical engagement.
✅ Cardboard boxes (for mini London street)
✅ Small fan (to demonstrate wind spreading fire)
✅ LED candles or tea light in a jar (teacher demonstration)
✅ Crackling fire sound effects (played during intro)
✅ Fill-in-the-blanks worksheet
✅ "Fire Expert" stickers
This lesson is multi-sensory, engaging, and practical, making the Great Fire of London come alive for students with attention difficulties. 🚀🔥
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