
History • Year gcse • 45 • 3 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England
I want to create a lesson about the conferences of Tehran, Yalta and Potsdam. Comparison and how did they affect to the start of the cold war. No group activities please
Subject: History
Level: GCSE (Key Stage 4) – Year 10/11
Curriculum Area: AQA GCSE History (Germany, 1890–1945: Democracy and Dictatorship OR Conflict and Tension Between East and West, 1945–1972)
Topic: The Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam Conferences: their impact on the Cold War
This lesson focuses on the three major wartime conferences: Tehran (1943), Yalta (February 1945), and Potsdam (July-August 1945). It will analyse and compare their key decisions and discuss how they contributed to tensions that led to the Cold War. The lesson avoids group activities and will hone students’ ability to think critically about whether these conferences marked collaboration, conflict, or a mixture of both.
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
| Time | Activity | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 0-5 mins | Starter: “Memory Check” prompt | To engage prior knowledge and set the thematic tone |
| 5-15 mins | Mini-lecture: Tehran and Yalta | Provide historical context on early cooperation and subtle tensions |
| 15-25 mins | Mini-lecture: Potsdam | Introduce sources of conflict: Germany, reparations, and Eastern Europe |
| 25-35 mins | Analysis Task: Comparison Table | Consolidates intricate details and critical thinking |
| 35-45 mins | Plenary: Build a Cause-Effect Timeline | Ensures retention and clarity about links to the Cold War |
Write on the board:
Students take 2 minutes to note their initial ideas (in silence). Each student shares 1 point, and teacher annotates the board, linking answers to themes of trust and tension.
Purpose: Begin framing the idea of alliances shifting from unity in WWII to division in the Cold War.
Introduce Tehran (1943):
Transition to Yalta (Feb 1945):
Use visual aids: Show a map displaying post-WWII zonal agreements in Germany.
Illustrations: Show archival images of the three conferences to visually track the changing tone.
Ask students: “How do you think Germany’s future was influencing these tensions?” Take 2-3 short answers to guide analysis.
Distribute handouts with blank comparison tables titled: “Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam: Key Agreements and Sources of Tension”.
Instructions:
Students complete the table individually. While they work, teacher checks progress, offering brief clarification where needed.
Ask: “Were the conferences more about collaboration or conflict? Let’s build a timeline to help us decide.”
Steps:
Final Question:
Write a brief GCSE-style exam response:
“To what extent were the conferences of Tehran, Yalta, and Potsdam responsible for the outbreak of the Cold War?” (12 marks)
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