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Controlled Assessment Controlled Assessment

Controlled Assessment - PowerPoint Presentation

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Controlled Assessment - PPT Presentation

Part A The lives of people on the Home Front were greatly changed by evacuation during World War II Select any five sources from your pack   How useful and reliable are these sources in explaining ID: 276839

people evacuation evacuated children evacuation people children evacuated explain war world lives changed dunkirk sources 000 part interpretation reliable controlled britain 1940

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Slide1

Controlled Assessment

Part AThe lives of people on the Home Front were greatly changed by evacuation during World War II.Select any five sources from your pack. How useful and reliable are these sources in explaining how people’s lives were changed by evacuation during World War II? (20)

Part BSome historians argue that the events at Dunkirk in 1940 deserve to be remembered as a triumph for Britain and its people. How valid is the interpretation of the events at Dunkirk in 1940? (30)

To succeed in Part A you must:

Show that you have a developed knowledge of how people’s lives were changed by evacuation.

Be able to use your own knowledge to explain why a source is useful.

Use your own knowledge to explain why a source is not very useful.

Explain why each source could be seen as (un)reliable.

Reach sound, well supported judgements.Slide2

Controlled Assessment

Part AThe lives of people on the Home Front were greatly changed by evacuation during World War II.Select any five sources from your pack. How useful and reliable are these sources in explaininghow people’s lives were changed by evacuation during World War II? (20)

Part BSome historians argue that the events at Dunkirk in 1940 deserve to be remembered as a triumph for Britain and its people. How valid is the interpretation of the events at Dunkirk in 1940? (30)

To succeed in Part B you must:

Be able to explain why some people see Dunkirk as a triumph. (explain the interpretation)

Be able to explain why some people see Dunkirk as a failure. (explain the counter interpretation)

Explain how the content of specific sources can be used to support or reject the interpretation..

Explain why each source could be seen as (un)reliable.

Reach balanced, well supported judgements.Slide3

How were people’s lives changed by evacuation during World War II

?In your first Controlled Assessment piece you must discuss the impact of evacuation on the people of Britain.

You must also evaluate how useful AND reliable specific sources are in informing you about the impact of evacuation on the people of Britain. Slide4

Evacuation during World War Two

L.O.To develop an overview of the process of evacuation and it’s potential impact.By the end of this lesson…ALL OF US will be able to begin to describe the process of evacuation. (F-E)EVEN BETTER IF you can describe in detail and give reasons why evacuation may have been a positive or negative experience. (D-C)EXCELLENT IF you can reasons why evacuation may have been a positive and negative experience. (B)Slide5

How do you think evacuation changed the lives of people in England?

Discuss on your own/with your partner and write down everything that you think of on the post it note in front of you.

4 minutesSlide6

What is Evacuation?

Evacuation means leaving a place. During the WW2 many children living in big cities were moved temporarily from their homes to places considered safer, like the

countryside.In the first few weeks of the start of the war (September 3rd 1939), nearly two million children were evacuated. The government, which controlled all aspects of the media, wanted to give the public the impression that evacuation was popular among those affected and put out propaganda pictures and film to this effect.Slide7

In the lead up to World War Two, governments throughout Europe had been terrified of bombing. The destruction of innocent civilians at Guernica in Spain during the Spanish Civil War

had been the proof that governments needed that bombing was the new horror of warfare.Why did Britain evacuate so many people?Slide8

Why was it important for people to be evacuated?

Evacuation tried to ensure the safety of young children

from the cities that were considered to be in danger of German bombing.Who was evacuated?

Schoolchildren

and their

teachers

Mothers with children under five

Pregnant women

Some disabled people Slide9

Where were children evacuated from?

London

241,000

Manchester

84,343

Merseyside

79,930

Newcastle

52,494

Birmingham

32,688

Leeds/Bradford

26,419

Portsmouth

23,145

Sheffield

13,871Slide10

Where were children evacuated to?

Lancashire

71,484

Sussex

67,541

Yorkshire

50,593

Kent

38,000

Cheshire

38,000

Essex

25,000

Northamptonshire

24,000

Hertfordshire

23,500

Suffolk

23,000

Somerset 

21,000

Surrey

20,000Slide11

School Children

Mothers and children under 5Pregnant women

Blind and disabled people

Teachers

827,000

524,000

13,000

7,000

103,000

Who

was evacuated

?Slide12

What else did they pack in their suitcases?

Overcoat or mackintosh Comb 1 pair of Wellington boots

Towel Soap Facecloth

Toothbrush

Boots or shoes

Plimsolls

Sandwiches

Packet of nuts and raisins

Dry biscuits

Barley sugar (rather than sugar)

Apple

                                         Slide13

What was it like for a child to be evacuated?

Being an evacuee must have been scary and exciting at the same time. The children had to leave their families and homes behind and try to fit in with host families in the country.

At the stationChildren had labels attached to them, as if they were parcels. They stood at railway stations not knowing where. They felt

scared

about being away from their families but also

excited

about going to a place they had never seen before.Slide14

On arrival

They were taken to the village hall, where they would be met by the

billeting officer (the person in charge of finding them homes). A 'pick-your-own evacuee' sessions would then take place, where

host families

haggled over the most presentable children while the sicklier and grubbier children were left until last.Slide15

When it happened. How many people were evacuated.

Who was evacuated and where to. Why evacuation happened. What happened to ‘evacuees’.

Now use what we have just looked at to describe the process of evacuation including:Do you think evacuation was a positive experience? Give reasons to support your opinion.

15 minutesSlide16

Over the next three lessons you are going to independently research the impact of evacuation on different groups of people in England and Wales.

Use your checklist to guide you in making notes.REMEMBER!!! The more specific detail the better you will do in your Controlled Assessment!!!