Year 3 Optional Homework Rubbish and Stig! Autumn Term 2014.
Learn about life in Iron Age Britain. Find out about hill forts, Iron Age tools and meet an Iron Age warrior. Find out about hill forts, Iron Age tools and meet an Iron Age warrior. 6 class clips.
Know about changes in Britain from the Stone Age to the Iron Age, including Iron Age Art and Culture. Design and Technology. Use research and design an Iron Age torc. Art. Study Iron Age designs and the significance of the twisted strands of the torc. Planning and Activities. A session researching and then making Iron Age bangles and jewellery. Teaching Outcomes: To understand that, in the.
Find out about changes from the Stone Age to the Iron Age. Follow the KS2History scheme of work for Stone Age to Iron Age. Literacy. Create your own narrative based on Stone Age Boy (see the KS2History Stone Age Boy planning unit) Write non-chronological reports about an aspect of prehistoric life. Write instructions for How to Wash a Woolly Mammoth (see the KS2History Woolly Mammoth planning.
Stone Age to Iron Age How did Britain change? The Stone Age The term Stone Age refers to a long period of time that we can break down into 3 parts. In the early Stone Age, which we call Palaeolithic, people were hunters and they found food by roaming from place to place in different seasons. The middle Stone Age, called the levels rose and Britain became an island (before this time, Britain.
Stone Age to Iron Age covers around 10,000 years, between the last Ice Age and the coming of the Romans. Such a long period is difficult for children to imagine, but putting the children into a living time-line across the classroom might help. In one sense not a lot happens for a very long time, yet in another sense dramatic changes occur at irregular periods. Man moves from hunter-gatherer to.
The Iron Age began in around 1200 BCE when the use of iron had become widespread in the Eastern Mediterranean. Ironworking first began in what is now Turkey between 1500 and 1300 BCE but the new technology was kept secret at first. By 700 BCE, it had spread throughout all of Europe. The warrior people who lived in Europe during this time are known today as the Celts. They shared common.
They also derive from a very detailed medium term plan (see KS2 teaching Stone Age to Iron Age in planning section) which contains all the differentiated objectives, imaginative activities and resources to ensure progression in history. Probably taught in Year 3 to develop some chronological sequence to our British history studies, this Stone Age to Iron Age topic offers great opportunities.