Decision-Making Games
Russel Tarr demonstrates how today’s technology can enliven teaching and learning about the past.
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Russel Tarr demonstrates how today’s technology can enliven teaching and learning about the past.
Russel Tarr shows that there is much more to using video than pressing ‘play’.
Russel Tarr introduces the new International Baccalaureate, assessing its advantages and disadvantages compared with A Levels.
Russel Tarr considers key issues from the life of the famous Cardinal.
Once again Russel Tarr demonstrates how ICT can enrich and enliven the work of historians.
Russell Tarr sees similarities but also important contrasts in the foreign policies of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy
Russell Tarr explains how the Bolsheviks established their grip on Russia after the 1917 Revolution, and at what cost.
A manager of men and a master of contemporary politics, writes Esmond Wright, Dundas was Pitt's energetic colleague “during the most critical years in Britis
Mark Rathbone analyses the causes and consequences of sudden changes of policy in nineteenth-century British politics.
Richard Kennett calls on his fellow history teachers to embrace narrative. There is no better way to inspire the historians of the future.
Political reputations are forged by actions, but the long view of history can be hard to predict.
What voting rights did Britons have in the century before 1918?
The House of Lords, often in the shadow of the Commons, asserted its power during the reigns of James I and his son, Charles I.
Anthony Fletcher uses the papers of his artistic great-aunt, who, as a young nationalist, wrote an eyewitness account of the Easter Rising, to explore her yo