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C P T N G R P F M B P I C C P
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Page 1: Lesson 3 final

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Page 2: Lesson 3 final

HOW DID THE WAR AFFECT YOUNG CHILDREN?

• Lesson Objectives:

• To create a detailed presentation on the experiences of young children during WWII

• To create a labour Party speech about the social welfare problems faced in Britain after the war

Page 3: Lesson 3 final

HOW DID THE WAR AFFECT YOUNG CHILDREN?

Create a detailed presentation on the affect the war had on Young Children – tYou can include videos, graphs, figures, images etc – diary accounts in order to best illustrate your argument  You Must cover – schooling, health, fear, evacuation, their happiness, problems, how many were evacuated, percentages, who did they go to, Diary account of a child who has been evacuated

Page 4: Lesson 3 final

WHAT CAN WE LEARN FROM THIS SOURCE?

• Who were the largest group evacuated in 1939?

• Who was the second largest group to be evacuated in 1939?

• How many people were evacuated in 1939?

• IS their anything surprising about this graph?

Page 5: Lesson 3 final

HOW FAR DOES THIS SOURCE SHOW THE EXPERIENCES OF EVACUATED CHILDREN? (7 MARKS)

Page 6: Lesson 3 final

WHY WAS THIS CARTOON PRODUCED?

Page 7: Lesson 3 final

WHAT WAS THE LONGER TERM IMPACT OF EVACUATION?

• It led to a massive political battle - arguments in the wartime coalition

• Evacuation had exposed how bad the conditions were in some areas of Britain

• Carers in the country side had noticed how children were so thin, ill, no education and had lived in slum housing in the cities – many arrived with no spare clothing – led to the Ministry of Education gave London Council £20,000 for boots and clothing in 1940.

• “Evacuation acted as a mirror to society ….British society became to know itself as unkempt, ill-clothed, undernourished. The children acted as messengers carrying the evidence.”

• Labour said the gov needed to do more to tackle poverty, illness, poor education, and other social problems – the conservatives said they were exaggerating the issue

• Led to the Beveridge Report