Industrial Revolution - Lesson Plan Grade 12
Industrial Revolution - Lesson Plan Grade 12
Industrial Revolution - Lesson Plan Grade 12
Lesson Plan
Lesson Title: _Introduction to the Industrial Revolution____________________________ Grade: 12____ Date: ___________
Subject: _History____________ Strand: CHY4U________________ Location: ___________Time: (length in minutes): _70 minutes _
Lesson Plan Description – (one/two paragraphs with general details about what you will do and how you will do it)
There will be three main parts to this lesson. The first will be a 15-minute introduction to cover the main points of how
the Industrial Revolution was started, and give an idea of the changes that was caused on behalf of the revolution. The
second part is a hands-on activity in which groups of students will create their own steam boats. The class will be
concluded with a painting analysis of, The Fighting Temeraire, by J.W.M. Turner.
The first part will be presented through the medium of slideshow. It will start with a slide that is a review from the
previous unit on the French Revolution. Then the lesson will merge into talking about England and the rise of the coal
industry, which lead to the rise of Industrialism. Before the main content is presented, there are three main questions
that the students will have the knowledge to answer after the slideshow. At the end of the slideshow, the questions
will be shown again and, using the Open Ended Questions check for understanding, the student will record and hand in
their answers. The second part will be very hands on. Students in groups of 4-5 will follow the instructions provided
and build their very own steamboats. The instructions for the boat is in the form of a video. The students will have 40
minutes to complete the boat, and 5-10 minutes to let their boats drive around a pool of water. The last activity will be
a class analysis of the famous painting from this period, The Fighting Temeraire. This picture shows a small steamboat
tugging a massive old sail powered warship off to the junk yard. This painting was made during the industrial
revolution and reflects the dominance of new technology and how society is being replaced by it.
CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS
Ontario Curricular Overall Expectations (numbers from documents and details)
• C1 – Social, Economic, and Political Context: analyze key social, economic, and political issues,
trends, and/or developments in various regions of the world between 1650 and 1789.
• C2 – Communities, Conflict, and Cooperation: analyze interactions between different groups in
various regions of the world from 1650 to 1789 and how various forces/factors affected those
interactions.
• D1 – Social, Economic, and Political Context: analyze key social, economic, and political issues,
trends, and/or developments in various regions of the world between 1789 and 1900.
Ontario Curricular Specific Expectations (numbers from documents and details) selected & listed from the Ont. Curriculum, refined when
necessary, has verbs that are observable & measureable, has realistic number of expectations (1 to 3) have expectations that match assessment
• C1.2 – Describe a variety of developments in science and/or technology during this period, and
analyze their impact.
• C2.4 – Analyze key causes and consequences of some economic and/or cultural exchanges between
different countries or regions during this period.
• D1.1 – explain some of the causes and consequences of key social developments and/or trends in
various regions during this period.
• D1.2 – Describe a variety of developments/achievements in science and/or technology during this
period, and assess their impact on various society.
• D1.3 – Analyze key economic events, issues, and /or developments in various regions during this
period, with a particular focus on the Industrial Revolution.
Learning Goals Discuss with students: What will I be learning today? (clearly identify what students are expected to know and be able to do, in language
that students can readily understand)
I can: Identify the main industry that majorly contributed to the development of the Industrial Revolution
I can: Identify what social system fell because of the revolution and how was it replaced
I can: Identify the technology that gave the ability of mass transportation and production
Assessment – how will I know students have learned what I intended?
Achievement Chart Categories (highlight/circle the ones that apply): Knowledge and Understanding; Thinking; Communication; Application
Highlight/circle ones that are assessed: responsibility, organization, independent work, collaboration, initiative, self-regulation
Action: During /working on it (time given for each component, suggested 15-40 min)
Introduce new learning or extend/reinforce prior learning, provide opportunities for practice & application of learning
Time: _40_min_-_50_min (Indicate time breakdown of instructional elements)
Switch to slide with activity instructions. Make sure to As a group, follow the instructions and construct the boat
read out all of the instructions on slide before the class as a team.
gets up and starts moving. Ask teacher to light their candle when they are ready.
This activity will take place in the classroom using the Once the boat starts running, clean up from activity.
desk as work surfaces. There are no notes they have to take while doing this
Provide instructions for the boat making activity. The link activity.
to the video instructions will be posted on the classes
OneNote.
The students will form into groups of (4-5) and send a
runner to pick up supplies for the activity from the front
of the class.
Roam around the classroom to assist groups and check on
progress.
Light candles when boats are ready
Assist with clean up
This lesson acts as an introduction to the unit. By learning about how the Industrial Revolution started, making a toy
from that period, and analyzing a painting from the period, this will get the students engaged and familiar with the
time period. The next step is to continue building on the time period they just were introduced to.
Personal Reflection (what went well, what would I change, what will I have to consider in my next lesson for this subject/topic)
The Lesson:
The Teacher: