The Moon Landings
4 lessons
Enquiry questions
Concepts
This study delivers 1 primary concept and 2 secondary concepts.
Primary concept: Historical Sources and Evidence (HI-KS1-C004)
Type: Skill | Teaching weight: 1/6Historical sources are the materials from which historians reconstruct the past - artefacts, photographs, documents, buildings, oral testimonies and other traces that survive from earlier times. Historical evidence is information extracted from sources by asking questions about them. At KS1, pupils begin to work with a range of sources, developing the ability to observe carefully, ask questions, extract information and begin to understand that sources provide evidence rather than complete and unmediated truth. This introduces the idea that history is a process of interpretation as well as discovery.
Teaching guidance: Bring a range of historical sources into the classroom: artefacts (or replicas), old photographs, letters, maps and accounts. Teach pupils a simple enquiry process: observe, question, infer, connect. Ask pupils what a source tells us and what it does not tell us. Compare sources about the same event or person. Use visit resources: museums, historic sites, community collections. Develop vocabulary for discussing sources: what is it? Who made it? When? Why? What can we learn from it? Begin to distinguish between primary (from the time) and secondary (written about the time later) sources. Key vocabulary: source, evidence, artefact, document, photograph, account, primary source, secondary source, observe, question, infer, reliable, bias, interpret, past Common misconceptions: Pupils may treat all sources as equally reliable and complete. Introducing the idea that sources can be partial, biased or misleading even at KS1 develops critical thinking. Pupils may not understand that historians do not know everything about the past; emphasising what we do not know as well as what we do know models intellectual honesty. The concept of primary sources from 'the time' can be confusing; concrete examples help.Differentiation
| Level | What success looks like | Example task | Common errors |
| Entry | Observing a historical source (photograph, artefact, picture) and saying what they can see. | Look at this old photograph of a street. Tell me three things you can see in the picture. | Making up details that are not visible in the source; Describing feelings about the picture rather than what is actually shown |
| Developing | Asking simple questions about a historical source and suggesting what it might tell us about the past. | Look at this old toy. What questions could you ask about it? What does it tell us about children in the past? | Asking questions that cannot be answered from the source; Assuming the source tells us everything about the past rather than just one part |
| Expected | Using more than one source to find out about a historical event or person, and recognising that sources can tell us different things. | Here is a photograph and a letter from the same period. What does each one tell us? Do they tell us the same things or different things? | Treating both sources as saying the same thing rather than offering different perspectives; Not recognising that sources have limitations — each one only shows part of the story |
Model response (Entry): I can see a horse pulling a cart. There are people wearing long clothes. The road is made of cobblestones.
Model response (Developing): I wonder who played with it and how old it is. It tells us that children in the past played with wooden toys, not plastic ones. It doesn't have batteries so children had to use their imagination.
Model response (Expected): The photograph shows us what the building looked like — it had a thatched roof and small windows. The letter tells us how the person who lived there felt — they said it was cold in winter. The photograph shows the outside but the letter tells us about life inside. Together they tell us more than one source alone.
Secondary concept: Time and Chronology (HI-KS1-C001)
Type: Knowledge | Teaching weight: 1/6Chronology is the ordering of events and periods in time. Understanding chronology requires both the vocabulary of time (before, after, then, now, long ago, recently, past, present) and the ability to place events and people in sequence relative to each other. At KS1, pupils develop chronological understanding beginning with their own life histories and moving outwards to family memories, local history and national events. Placing events on timelines, sequencing pictures and comparing 'old' and 'new' versions of familiar objects are key activities that develop chronological awareness.
Differentiation
| Level | What success looks like | Common errors |
| Entry | Recognising and using basic time vocabulary (before, after, now, then, long ago) to describe the order of two events. | Using 'before' and 'after' interchangeably without distinguishing their meaning; Placing all events described as 'old' at the same point in the past |
| Developing | Sequencing three or more events or objects on a simple timeline, using vocabulary such as 'first', 'next', 'then', 'finally', 'a long time ago'. | Ordering by personal preference rather than chronological sequence; Placing the steam train after the car because trains are less familiar |
| Expected | Placing events, people and objects from different periods on a timeline and explaining how they know the order, using evidence from sources. | Placing objects in order of size or appearance rather than age; Not being able to explain the reasoning behind the sequence |
| Greater Depth | Using chronological understanding to explain that different periods of time varied in length, and that some changes happened quickly while others took a long time. | Assuming all historical change happens at the same pace; Struggling to grasp that 'hundreds of years' and '20 years' represent very different spans of time |
Secondary concept: Change and Continuity (HI-KS1-C002)
Type: Knowledge | Teaching weight: 1/6Historical change refers to the ways in which people's lives, beliefs, institutions and the world around them have transformed over time. Continuity refers to aspects that remain the same over long periods despite other changes. Understanding change and continuity requires pupils to identify what has changed, what has stayed the same, and to consider why some things change while others persist. At KS1, pupils explore change through comparing everyday objects, homes, transport and daily life across different time periods within living memory and beyond.
Differentiation
| Level | What success looks like | Common errors |
| Entry | Identifying one thing that has changed and one thing that has stayed the same when comparing old and new versions of a familiar object or setting. | Identifying only differences and not recognising any continuity; Focusing solely on colour differences in photographs rather than meaningful changes |
| Developing | Describing several changes and continuities between past and present in a familiar context, using comparative language. | Assuming everything in the past was completely different from today; Listing changes without using comparative language (older/newer, more/fewer) |
| Expected | Explaining why some things have changed while others have stayed the same, giving reasons linked to people's needs or new inventions. | Describing changes without offering any explanation for why they happened; Treating all change as automatic 'progress' rather than a response to needs |
| Greater Depth | Recognising that change can involve loss as well as gain, and that not everyone experiences change in the same way. | Viewing all historical change as purely positive progress; Struggling to imagine disadvantages of modern inventions |
Thinking lens: Cause and Effect (primary)
Key question: What caused this to happen, and how do we know? Why this lens fits: Studying significant individuals asks pupils to trace the consequences of particular people's actions on events and society — why did this person matter? what changed because of what they did? — which is explicitly causal-chain reasoning applied to historical biography and local/national narrative. Question stems for KS1:Session structure: Topic Study
Topic Study
A structured enquiry into a defined topic, period, or place. Begins with an engaging hook to capture interest, builds contextual knowledge, moves through source analysis and interpretation, and culminates in a substantiated argument or conclusion. The core humanities template.
hook → context → source_analysis → interpretation → argument
Assessment: Extended writing task presenting a reasoned argument supported by evidence from the topic. Can take the form of an essay, structured explanation, or debate position.
Teacher note: Use the TOPIC STUDY template: begin with a simple hook that captures children's curiosity — a picture, an object, or a short story. Provide context through visual and sensory experiences. Guide children to look at one source closely, describing what they can see. Ask them to say what they think it tells us, using 'I think... because...' sentences.
KS1 question stems:
Disciplinary concepts foregrounded
| Concept | Key question | Role in this study |
| Significance | Why does this matter, and to whom? | At KS1, ask 'Why do people still talk about the Moon landing?' and 'What made it so special?' |
| Evidence and Interpretation | How do we know about this, and how do historians disagree? | At KS1, use photographs and film footage as sources. Ask 'How do we know about the Moon landing?' |
| Chronology | When did this happen, and how does it fit into the wider timeline? | At KS1, help pupils understand that 1969 was within their grandparents' lifetime. |
Key figures and events
Key figures: Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, Michael Collins Key events:Why this study matters
The Moon landings capture children's imagination and develop the concept of significance through an event whose scale is awe-inspiring. The event is within grandparents' living memory for many pupils, bridging the 'beyond living memory' requirement with accessible oral testimony. It develops chronological understanding (1969 is both 'a long time ago' and 'within Grandma's lifetime').
Pitfalls to avoid
Cross-curricular opportunities
| Link | Subject | Connection | Strength |
| Recount: My Weekend | English | Writing a recount of the Moon landing; reporting as a news broadcaster | Strong |
Historical thinking skills (KS1)
These disciplinary skills should be woven through teaching, not taught in isolation:
Vocabulary word mat
| Term | Meaning |
| account | A spoken or written description of an event, used to find out about the past. |
| after | Later in time; following an event in chronological order. |
| ancient | Belonging to a time very long ago, typically thousands of years in the past. |
| artefact | An object made or used by people in the past that helps us learn about how they lived. |
| before | Earlier in time than something else; preceding an event in chronological order. |
| bias | A one-sided view that favours one opinion over another, shaped by the creators beliefs. |
| century | A period of one hundred years, used to organise and talk about time in the past. |
| change | When something becomes different over time, such as the way people live, work, or are governed. |
| continuity | When something stays the same over a period of time, even while other things change. |
| decade | A period of ten years, used to describe and organise stretches of time. |
| develop | To grow, change, or become more advanced over time. |
| development | The process of growing, changing, or becoming more advanced over a period of time. |
| different | Not the same as something else; used in history to compare how things have changed. |
| document | A written or printed record that provides information or evidence about the past. |
| evidence | Information from sources such as objects, documents, or pictures that helps us work out what happened. |
| future | The time that has not yet happened; what will come after the present. |
| improve | To make something better or to become better over time. |
| infer | To work out what something means by using clues from evidence rather than being told directly. |
| interpret | To explain the meaning of something, such as a source or event, based on the evidence. |
| long ago | A time in the distant past, much further back than living memory. |
| modern | Belonging to the present time or the recent past, as opposed to earlier historical periods. |
| new | Recently made, discovered, or introduced; not existing before. |
| observe | To look at something carefully in order to notice details and gather information. |
| old | Having existed for a long time; belonging to an earlier period in the past. |
| order | The arrangement of events or objects in a sequence, from first to last. |
| past | The time before now; everything that has already happened. |
| photograph | A picture taken with a camera, used in history as evidence about events and people. |
| present | The current time; now, as opposed to the past or the future. |
| primary source | Evidence created at the time of the event being studied, such as a letter or diary. |
| progress | Movement forward or improvement over time, often in knowledge, technology, or living conditions. |
| question | A sentence used to find out information; in history, the starting point for investigating the past. |
| recent | Having happened a short time ago; near to the present. |
| reliable | Trustworthy and likely to be accurate; a source that can be depended on. |
| same | Identical or unchanged; used when comparing things that have not altered over time. |
| secondary source | Evidence created after the event by someone who was not there, such as a textbook. |
| sequence | A set of events or objects placed in a particular order, from first to last. |
| source | Anything that gives us information about the past, including objects, documents, and buildings. |
| timeline | A line showing events in the order they happened, with dates marked along it. |
| tradition | A custom or belief that has been passed down through generations and is still practised. |
| transform | To change something completely in form, appearance, or character. |
| year | A period of twelve months, used as a basic unit for measuring and dating events in history. |
| Moon | |
| astronaut | |
| spacecraft | |
| launch | |
| landing | |
| significant | |
| achievement | |
| explore |
Prior knowledge (retrieval plan)
Pupils should already know the following from earlier units:
| Prior knowledge needed | For concept | Description |
| Chronological Language | Time and Chronology | The vocabulary and grammatical structures used to locate events and situations in time and to exp... |
Scaffolding and inclusion (Y1)
| Guideline | Detail |
| Reading level | Pre-reader / Emergent |
| Text-to-speech | Required |
| Max sentence length | 8 words |
| Vocabulary | Concrete nouns and action verbs only. No abstract concepts without physical anchor. Examples: dog, apple, jump, big, one more. |
| Scaffolding level | Maximum |
| Hint tiers | 2 tiers |
| Session length | 5–12 minutes |
| Worked examples | Required — Animated, narrated walkthrough with no text. Character models the thinking aloud. |
| Feedback tone | Warm Nurturing |
| Normalize struggle | Yes |
| Example correct feedback | The frog jumped exactly four spaces — you counted perfectly! |
| Example error feedback | Oh, let us count again together! [animation demonstrates] |
Knowledge organiser
Period: 1969 Key terms:Graph context
Node type:HistoryStudy | Study ID: HS-KS1-004
Concept IDs:
HI-KS1-C004: Historical Sources and Evidence (primary)HI-KS1-C001: Time and ChronologyHI-KS1-C002: Change and Continuity``cypher
MATCH (ts:HistoryStudy {study_id: 'HS-KS1-004'})
-[:DELIVERS_VIA]->(c:Concept)
-[:HAS_DIFFICULTY_LEVEL]->(dl)
RETURN c.name, dl.label, dl.description
``
Generated from the UK Curriculum Knowledge Graph — zero LLM generation.