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Video summary

Grace Darling tells the story of her life, and describes the night she and her father rowed out in their tiny boat to save nine sailors.

Told in the first person, and brought to life with a mix of drama, movement, music and animation.

We see Grace growing up in the lighthouse, and the night the storm breaks.

Grace spots people in the waves and, determined to try and save them, rows out into the storm with her father to try to rescue them.

By the time they returned to the lighthouse, they had saved nine souls who would otherwise have perished.

It was an extraordinary act of bravery that made Grace famous.

This clips is from the series True Stories.

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Teacher Notes

Before watching the film

The Darlings were the keepers of Longstone lighthouse in the Farne Islands and the rescue took place on 7 September 1838. The nine survivors came from the wrecked ship SS Forfarshire. Tragically, Grace Darling died of consumption (tuberculosis) just four years after this event at the age of 26.

Questions to consider whilst watching the film

Depending on the focus of your lesson, you may wish to ask the following questions after the video or pause the short film at certain points to check for understanding.

  • How does Grace Darling describe her childhood growing up in a lighthouse? What would have been the good things about living in a lighthouse, and what not so good?
  • What do we learn from this film about the key event for which Grace Darling became famous?
  • Why do you think Grace Darling says she was ‘not afraid’
  • After rescuing the people from the storm, Grace says that 'perhaps she was brave.' Do the pupils think she was brave?
  • There were two Darlings who rescued the nine people. Why do you think it is Grace, and not her father, who became famous?
  • Did she deserve all the attention from newspapers and painters?

Learning activities to explore after the video

History is a subject which can lend itself to a wide range of cross-curricular links. As a teacher, you will have a greater awareness of how this topic may act as stimulus for learning in other subjects. However, the suggestions below relate to ways of developing the children’s historical knowledge and understanding.

Key Question: Why do we still remember Grace Darling today?

SignificanceThe remarkable story of Grace Darling is still remembered to the present day as can be seen in this 鶹Լ News article and so this provides another opportunity for the children to explore historical significance. These teachers notes on Florence Nightingale provide some guidance for teaching historical significance in the classroom and the criteria for assessing the significance of an individual, which are:

  • Relevance: why the achievements of the person are still relevant today.
  • Remembered: why the name of the person is still known today.
  • Durability: the effects of the life of the person have lasted well beyond the time they were alive.
  • Quantity: how many lives have been affected by this person.

However, the story of Grace Darling provides a different challenge. Whereas many of these criteria could be used to assess Florence Nightingale or Elizabeth Fry, some (e.g. durability and quantity) are not so applicable to Grace Darling. She was clearly famous at the time and the pupils will be explaining why that was the case. However, the concept of significance goes beyond contemporary fame and that is why the wording of the key question is crucial: Why do we still remember Grace Darling today?

The story of Grace Darling has inspired a range of classroom resources for primary teachers. As to which you use will depend on the time available for further study and the key learning objective. If it is just one lesson, then this video is at the heart of , though the activity will develop the pupils’ artistic skills more than their historical skills.

has a three lesson scheme of work on Grace Darling. The lessons do not focus on significance as the main aim is to encourage the pupils to interrogate sources critically. These include the famous painting by Henry Perlee Parker, which is the top image in the 鶹Լ News article and sources in the collection of the . The website has a virtual tour of the museum and a factsheet with a range of material which could be used in the classroom.

The and this explores in much more detail her early life in the lighthouse and her rescue of the passengers of the Forfarshire. The fifth lesson explores explicitly the question: Why do we remember Grace Darling? Although it states the pack is aimed at Key Stage One, the resources and some of the activities are suitable for KS2 pupils.

Learning aims or objectives

England

From the history national curriculumPupils should:

  • understand historical concepts such as …significance.
  • understand the methods of historical enquiry, including how evidence is used rigorously to make historical claims.

Northern Ireland

From the statutory requirements for Key Stage 2: The World Around Us
Pupils should be enabled to explore:

  • Change over time: The life of a famous person, family or building in the past.

To provide a balance of experiences in History pupils could study:

  • effects of historical events.

Scotland

From the Experiences and Outcomes for planning learning, teaching and assessment ofSecond Level Social Studies:

  • I can discuss why people and events from a particular time in the past were important, placing them within a historical sequence.

Wales

From the new Humanities Area of Learning and Experience
School curriculum design for History should:

  • develop rich content across the time periods, through which learners can develop an understanding of chronology through exploring … historical significance.

Principles of progressionDescriptions of learning for Progression Step 2

Enquiry, exploration and investigation inspire curiosity about the world, its past, present and future:

  • Events and human experiences are complex, and are perceived, interpreted and represented in different ways:
    • I can recognise and explain that my opinions and the opinions of others have value.
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