AT GCSE (the final two years of Secondary school when we do exams - Years 10 and 11) no we didn't. It was all Modern History and apart from the fall of Tsarist Russia, I'm just not that interested in Modern History.
In the previous 3 years of school (Years 7,8 and 9) we did...
- A vague topic on castles. It also vaguely covered the Norman Conquest in 1066 but as the teacher didn't even know who Edward The Confessor was, it sort of gives you an idea of the teaching.
- One lesson on the plague.
- Nazi Germany. We did it in years 7,8,9,10 and 11. We never even really learnt about the UK's participation in the war other than we bombed Germany and ultimately defeated them.
- Slave Trade in years 8 and 9.
- One vague lesson on The French Revolution. I went away knowing less than I did before the lesson. Always a good sign :thumbup
- A few vague lessons on the Victorians. We went around the local area to see "Victorian Housing" (most of which were built in the.... 1930s and 1940s. There are Victorian Houses around here, pity the teacher couldn't find them).
- A few vague lessons on WW1. I learnt more about WW1 studying Literature 2 years ago than I did in those lessons. But they only taught it at my school so they could tie in a History trip to France (one day looking around trenches then 6 days doing nothing at all History related)
- One lesson on Lady Jane Grey.
- One lesson on feminism in 1970s America. I remember that lesson well. We watched some American commercials from the 70s that showed women in a good light for an hour. And that was it.
It was so rubbish and everything was so vague because I think most of the time, the teacher didn't even know what she was talking about!