All Activities
History

The Fight Against Slavery

Overview

Students explore how slavery operated, why abolition was achieved, and why its legacy still shapes the world today.

Learning Objective
Students understand the history of slavery, the abolitionist movement, and the long-term legacy of both.

Resources needed

  • None

Lesson stages

0 / 7 done
  1. 1 Ask: what do you already know about the history of slavery?
  2. 2 Explain: slavery has existed in many forms across many cultures and times.
  3. 3 Focus on the transatlantic slave trade: scale, operation, and human cost.
  4. 4 Introduce the abolitionist movement: who fought against it, how, and why.
  5. 5 Ask: why did abolition take so long despite widespread human suffering?
  6. 6 Discuss: did abolition end the effects of slavery? What persisted?
  7. 7 Ask: what does this history tell us about how human rights change over time?

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Focus on a specific abolitionist figure and examine their methods and motivations.
  • Discuss forms of modern slavery — is the fight against slavery finished?
  • Examine the economic arguments used to justify slavery and their refutation.
More information

Teach: slavery, enslaved, abolition, abolitionist, transatlantic, legacy, reparation. Use 'enslaved person' rather than 'slave' to emphasise humanity.

Handle with sensitivity. Allow students to engage at their own level. Focus on the resistance and abolitionist stories as well as the suffering.

Can students explain why abolition took so long despite clear moral arguments against slavery? Can they identify one ongoing legacy?

No resources needed. Entirely discussion-based with teacher as primary knowledge source.

Students sometimes think slavery was only practised in the Americas. Establish that slavery existed across many cultures and periods — the transatlantic trade was the largest and most systematised.

The history of slavery and abolition is essential for understanding the modern world. It connects directly to human rights, racial inequality, and economic history.