Different Accounts of the Same Event
Recognise that different people can give different accounts of the same event — and that both can be genuine while still disagreeing
Typical age: 6–8 years
“If your child heard two different versions of the same historical event, would they understand that both people might be telling the truth from their own point of view — and want to know why the versions differ?”
0 / 2 mastered
Explore graph
Needs first
- Evidence from the PastREQUIRED
Recognising that accounts can differ requires first understanding that accounts exist because people left behind evidence
- Comparing Characters Across Stories
Recognising that different people give different accounts of the same event is the historical application of the English skill of comparing and contrasting two texts on the same topic
- Vocabulary: historical thinkingREQUIRED
Recognising that different accounts exist requires 'source', 'perspective', and 'interpretation' vocabulary
- Spotting Patterns
Recognising that accounts diverge in systematic ways — based on who is telling the story — is an application of the universal pattern-recognition habit
Unlocks next
- Understanding People in Their Own TimeREQUIRED
Contextualising past behaviour requires first accepting that the same event can look different from different viewpoints — contextualisation is the deeper explanation for why accounts differ
- Questioning Historical SourcesREQUIRED
Sourcing — asking who made this and why — is the analytical tool for explaining why accounts of the same event differ
- Checking Sources Against Each Other
Corroboration builds directly on the understanding that accounts can differ — it is the systematic practice of comparing those differences