We're looking forward to a great couple of days at the @histassoc conference!
If you're attending, come and find us on stand 17, where we’ll be sharing a first look at Fragile Worlds - the final book in our Changing Histories series for KS3, created to help teachers bring a wider range of stories, places and perspectives into the history classroom.
You can also explore the full Changing Histories series and pick up some free classroom goodies and sample materials.
@CazAJ83 In terms of who they're aimed at, they're suitable for students of all abilities. Don't let the number of words fool you. The text is incredibly accessible and the narrative driven approach has shown to have a real impact, particularly for lower attainers.
We’re nearly there with Changing Histories, Fragile Worlds and I couldn’t be prouder of how this project is coming together. Here are a few stunning spreads. You can see more at the @histassoc conference this week! #historyteacher#historyeducation#HAConf26
@CazAJ83 I recommend watching the Changing Histories webinar series on YouTube to find out more about how to use them in the classroom. The Boost Teaching and Learning resources also help with this.
Why haven't we have a great AI novel yet?
Because LLMs are compression engines trained on the statistical regularities of human text. When generating stories, they produce a kind of average of all stories in the training distribution. This is why LLM fiction tends to be so generic: competent but undistinguished prose, predictable character arcs etc.
This kind of "average of averages" explains not just why LLM fiction is bad but why it's bad in such a specific and recognisable way. It's never incoherent or offensive. It's never wrong exactly. It's just… beige.
And scaling doesn't work either. More parameters and more data push the model toward a higher-resolution average, not away from averaging itself. You get more polished averages, not more distinctive points. Better beige is still beige.
This is the "ill-defined domain" problem. AI is currently very good in certain domains: code compiles or it doesn't, a proof holds or it fails etc. But literature doesn;t work at all like this. There's no compiler for narrative or readily formalisable criteria for a truly great work of fiction.
Planning for the revised IB DP History course? We’ve got you covered. Explore our refreshed Access to History for the IB Diploma series, developed for the new syllabus with full support for Papers 1, 2 & 3.
✅ Download contents pages for 9 upcoming titles
✅ Get a free first-look sample of The Great Depression in the Americas (c.1920–1939), publishing March
Find out more, register your interest and access samples via the Access to History page: https://t.co/HWc6fBSL3z
Looking forward to this LEAD conference next Monday. @schrecal and I will be sharing publisher insights on CAR, how @Hachette_Learn resources are created and how we can support teachers going forward. https://t.co/lpPIFACeGd
Lincoln here I come - really looking forward to taking part in this full day of insights, discussion, and practical guidance on the latest curriculum reforms for geography and history! Here's a link: https://t.co/FBFgC95Jvb
@michaeldoron Good thing I bought mine yesterday then! Happy Christmas Mike and thanks for all your amazing writing and editing for #ChangingHistoriesKS3 this year.
Calling all A level Politics Teachers! Hachette Learning would love your thoughts on its AQA and Edexcel A level politics Boost Updates resource. The survey will take 5 minutes and you'll receive a 10% discount redeemable on the HL website. Thanks ! https://t.co/wb4xEo1dWi
#ChangingHistoriesKS3 is improving history curriculums in schools across the country. A huge thank you to @catherinepriggs for her reflections on the impact the Changing Histories curriculum is having on the pupils at Avanti Grange School. https://t.co/f5kPanyUQB
🚨 History teachers, we’re back! 🚨
Join us on 7 Feb 2026 for a day of workshops and a nice curry – all for £25.
Ten years after the ‘knowledge turn’, we’re exploring what knowledge-rich history teaching looks like today.
Presenters & link below 👇
📢 New research from Oxford University Press: over half of UK students struggle to spot AI misinformation. Our latest report, Teaching the AI-Native Generation, reveals UK teenagers want support from teachers to identify trustworthy AI content.
Full report https://t.co/mSe5loKuin
Discover why women’s voices still remain too often anonymous in our history curriculum and how the Changing Histories series is helping to change that.
Let’s make history reflect everyone’s stories! Read more: https://t.co/Mb6lolYTll