Students categorize the exchange of plants, animals, and diseases between the hemispheres, focusing on the horse's impact on Plains culture and the devastating effect of diseases.
Examine the origins of constitutional government with the Magna Carta, the growth of medieval towns, and the transition toward the Renaissance.
Investigate the origins, symptoms, and catastrophic social and economic consequences of the Bubonic Plague in 14th-century Europe.
Analyze the immense power and influence of the Catholic Church on daily life, politics, and the cultural landscape of Medieval Europe.
Explore the life of a medieval knight, the code of chivalry, and the religious motivations behind the Crusades.
Explore the rigid social structure of feudalism and the economic system of manorialism that defined life in the Middle Ages.
Students explore the vital role of a free press as the 'Fourth Estate' in a democracy, examining historical impact and current relevance through inquiry and analysis.
Students investigate the profound social, religious, and political impacts of centralized power, examining how the rise of nation-states led to both stability and systemic conflict across Europe.
Students rotate through stations, analyzing maps, treaties, and accounts to understand how monarchs consolidated power and defined the borders of modern Europe.
A 45-minute lesson for 6th graders to develop media literacy skills by learning how to identify AI-generated images and discussing the ethical implications of digital manipulation. Students will become 'Pixel Detectives,' learning specific visual cues to distinguish between reality and synthesis.
In this media literacy lesson, 6th-grade students become 'Digital Detectives' to uncover the hidden tactics of clickbait. They will analyze sensational headlines, identify emotional triggers, and practice transforming misleading viral content into factual reporting.
A comprehensive 45-minute lesson for 6th graders to navigate the complex digital landscape by categorizing information into six distinct 'InfoZones' based on their primary purpose. Students will learn to distinguish between news, opinion, advertising, and more.
Students explore the foundations of professional journalism ethics to collaboratively build a code of conduct for their classroom newsroom, focusing on truth, fairness, and accountability.
A 45-minute civics lesson exploring the First Amendment through the lens of the landmark Supreme Court case Tinker v. Des Moines, empowering students to understand their rights and responsibilities.
This lesson introduces 6th-grade students to the fundamental differences between accountability journalism and opinion pieces, focusing on the concept of 'watchdog' journalism and the role of information gatekeepers.
A 45-minute ESL lesson for Grade 5 (Emerging/Developing) focused on sequencing historical events and summarizing oral information using the California Gold Rush as a central theme.
A historical exploration of tropical storms in the Caribbean, focusing on significant events, technological evolution, and the impact on regional history from the colonial era to the late 20th century.