A collection of vocabulary activities focused on high-frequency academic words used to analyze the Cold War, including 'impact', 'tension', and 'strategy'.
A comprehensive study guide and answer key covering five core units of Economics, including principles, market forces, indicators, and policy.
Investigate the resistance to integration, the 'Brown II' ruling, and the emergence of grassroots activism.
Examine the 1954 Supreme Court ruling, including the psychological evidence presented and the unanimous decision.
Explore the NAACP's long-term legal strategy led by Thurgood Marshall and the five specific cases that formed Brown v. Board.
Analyze the legal precedent of 'separate but equal' established by Plessy v. Ferguson and the reality of Jim Crow education.
A comprehensive reading and assessment lesson exploring the life and legacy of Walt Disney, from his humble beginnings on a Missouri farm to the creation of a global entertainment empire.
A comprehensive visual assignment and assessment for AP Human Geography Units 3 and 4, focusing on the intersection of cultural patterns and political structures within a single country.
A 45-minute lesson exploring the Seminole Wars through Howard Zinn's lens of resistance and the perspective of the Seminole people. Students analyze historical imagery and texts to uncover narratives of agency and defiance against forced removal.
A comprehensive end-of-course or unit-review project where students create a visual 'one-pager' profile of a country, synthesizing concepts from all seven units of the AP Human Geography CED.
Students explore the history of American involvement in WWI, vocabulary related to trench warfare, and the significance of modern memorials through a comprehensive reading packet.
A foundational lesson on basic economic principles including supply, demand, producers, and consumers. Students will identify key terms and understand how they interact in a marketplace.
A 45-minute lesson examining Indigenous resistance and survival through the lenses of the Taino response to Columbus and the Seminole's defiance during the Florida Wars. Students analyze primary sources to shift the narrative from victimhood to agency.
This lesson examines the Seminole Wars not just as a series of conflicts, but as a sustained movement of resistance against US expansion and the institution of slavery. Students will analyze the strategic alliance with Black Seminoles and the reasons why the Seminole people remained 'unconquered.'
A comprehensive set of practice activities for students to master their knowledge of Boston's most iconic landmarks through sentence construction, matching, and vocabulary puzzles.
A lesson designed for English Language Learners to understand the key concepts and vocabulary of Westward Expansion through simplified text and visual scaffolds.
A comprehensive literacy and history packet exploring Paul Revere's legendary journey through vocabulary building, close reading, and critical analysis.